This year's popular-vote margin is the second-closest since 1968 and still tightening. It shows just how closely divided the ...
Teens spend much of their days on their phones — many of them during school. Here's how schools and teachers are trying to ...
President Joe Biden has pledged to spend all of the military assistance funds Congress approved this year for Ukraine before ...
Retailers are warning Americans to be vigilant about their packages and not let porch pirates steal the holiday spirit, ...
President Biden's move to pardon his son Hunter has been met with criticism — from opponents and some allies. We look at what that means for his legacy.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with historian Beverly Gage about her biography of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI's history of civilian surveillance.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Eliot Cohen of the Center for Strategic and International Studies about Ukraine's strategies preceding President-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House.
The Ryan White program serves about half a million people with HIV, and 90% of them are successfully keeping the virus at undetectable levels. But will Republicans cut funding for the effort?
The rapid advance by rebel fighters in Syria seemed to come out of nowhere. Yet this development is linked to a series of combustible events in the Middle East over the past year.
There is a historic opera house in the Amazon that is a destination for some famous singers, musicians and local fans.
The William S. Burroughs novella "Queer" has been transformed for the big screen. Daniel Craig plays a swaggering-yet-desperate expatriate living in Mexico City who longs for a younger man.
As the transition to a new administration approaches, what is the likely impact on a decidedly nervous State Department?