News

After Hurricane Helene hit last year, resource hubs popped up around western North Carolina to receive and distribute ...
The Senate voted to approve a $9 billion rescission package aimed at clawing back money already allocated for public radio and television.
The weather system moving across the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday was showing a greater chance of becoming a tropical ...
CDC staffers worry $140 million in grants could fail to reach state and local overdose programs. The White House officials ...
Former and current U.S. air traffic controllers say the Trump administration's focus on new equipment doesn't address ...
So Charlotte's office market has a problem that's often described as a “flight to quality." That's employers leaving ...
President Trump called Republicans who demand the release of more Epstein probe details "weaklings." NPR asks GOP strategist Alex Conant whether it's splintering Trump's MAGA coalition.
Senate approves cuts to funding for public media and foreign aid programs, President Trump attacks Fed Chair Powell over interest rates, UN Security Council to meet over unfolding Israel-Syria crisis.
NPR's Steve Inskeep asks John Dinkelman, new president of the American Foreign Service Association, about how layoffs will affect the State Department and American diplomacy.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote on a controversial judicial nominee who's courted controversy at the Justice Department this year.
The world's highest concentration of data centers is in Virginia. Residents are not happy about that.
The Senate debates the clawing back of previously approved funding for foreign aid and public media — as Democratic lawmakers object. A final vote in the Senate is expected by Thursday.