Trump Says 'More White People' Killed By Police Violence Than Blacks In an interview with CBS News, the president also said, "I know people who like the Confederate flag, and they're not thinking of slavery." Domenico Montanaro
King County Executive on oversight of Sheriff's office Dow Constantine talks to Marcie Sillman about the Sheriff's office, Covid-19 cases in the county, and more bad news for the West Seattle bridge. Alison Bruzek
ICE Agrees To Rescind Policy Barring Foreign Students From Online Study In the U.S. A federal judge announced on Tuesday that ICE has reached an agreement with schools that sued it over the rule change. The directive will now be rescinded nationwide. Rachel Treisman
A Look At Betsy DeVos' Role During The Coronavirus Pandemic Pandemic has put Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in the spotlight — she uses her power to promote private school interests but has also had to backtrack on her support of virtual schooling. Cory Turner
Watch Live: President Trump To Speak At White House Tuesday The president will address media in the Rose Garden of the White House at 5 p.m. ET amid mounting concerns raised by the public and health officials about his administration's coronavirus response. Alana Wise
Biden Outlines $2 Trillion Climate Plan The former vice president's initiative calls to chart the United States on "an irreversible path" to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. Alana Wise
Biden Goes Up With His 1st Ad In Texas, Where Polls Show A Close Race As polls show a tightening presidential race in traditionally Republican Texas, presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden is launching his first general election ad in the state. Asma Khalid
Federal Government Executes 1st Prisoner In 17 Years After Overnight Court Rulings Daniel Lee, 47, was put to death on Tuesday morning in the federal death chamber in the first federal execution since 2003. Other inmates are scheduled for death this week. Carrie Johnson
Red Ink Overflowing: In June, U.S. Borrowed A Typical Year's Worth The federal deficit is ballooning as the government tries to cushion the blow from the coronavirus pandemic. June's shortfall totals $864 billion — more than in an entire typical year. Scott Horsley
NPR Analysis: Thousands Of Mail-In Ballots Rejected For Arriving Too Late A new NPR analysis has found that at least 65,000 mail-in ballots have been rejected during primaries held so far this year, because they arrived too late — often through no fault of the voter. Pam Fessler