Episodes
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“November is coming,” Ana Maria Archila said after Brett Kavanaugh was voted onto the nation’s highest court.
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Missing episodes?
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Political campaigns and parties say they’re sending many more texts this year than in past elections as part of a search for alternatives to social media.
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This November, Democrats are going to have to overcome an inherent disadvantage in many states due to gerrymandering.
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French leader Emmanuel Macron is preparing broad changes within his government to jump start his presidency.
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This week, Kansas City mayoral candidate and veteran Jason Kander announced he was quitting the race to face his PTSD.
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Chinese buyers stop American crude imports as countries jostle on tariffs.
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Social media and the rhetoric of President Donald Trump have upended the old world order in dangerous ways.
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Dr. Denis Mukwege and Nadia Murad have won the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to end sexual violence.
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During many kinds of emergencies, tech know-how is critical.
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The algorithms that govern how we find information online are once again in the news - but you have to squint to find them.
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Forty-four House Republicans are heading for the exits, and almost half of their seats have become top Democratic targets.
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Sweden has long been one of the world’s most tolerant countries. In Sunday’s election, it demonstrated that no country is immune from the anti-immigrant, far-right backlash.
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A new study of newspapers’ coverage of school shootings finds that images of suspects outnumber images of victims 16 to 1.
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Obama urged supporters here to not only back Cordray but to also rally voters to back the nominee regardless of party.
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Barack Obama delivered a widely covered speech about our current president and suggested that Donald Trump didn’t necessarily deserve much credit for the healthy economy.
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For many young Hispanics, navigating their parents' culture in the U.S. has shaped their views on what it means to be American.
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Cities are now serving as a unique testbed for responses to climate change.
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The problem is one that many moms and dads of young kids face all the time.
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More than 1,000 Google employees, six U.S. senators and at least 14 human rights groups have written to the company expressing concern about its China ambitions.
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