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PBS NewsHour
In NYC, a crowded mayoral race to save a city 'gone to hell'
Primary voting is underway for the next mayor of New York City. The winner will be tasked with a long list of challenges: reviving the city's economy, curbing rising rates of violent crime and police reform. Filling the needs of more than 8 million people in America's largest city is not an easy job, but it hasn't stopped more than a dozen Democrats from running for it. Hari Sreenivasan reports.
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Is inflation under control enough for the Fed to lower interest rates? "PBS NewsHour" speaks with a key player watching the economy.
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Arizona's Supreme Court upholds a Civil War-era abortion law, effectively banning the procedure in the state.
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Israeli forces withdraw from southern Gaza and cease-fire talks resume in Cairo six months after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.
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As the NCAA women’s basketball tournament wraps up, why women’s sports are reaching new heights in popularity and revenue.
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Why more Americans are dipping into their retirement accounts early to make ends meet.
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Two Israeli officers are disciplined after the military admits to making a "grave mistake" in killing seven aid workers in Gaza.
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The Biden Administration warns Israel to change the way it is handling the war with Hamas or risk losing U.S. support.
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Israeli officials say their deadly strike on an aid convoy in Gaza was a result of misidentification.
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Israel accepts responsibility for a strike that killed World Central Kitchen workers delivering aid in Gaza.
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Iran accuses Israel of striking its consulate in Damascus, Syria, a potential major escalation of the regional conflict.
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Why more Americans are saying that religion is losing influence in public life.
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A look at the burden women across the United States are bearing as the primary caretakers of loved ones.