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Justice Department accuses 6 major landlords of keeping rents high
The lawsuit arrives as U.S. renters continue to struggle. The latest figures show that half of American renters spent more than 30% of their income on rent and utilities in 2022, an all-time high.
NPR Politics Special: What We Learned From The Jan. 6 Hearings
How did the attack on the U.S. Capitol come together? What did President Trump know and why did he take so long to respond? And who will be held accountable?
Lawmakers have pre-filed over 75 bills for upcoming legislative session
Interstate medical and mental health licensing compacts and AI regulation are among legislators' top priorities.
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•
2:18
What the subpoena for the Secret Service's erased texts means for the Jan. 6 probe
The House committee subpoenaed the Secret Service for text messages agents reportedly deleted, as the panel probes President Donald Trump's actions at the time of the deadly Capitol attack.
Bill Russell's No. 6 is being retired across the NBA, a first for the league
The number worn by the 11-time champion, civil rights activist and Hall of Fame player and coach is being permanently retired by all 30 teams. Russell died July 31 at age 88.
Here's every word from the fifth Jan. 6 committee hearing on its investigation
Read the full transcript from the June 23 hearing from the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.
6 immigrants reflect on their complicated relationships with the 4th of July
We asked people who immigrated to the United States what the day meant to them — and how their feelings about the holiday have changed since they first arrived.
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•
5:31
6 key facts about abortion laws and the 2024 election
State laws on abortion keep changing – with new bans taking effect in some places while new protections are enacted in others. And abortion will be on the ballot in at least four states.
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•
6:58
5 key questions the Jan. 6 committee will tackle in its hearings
It's been nearly a year of gathering information — via depositions, subpoenas, hearings, document dumps and court challenges — for the House select committee investigating the siege of the Capitol.
Trump DOJ hired lawyer who compared Jan. 6 prosecutions to the Holocaust
Before joining the Justice Department this year, attorney Jonathan Gross said Jan. 6 prosecutors were "evil people. They will put you on a cattle car to Auschwitz without batting an eye."
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4:25
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