The Department of Justice is quietly restarting a decades-dormant program to restore gun rights to felons. One of them was an ...
WASHINGTON, D.C.; March 2, 2026 – NPR is standing up for the public's right to ask hard questions in a national campaign dubbed "For your right to be curious." At NPR's headquarters, on billboards in ...
March Madness is here. The high-stakes, sudden-death college basketball tournament is a beloved tradition in American sports.
New research finds AI can point people in the wrong direction. And the quality of health information it imparts depends on ...
International Atomic Energy Agency head Rafael Grossi said Iran's nuclear program is heavily damaged, "but the material will still be there and the enrichment capacities will be there." ...
NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Ariane Tabatabai, the Public Service Fellow at Lawfare, about the nature of Iran's nuclear program, and whether it, as President Trump has said, posed an "imminent threat." ...
The Trump administration announced a three-phase transition that will eventually include management of most federal student ...
Harerimana Ismail of Uganda is a community health worker who checks on kids with HIV. He lost his salary after the Trump ...
The Department of Justice has quietly restarted a decades-dormant program to restore gun rights to felons. One name on the list is raising questions about transparency.
Darren Indyke, longtime attorney for Jeffrey Epstein, testified he "did not know" of Epstein's sexual abuse of women and ...
Without this Education Department oversight, borrowers could "be placed in the wrong loan repayment status, billed for ...
Title X is a 56-year-old federal grant program that supports thousands of clinics that provide birth control and STI testing ...