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An interview with Sonia Purnell, author of Kingmaker. In the book, Purnell tells the secret history of Winston Churchill’s daughter-in-law, Pamela Churchill Harriman, whose image as a vapid socialite masked her powerful influence on the world stage for five decades.
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It's Friday and time for our Reporter Roundtable when Idaho Matters catches you up on the past week's headlines, including cuts to funding for public media and sheep headed to the Payette National Forest.
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Ben Stuckart, Justice Forral, Erin Lang, Bajun Mavalwalla, Jac Archer and four others are scheduled for arraignment at 3 p.m. Tuesday after their arrests by the U.S. Marshals the same morning.
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The Trump administration has asked Congress to rescind funds for NPR/PBS and foreign aid. Congress has until the end of the week to approve the cuts.
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Time to talk about contractors — the bad and the good — and why consumers have to be careful when it comes to having anything done on their home.
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The new traffic signal at State Highway 55 and the Banks-Lowman Road is working as intended, according to the Idaho Transportation Department.
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An interview with Steve Coll, author of the new book, The Achilles Trap: Saddam Hussein, the CIA, and the Origins of America’s Invasion of Iraq.The book offers the definitive story of the decades-long relationship between the United States and Saddam Hussein, and an investigation into one of the costliest geopolitical conflicts of our time.
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Idaho Matters takes a look at the news that made headlines this week, including a list of new laws that went into effect this month, an update on Kohberger's plea deal and Buc-ee's could be coming to the Gem State.
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The crimes were most often motivated by racial bias, and the majority were reported in Boise.
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Last week, the City of Nampa announced it was thinking of handing over the Ford Idaho Center to the College of Western Idaho.
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An Idaho grassroots organization is working to collect signatures for the initiative called the “Reproductive Freedom and Privacy Act.”
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Valley County wants to shrink and take back control of the McCall's impact area and will host a public hearing on the afternoon of July 7.