Rebekah Jones has said she lost her job after refusing to manipulate data to suggest Florida was ready to ease coronavirus restrictions.
(Image credit: Courtesy Rebekah Jones)
Rebekah Jones has said she lost her job after refusing to manipulate data to suggest Florida was ready to ease coronavirus restrictions.
(Image credit: Courtesy Rebekah Jones)
The scholarship program, sponsored by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, intends to support the next generation of civil rights advocates working in the South.
(Image credit: Bebeto Matthews/AP)
Ahead of soon-to-be former President Trump’s Senate trial, constitutional scholars disagree on whether the Founders intended for a president no longer in office to be tried by the Senate.
(Image credit: Alex Brandon/AP)
A witness, identified as a former romantic partner of the woman, says she intended to sell the computer to a Russian friend, who planned to then pass it to the Kremlin’s foreign intelligence service.
(Image credit: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
In Michigan, Sunday’s protest in Lansing was deemed “eclectic, but small and dull.” It wasn’t alone.
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A Twitter spokesperson said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene violated the company policy it recently used to remove thousands of QAnon-related accounts. Her account was suspended for 12 hours.
(Image credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
NPR’s Michel Martin speaks with professor Cynthia Miller-Idriss about how the Biden administration might confront the national security threat of white extremism.
NPR’s Michel Martin discusses president-elect Joe Biden’s immigration policies with two people who have extensive knowledge on the topic: Theresa Cardinal Brown and Chuck Rocha.
As federal, Capitol Hill, and D.C. authorities assess the failure to secure the U.S. Capitol, they have to turn to securing President-elect Biden’s inaugural festivities.
NPR’s Michel Martin speaks with Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) about his role as an impeachment manager.