GOP Expects President Trump To Tap Amy Coney Barrett For Supreme Court
The likely shift in the court’s makeup is set to be the sharpest ideological swing in nearly three decades.
The likely shift in the court’s makeup is set to be the sharpest ideological swing in nearly three decades.
There was bipartisan backlash after Trump suggested that he would have to see the results before committing to a peaceful presidential transition. And Ruth Bader Ginsburg is the first woman in U.S. history to lie in state at the Capitol.This episode: campaign correspondent Scott Detrow, congressional reporter Claudia Grisales, White House correspondent Franco Ordoñez, and legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg.Connect:Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Listen to our playlist The NPR Politics Daily Workout.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Find and support your local public radio station.
Reset breaks down the week’s top stories in our Friday News Roundup with Justin Kaufmann.
Republicans pushed back against Democrats’ warning that lawmakers could raise state income taxes for all if voters reject a graduated income tax plan.
This year, Latinos are expected to be the largest non-white voting bloc for the first time. Trump’s appeal may be stronger than you think.
Justice Ginsburg’s open seat might dramatically shift the ideological balance on the U.S. Supreme Court.
We talk with women in law today about how Ginsburg changed the nation.
The late Supreme Court justice is the first woman to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol. Watch the ceremony held by members of Congress.
After the Trump administration made last-minute changes that shortened the 2020 census schedule, a federal judge in California has ordered it to extend counting for another month.
In an ongoing series congressional correspondent Kelsey Snell looks under the hood at campaigns. From how they raise money to what they do once they have it.This episode, Kelsey looks at political fundraising. She talks to former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci about how you ask for those big checks from millionaires, and the head of digital fundraising for Bernie Sanders about how you get a lot of people to donate just a little bit of money over and over again.This episode: White House correspondent Tamara Keith and congressional correspondent Kelsey SnellConnect:Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Listen to our playlist The NPR Politics Daily Workout.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Find and support your local public radio station.