Health care: See where the 2020 Democratic candidates standSeptember 10, 2019 8:03 AMBy Danielle Kurtzleben and Lexie Schapitl Policies related to public vs. private health insurance coverage have divided the presidential field, but there is more agreement on drug pricing.
Trade issues have divided Democrats, so where do the 2020 candidates stand? December 19, 2019 5:50 PMBy Danielle Kurtzleben , Lexie Schapitl , and Elena Burnett President Trump has taken dramatic action on trade. His potential 2020 rivals are on the record about what they would do regarding tariffs and trade deals that could dramatically impact the economy.
Bigger Supreme Court? No more Electoral College? See what 2020 Democrats would doDecember 23, 2019 11:23 AMBy Danielle Kurtzleben , Lexie Schapitl , and Elena Burnett Stacking up the positions of presidential candidates on changes to government institutions, there are divisions over expanding the U.S. Supreme Court and ending the Senate's filibuster.
Climate Issues: Where 2020 Democrats stand on the Green New Deal and moreDecember 20, 2019 3:24 PMBy Alyson Hurt , Danielle Kurtzleben , and Lexie Schapitl While most Democratic presidential candidates support the goals laid out in the Green New Deal, they differ on specifics like a carbon tax, nuclear energy and federal spending to fight climate change.
Immigration: Where 2020 Democratic candidates stand on border crossings and moreDecember 19, 2019 6:51 PMBy Alyson Hurt , Danielle Kurtzleben , and Lexie Schapitl Democrats are unified against President Trump's immigration stances, but many do not have clear positions on specific policies related to border security and immigration levels.
See where Democratic candidates unite and differ on gun policyDecember 19, 2019 6:31 PMBy Danielle Kurtzleben , Lexie Schapitl , and Elena Burnett Democrats running for president are largely unified on proposals like an assault weapons ban and red flag laws. Divisions exist over implementing gun buyback programs as voluntary or mandatory.
Play4min 01secVote for everyone you like — Fargo tests approval votingJune 6, 2022 5:00 AMBy Dan GundersonFargo is the first city in the U.S. to use approval voting, where voters can select all of the candidates they like.
Former election security official says it will take 'years' to undo disinformationDecember 22, 2020 11:52 AMBy Pam Fessler In his first interview out of office, Matthew Masterson, a top deputy to Christopher Krebs at the Department of Homeland Security, called 2020 "as smooth a presidential election as I've ever seen."
Here's how NPR reports election resultsOctober 29, 2020 3:00 PMBy Arnie Seipel The network relies on results and race calls from The Associated Press for the presidential race, other federal elections and statewide contests.
'We don't speculate': How AP counts votes and calls racesOctober 29, 2020 10:15 AMBy The Associated PressAs it has for more than 170 years, The Associated Press will count the vote and report the results of presidential, congressional and state elections — some 7,000 races — on Nov. 3 and beyond. To do so, AP relies on a 50-state network of local stringers who have trusted relationships with county clerks and other local officials.