A year after the strike is the UAW still winning?

A year ago at this time, members of the United Auto Workers Union were feeling powerful and optimistic. The group’s new President Shawn Fain had called a historic strike. For the first time, the Union walked out on ALL three big automakers.

It was a bold move that by most measures worked. It ultimately brought Ford, GM and Stellantis much closer to the union’s demands for historic raises and new job protections.

The strike’s success had people predicting a bigger and more powerful union.

A year on the union is still staring down some major challenges.

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Another attempt was made on Trump’s life. What do we know?

Former President Donald Trump was targeted in what “appears to be an attempted assassination” on Sunday afternoon, the FBI says.

What do we know about the suspect, his motivations, and what this could mean for the rest of the 2024 election?

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The Republicans who stood up to Trump after the 2020 election

In the new HBO documentary “Stopping the Steal,” we hear from Republican officials in Arizona and Georgia who wanted Donald Trump to win the 2020 presidential election but were not willing to break the law for him.

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NASA prepares to head back to the moon.

This time next year, if everything stays on schedule, NASA will send its first crewed mission to the moon, since the end of the Apollo program. Artemis II will be the first flight around the moon in more than 50 years.

Its goal will be to test out the Orion capsule and all the other equipment, so that by 2026, Artemis III can put astronauts back ON the moon.

The Artemis program is aimed to kickstart a new, more enduring era of space travel that leads to Mars.It’s also intentionally more representative than Apollo was. The Artemis program will eventually put the first woman on the moon, as well as the first person of color.

It’s all as historic and high stakes as it gets, and also pretty daunting.

NPR’s Scott Detrow goes behind the scenes at the Johnson Space Center in Houston to see how the team is preparing.

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Anne Lamott has some ideas on getting older in the United States

Getting older has been a punchline for as long as anyone can remember. And while there are plenty of jokes to be made about aging, it can also have some negative implications for how we see ourselves and others.

For writer Anne Lamott, aging has been a challenge, and a gift. “There is grace in not being able to see everything so clearly with all of its faults and annoying tendencies.”

Lamott has been reflecting on growing older in her latest column for the Washington Post, and shares some of those insights with Consider This host Mary Louise Kelly.

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During Tuesday’s debate, Harris was in command; Trump was incoherent

Vice President Kamala Harris was dominant during Tuesday’s presidential debate in Philadelphia. Former President Donald Trump struggled to stay on topic and a times sounded incoherent. With the race to the White House neck and neck will this debate make a difference?

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Cooking for the most powerful person in the world

There’s an old line: “Tell me what you eat and I’ll tell you who you are?” Well if it’s true, then Cristeta Comerford knows the last five Presidents better than almost anyone.

She just retired after nearly 30 years as White House chef. Comerford cooked for Presidents from Clinton to Biden…making everything from family snacks to state dinners.

She is the first woman and the first person of color to hold the serve in that job.

She reflects on her groundbreaking role, and what she’s learned from cooking for some of the most powerful people in the world.

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As debate looms political impressionists get into character

Ahead of the presidential debate, host Scott Detrow talks to comedians Matt Friend and Allison Reese. They’re two of the most prominent political impressionists out there, who are trying to channel the candidates.

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The rise and fall of the DEI movement

We’re in a moment where DEI (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion) hiring practices mean many different things to many people. Over the past four years, many of the companies that publicly embraced DEI policies in the wake of George Floyd’s murder have been backing away. What are the politics behind the anti-DEI backlash and what happens when workplace diversity initiatives are lost?

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