Four progressive first-term members of Congress, all women of color, have become sought-after endorsers and candidate surrogates in the Democratic presidential primary.
All the Democratic candidates who have qualified for next week's debate in Los Angeles are threatening to boycott over a labor dispute at the university hosting the event.
The full House of Representatives is slated to vote on two articles of impeachment next week against President Trump. Some centrist Democrats are still deciding if they will vote yes.
NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with E.J. Dionne of The Washington Post, and Hugo Gurdon of the Washington Examiner about impeachment news and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's election victory.
Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders and others say they won't attend next week's debate at Loyola Marymount University unless a subcontractor negotiates with striking culinary workers.
Under the new rules, most adults who quality for Medicaid coverage will be required to prove they work at least 80 hours a month, or are doing other activities like volunteering or hunting for a job.
President Trump and Republican supporters have dismissed the articles of impeachment brought before the president, but how do their arguments stack up?