
Articles
-
3 weeks ago |
propublica.org | Talia Buford |Ginny Monk |Joshua Kaplan |Brett Murphy
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published. We are pleased to announce the journalists chosen as the 2025 cohort of the ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program. The program was established in 2023 to expand the ranks of editors with investigative experience in newsrooms across the country and help better reflect the nation as a whole.
-
3 weeks ago |
propublica.org | Doug Bock Clark |Ginny Monk |Jacob Orledge |Joshua Kaplan
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week. Last week, North Carolina Democrats scored a victory when Republican Judge Jefferson Griffin, who’d lost a tight race for the state’s Supreme Court, finally conceded defeat after a six-month legal battle to throw out ballots that he contended were illegitimate.
-
3 weeks ago |
propublica.org | Tim Golden |Jesse Coburn |Joshua Kaplan |Brett Murphy
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published. In what could be a significant escalation of U.S. pressure on Mexico, the Trump administration has begun to impose travel restrictions and other sanctions on prominent Mexican politicians whom it believes are linked to drug corruption, U.S. officials said.
-
3 weeks ago |
benton.org | Joshua Kaplan |Brett Murphy |Justin Elliott |Alex Mierjeski
In early February 2025, Sharon Cromer, U.S. ambassador to Gambia, went to visit one of the country’s Cabinet ministers. It had been two weeks since President Donald Trump took office, and Cromer had pressing business to discuss. She needed the minister to fall in line to help Elon Musk. Starlink, Musk’s satellite internet company, had spent months trying to secure regulatory approval to sell internet access in the impoverished West African country.
-
3 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Joshua Kaplan |Brett Murphy |Justin Elliott |Alex Mierjeski
This story first appeared at ProPublica. ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox. In early February, Sharon Cromer, U.S. ambassador to Gambia, went to visit one of the country’s Cabinet ministers at his agency’s headquarters, above a partially abandoned strip mall off a dirt road. It had been two weeks since President Donald Trump took office, and Cromer had pressing business to discuss.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →Coverage map
X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 10K
- Tweets
- 1K
- DMs Open
- Yes

RT @propublica: THREAD: Under a new law, thousands of prisoners in Louisiana have been cut off from ever getting a chance at parole. Why?…

RT @propublica: New: Tens of millions of dollars slated for violence prevention have been cut or are frozen as DOGE steamrolls the national…

An extraordinary, must-read story about what's happening inside the Social Security Administration. “Are we going to break something?” the agency's head asked in a meeting, referring to what DOGE has been doing with Social Security data. “I don’t know.” https://t.co/1HELIihUQQ