Tuesday Evening Headlines Mayor Harrell announces new climate measures, Pike Place Market goes temporarily car-free, and the Seattle Kraken are looking for a new head coach, again. It’s our daily roundup of top stories from the KUOW newsroom, with host Paige Browning. Paige Browning
What's at stake in the birthright citizenship Supreme Court case The Supreme Court will soon decide whether a 125 year old constitutional right to citizenship for people born in the United States to non-citizen parents is guaranteed. Libby Denkmann
Congressman Adam Smith on the latest Signal chat scandal out of the Pentagon Rep. Adam Smith of Washington's 9th Congressional District joins Soundside to talk about the latest Signal chat scandal out of the Pentagon. Libby Denkmann
President Trump says he has 'no intention' to fire Federal Reserve's Jerome Powell President Trump said Tuesday he had "no intention" of firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, ending days of speculation about the independence of the central bank that had roiled the financial markets. Washington Desk / NPR staff
Judge blocks Trump administration plans to dismantle Voice of America A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction stopping the Trump administration from dismantling Voice of America, the federally funded overseas news outlet. Emily Feng
Supreme Court leans toward parents who object to LGBTQ books in public schools At the center of the case is the school system in Montgomery County, Md., the most religiously diverse county in the U.S., with 160,000 students of almost all faiths. Nina Totenberg
Inside Harvard's lawsuit against the Trump administration Harvard's lawsuit questions how freezing research funds will further the administration's goal of eliminating antisemitism on campus. Elissa Nadworny
Hegseth is in hot water again over sharing attack plans. But this time it may be worse Military lawyers question Pentagon head Pete Hegseth's defense that he didn't share anything revealing in Signal chat group with his wife and brother. Tom Bowman
Marco Rubio announces overhaul of U.S. State Department Secretary of State Marco Rubio has unveiled his plan to streamline a department that he says has become too bloated over the years. He's cutting 132 offices and about 700 jobs at the state department Michele Kelemen
Jury finds 'The New York Times' did not libel former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin A jury concluded that The New York Times did not libel former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who had argued that an error in a 2017 Times editorial damaged her reputation. The Associated Press