News

Investors are worried about the ongoing trade war — and rethinking the safety and soundness of U.S. government debt.
The House and Senate both voted to loosen regulations on air pollutants like dioxin and mercury, which are associated with ...
An NPR listener writes: "We live in a nice neighborhood that has homeowner association rules, and our neighbor is violating ...
On Wednesday, two Israeli Embassy aides were shot and killed following an event at a Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C.
In a cost-cutting move, the Treasury Department will soon stop minting new pennies. The one-cent coins will still be legal ...
The Senate parliamentarian advised lawmakers that they couldn't use the Congressional Review Act to revoke California's right ...
The federal judge also told the administration to reinstate department employees who lost their jobs during the ...
South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa keeps his cool after a carefully choreographed Oval Office ambush by Trump.
The husband is from India. The wife is from Pakistan. Their son is Indian and daughters are Pakistani. India blames Pakistan ...
NPR interviews Maria Van Kherkove, the infectious disease epidemiologist who is a leader in the World Health Organization.
An air traffic controller who works the airspace around Newark, N.J. speaks out about what it was like to lose radar and ...
It's a pattern in President Trump's chaotic tariff policy: he first suggests a high number, only to later ratchet it down.