All Things Considered
Hear KUOW and NPR award-winning hosts and reporters from around the globe present some of the nation's best reporting of the day's events, interviews, analysis and reviews.
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Episodes
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Gaza's police are now back on the streets in wake of ceasefire
Gaza's police were hit hard by Israel in the war against Hamas, but the force is back providing law and order after months of looting and chaos.
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LGBTQ rights groups sue over Trump effort to block funding for gender-affirming care
President Trump's executive order to ban gender affirming care for young people had immediate effects. Clinics canceled appointments and patients are in limbo. Now, there's a lawsuit.
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Cheesesteaks, green mohawks and community: Anatomy of a Philadelphia Eagles tailgate
There's nothing quite like a football tailgate, where fans turn parking lots into open-air living rooms and serve food to strangers who share the same passion for the hometown team.
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Judge pushes back deadline for federal employees to accept Trump's resignation offer
A federal judge in Massachusetts paused the Trump administration's deferred resignation offer until Monday, when he will hear the merits of the case.
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Deported migrants are already landing at Guantanamo Bay as part of Trump's plan
Venezuelan migrants sent to Guantanamo Bay are being held in a military prison that has housed al-Qaeda members.
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Justice Department sues Chicago and Illinois over 'sanctuary' laws
The federal lawsuit accuses those jurisdictions of "making it more difficult for, and deliberately impeding, federal immigration officers' ability to carry out their responsibilities."
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Michigan Arab-American voters weigh in on Trump Gaza plan
Arab American voters in Michigan helped President Trump win the state during the presidential election. A look at how voters in Michigan feel now about Trump's idea to take over Gaza
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Trump fired EEOC commissioner Jocelyn Samuels. She isn't going quietly
Former EEOC commissioner Jocelyn Samuels was Trump's pick to fill a Democratic seat in 2020. She was fired at the start of his new administration in what she calls an attempt to eviscerate the agency.
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UCLA women's basketball team is only remaining undefeated squad
UCLA has one of the most storied programs in college basketball. But for all of its success on the men's side, the women's team has won only one national championship. This year they're undefeated.
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Trump signs order to ban trans women from sports in schools that get federal funding
President Trump signed an executive order Wednesday aimed at preventing transgender athletes from competing in women's sports. It's the latest in a series of actions focused on "gender ideology."
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Irish poet Padraig o Tuama's new anthology focuses on pleasure and pain of connection
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Irish poet Pádraig Ó Tuama about a new poetry anthology he edited called "44 Poems on Being with Each Other" and his own collection called "Kitchen Hymns."
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An experimental spinal treatment may help people with a paralyzing genetic disorder
Electrical stimulation of the spinal cord strengthened the muscles of three people with spinal muscular atrophy, a rare motor neuron disease.