Steve Inskeep
Stories
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How jobs in certain industries in Western Pennsylvania help determine votes
Steel as well as oil and gas are traditional industries in Western Pennsylvania. NPR's Steve Inskeep spoke with people in those industries to see how their work shapes their votes.
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Leaked U.S. intelligence documents suggest Israel is planning to strike Iran
The documents, which are marked top secret, were posted to the Telegram messaging app and first reported by CNN and Axios.
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Assessing the damage after Israel strikes Lebanese bank branches linked to Hezbollah
Israeli forces have carried out airstrikes across Lebanon -- targeting branches of a Hezbollah-operated financial institution that Israel says is central to financing the group’s terror operations.
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Morning news brief
Israeli strikes target bank branches operated by Hezbollah. If Donald Trump wins the election, he vows retribution against enemies. The connection between people’s economic lives and their vote.
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How a TV channel in Afghanistan operates freely despite Taliban restrictions
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Saad Mohseni, CEO of a media company in Afghanistan. His new book is called "Radio Free Afghanistan: A Twenty-Year Odyssey for an Independent Voice in Kabul."
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As Election Day approaches, international election observers are in the U.S.
Teams of EU election observers are in the U.S. to visit polling places, speak with campaigns and asses media coverage. They will then make recommendations about how to improve the process.
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Gordon Sundland testified against Donald Trump. Why does he plan to vote for him?
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Gordon Sundland, a Republican donor and former ambassador to the European Union during the Trump administration, about why he's again supporting the former president.
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Life in a war zone: Israel ordered people in southern Lebanon to leave. Did they?
Southern Lebanon is being pounded by the Israeli air force. By some estimates, about a million people have left their homes. We her from some who have remained.
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Going deeper into some claims in legal filings against TikTok that NPR uncovered
Internal documents from TikTok that were reviewed by NPR indicate that company executives knew about the harm the app could cause young people. We talk to a researcher about what that harm looks like.
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Floridians are cleaning up after Hurricane Milton stormed through the panhandle
Milton battered the state with high winds, storm surge and torrential rains. At least a dozen deaths have been attributed to the storm, and millions of homes and businesses are without power.