NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks with Marilyn Marks of the Coalition for Good Governance about the reasons behind the lawsuit seeking to bar Georgia from using its paperless voting machines.
Ken Starr was stripped of his presidency at Baylor University in 2016, accused of overseeing an administration that ignored a campus sexual assault scandal.
The response is a formal part of the process in the impeachment trial, which begins Tuesday. It marks the first time the president has outlined a legal case for his acquittal.
NPR's Scott Simon offers some context to America's political chaos by looking at how authoritarian regimes around the world have tightened their grips on power.
NPR's Michel Martin talks about the disagreement that's emerged between Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders with journalists Connie Schultz, Clare Malone and Melanye Price.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Dr. Crystal Aguh, a dermatologist at Johns Hopkins University, about Rep. Ayanna Pressley's recent announcement that she has alopecia.
Reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker tell NPR they wanted to make sense of the rapid churn of Trump-era news. In a new book, they emerge with a portrait of an "undisciplined, impulsive leader."