Morning Edition
Every weekday for over three decades, Morning Edition has taken listeners around the country and the world with two hours of multi-faceted stories and commentaries that inform, challenge and occasionally amuse.
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Episodes
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FBI finds information about a foreign country's nuclear program in Mar-a-Lago search
NPR's A Martinez talks to former CIA officer David Priess about reports that some of America's most closely guarded secrets were among documents seized from Donald Trump's Florida estate.
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Meet the 7-year-old boy who is South Dakota's corn-bassador
Nicknamed the "Corn Kid," Tariq, who lives in New York, has been declared South Dakota's Official Corn-bassador after his passion for the vegetable went viral on TikTok and YouTube.
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California dockworkers are worried about losing their good-paying jobs to robots
West Coast dockworkers and the shipping industry are locked in contract negotiations. Dockworkers are fighting to keep high paying jobs from being automated.
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Texas State Police downplay their role in Uvalde shooting failures, report says
A ProPublica-Texas Tribune report finds that Texas state law enforcers sought to shift blame to local law enforcement for the Uvalde school shooting in May that killed 19 children and two teachers.
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The 2nd suspect in Canada's mass stabbing case dies in custody, police say
A man suspected of killing ten people and injuring more than a dozen last weekend died after he was taken into custody in Sasketchewan, Canada.
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Remembering longtime NPR foreign correspondent Anne Garrels who died at 71
NPR's Rachel Martin speaks with Columbia Journalism School Professor Emerita Ann Cooper about her friend, former NPR foreign correspondent Anne Garrels.
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The U.N. calls for an end to the fighting around a nuclear facility in Ukraine
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield about the fighting around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, and the next steps in order to try to secure the plant.
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The IAEA says it's worried about the stability of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant
The U.N.'s nuclear watchdog says it's concerned about the stability of the plant in Ukraine under Russian control. The IAEA called for a security protection zone to prevent a nuclear accident.
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Running water is restored to Jackson but when will the boil order be lifted?
The water in Jackson, Miss., is still not safe to drink. NPR's A Martinez talks to Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba about the the city's water infrastructure which is deficient.
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The probe into Trump's seized documents raises executive privilege questions
NPR's A Martinez talks to Yeshiva University professor of law Jessica Roth, who analyzes a federal judge's decision to grant former President Donald Trump's request for a special master.
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A judge grants Trump's special master request to review Mar-a-Lago materials
A federal judge ruled in favor of former President Trump on Monday, ordering an independent review of materials seized by the FBI at Trump's Florida home. It's a temporary setback for investigators.
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Will South Koreans get a say in whether a boy band is exempt from military service?
Members of BTS already received a special deferment. Instead of serving the mandatory 18 months by the time they turn 28, they can wait until they're 30. The two oldest members are now 29.