NPR’s Scott Detrow spoke with the 78-year-old about her long career and how she feels now that her iconic holiday tune is finally at the top of the charts.
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NPR’s Scott Detrow spoke with the 78-year-old about her long career and how she feels now that her iconic holiday tune is finally at the top of the charts.
Email us at considerthis@npr.org
The list of reasons a woman hasn’t won is long — sexism, lack of representation in circles of power, and lack of representation in circles of money. But Nikki Haley has just scored an endorsement from the Koch Network that could change that.
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly talks to Political Scientist Kira Sonbonmatsu about the inequities between men and women when it comes to fundraising and what the Koch Network endorsement could mean for Haley.
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Rocha is the latest in a long line of spies, who have worked for the federal government while spying for other countries. Some for decades at a time.
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly talks to former CIA officer Robert Baer about the charges against Rocha and how he might have managed to go undetected for four decades.
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NPR’s Ailsa Chang speaks with Wafa Ghnaim, a fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and curator for the Museum of the Palestinian People, about the history of the garment, what it means to Palestinian identity and what it means to her.
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NPR’s Fatma Tanis speaks with analysts who say that U.S. support for Israel is undermining American interests and NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent for the New York Times, about how President Biden’s history with Israel is shaping current U.S. policy.
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According to an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll conducted after the midterm elections, more than 8 in 10 Americans feel there is a serious threat to Democracy in the U.S.
Ranked choice voting has become the latest political change touted as a way to strengthen democracy.
Instead of choosing one candidate, in ranked choice voting a voter picks a favorite candidate, a second favorite, and so on.
Voters in almost 50 American cities and states have switched to a ranked-choice voting system. So even if you’ve never heard of ranked choice voting, it may be coming to a polling place near you.
NPR’s Miles Parks reports on whether ranked choice will live up to the hype as a cure-all for the country’s deep partisan divides.
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The United Arab Emirates is hosting COP28 this year. The goal of the conference is to decrease emissions and protect the planet. But leading the climate talks is the head of one of the biggest oil companies in the world, in a nation that derives much of its wealth from oil. Are the goals of this meeting truly in sync with the goals of the hosts?
NPR’s Miles Parks speaks with NPR international correspondent Aya Batrawy from COP28.
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NPR’s Ailsa Chang talks to author and historian Jeremi Suri about Kissinger’s complicated legacy.
Listen to Throughline’s deeper dive on Kissinger here.
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But her commitment to the issue extended well beyond her role as First Lady.
NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly talks to Anne Mahoney Robbins, a friend of the Carters and member of President Jimmy Carter’s mental health commission, about how Rosalynn Carter supported her during her own crippling depression.
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NPR’s Sacha Pfeiffer tells the story of one such struggle in St. Louis where a detective wouldn’t testify in a case. That refusal may have helped a man charged with murder walk free.
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