The Latest National The latest updates on the Minneapolis ICE shooting The scene in Minneapolis in the days after an ICE agent fatally shot a 37-year-old mother. Sergio Martínez-Beltrán Politics Democratic-led states sue Trump over freezing $10 billion in welfare funding Following fraud investigations in Minnesota, five Democratic-led states are suing the Trump administration after it said it's freezing funding intended to help low-income families and children. Mawa Iqbal Economy How are U.S. oil companies responding to Trump's plans for Venezuela? President Trump met with oil executives on Friday. Trump wants major investments in Venezuela. He announced a near-term plan to control Venezuelan oil sales. Scott Simon Iran enforces a nationwide internet blackout amid escalating anti-government protests Tehran has imposed a nationwide internet blackout as protests continue to spread across Iran. Scott Simon Politics The Trump administration fired nearly 100 immigration judges in 2025. What's next? An immigration court in San Francisco is the latest to close its doors, NPR has learned, as the Trump administration seeks to remake the system that offers immigrants due process. Scott Simon Politics Week in Politics: ICE Shooting in Minnesota; Trump threats and surprises President Trump seems to have settled on a provocative playbook for his second go-around in the White House. Scott Simon National A mother and daughter respond to the latest tragedy in Minneapolis NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Heather and Hattie Anderson, a mother and daughter from Minneapolis, about their community, immigration enforcement operations and protests. Scott Simon World A human rights expert explains the status of human rights under the Maduro regime NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Ofelia Riquezes, human rights lawyer and professor at Florida International University, about the status of human rights under the Maduro regime in Venezuela. Scott Simon Sports Saturday Sports: NFL playoffs; College Football Playoff National Championship NPR's Scott Simon and sportswriter Howard Bryant discuss the College Football Playoff and more. Scott Simon Arts & Life 2026 looks ominous for media, from Hollywood to journalism Critic at large Eric Deggans says that in 2026, audiences have more power than they realize to determine the future of news and entertainment. Eric Deggans Prev 156 of 1637 Next Sponsored
National The latest updates on the Minneapolis ICE shooting The scene in Minneapolis in the days after an ICE agent fatally shot a 37-year-old mother. Sergio Martínez-Beltrán
Politics Democratic-led states sue Trump over freezing $10 billion in welfare funding Following fraud investigations in Minnesota, five Democratic-led states are suing the Trump administration after it said it's freezing funding intended to help low-income families and children. Mawa Iqbal
Economy How are U.S. oil companies responding to Trump's plans for Venezuela? President Trump met with oil executives on Friday. Trump wants major investments in Venezuela. He announced a near-term plan to control Venezuelan oil sales. Scott Simon
Iran enforces a nationwide internet blackout amid escalating anti-government protests Tehran has imposed a nationwide internet blackout as protests continue to spread across Iran. Scott Simon
Politics The Trump administration fired nearly 100 immigration judges in 2025. What's next? An immigration court in San Francisco is the latest to close its doors, NPR has learned, as the Trump administration seeks to remake the system that offers immigrants due process. Scott Simon
Politics Week in Politics: ICE Shooting in Minnesota; Trump threats and surprises President Trump seems to have settled on a provocative playbook for his second go-around in the White House. Scott Simon
National A mother and daughter respond to the latest tragedy in Minneapolis NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Heather and Hattie Anderson, a mother and daughter from Minneapolis, about their community, immigration enforcement operations and protests. Scott Simon
World A human rights expert explains the status of human rights under the Maduro regime NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Ofelia Riquezes, human rights lawyer and professor at Florida International University, about the status of human rights under the Maduro regime in Venezuela. Scott Simon
Sports Saturday Sports: NFL playoffs; College Football Playoff National Championship NPR's Scott Simon and sportswriter Howard Bryant discuss the College Football Playoff and more. Scott Simon
Arts & Life 2026 looks ominous for media, from Hollywood to journalism Critic at large Eric Deggans says that in 2026, audiences have more power than they realize to determine the future of news and entertainment. Eric Deggans