News

The Department of Education says it will resume collections on May 5 and send wage garnishment notices "later this summer." ...
The U.S. is showing signs that it is increasingly willing to withdraw from a peace process that has grown more complex in ...
The International Monetary Fund is warning that President Trump's tariffs could pose significant challenges for the global ...
Lydia Millet's characters in Atavists interact and have little dramas of their own — the author's talent is on full display ...
Frustrated with their party's response to President Trump, a wave of young Democrats are challenging incumbents in safe blue ...
In some countries, including those facing national elections soon, political leaders who've advocated a homegrown style of ...
The word itself predates Christianity, but the conclave with its secretive deliberations and ancient trappings still captures ...
With the U.S. now reporting more than 800 measles cases, a new poll from health policy research group KFF finds that many ...
Weinstein is facing sex crimes charges after his 2020 New York conviction was overturned last year. The #MeToo movement was catalyzed in part by the many women who came forward to accuse the disgraced ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Evelyn Farkas about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of private Signal chats and the turmoil inside the Pentagon.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio plans to streamline the State Department by eliminating 132 offices and about 700 jobs, including positions focused on promoting democracy and human rights.
NPR speaks to Rep. Troy Carter, who visited a detention center in his home state Louisiana with a Democratic delegation to meet Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil and others recently detained by ICE.