News

The U.S. has officially accepted a luxury jetliner from Qatar as a gift, and slated it to become a new Air Force One. Experts ...
This week's quiz is the usual potpourri of the silly and sublime. Actually, not the latter.
Loving Day, the landmark case that overturned U.S. state laws against interracial marriage, is on June 12. NPR wants to hear ...
The academy in Emmitsburg, Md., is often described as the national war college for firefighting. It offers training that ...
Michel Martin asks civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump about changes in the legal landscape in the years since a former Minneapolis police officer was convicted of murder in George Floyd's death.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday granted the Trump administration's emergency request to fire the heads of two independent agencies. But the decision is technically a temporary one.
The man charged with shooting and killing a couple outside the Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. was once a member of a far-left political group. That is raising concerns about domestic extremism.
Five years after the killing of George Floyd, NPR's Michel Martin visits the Minneapolis intersection that has become a memorial to his life: George Perry Floyd Square.
The judge says the administration "unquestionably" violated his earlier order, which stated migrants cannot be deported to a ...
The Senate parliamentarian advised lawmakers that they couldn't use the Congressional Review Act to revoke California's right ...
An NPR listener writes: "We live in a nice neighborhood that has homeowner association rules, and our neighbor is violating ...
The suit claims that efforts to get sensitive information about food aid recipients from states violates federal privacy laws ...