53% of voters say schools should be opened for in-person learning Share Share Subscribe Subscribe Amazon Music Apple Podcasts CastBox Google Podcasts iHeartRadio Pocket Casts RadioPublic Spotify Stitcher TuneIn RSS Download Description × Advertising 0 / 0 | 00:00 / 00:00 | Skip Listen on Privacy Policy <iframe> Player Code Embed this player on your website using the snippet below Copy 31% of voters disagree in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, with 42% of Democrats also saying schools should remain closed, compared to 19% of Republicans. Top Stories Security FBI’s years long stonewalling on 2017 congressional softball shooting is over: Patel Elections GOP tries to pad House majority in 2 Florida special elections, but races appear unexpectedly close Sponsored Award-Winning John Solomon Reports Daily Podcast. LISTEN NOW! Coronavirus Repeat COVID vaccines provoke two kinds of inferior antibodies, study finds Federal Agencies DOGE unmasks maddening waste, but may struggle to find permanent spending cuts without Congress Just the News Spotlight Just News, No Noise From the States USDA paid to study queer farmers, Latinx masculinity, more on taxpayer dime White House Trump on running for third term: 'There are methods which you could do it' Local Arizona woman beaten up in her Tesla says her car isn't a 'political statement' From the States Illinois’ rainy-day fund, emergency reserves lowest in country White House Greenland prime minister: 'United States will not get' Greenland Trending FBI’s years long stonewalling on 2017 congressional softball shooting is over: Patel Repeat COVID vaccines provoke two kinds of inferior antibodies, study finds DOGE unmasks maddening waste, but may struggle to find permanent spending cuts without Congress Louisiana voters overwhelmingly reject all four constitutional amendments California high speed rail needs $7B bailout, could lose federal funds The Latest From the States Audit: North Carolina Central University reporting errors exceed $45M Congress Helene: Proposal brings back help accessing federal money From the States Report: Lawyers PAC funnels over $1 million to Illinois Democrats
Elections GOP tries to pad House majority in 2 Florida special elections, but races appear unexpectedly close
Federal Agencies DOGE unmasks maddening waste, but may struggle to find permanent spending cuts without Congress