Votes are still being counted from the midterm elections. But dozens of Democrats are already making plans for the 2020 Presidential election.
                    
                                                                                            
                        Dozens of former US senators have signed a bipartisan warning letter published in The Washington Post.
Members of the House Judiciary Committee question Special Counsel Mueller: some have gone on the attack, others have read sections of his report. Former federal prosecutor Shan Wu provides analysis.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos announced sweeping rules on how colleges handle cases of sexual assault and harassment she says will fix a "failed" and "shameful" system that has been unfair to accused students.
                    
                                                                                            
                        
Long before she was a Democratic presidential candidate, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren was a Republican. But after years of studying - then fighting – bankruptcy legislation, her world view began to change. How Warren's career as a Democrat started by looking at the bottom on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Program note: Some or all of this program may be pre-empted by breaking news from Washington D.C.
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Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App for your favorite mobile device!
(Photo: Sen. Elizabeth Warren - Drew Angerer/Getty Images/via NPR)
                    
                                                                                            
                        
Democrats are challenging a Trump administration order that would open up parts of a national monument in Utah to mining and more cattle grazing. Why do some locals support the change, and what does it mean for the future of nearby rural communities? Plus, the results of the Women's World Cup on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App @ iTunes & Google Play!
(Photo: Bureau of Land Management [Public domain])
                    
                                                                                            
                        Change is happening in Ethiopia. What was once one of the most authoritarian countries in the world is opening up and people there are trying to navigate their new freedom.
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Diplomats are gathering here for the annual meeting of the United Nations this week. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is attending, backed up by senior staff at the State Department in New York and around the world.
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