News

Immigration agents are raiding known hubs for Latino workers: day laborer gathering spots, street vendor corners and car ...
About 40 million people rely on the Colorado River for drinking water. It also irrigates agricultural fields. It's also shrinking. Now, states might agree on a potential deal on sharing the river.
The team from NPR's "Planet Money" looks at Elon Musk's Starlink and its big lead in the satellite internet market. Can it stay ahead of its competitors?
The U.S. dollar had its worst start this year in more than half a century. Harvard University economics professor Kenneth ...
South Korean authorities plan to investigate the border crossing and did not immediately say whether they view the incident ...
More than 5,000 tourists, hotel workers and residents were evacuated from an area along Crete's southern coast. Some people ...
The number of people in ICE detention without criminal convictions nearly doubled in the last month — a significant increase ...
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with McKay Coppins, who recently profiled Russell Vought in the Atlantic. Vought is a key player in the Trump administration's push to remake the federal government.
Fans in Liverpool and beyond are heartbroken at the tragic death of 28-year-old star player Diogo Joga, who was killed in a car crash in Spain ...
More than 180 airports in rural areas across the U.S. benefit from federal funding that guarantees commercial air service. That program might lose half its funding due to Trump administration cuts.
President Trump's CIA Director John Ratcliffe tasked CIA analysts with reviewing the agency's 2016 conclusions about election interference.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear two cases in the fall that test state laws banning transgender women and girls from participating in sports at publicly funded institutions.