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2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
Events
About Us
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Social Media Commenting Policy
Meet the Staff
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Google Preferred News Source
Contact BBC and NPR
WUSF Rebrand
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Classical WSMR
WUSF Jazz
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The Zest Podcast
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Gordon Sondland testified against Donald Trump. Why does he plan to vote for him?
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Gordon Sondland, a Republican donor and former ambassador to the European Union during the Trump administration, about why he's again supporting the former president.
Listen
•
7:16
Shark River Slough: Bridges Help Bring Water Into Thirsty Everglades Park
The historic rise of South Florida sugarcane farming turned the giant Lake Okeechobee into a toilet for polluted waters draining from as far as Central Florida and flushing ruinously via canals to coastal estuaries at Fort Myers and Stuart.
A Wrap Up Of The Supreme Court's Most Recent Term
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with NPR's Nina Totenberg and lawyer Tom Goldstein and Colombia Law School professor Jamal Greene for a wrap up of the Supreme Court's most recent term as it comes to an end.
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•
8:15
Ida Brings Historic Flooding To The Northeast, Killing More Than 40 People
Record-breaking levels of rainfall in New York City, parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania flooded roadways and affected travel throughout Wednesday evening into Thursday.
'Bond' franchise will have to make changes to appeal to a younger audience
Daniel Craig's tenure as James Bond is coming to an end with the release of No Time To Die. But with Amazon acquiring MGM, where does the 007 franchise go from here?
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•
7:57
Why some alleged Capitol rioters are acting as their own attorneys
More than 100 people charged in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol have pleaded guilty. But others are promising to take their cases to trial, including some who have decided to represent themselves.
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•
4:53
African students who fled to Poland from Ukraine are waiting in limbo
More than 6 million people have fled Ukraine since Russia invaded. Not all of them are Ukrainian. Some citizens of African countries have found that the doors of Europe are much less open to them.
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•
8:07
Diplomacy, with a Side of Rice
NPR Political Editor Ken Rudin answers your questions. This week: precedents for Rice's move from the NSA to the State Department.
What to know about the 2026 Gasparilla festivities
From air invasions and parades to parking information, here's a guide for Gasparilla.
Three alleged 9/11 plotters have pled guilty: The daughter of a victim reacts
Three men behind the 9/11 attacks have agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence. Liz Miller, whose father was killed on Sept. 11 when she was six, shares her view on the outcome.
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•
8:03
Jury: Isiah Thomas Sexually Harassed Colleague
A federal jury recently found that New York Knicks coach Isiah Thomas sexually harassed a former team executive. Anucha Browne Sanders accused Thomas of sexual harassment and said the team's owner, Madison Square Garden, fired her for complaining. Georgetown law professor Emma Coleman Jordan discusses the impact of the case.
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•
0:00
Supreme Court Weighs Abortion Case; Schumer Remarks Draw Rebuke From Roberts
Lawyers for the Center for Reproductive Rights and Louisiana faced a hot bench Wednesday in a case critical to abortion rights in the U.S. But the Chief Justice - a key vote - did not tip his hand.
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•
5:50
Latest On Coronavirus: Florida COVID-19 Cases Near 25,000, The Impact On Tampa Bay, And More
WUSF will be providing the latest news and information on coronavirus in Tampa Bay and across the state. Here are the latest developments:Total positive…
Michael Weakens After Historic Slam Into Florida Panhandle
Hurricane Michael was the most powerful storm to make landfall in the continental U.S. in more than 26 years. The now tropical storm is moving over Georgia on its way to the Carolinas.
Can America's 'Civil Religion' Still Unite The Country?
America's diversity means it is not defined by a single ancestry or faith tradition. Americans may nevertheless unite behind a "civil religion" that incorporates the nation's founding principles.
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•
8:05
The Electoral College Is At The Heart Of Debate Over Vote Counting Laws
The electoral college, which has helped Republicans in recent elections, is also at the heart of debate over GOP state laws regarding vote counting.
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•
8:11
What It Was Like For One Former Correspondent To Report On Trump For Irish Readers
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Suzanne Lynch, former Washington Correspondent for The Irish Times, about covering everything from the Trump administration to the Black Lives Matter protests.
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•
8:00
Feel like you don't fit in either political party? Here's why
The division is far more complicated than a split between Republicans and Democrats, according to the Pew Research Center. Here are the differences in ideology on race, economics and government.
White House Council of Economic Advisers head on the economic issues the U.S. faces
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Cecilia Rouse, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, about President Biden's Federal Reserve nomination and the economic challenges the country is facing.
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•
8:05
Critics fear a proposal to fix the nursing home staffing shortage could affect care
A bill being considered by legislators would cut the required time that a nurse or certified nursing assistant spends with a patient in a long-term care facility from 3.6 hours to one hour. It would also permit nonmedical staff to replace CNAs for 2.5 hours every day.
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•
6:55
Rising seas swamp Black, Spanish and Indigenous history in St. Johns County
A city reliant on heritage tourism struggles to protect its most valuable assets.
States have yet to spend millions of federal dollars to tackle COVID health disparities
A year ago, the CDC awarded states and local health departments $2.25 billion to help people of color and other populations at higher risk from COVID. But a KHN review shows public health agencies across the country have been slow to spend it.
U.S. Soldiers Try to Bridge Cultural, Military Divide in Iraq
The number of attacks in Iraq rises and falls, but that is just one way to try to measure progress in the war. Other factors are harder to quantify. One is the way Iraqis view the American troops who still patrol their cities. Philip Reeves spent a day with an American platoon in and around the northern city of Mosul.
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0:00
Sen. Schumer talks on what the Inflation Reduction Act means for Americans
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., about what it was like passing the Inflation Reduction Act and what it means for Americans.
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•
8:06
Through all Trump's legal wars and woes, one lawyer's influence still holds sway
Roy Cohn always told clients to fight all charges, countersue when sued and never concede. Trump has followed his formula for half a century, and it has come to matter a great deal to the nation.
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