The Latest National Minnesota leaders defend the Somali community after a blistering attack by Trump After blistering attacks by President Trump on the Somali community in Minnesota, local leaders in Minneapolis and St. Paul are defending Somali-Americans. Matt Sepic Health CDC's vaccine advisers meet to question long-used vaccines Advisers to the Centers for Disease Control Prevention will scrutinize the childhood vaccine schedule and may start to upend it. Pien Huang Politics Pentagon watchdog finds Hegseth risked the safety of U.S. forces with use of Signal A forthcoming inspector general report finds that had intel shared by Hegseth been intercepted by an adversary, it would have endangered servicemembers, according to a source who viewed the findings. Tom Bowman Health Trump uses 'Third World' in a social media post. What's up with that term? TK Food Check your cheese: Shredded and grated varieties are recalled in Washington, nationwide The FDA is urging customers to toss certain brands of grated Pecorino Romano; at the same time, it escalated an existing recall of numerous shredded cheeses. Rachel Treisman Law & Courts Trump administration sues WA for not sharing voter data The Department of Justice on Tuesday sued Washington’s secretary of state over his refusal to provide personal information contained in the state’s voter rolls. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard Politics WA Gov. Bob Ferguson says he’s drafting a cuts-only budget Gov. Bob Ferguson warned Tuesday that the budget proposal he’ll release this month will rely solely on spending cuts and not higher taxes to overcome what he says is a multi-billion dollar shortfall. Jerry Cornfield/Washington State Standard National Did the Trump administration commit a war crime in its attack on a Venezuelan boat? Washington Post reporter Alex Horton talks about the Sept. 2 U.S. military strike on a boat with alleged "narco terrorists," in which a second strike was ordered to kill two survivors in the water. Terry Gross Health How centenarians are staying healthy A new survey of centenarians finds a growing proportion of those living to 100 have prioritized healthy habits. Health The challenge of retaining young public health workers A researcher at Columbia University has been pondering a question: How can we keep younger public health workers on the job? Prev 37 of 1654 Next Sponsored
National Minnesota leaders defend the Somali community after a blistering attack by Trump After blistering attacks by President Trump on the Somali community in Minnesota, local leaders in Minneapolis and St. Paul are defending Somali-Americans. Matt Sepic
Health CDC's vaccine advisers meet to question long-used vaccines Advisers to the Centers for Disease Control Prevention will scrutinize the childhood vaccine schedule and may start to upend it. Pien Huang
Politics Pentagon watchdog finds Hegseth risked the safety of U.S. forces with use of Signal A forthcoming inspector general report finds that had intel shared by Hegseth been intercepted by an adversary, it would have endangered servicemembers, according to a source who viewed the findings. Tom Bowman
Food Check your cheese: Shredded and grated varieties are recalled in Washington, nationwide The FDA is urging customers to toss certain brands of grated Pecorino Romano; at the same time, it escalated an existing recall of numerous shredded cheeses. Rachel Treisman
Law & Courts Trump administration sues WA for not sharing voter data The Department of Justice on Tuesday sued Washington’s secretary of state over his refusal to provide personal information contained in the state’s voter rolls. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard
Politics WA Gov. Bob Ferguson says he’s drafting a cuts-only budget Gov. Bob Ferguson warned Tuesday that the budget proposal he’ll release this month will rely solely on spending cuts and not higher taxes to overcome what he says is a multi-billion dollar shortfall. Jerry Cornfield/Washington State Standard
National Did the Trump administration commit a war crime in its attack on a Venezuelan boat? Washington Post reporter Alex Horton talks about the Sept. 2 U.S. military strike on a boat with alleged "narco terrorists," in which a second strike was ordered to kill two survivors in the water. Terry Gross
Health How centenarians are staying healthy A new survey of centenarians finds a growing proportion of those living to 100 have prioritized healthy habits.
Health The challenge of retaining young public health workers A researcher at Columbia University has been pondering a question: How can we keep younger public health workers on the job?