The Latest Politics The government shutdown is delaying an assistance program families use to heat homes The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, helps about 6 million U.S. households pay energy bills, buy fuel, or fix broken heaters. The shutdown has stalled funds. Sophia Schmidt Some things that didn’t suck in 2025 (really) Emily Pisacreta Politics The DOJ has been firing judges with immigrant defense backgrounds NPR's data analysis shows that the DOJ has tended to fire judges with immigrant defense backgrounds in its recent rounds of dismissals. Anusha Mathur National How would the government shutdown affect Thanksgiving travel? Here's what to know Holiday travel can already be stressful. Here's how a prolonged government shutdown might make things even harder and whether you should travel at all. Juliana Kim Business Is your electric bill going up? AI is partly to blame Across the country, demand for electricity is on the rise — and so is the price of electric power. Scott Horsley National Morning news brief Democrats' victories complicate Senate shutdown talks, SCOTUS seems skeptical of Trump's authority to impose tariffs, judges hear cases on Chicago ICE detention center and agents' use of force. A Martínez Investigations Your credit history could be costing you more to drive Credit history can play a big part in car insurance costs. NPR found the difference between a good driver with poor credit and one with excellent credit can be thousands of dollars a year. Robert Benincasa World NPR returns to Gaza for sobering post-war tour NPR's Daniel Estrin visits Gaza for the first time since the war began, touring the destruction in northern Gaza. Daniel Estrin Politics Billionaires who spent millions to block him now face working with NYC's new mayor Wall Street leaders and billionaires spent big to defeat democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani in New York City's mayoral race. Now they have to figure out how to work with him. Maria Aspan National With social safety nets cut, Americans in rural areas look for ways to cope Millions of Americans rely on federal subsidies and programs to make ends meet. But the shutdown and other cuts have them looking elsewhere for help. Here's how residents in rural New York are coping. Emily Russell Prev 746 of 1650 Next Sponsored
Politics The government shutdown is delaying an assistance program families use to heat homes The Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, or LIHEAP, helps about 6 million U.S. households pay energy bills, buy fuel, or fix broken heaters. The shutdown has stalled funds. Sophia Schmidt
Politics The DOJ has been firing judges with immigrant defense backgrounds NPR's data analysis shows that the DOJ has tended to fire judges with immigrant defense backgrounds in its recent rounds of dismissals. Anusha Mathur
National How would the government shutdown affect Thanksgiving travel? Here's what to know Holiday travel can already be stressful. Here's how a prolonged government shutdown might make things even harder and whether you should travel at all. Juliana Kim
Business Is your electric bill going up? AI is partly to blame Across the country, demand for electricity is on the rise — and so is the price of electric power. Scott Horsley
National Morning news brief Democrats' victories complicate Senate shutdown talks, SCOTUS seems skeptical of Trump's authority to impose tariffs, judges hear cases on Chicago ICE detention center and agents' use of force. A Martínez
Investigations Your credit history could be costing you more to drive Credit history can play a big part in car insurance costs. NPR found the difference between a good driver with poor credit and one with excellent credit can be thousands of dollars a year. Robert Benincasa
World NPR returns to Gaza for sobering post-war tour NPR's Daniel Estrin visits Gaza for the first time since the war began, touring the destruction in northern Gaza. Daniel Estrin
Politics Billionaires who spent millions to block him now face working with NYC's new mayor Wall Street leaders and billionaires spent big to defeat democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani in New York City's mayoral race. Now they have to figure out how to work with him. Maria Aspan
National With social safety nets cut, Americans in rural areas look for ways to cope Millions of Americans rely on federal subsidies and programs to make ends meet. But the shutdown and other cuts have them looking elsewhere for help. Here's how residents in rural New York are coping. Emily Russell