News

The government of El Salvador has acknowledged to United Nations investigators that the Trump administration maintains ...
Winemakers in the Burgundy region of France are worried they will lose U.S. customers because of potential higher tariffs that may take hold in August if current trade talks fail.
NPR's Leil Fadel asks Mahmoud Meslat, co-chair of the political wing of the Syrian Democratic Forces, whether Kurds in the semi-autonomous northwest region have a voice in the new government.
A beluga whale at Chicago's Shedd Aquarium is the first to successfully recover from general anesthesia in captivity after a surgery to remove a network of cysts.
NPR's A Martinez speaks with journalist Paola Ramos about President Trump's gains among Latino voters in 2024 and how ICE operations across the country could effect that support.
A new study in the journal JAMA finds the health of America's children has worsened across several key indicators over the ...
One hundred years ago, the small town of Dayton, Tenn., became the unlikely stage for one of the most sensational trials in ...
Marine mammal researchers are investigating how sea lions were affected by the longest toxic algal bloom on record off the ...
NPR speaks with Mac McCorkle, professor of public policy at Duke University, about Elon Musk's bid to launch a third party and how that might impact upcoming U.S. elections.
Leaders in the BRICS group of emerging economies ended their recent summit with calls for less confrontation in the world. But that plea didn't go over well with President Trump.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with meteorologist Tom Di Liberto {DEE la-bert-oh} with the nonprofit news organization Climate Central about flash flood warnings preceding the deadly central Texas foods.
Medicaid programs go by so many different names across the country that advocates and experts warn people may not know they're losing their coverage until it's too late.