News

Civil rights groups, labor organizations and politicians praised Alexis Herman as a "trailblazer" who fought for the rights ...
The toddler, a U.S. citizen, was apparently sent to Honduras with her mother and 11-year-old sister, even as a federal judge ...
Pope Francis often spoke with great sympathy for immigrants and refugees. NPR's Scott Simon reminds us that the Pope's father ...
Washington found itself at the leading edge of a once-in-a-century pandemic.  The rapid spread of COVID, and the lockdowns that followed, shaped our communities, our health and our work for years to ...
On Thursday, three federal judges in Maryland, New Hampshire and Washington, D.C., said Trump's anti-DEI efforts were on ...
Social Security employees are feeling "overwhelmed" and wait times for phone services are up as workforce cuts from the Trump ...
In the last decade, money spent lobbying in Washington rose more steadily and dramatically than other U.S. state that tracks ...
Food research at Washington State University is being hit by federal funding cuts. That includes the WSU Breadlab in ...
Host Bill Radke discusses the week’s news with Cascade PBS’s Maleeha Syed, Earth Finance’s Reuven Carlyle, and columnist Bill Bryant.
Commerce Department employees caught up in a legal battle over their mass firings are now learning that their health care ...
Makers of our food and home essentials, including Pepsi and Procter & Gamble, are cutting their financial forecasts for the ...
David Cronenberg's thriller centers on an unusual technology that allows people to watch their loved ones decompose in real time. The Shrouds is both deeply morbid and disarmingly funny.