NPR’s Miles Parks and Odette Yousef explain what law enforcement and elections officials are preparing for.
Email us at [email protected].
Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
NPR’s Miles Parks and Odette Yousef explain what law enforcement and elections officials are preparing for.
Email us at [email protected].
A 2021 investigation by The Guardian revealed that more than 6,500 migrant laborers died during the construction of World Cup facilities and infrastructure.
There are also questions about how LGBTQ soccer fans and players may be treated in Qatar, where homosexuality is illegal.
We hear from one man who is speaking out about the lack of LGBTQ rights in his home country. And we speak with Minky Worden of Human Rights Watch, one of the groups that has been putting pressure on Qatar ahead of the World Cup.
Email us at [email protected].
NPR’s Franco Ordoñez reports that Ukrainian soldiers are preparing for what could be their toughest battle yet: the fight for the southern city of Kherson.
Meanwhile, supply chain issues are complicating the flow of Western military aid to Ukraine. We hear about that from NPR Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman and NPR global economics correspondent Stacey Vanek Smith.
Email us at [email protected].
For Democrats, who are hoping to pick up a US Senate seat in Wisconsin, a key factor will be turnout among young voters. NPR’s Juana Summers talked to three Wisconsin voters under the age of 30 to find out what issues are driving them to the polls this year.
Email us at [email protected].
The same day, a federal Judge in Phoenix refused to stop a group from patrolling outdoor ballot boxes. Members of the group have been showing up heavily armed, often masked and wearing tactical vests. Critics say this is intimidating voters. The judge said that barring the group would violate their constitutional rights.
From election deniers who continue to insist without evidence that the 2020 election was stolen, to a flood of recent state laws that make voting more difficult, for many Americans, voting feels much more fraught. But volunteers are stepping up across the country to make sure that all voters feel safe casting their ballot.
Host Michel Martin talks to the Reverend Barbara Williams-Skinner of Faiths United to Save Democracy and TurnOut Sunday and Emily Eby, Senior Election Protection Attorney at Texas Civil Rights Project.
The outcome of the presidential runoff vote will of course shape the future of Brazil’s democracy. But the vote’s impact could also be felt far beyond the country’s borders.
We hear what the outcome could mean for the future of the Amazon rainforest and efforts to prevent catastrophic climate change. And then, NPR’s Shannon Bond explains why conspiracy theories about Brazil’s elections are circulating in the United States.
Email us at [email protected].
But many returning Black veterans were excluded because of segregation. And that exclusion helped widen the wealth gap between white and Black Americans.
A bill in Congress would repair some of that harm by paying reparations to the families of nearly one million Black veterans who served in World War II.
NPR’s Quil Lawrence spoke with the family of Bill Dabney, who fought in the little known Barrage Balloon Battalion, about what that money would mean to them.
Email us at [email protected].
Hidden in that number are hints about the effect disinformation might be having on voting by mail, whether new voting restrictions are depressing turnout and how motivated Americans are to cast ballots this year.
NPR’s Miles Parks breaks down the national early voting picture, and Sam Gringlas with WABE in Atlanta, talks about the role early voting has played in that crucial midterm state.
Email us at [email protected].
We hear from Shatner about “Boldly Go,” the book he has since written about how that experience changed his outlook. And we also hear from Frank White, the author and philosopher who coined the term “Overview Effect” to describe experiences like Shatner’s.
Email us at [email protected].
We talk to three NPR reporters on three different continents —Chief Economics Correspondent Scott Horsley in Washington, Rob Schmitz in Berlin and Lauren Frayer in Mumbai—about how economic crises half a world away can bear down on daily life.
This episode also features reporting from NPR’s David Gura on where CEOs think the economy is headed.
Email us at [email protected].