Every weekday, NPR's best political reporters are there to explain the big news coming out of Washin
In a press conference to mark one year in office, the president touted his administration's progress
Senate Democrats are bringing new voting rights bills to the floor this week. There's just one probl
The Biden administration laid out his main priorities as the president took office: tackling the pan
The Supreme Court has struck down the Biden administration's vaccine-or-test rule for businesses wit
The idea of another American Civil War might seem outlandish. But as the country diversifies, it's g
In an interview with NPR, former President Donald Trump made it clear that he hasn't moved on from h
In a fiery speech in Atlanta Tuesday, President Biden urged the Senate to change filibuster rules in
Democrats have two major pieces of unfinished business on their to-do list. They'll try, again, to r
The justices are considering whether the federal mandates governing private employers and healthcare
In a speech from the Capitol one year after the building was attacked, President Biden warned that t
As the president and his team promise more tests are coming, the omicron variant continues to drive
Chief Tom Manger says that he is dealing with low morale and high turnover as the force attempts to
The sentiment is felt most acutely by Republicans, two-thirds of whom wrongly believe that "voter fr
Miles Parks, Juana Summers, and Ayesha Rascoe are joined by Stephen Thompson of NPR Music to discuss
Miles Parks, Kelsey Snell, and Barbara Sprunt are joined by Aisha Harris of NPR's Pop Culture Happy
Whitney Phillips, assistant professor at Syracuse University, talks to NPR's Miles Parks about consp
In the latest NPR Politics Book Club, Danielle Kurtzleben talks with journalist Sasha Issenberg whos
Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said officials knew t
Huma Abedin has worked for Hillary Clinton for a quarter-century. In a new book, Both/And, she discu