The Latest Politics As DOJ threatens WA over sanctuary laws, state officials double down on protections Washington officials are responding to a letter from the federal government last week demanding they end so-called “sanctuary jurisdiction” policies — local laws stopping police from working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Scott Greenstone Politics Trump announces on Truth Social that he'll ban mail-in voting and voting machines President Trump says he wants to ban mail-in voting and voting machines ahead of next year's midterms. Is it legal? Ashley Lopez National Prospective opera singers learn German at a summer language course in Vermont At Vermont's famed Middlebury Language School, opera singers perfect their German — right down to mastering the elusive umlaut. Nina Keck National Sand tiger shark conservation efforts pay off in Boston Harbor Scientists say that the water in Boston harbor is getting cleaner, leading to an increase in the number of sand tiger sharks using the area as a nursery habitat. Craig LeMoult Latin America Bolivian voters signal they want a sharp retreat from nearly two decades of socialism After two decades of left wing dominance, Bolivia swings to the right as their presidential election heads for a runoff vote. Carrie Kahn National Security Former national security adviser Susan Rice weighs in on Trump-Zelenskyy talks NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Susan Rice, national security advisor to President Obama, about today's White House talks between President Trump and President Zelenskyy. Megan Lim A new study raises concerns about whether doctors become too reliant on AI A new study finds that AI may be causing some doctors to become less adept at screening for unusual lesions in the colon. Geoff Brumfiel National It's unclear where unhoused people are ending up as authorities clear D.C. encampments Federal authorities are clearing homeless encampments across Washington, D.C. as part of President Trump's efforts to crack down on crime and blight in the nation's capital. Where are the unhoused going? Jennifer Ludden National The latest on Trump's meeting with Zelenskyy, other leaders President Trump meets his Ukrainian counterpart and European leaders as he tries to broker an end to Russia's war on Ukraine. Mary Louise Kelly National A parent calls on a stranger in a moment of crisis, sparking a lifelong friendship In 1974, Surinder Gupta and his young family had just moved to New Orleans, a city where they knew no one. Karen Zamora Prev 1006 of 1647 Next Sponsored
Politics As DOJ threatens WA over sanctuary laws, state officials double down on protections Washington officials are responding to a letter from the federal government last week demanding they end so-called “sanctuary jurisdiction” policies — local laws stopping police from working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Scott Greenstone
Politics Trump announces on Truth Social that he'll ban mail-in voting and voting machines President Trump says he wants to ban mail-in voting and voting machines ahead of next year's midterms. Is it legal? Ashley Lopez
National Prospective opera singers learn German at a summer language course in Vermont At Vermont's famed Middlebury Language School, opera singers perfect their German — right down to mastering the elusive umlaut. Nina Keck
National Sand tiger shark conservation efforts pay off in Boston Harbor Scientists say that the water in Boston harbor is getting cleaner, leading to an increase in the number of sand tiger sharks using the area as a nursery habitat. Craig LeMoult
Latin America Bolivian voters signal they want a sharp retreat from nearly two decades of socialism After two decades of left wing dominance, Bolivia swings to the right as their presidential election heads for a runoff vote. Carrie Kahn
National Security Former national security adviser Susan Rice weighs in on Trump-Zelenskyy talks NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Susan Rice, national security advisor to President Obama, about today's White House talks between President Trump and President Zelenskyy. Megan Lim
A new study raises concerns about whether doctors become too reliant on AI A new study finds that AI may be causing some doctors to become less adept at screening for unusual lesions in the colon. Geoff Brumfiel
National It's unclear where unhoused people are ending up as authorities clear D.C. encampments Federal authorities are clearing homeless encampments across Washington, D.C. as part of President Trump's efforts to crack down on crime and blight in the nation's capital. Where are the unhoused going? Jennifer Ludden
National The latest on Trump's meeting with Zelenskyy, other leaders President Trump meets his Ukrainian counterpart and European leaders as he tries to broker an end to Russia's war on Ukraine. Mary Louise Kelly
National A parent calls on a stranger in a moment of crisis, sparking a lifelong friendship In 1974, Surinder Gupta and his young family had just moved to New Orleans, a city where they knew no one. Karen Zamora