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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What to know about Mark Robinson, the Republican nominee for North Carolina governor
Republicans in North Carolina voted to nominate Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson for governor. He has come under fire for his history of anti-gay and anti-Semitic remarks.
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New Jersey passed a law that will have insurance companies approving meds faster
Increasingly, insurance companies want doctors to get an ok for treatments or drugs ahead of time. It's called "prior authorization" and it can mean troublesome delays for patients.
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A look at the security legislation that Hong Kong's government is working to pass
Hong Kong looks set to pass sweeping additional security legislation decades in the making. Critics say the legislation is too broad and gives even more power to Hong Kong's government.
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Signs of growing friction between U.S. President Biden and Israel's Netanyahu
President Biden is warning Israel against an invasion of the Gaza town where displaced Palestinians are living in tents. Israel's leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, says the operation is still in the works.
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Special counsel Hur testifies about his Biden documents investigation
Special counsel Robert Hur testified before a House committee on Biden's handling of classified documents.
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Inflation was higher than expected in February
Inflation was a little hotter than expected in February, for the second month in a row. Rent and gasoline drove much of the monthly increase. Food prices were flat.
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Court overturns large part of Florida's so-called 'don't say gay' law
A settlement has been reached that rolls back part of Florida's so-called "don't say gay" law, which bans instruction on gender identity.
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Jim Sciutto on if the next world war is preventable
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with CNN chief national security analyst Jim Sciutto about his new book The Return of Great Powers and how close we are to the precipice of a new global order.
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World Food Program's Jean-Martin Bauer on Haiti's growing starvation
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with World Food Program director Jean-Martin Bauer on the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Haiti as violence has displaced hundreds of thousands of people.
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With a few days likely left in the Iditarod, a frontrunner gets a time penalty
With days likely left in the sled dog race, one of the frontrunners has been given a 2-hour time penalty after officials deemed he didn't sufficiently gut a moose that got tangled with his dog team.
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Biden and Trump made general election pitches in Georgia
President Biden and former President Donald Trump traveled to Georgia over the weekend to make their first general election pitches in a key state that finishes voting on Tuesday.
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Probe finds that the largest wildfire in Texas history was 'ignited by power lines'
The U.S. faces a dangerous combination of aging utility infrastructure and rising wildfire risk because of global warming. Experts say many utilities aren't employing solutions to reduce the threat.