The Latest Politics Republican efforts to cut green energy credits meets resistance in the Senate A small number of Senate Republicans are pushing back on their own party's plans to cut green energy credits that were approved under former President Biden. Barbara Sprunt Politics Saturday's military parade will be the first in D.C. since 1991's Victory Celebration The last time the United States held a national military parade was in June 1991, timed to welcome returning veterans of the 100-day Persian Gulf War. Ron Elving Business The U.S. will tax tomatoes from Mexico. It could mean higher prices for consumers On July 14, the U.S. is set to impose a 21 percent anti-dumping duty on fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico, and the U.S. food industry fears that prices at grocery stores and restaurants will go up. David Martin Davies World Iran vows to enrich more uranium as tensions soar The U.N. nuclear watchdog said Iran is violating its obligations ahead of new round of talks with U.S. Jackie Northam Politics Immigration protests mark a make-or-break political moment for Newsom After months of trying to balance confrontation and collaboration, California Gov. Gavin Newsom seized a volatile moment on Tuesday to speak not just to California but to the nation. Marisa Lagos Immigration What happens next for a man at the center of Trump's immigration crackdown? Kilmar Abrego Garcia was mistakenly deported from Maryland, where he lives, to a prison in El Salvador in March. Then, last week he was flown back to the U.S. Erika Ryan Children's book 'Marianne the Maker' celebrates creativity NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with authors Kelly Corrigan and Claire Corrigan Lichty about their new book Marianne the Maker. Michelle Aslam Politics Denounced by GOP lawmakers, blue state governors defend immigration policies GOP lawmakers on Thursday blasted Democratic immigration policies as coddling violent criminals. Democrats portrayed Trump's escalating migrant sweeps as a dangerous assault on civil liberties. Brian Mann Environment A popular climate website will be hobbled, after Trump administration eliminates entire staff Climate.gov is the main source of timely climate-related information for the public. It will stop publishing new information because the Trump administration laid off everyone who worked on it. Rebecca Hersher Politics U.S. House votes to claw back $1.1 billion from public media The House of Representatives narrowly approved legislation Thursday to revoke two years of federal funding for public media outlets. David Folkenflik Prev 1358 of 1642 Next Sponsored
Politics Republican efforts to cut green energy credits meets resistance in the Senate A small number of Senate Republicans are pushing back on their own party's plans to cut green energy credits that were approved under former President Biden. Barbara Sprunt
Politics Saturday's military parade will be the first in D.C. since 1991's Victory Celebration The last time the United States held a national military parade was in June 1991, timed to welcome returning veterans of the 100-day Persian Gulf War. Ron Elving
Business The U.S. will tax tomatoes from Mexico. It could mean higher prices for consumers On July 14, the U.S. is set to impose a 21 percent anti-dumping duty on fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico, and the U.S. food industry fears that prices at grocery stores and restaurants will go up. David Martin Davies
World Iran vows to enrich more uranium as tensions soar The U.N. nuclear watchdog said Iran is violating its obligations ahead of new round of talks with U.S. Jackie Northam
Politics Immigration protests mark a make-or-break political moment for Newsom After months of trying to balance confrontation and collaboration, California Gov. Gavin Newsom seized a volatile moment on Tuesday to speak not just to California but to the nation. Marisa Lagos
Immigration What happens next for a man at the center of Trump's immigration crackdown? Kilmar Abrego Garcia was mistakenly deported from Maryland, where he lives, to a prison in El Salvador in March. Then, last week he was flown back to the U.S. Erika Ryan
Children's book 'Marianne the Maker' celebrates creativity NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with authors Kelly Corrigan and Claire Corrigan Lichty about their new book Marianne the Maker. Michelle Aslam
Politics Denounced by GOP lawmakers, blue state governors defend immigration policies GOP lawmakers on Thursday blasted Democratic immigration policies as coddling violent criminals. Democrats portrayed Trump's escalating migrant sweeps as a dangerous assault on civil liberties. Brian Mann
Environment A popular climate website will be hobbled, after Trump administration eliminates entire staff Climate.gov is the main source of timely climate-related information for the public. It will stop publishing new information because the Trump administration laid off everyone who worked on it. Rebecca Hersher
Politics U.S. House votes to claw back $1.1 billion from public media The House of Representatives narrowly approved legislation Thursday to revoke two years of federal funding for public media outlets. David Folkenflik