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   NEWS: NPR HEADLINE NEWS
NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

What you need to know about Sen. Markwayne Mullin, Trump's new pick to lead DHS
President Trump announced Thursday that Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., is his pick to replace Kristi Noem as the head of the Department of Homeland Security.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic can curb addiction risk, study finds
A large study of data from Veterans Affairs finds that people on GLP-1 drugs were less likely to develop substance abuse disorder or overdose.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

New romance novel asks whether a marriage can survive PTSD
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Cara Bastone about her latest romance novel, "No Matter What." The story starts with miscommunication, but protagonists Vin and Roz's love carries the story.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

What it feels like to be in the middle of Iran's widening war
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman and international correspondent Aya Batrawy about the war in the Middle East for the national security podcast Sources & Methods.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

What's next for the Washington National Opera
In February, D.C.'s opera company severed its relationship with the Kennedy Center. Now, they're on to their next — and less certain — chapter.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

U.S. businesses that paid emergency tariffs are now trying to recover their funds
Businesses that paid more than 100-billion dollars in tariffs are waiting to find out when they'll get their money back, after the Supreme Court ruled those import taxes were illegal.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

Trump fires Kristi Noem as DHS chief, names Sen. Markwayne Mullin to replace her
President Trump has fired his homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, and said Markwayne Mullin, a senator from Oklahoma, would replace her.

NPR Headline News
Mar 05, 2026

Can a digital tablet cut back a country's overuse of antibiotics?
Overprescribing antibiotics breeds antibiotic resistance. A new tool aims to lower a notably high rate of such prescriptions in Rwanda.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Trump faces criticism for not have evacuation plans in place before starting the war
As Iranian strikes target U.S. facilities across the Middle East, the State Department  races to evacuate thousands of Americans caught in a rapidly evolving war zone.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Iranian civilians are now fleeing the relentless bombing for neighboring Turkey
As the U.S. military broadens its strikes in Iran, traumatized Iranians are reaching the border with Turkey.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

As Trumps plans visit to China, arms package to Taiwan is delayed
Two American arms package sales to Taiwan have been delayed as President Trump prepares to visit China, raising questions about the United States' commitment to Taiwan.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Cuban Americans in South Florida are preparing for possible regime change in Cuba
Some Cuban-Americans in South Florida are eager for regime change in Cuba and hope the Trump administration will make it happen.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Six months after Gen Z-led unrest, Nepal votes in its first post-protest election
Six months after massive youth-led protests that ousted a prime minister, voters in Nepal are headed to the polls on Thursday.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

U.S. submarine sinks Iranian warship in Indian Ocean as conflict widens
The U.S. and Israel's war with Iran has expanded to the Indian Ocean, as a U.S. submarine sank an Iranian warship in international waters.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Tokyo court orders Unification Church's Japan branch to dissolve after fraud ruling
A court in Japan has ordered the Unification Church's local arm dissolved, after it bilked followers for decades. Ties between the church and Japan's ruling party became a political scandal.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

In Tacoma, a joyful treasure hunt for 'monkeyshines' has been going on for 2 decades
In Tacoma, Wash., glass artists hide beautiful glass spheres around the city each winter for residents to find. They're called "monkeyshines," because the first ones were stamped with a monkey stamp.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Senate committee advances Trump's nominee for public lands chief
President Trump's controversial nominee to lead the nation's largest public lands agency faces an initial confirmation vote Wednesday as Democrats point to his past support to sell federal lands.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

The 2026 midterm elections are officially underway. Here's what to watch
Voters went to the polls Tuesday in Texas, North Carolina and Arkansas. The results could help determine control of Congress and how people feel about Democratic and Republican party leadership.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

A split Senate votes against measure to constrain Trump's authorities in Iran
Democrats in the Senate were facing an uphill climb Wednesday in their push to restrain President Trump's ability to wage war against Iran.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

With a vote on war powers, a split Senate will weigh Trump's authorities in Iran


NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

With launch of Iran war, Trump continues pattern of breaking presidential norms
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Susan Glasser, who writes the "Letters from Trump's Washington" column in The New Yorker, about the war on Iran and how its early days differ from historical norms.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Why Minnesota Medicaid faces federal cuts
The Trump administration is holding back Medicaid funds to Minnesota, citing fraud. But experts point out Minnesota's fraud rates are far lower than the national average in Medicaid.

NPR Headline News
Mar 04, 2026

Federal workers sue over sting operations by political provocateur James O'Keefe
Federal employees have been losing their jobs after sting operations engineered by political provocateur James O'Keefe. Now some of them are fighting back in court.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Humans' pull toward alcohol may have ancient origins (according to chimp pee)
Scientists learned that wild African chimpanzees consume alcohol by eating fermented fruit, suggesting that human attraction to alcohol may have ancient evolutionary origins.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

The U.S. and Israeli war on Iran is straining relations with some U.S. allies
President Trump criticized the U.K. over its stance on the war on Iran, as he praised and welcomed Germany's chancellor to the White House.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Who will succeed Khamenei?
Iran's supreme leader is dead, but the regime endures. Iran scholar Mehrzad Boroujerdi walks through how the leadership succession could unfold.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Israel marks somber Purim under Iranian missile fire
Israeli Jews are celebrating Purim and drawing parallels with the war in Iran and the ancient biblical story.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Roger Bennett's world revolves around the World Cup - and it always has
NPR's Juana Summers talks to Roger Bennett about his new book, We Are the World (Cup), and what could be in store in this year's tournament as America hosts for the first time in 32 years.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

President Trump aimed to cut science funding. Congress has quietly restored much of it
Despite President Trump's efforts to deeply cut science funding from the federal budget in 2026, Congress quietly restored much of the funding to previous levels in recent weeks.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Pregnant migrant girls are being sent to a Texas shelter flagged as medically risky
Government officials and advocates for the children worry the goal is to concentrate them in Texas, where abortion is banned.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Trump administration reverses course on law firms, vowing to appeal
The Justice Department reversed course and took back an effort to abandon an appeal against four big law firms that challenged President Trump's punitive executive orders.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

U.S. gasoline prices set to jump with Iran war
The U.S. war with Iran is rattling energy and financial markets. Gasoline prices jumped overnight while stock prices tumbled.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Hezbollah attack on Israel drags fragile Lebanon back into war
Tensions in Lebanon are soaring as Hezbollah renews its attacks on Israel.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

As war widens in Middle East, the U.S. struggles to explain rationale for attacks
President Trump took questions publicly for the first time since striking Iran as violence continues to unfold in the region.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

For filmmaker Chloé Zhao, creative life was never linear
Director Chloé Zhao used meditation, somatic exercises and dance to inspire the cast and crew of this Oscar-nominated story about William Shakespeare's family.

NPR Headline News
Mar 03, 2026

Senators pressed Kristi Noem on the DHS shutdown and shootings. Here are key moments
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem testified amid a pause in funding to her agency and increased bipartisan scrutiny of her leadership.


NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Supreme Court wrestles with gun rights, marijuana, and the right to own a gun
The argument took place in light of the court's 2022 Bruen decision, which held that for a gun law to be constitutional, it must be analogous to a similar law at the nation's founding in the late 1700s.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Remembering Colman McCarthy, who wrote about peace at 'The Washington Post' for years
Colman McCarthy dedicated his life to peace — from training to be a monk, to teaching and writing about peace. NPR's Scott Detrow talks with his eldest son, Jim McCarthy, about his father's legacy.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

A homeless shelter and rehab center holds a marathon to get people back on their feet
Outside of Chicago, a homeless shelter and rehab center called Wayside Cross hosts a unique program to help people get back on their feet, one mile at a time.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Videos of Bill and Hillary Clinton's depositions in Epstein probe are released
Republicans on the House Oversight Committee have released videos of Bill and Hillary Clinton's depositions in the committee's ongoing investigation into the Epstein files.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

What Americans make of the U.S. attack on Iran so far
As missiles continue to fly across the Middle East, what do Americans make of the U.S. attack on Iran so far? Residents of Harrisburg, Pa., weigh in.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

IDF spokesperson gives an Israeli perspective on the campaign in Iran
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, international spokesperson for the Israeli Defense Forces, about the ongoing war with Iran.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

U.S. states take steps to guard against any potential threat from Iran
Iran has made prior attempts to launch terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, but all have been thwarted in recent years. States are bracing for a heightened threat after the war.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

A new single-pill treatment for HIV shows promising results
A new single-pill treatment for HIV has shown promising results. This is particularly useful for people who have had HIV for decades.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

The Trump administration's objectives for the mission in Iran
President Trump said the ongoing strikes on Iran are the best chance to strike at its nuclear weapons program. But that's the same program he said, not long ago, was completely obliterated.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

This woman is providing second-hand clothes that teens don't just need, but want
Donated clothes for low-income kids aren't always that cool. So a volunteer at a school district in Sonoma County curates, launders and presents clothing donations that teens actually want to wear.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Texas Senate candidates' final push ahead of Tuesday primaries
The Republican primary in the Texas Senate race is turning out to be one of the most closely watched races in the country. Its results could have consequences for Republican control of the Senate.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

After 25 years, Gorillaz band members are still cartoons but the music is very real
Gorillaz, the animated band, burst on the scene 25 years ago. NPR's Juana Summers talks to musician Damon Albarn and artist Jamie Hewlett, the band's creators, about how it has evolved.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Here are the most important developments in Iran in the past 24 hours
President Trump is offering some indication about how long the war with Iran might last.

NPR Headline News
Mar 02, 2026

Oil prices surge amid fears over Iran war
Global oil prices are in the high $70s as traffic through Strait of Hormuz comes to a halt. Some analysts have warned they could top $100 a barrel if the stoppage is prolonged.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

Looking to the history of U.S.-Iran relations to understand the future
In many ways, the conflict between Iran and the U.S. and Israel has been decades in the making. Ramtin Arablouei, host of NPR's podcast "Throughline," explains how.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

Democratic Sen. Mark Warner describes intelligence on Iran
Sen. Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia and the ranking member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, talks about his response to U.S. strikes on Iran.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

How war in Iran could impact global energy markets
The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, a major oil producer, threatens to impact oil and natural gas markets worldwide.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

Iranians in Los Angeles react to the strikes on Iran
The Iranian diaspora in Los Angeles has celebrated the Trump administration's strikes against Iran, but some have mixed feelings.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

What is the U.S. military's capacity to carry out extended strikes in Iran?
Seth Jones of the center for Strategic and International Studies talks about the U.S military's capacity to carry out extended strikes in Iran, and Iran's ability to retaliate.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

Iranian spokesperson says country has 'no other choice' but to fight back
Esmail Baghaei, spokeman for Iran's Foreign Ministry, talks about his country's response to U.S. and Israeli airstrikes.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales faces primary challenge amid allegations of affair
Caught in controversy, Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales faces a tough primary challenge as his voters weigh whether to back him again in Tuesday's primary.

NPR Headline News
Mar 01, 2026

U.S.-Israeli war with Iran continues as 3 American troops are killed
Three U.S. service members have been killed in ongoing operations in the Middle East, as U.S. and Israeli strikes continue to hit Iran and Iran responds with waves of missiles and drones across the region.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

How some Iranians reacted to attacks on their country
What are people in Iran saying about today's attacks by the U.S. and Israel? We hear from people on the ground who experienced the event as it unfolded.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

House Dem. Leader Jeffries responds to air strikes on Iran by U.S. and Israel
NPR's Emily Kwong speaks to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), who is still calling for a vote on a war powers resolution following a wave of U.S.- and Israel-led airstrikes on Iran.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

Retired Vice Admiral gives military perspective on US-Israel attacks on Iran
Robert Harward is a former U.S. Navy Seal who grew up in Iran and led operations in the region. He speaks with host Mary Louise Kelly about this moment and what it means.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

Marco Rubio is pressing for change in Cuba. Will it work?
Secretary of State Marco Rubio walks a diplomatic tightrope in the Caribbean, pressing for change in Cuba while regional leaders warn of a deepening humanitarian and migration crisis.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

What's next after Iran attack? A former negotiator weighs in.
What will negotiations look like in the weeks after the U.S. and Israel's strikes on Iran? Robert Malley -- who was a lead negotiator on the 2015 Iran Nuclear deal -- offers some insight.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

White House confirms death of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been killed. He was 86 years old. Khamenei was unwavering in his steadfast antipathy to the US and Israel.

NPR Headline News
Feb 28, 2026

President Trump says Iran's Supreme Leader is dead. What happens now?
The United States and Israel launched military strikes against Iran overnight. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly discusses the attacks with NPR's Daniel Estrin and Greg Myre.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

New music Friday: Mitski's new album, 'Nothing's About to Happen to Me'
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Raina Douris, host of World Cafe at member station WXPN, about Mitski's new album, Nothing's About to Happen to Me.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Populism is dominating politics right now
Republicans and Democrats are embracing their own takes on populism to respond to shifting politics in the country.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Australia says no to returning citizens with alleged ISIS ties from Syria
In Australia, the attempted return of people with alleged links to the Islamic State has raised questions about who bears responsibility for nationals who traveled overseas to join the Islamic State.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Why are Afghanistan and Pakistan fighting again?
Pakistan struck several sites in Afghanistan early Friday in what it calls an "open war." We look at what's driving the renewed fighting.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Author Jennette McCurdy talks about her experience with eating disorder recovery
On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Author Jennette McCurdy talks about her experience with eating disorder recovery.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

What happens to CNN if Paramount buys Warner Bros. Discovery?
The deal struck by Paramount to acquire CNN's parent company leaves a series of questions over the cable TV news giant. Journalists there are girding for what could be next if the deal is approved.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Amid fraud concerns, Trump is rolling back a Biden rule aimed at stabilizing child care
In an effort to stabilize child care in America, the Biden administration changed how child care subsidies are paid. The Trump administration says the change invited fraud and is preparing a reversal.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Colorado is making it a little easier to prove you exist
A woman born in Colorado has never had a birth certificate; her parents rejected such things. She's never gone to school, had a job or been on a plane. Revised rules mean she'll soon officially exist.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Hilary Duff explores the highs and lows of a 'sturdy' home life on new album
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Hilary Duff about her new album. It's called Luck... Or Something, and is her first release in more than 10 years.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Local 'All Things Considered' host Alex Chrichton signs off after 42 years at WXXI
WXXI News' Alex Crichton is retiring Friday, after 42 years at the station and hosting All Things Considered in Rochester, N.Y.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Music released by Black artists in 2016 both shaped and reflected culture
2016 was a complex year for Black music, between the last year of the Obama presidency, and the numerous high-profile deaths of Black people at the hands of police.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Loyalty to Trump matters in GOP Senate primary in North Carolina
Many GOP primary voters in North Carolina say they want a candidate who will support the president after Sen. Thom Tillis chose not to seek reelection following disagreements with President Trump.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

A journalist early to the Jeffrey Epstein story reflects on the latest news
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with journalist Tina Brown, one of the first to report about Jeffrey Epstein's sexual abuse, about the fallout of the Epstein files.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

Why is MAHA mad at Trump?
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Helena Bottemiller Evich, founder and editor in chief of Food Fix, about tensions between the MAHA movement and President Trump over glyphosate.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

How Oman mediates in U.S.-Iran talks
By staying out of wars, keeping quiet and building trust, Oman plays a historic role as mediator in the U.S.-Iran talks.

NPR Headline News
Feb 27, 2026

President Trump bans Anthropic from use in government systems
Trump announced that Federal agencies would be cease using Anthropic's tools within six months.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

In reversal, Warner Bros. jilts Netflix for Paramount
Warner Bros. says Paramount's sweetened bid to buy the whole company is "superior" to an $83 billion deal it struck with Netflix for just its streaming services, studios, and intellectual property.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Iowa State's basketball star Audi Cooks is breaking records and topping score charts
She's from Iowa. She's a star female college basketball player. Her name is Audi Crooks. The junior at Iowa State University is a center who is known for her dominance on the court.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

The mayor of Buffalo, N.Y., blames ICE for the death of nearly blind refugee
The mayor of Buffalo, New York, is blaming ICE for the death of a man who was released from their custody. The man was blind and did not speak English. He was found dead days after his release.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

As Trump dismantles asylum programs, Russians and Ukrainians fear for future
The Trump administration has been sending asylum seekers from Ukraine and Russia back to a warzone. One family in Minnesota says they fear for their lives.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Crowded Democratic field could give GOP an opening in California governor's race
In California, the two candidates with the most votes in the primary advance to the general election, regardless of party. That's an issue for Democrats who have nine major candidates for governor.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

How the Epstein file saga is fueling extremist conspiracies
Researchers of online extremism say lack of public accountability in relation to the release of the latest Epstein files has bred a worrying mixture of cynicism and nihilism in some online spaces.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Nvidia earnings, AI fan-fic, and the week in markets
Wall Street's AI worries are getting stranger. Chip company Nvidia reported record-breaking earnings on Wednesday, but tech investors are still panicking.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Bill Callahan's life was 'derailed' by having kids. Songwriting got him back on track
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with the singer-songwriter Bill Callahan about his new album My Days of 58.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Kyiv's elderly stay at home despite Russian attacks and power cuts
Older residents of Kyiv's many high-rises are learning to live with intermittent heat and electricity, cut off by Russian attacks.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Jesse Jackson lies in repose
The official memorials for Jesse Jackson began this week. The late civil rights leader is lying in repose at his Rainbow-Push Coalition headquarters in Chicago Thursday and Friday.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

'Radio Diaries': Orson Welles and the Blind Soldier
In 1946, Orson Welles vowed to solve a shocking crime on his radio show on ABC: the beating of a Black soldier who was returning from service after Word War 2. Radio Diaries recalls the story.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Sen. Tim Kaine on why he's pursuing a war powers resolution — again
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Sen. Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, about his continued efforts to limit President Trump's ability to use military force through war powers resolutions.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

What happens next with Iran?
Indirect talks between the U.S. and Iran have wrapped, and a deal was not reached on Tehran's nuclear program. NPR's weekly national security podcast Sources & Methods explores what's next.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Taylor Swift is back on top of the charts with 'Opalite'
NPR Music's Isabella Gomez Sarmiento reports on the artists making waves on the pop charts. Taylor Swift is now back at number one on the Hot 100. But Bad Bunny hasn't gone anywhere.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

NASA lost a lunar spacecraft one day after launch. A new report details what went wrong
Why did a $72 million mission to study water on the moon fail so soon after launch? A new NASA report has the answer.

NPR Headline News
Feb 26, 2026

Why it's a bit surprising that the U.S. is attending a key global flu meeting
After the U.S. withdrew from the World Health Organization, it wasn't clear they would participate in this WHO-led meeting to determine the recipe for the next flu vaccine.

NPR Headline News
Feb 25, 2026

What to know about Sen. Katie Britt, who's negotiating changes to how ICE operates
Alabama Sen. Katie Britt came to national prominence in 2024 with an image as a firebrand on the right but has developed a reputation as a bipartisan deal maker in the Senate.

NPR Headline News
Feb 25, 2026

The market for tariff refunds
Well before the Supreme Court struck down many of President Trump's tariffs, Wall Street had been literally betting on it. Firms created a market to sell companies' claims on refunds, if they happen.

NPR Headline News
Feb 25, 2026

'Bridgerton' is back: Head downstairs to meet this season's love interest
Bridgerton continues to enthrall fans. This season, Yerin Ha stars as Sophie Baek in a Cinderella-coded story.

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