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  • Senators will ask a series of questions in President Trump's impeachment trial — questions that so far have illuminated how sharply divided opinions are on how the president handled aid to Ukraine.
  • A Tribe Called Quest frontman is the first artistic director for hip-hop culture at the Kennedy Center. He discusses the cultural levity of his appointment and the current political climate.
  • Updated: 1:00 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020 In Ohio, local elections officials process absentee ballots as soon as they get them. That offers not only a sense of how many people are voting in person or by mail, but how many ballots have been flagged for errors. ideastream’s Morning Edition host Amy Eddings talked with Cuyahoga County Board of Elections Spokesman Mike West about the process of "curing" irregular ballots.
  • Updated: 9:50 a.m., Friday, July 31, 2020 A federal grand jury Thursday indicted Larry Householder, and his statehouse colleagues voted to remove him as Speaker of the Ohio House. At the heart of the corruption case against Householder is a so-called “dark money” group called Generation Now.
  • In the coming weeks, you will likely find a reminder in your mailbox to fill out the 2020 U.S. Census. This year is the first time people can fill out the census online, but you can get a paper questionnaire if you prefer. Such a count happens only every 10 years, so this will show the country and Northeast Ohio how things have changed in the last decade. ideastream’s Nick Castele and All Things Considered Host Tony Ganzer explored how this year’s census will work and what the results will mean for Northeast Ohio for the next 10 years.
  • This week on the show, Steve Brown and Thomas Bradley discuss the Ohio State Buckeyes, their performance against Hawai'i and their upcoming game against…
  • Esther Duflo is the first female economist to win the Nobel Prize. Planet Money talks to her about her win, the state of gender inequality in economics, and her new book.
  • Updated 6:17 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 1, 2019
  • Starting with the landmark DeRolph decision in 1993, the Ohio Supreme Court has ruled four times that the state's school funding formula, with its reliance on property taxes, is unconstitutional. Now it appears state legislators may finally be doing something about that, with bills in both the House and Senate proposing major school funding reforms.
  • At Hofstra University, Margaret Hoover leads a forum with two conservatives on the impact
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