Dua Halisa-Cautel
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Live from NPR News in New York City, I'm Dua Halisa-Cautel.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee has voted 8-3 to roll back its universal recommendation to start hepatitis B immunization at birth, a guidance practiced for more than three decades.
NPR's Rob Stein explains the new, more narrow guidance for newborns.
This committee of CDC advisors was put together by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long questioned many vaccines and has launched a major review of all childhood vaccinations.
The Trump administration is pledging support for European political parties that fight immigration.
That sparked criticism from some mainstream European parties, as NPR's Lauren Freyer reports.
A federal judge has ruled that the Trump administration cannot use Guantanamo Bay as a holding place for migrants targeted for deportation.
And Piersasha Pfeiffer reports.
Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that the president does have the constitutional power to fire members of two independent agencies at will, despite federal laws to the contrary.
The ruling comes as the Supreme Court prepares to tackle the same topic, as NPR's Andrea Hsu reports.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing to stop the development of a 400-acre housing and education project that has been described as the epicenter of Islam in North America.
Paxton alleges the developer EPIC, or East Plano Islamic Center, and its partners violated Texas security laws and its...
radical plot to destroy hundreds of acres of beautiful Texas land and line their own pockets.
I'm Dwahli Saikautel, NPR News.
Live from NPR News in New York City, I'm Dua Halisa-Cautel.
The arrest of a conservative influencer in Portland, Oregon, has drawn the ire of the Trump administration.
White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt says the Department of Justice is launching a full investigation.