U.S. Supreme Court Wraps Up Historic Session
The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on LGBT discrimination highlights a session of historic rulings.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on LGBT discrimination highlights a session of historic rulings.
Protesters gathered outside City Hall during Wednesday’s City Council meeting to demand police reform.
President Trump is in a political hole and has a lot of ground to make up over the next five months if he hopes to win another term, an NPR analysis of the Electoral College map finds. Read the analysis.This episode: campaign correspondent Scott Detrow, congressional correspondent Kelsey Snell, and senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.Connect:Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Find and support your local public radio station.
The tone of his forthcoming book, The Room Where It Happened, suggests the diary of a tutor who has endured many frustrating months with a spoiled and inattentive pupil who ignores his lessons.
The council also passed resolutions to honor Juneteenth and temporary protections for renters.
No Federal Reserve chair has ever been ridiculed publicly as much as Powell. And that’s despite the Fed’s unprecedented efforts to save the economy.
ComEd’s payments to Jenner & Block spiked as federal prosecutors investigated the company’s ties to Illinois politicians.
President Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday encouraging police departments to improve training — a step critics say falls short of what is needed to curb police officers’ use of force against people of color.This episode: campaign correspondent Scott Detrow, White House reporter Ayesha Rascoe, and congressional reporter Claudia Grisales.Connect:Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Find and support your local public radio station.
Reset checks in with a Northwestern professor who’s been making the argument since he was a law student in the ‘80s.
Kwame Raoul is the first statewide official to announce he tested positive for COVID-19.