News

A new report tries to capture the true cost of incarceration to families of people behind bars. It found it costs them around ...
The House version of the tax bill would revoke credits for EVs starting at the end of this year. If the plan survives, it ...
Like other NATO members, the U.K. has been reassessing its defense spending since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with James Kimmel Jr., lecturer in psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine, about his new book "The Science of Revenge." ...
President Trump has used emergency declarations to push through his agenda. Elizabeth Goitein, analyst at the Brennan Center for Justice, discusses his use of emergency powers.
As part of our series on the world that America made after World War II, NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with author Christopher Leonard about the rise of the U.S. defense industry post-1945.
The State Department's Historical Advisory Committee puts out unbiased accounts of events around U.S. foreign policy. Trump fired its members. NPR speaks with its former chair, James Goldgeier.
South Koreans head to the polls on Tuesday to pick a new president. The election comes nearly two months after President Yoon was removed from office after he was impeached for declaring martial law.
A second round of ceasefire talks between Ukraine and Russia ended quickly and with no ceasefire, though the two countries agreed to exchange more prisoners of war. Hear the latest updates.
Mount Etna produced a spectacularly explosive eruption Monday, sending a ripple of reddish clouds down from the southeast ...
Gazan health officials say more than 20 people were killed and more than 100 were wounded near an aid distribution site in ...
Senate Republicans return to session with a big task ahead: passing Trump's big, beautiful bill. And, Boulder's Jewish ...