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House Republicans released a short-term spending bill to fund the government until late November but Democrats are calling for further changes.
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NPR wants to hear from listeners whose lives have changed due to an increase in ICE operations, throughout the country.
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Herb Alpert got his start playing trumpet in L.A.'s public schools. He wants to help make that "magic" possible for students.
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Some 154 million people in the United States get health care through their employer — and for many, their costs are about to go way up.
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Four prosecutors who worked on Capitol riot cases have found a way to continue public service after leaving the Justice Department. They're all colleagues again.
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CBS' new owner, David Ellison, has taken concrete steps to address the concerns of the news division's sharpest critics — particularly President Trump and his allies.
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How much security at a campus event is enough? Campus police are mulling the question.
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Though the FDA narrowed criteria for the shots, many people still want them, to avoid illness and protect vulnerable family members. Some are turned down at the pharmacy or have to jump through hoops.
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The firing of Kevin Struthers is the latest in a line of dismissals and resignations at the D.C. arts behemoth.
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The change will allow certain nominees to be confirmed in groups rather than by individual vote. It follows months of GOP complaints that Democrats were dragging out the confirmation process.
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NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., about the legacy of 9/11, how it's shaped the U.S. intelligence community and how the Trump administration is changing things.
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Kirk's death has forced his legions of young conservative followers to confront the question of how to sustain the movement that he built.