Latest Oklahoma Headlines
Budget cuts and modifications are leaving the state Medicaid agency with “razor-thin margins” as it enters the 2027 fiscal year.
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The New Jersey Republican was missing for months with no explanation for his constituents. He explained in a House floor speech that after his diagnosis, there was no timeline for recovery.
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NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with University of Virginia professor of constitutional law Amanda Frost about the Supreme Court's ruling on birthright citizenship.
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The decision firmly rejected the executive order that Trump issued on the first day of his second term.
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Since 2021, harm-reduction organizations have distributed hundreds of thousands of sterile needles and syringes to drug users across Oklahoma.
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Discover the remarkable Kate Barnard — the fiery “Good Angel of Oklahoma.” Before women could vote, she became the state’s first woman elected to statewide office, fiercely battling child labor, prison cruelty, mistreatment of the mentally ill and corruption involving Native American lands.
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Oklahoma City's Key to Home initiative successfully housed 65 of 75 people from one encampment within 90 days, but advocates say the housing voucher inspection process, a shortage of willing landlords and a lack of affordable units are slowing progress as more people fall into homelessness than are being housed.
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Earlier this year, Oklahoma launched a new initiative to improve foster care through centering the voices of youth who have gone through the system.
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At issue in the case was a post-Watergate law that Congress passed to limit the amount of money individuals can give to political parties.
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Personal finance and nutrition experts share simple strategies that make it possible to eat out without spending a fortune. One tip? You might have to let go of your fast food delivery habit.
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Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who has long coached his daughters' and other girls' basketball teams at school, wrote the court's majority opinion.
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The Supreme Court is expected to make a long-awaited ruling on birthright citizenship today, on the high court's last day of its term. And, the U.S. murder rate approaches a record low.
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More U.S. scientists are heading abroad. Three researchers explain why they decided to shift their research to universities in the U.K.
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On June 24, 146 Venezuelans were deported from Texas to Caracas. Hours later, while the deportees were in a guarded hotel, powerful twin earthquakes struck.