All USA
- First LookHow the pandemic slowed the march toward equal payBetween 2022 and 2023, the gender wage gap between men and women working full-time widened for the first time in 20 years.聽For Black women and Asian women, the gap widened, for Hispanic women, it narrowed, and for white women, it stayed the same.
- How AI deepfakes test voter confidence and election integrityVoters worldwide are contending with a new challenge this year: AI fraud. Now it鈥檚 America鈥檚 turn. An explainer on how bad it is, and who鈥檚 doing it.
- First LookThe hurricanes drained FEMA funds. Now small business grants are running out, too.A federal agency is running out of money for loans to businesses and homeowners rebuilding after Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Congress can approve more funds, but it won鈥檛 be back in session until after the November presidential election.
- States get bolder about banning legacy admissions. What does that mean for equity?In legislatures and on college campuses across the U.S., the issue of legacy admissions is heating up. California is the latest state to ban the practice 鈥 adding more fuel to a nationwide debate聽about how to create an even playing field for applicants.
- The ExplainerHow are targeted killings different from assassinations 鈥 and are they legal?Israel has carried out dozens of targeted strikes to take out senior operatives in Hezbollah and Hamas. Other countries have carried out similar enemy strikes in the past decade. We look at the legal basis for such killings.
- First LookLilly Ledbetter fought for equal pay at the highest levels and launched a worker movementLilly Ledbetter, who passed away Oct. 12, catalyzed key equal pay and wage discrimination legislation. President Barack Obama signed into law the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, which gave workers the right to sue for equal pay for equal work.
- First LookThey survived nuclear weapons. Now they鈥檝e won a Nobel peace Prize for trying to end them.The Japanese group Nihon Hidankyo won the Nobel Peace Prize on Oct. 11 for pushing for denuclearization. The U.N. Secretary General praised the survivors of the U.S. atomic bombings, saying, 鈥渘uclear weapons remain a clear and present danger to humanity.鈥
- The ExplainerTrump hammers on 鈥榤igrant crime.鈥 The reality: It鈥檚 not rampant, but a real concern.Donald Trump highlights 鈥渕igrant crime鈥 on the campaign trail, in Colorado and beyond. We explain recent high-profile criminal cases and how researchers assess immigrant crime rates.
- Swing states scramble to keep elections on track in hurricanes鈥 wakeIn key battlegrounds North Carolina and Georgia, officials are racing to make voting accessible despite Hurricane Helene鈥檚 disruption. Florida will require similar efforts after Hurricane Milton.
- After hurricanes, FEMA confronts a different kind of flood: MisinformationNatural disasters often spark rumors and lies. But officials have been stunned by the volume of online misinformation around Hurricanes Helene and Milton.聽
- First LookAfghan man arrested by FBI for allegedly planning to attack crowds on Election DayThe FBI has arrested two people who officials say were planning an attack on Election Day. The Justice Department claims that聽Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi of Oklahoma City, inspired by the Islamic State, had been planning to buy weapons and ammunition.聽
- First LookTiktok lawsuit: Endless scrolling, face filters, instant gratification harms kidsThe lawsuits, filed Oct. 8, resemble how states previously organized against the tobacco and pharmaceutical industries. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e chosen profit over the health and safety, well-being and future of our children,鈥 said California Attorney General Rob Bonta.
- On Ohio ballot, a retired justice鈥檚 crusade to make politics competitive againVoters will decide whether Ohio becomes one of the few states where an independent citizens commission, rather than politicians, draws district maps.
- First LookFlorida residents brace for massive Hurricane MiltonTampa Bay hasn鈥檛 been in the direct path of a major hurricane in over a century, but Hurricane Milton may change that. Hurricane scientists say Tampa Bay is 鈥渢he city to worry about most鈥澛燿ue to high vulnerability to flooding from climate change.
- Trump vs. Harris? In Florida, abortion is the biggest question on the ballot.After Roe v. Wade was overturned,聽ballot measures for abortion rights have won voter approval and fueled Democratic turnout. Now Florida will test the long-term strength of聽this political backlash.聽
- On the plane with Harris 鈥 but is she really opening up to the press?Our reporter traveled with Kamala Harris as she barnstormed two must-win states and began a media blitz, including with 鈥60 minutes,鈥 鈥淐all Her Daddy,鈥 and Howard Stern.
- First LookColorado judge receives threats after sentencing election denier official to prisonA Colorado county courthouse has stepped up security after threats were made against staff and a judge who sentenced former county clerk Tina Peters to prison in a data breach scheme tied to denial of 2020 election results.
- Focus鈥楽alaam. Shalom. Peace.鈥 How US interfaith groups work for peace in a time of war.At a time when many people default to demonizing those who believe differently than they do, U.S. interfaith groups are working to acknowledge shared humanity and ask, What can we learn from one another?
- First LookMisinformation from Trump, far-right hampers Helene recovery effortsDonald Trump and others have spread claims suggesting officials are withholding assistance from Republican storm victims. And that's forcing public officials, including members of Mr. Trump's own party, to set the record straight.
- Hurricanes and wildfires are closing schools. How can students get back on track?As the world faces more extreme weather, what should preparing for education in the aftermath of a natural disaster look like?