
Podcasts Archives • NC Newsline
159 episodes — Page 2 of 4

Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy on efforts to locate large ICE detention centers across the country
  There’s been no bigger or more controversial national news story in recent weeks than the Trump administration’s unprecedented immigration crackdown. All across the country – and perhaps most notably in Minnesota – federal immigration officers have employed an array harsh and often discriminatory and violent tactics to round up people suspected of being undocumented […]
Environmental Defense Fund Policy Director Will Scott on what’s behind rising energy costs

Environmental Defense Fund Policy Director Will Scott on what’s behind rising energy costs
As you’ve no doubt noticed, the first several weeks of 2026 have featured a large complement of wintry and bitterly cold weather and that’s something that’s sure to drive up the electric bills that will soon hit thousands of residential ratepayers. And while there’s nothing that can be done to control the weather, there are […]

Meech Carter with the NC League of Conservation Voters on rising energy costs and data centers
  If there’s a most egregious disconnect right now between state and national policy and what reams of scientific evidence and countless common-sense observations tell us about the world around us, it’s clearly in the realm of environmental protection and, in particular, climate change. As has been repeatedly and thoroughly documented, our planet currently faces […]
Meech Carter with the NC League of Conservation Voters on rising energy costs and data centers

NC Newsline reporter Lynn Bonner on a questionable effort to purge the voter rolls
  Early voting is already well underway in this year’s primary election that concludes on March 3, but even as this process plays out, conservative activists and self-described “election integrity experts” are renewing their longstanding campaign to purge registered voters from the rolls in groups and geographic areas that generally tend to vote for Democratic […]

Professor Michael Bitzer on why North Carolinians are increasingly anxious about the economy
  During his 2024 campaign to return to the White House, President Trump promised American voters that he would almost immediately deliver a new era of peace and prosperity. Today, a little over a year since his return to office, it’s increasingly clear that most Americans do not believe he has delivered. In addition to […]

North Carolina small business owners on how tariffs are negatively impacting their bottom line
  If you celebrated Valentine’s Day over the weekend, chances are you noted that tariffs are driving up the cost of flowers, chocolates, and many other items associated with the holiday. Many of the products that define Valentine’s rely heavily on imports. The United States imports nearly all the cacao used to make chocolate, primarily […]

Congresswoman Deborah Ross on efforts to place guardrails on Homeland Security and ICE
For those who had hoped the New Year would return a modicum and calm and normalcy to the nation, the past several weeks have been a profound disappointment. Between the Trump administration’s continued war on basic government services, rogue foreign policy threats, destructive and frequently lawless attacks on immigrant communities, and failure to address the […]
Congresswoman Deborah Ross on efforts to place guardrails on Homeland Security and ICE

Professor Anneliese Mennicke of UNC Charlotte on the debate over academic freedom
  For close to 90 years, most American universities and their faculty members have operated under a popular, useful and commonly understood definition of academic freedom – that is the notion that a free search for the truth and its exposition (one not beholden to politicians or the whims of public opinion) is at the […]

Dr. Shannon Schumacher of KFF on the latest national polling results on health care costs
  The nation’s persistent affordability crisis continues to leave large majorities of Americans deeply concerned about the state of the country and dissatisfied with national political leaders and, as Newsline learned in a recent conversation with KFF senior survey polling analyst Dr. Shannon Schumacher, nowhere is this better evidenced than in the field of health […]

Pediatrician Dr. Arthur Lavin on the spread of measles in the Carolinas
  One of the most worrisome trends impacting our nation’s public health right now is the spread of misinformation about the risks and benefits of vaccines. Tragically, this sobering development is on display right now in our state where multiple outbreaks of measles – a dangerous and sometimes deadly and debilitating illness – have emerged […]

Veteran political consultant Thomas Mills on the state of North Carolina politics
North Carolina primary election is just weeks away, and it looks like our state will play host to one of the nation’s most expensive and important U.S. Senate races as former Democratic governor Roy Cooper heads toward a fall clash with one of three candidates seeking the Republican nomination. Of course, all of this comes […]

Common Cause NC’s Sailor Jones on voting rights and other front burner election issues in 2026
  Few organizations have had a larger impact on the honesty, transparency and overall health of North Carolina’s government over the few decades than the state chapter of the national nonprofit advocacy organization Common Cause. Recently, the group’s longtime executive director Bob Phillips moved on to retirement, turning over the reins to the longtime organizational […]

Raul Pinto of the American Immigration Council on the national crisis surrounding immigration policy
  All across the country, ICE and Border Patrol agents have conducted police-state-style raids and other actions that have terrorized communities and raised constitutional issues of profound importance. At the same time, numerous changes to immigration policy – many of them adopted without public knowledge or input – have made an already complex system more […]

Political scientist David McLennan on the political environment and the pivotal elections in 2026
  The headlines are making clear, big and important debates and actions – especially several controversial actions of the Trump administration and its allies — have continued to roil American policy and politics in the New Year. From the health care wars to the widespread immigration crackdowns to a bevy of contentious foreign policy moves, […]

Bishop William Barber discusses his unifying vision for the nation and reflections on MLK Day
  Commemorative services are planned across the state Monday as the nation pauses for a federal holiday in observance of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. MLK Day is a national day of service to encourage all Americans to volunteer and improve their communities. Bishop William Barber – president of Repairers of the […]

Congresswoman Valerie Foushee on Trump’s takeover of Venezuela and U.S. healthcare affordability
  For those who had hoped the New Year might usher in a period of renewed calm in American policy and politics, this first week has been yet another profound disappointment. Topping the list of worrisome developments was President Donald Trump’s decision to use U.S. military personnel to arrest the president of Venezuela Niclas Maduro […]
Congresswoman Valerie Foushee on Trump’s takeover of Venezuela and U.S. healthcare affordability
Inside Climate News reporter Lisa Sorg on forever chemicals and top environmental stories of 2025

Inside Climate News reporter Lisa Sorg on forever chemicals and top environmental stories of 2025
  As we commence the New Year, few if any subjects raise greater concerns for the wellbeing of Americans than the ongoing global environmental crisis. From climate change to the growing and widespread prevalence of toxic chemicals, to the Trump administration’s ongoing war against environmental protection regulations, this past year has been another deeply worrisome […]

Stateline reporter Robbie Sequeira on the widespread corporate takeover of residential housing
It’s common knowledge that the nation’s housing market – especially in growing areas like North Carolina – has become prohibitively expensive for millions of people, and a new report from researchers at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and the Center for Geospatial Solutions (which is housed at the institute) highlights a major culprit – […]

NC State economist and professor Mike Walden on the affordability crisis that’s plaguing the economy
The rising cost of housing continues to be a huge problem for millions of Americans. But, of course, as just about any average person can also confirm, lack of affordability is not just a problem confined to housing – it’s spreading across the U.S. economy in dozens of areas. So, what’s going on here? During […]
NC State economist and professor Mike Walden on the affordability crisis that’s plaguing the economy

For Bowl Season, Elon University’s Jason Husser revisits the changing world of college athletics
  Few areas of modern American popular culture have undergone greater or more rapid changes in recent years that college sports. Thanks to a series of successful legal challenges, the nation’s longstanding practice of treating college athletes as amateurs has been completely upended and, especially at big schools engaged high-profile sports like football and basketball, […]
For Bowl Season, Elon University’s Jason Husser revisits the changing world of college athletics

Sam Hiner of the Young People’s Alliance on efforts to protect young people from evolving technology
In our fast-changing world, few technological developments of recent years have had a bigger impact on young people than the emergence of instant communication and social media. And while it’s not difficult to identify the positive impacts of these phenomena, the worrisome impacts are also numerous. And this is a trend that seems certain to […]

Dr. Latonya Agard with the NC Coalition to End Homelessness on affordability and homelessness
  The affordability crisis plaguing the American economy continues to grow more serious, and if there is a most visible sector of the economy for which soaring prices are causing the most havoc, it has to be housing. Across the country, the skyrocketing cost of housing – both for purchase and rent – is conspiring […]

Common Cause NC’s Bob Phillips about his organization’s long and ongoing effort for fair elections
  When veteran journalist and advocate Bob Phillips took over as executive director of Common Cause of North Carolina a quarter century ago, he was the organization’s sole staff member and the work he pursued to fight for fair elections, voting rights and honest government could often be a lonely effort. Today, as he prepares […]

Inter-Faith Food Shuttle CEO Ron Pringle on how funding cuts are worsening NC’s hunger problem
It continues to be one of the great scandals of modern America that in the world’s richest nation, millions of people – including an especially high percentage of children – suffer from hunger and malnutrition. Here in North Carolina, around one in seven people — including a quarter of our children — are burdened by […]

Helene survivor Jon Council warns of a growing national crisis in disaster preparedness
  It’s now been nearly 15 months since the worst storm in modern times to hit western North Carolina – Hurricane-turned-Tropical Storm Helene – inundated numerous mountain communities, killed more than 100 people and inflicted tens of billions of dollars in property damage. Unfortunately, as NC Newsline has reported on numerous occasions, especially when it […]

NC State economist and professor Mike Walden on the affordability crisis that’s plaguing the economy
  The rising cost of housing continues to be a huge problem for millions of Americans. But, of course, as just about any average person can also confirm, lack of affordability is not just a problem confined to housing – it’s spreading across the U.S. economy in dozens of areas. So, what’s going on here? […]

Stateline reporter Robbie Sequeira on the widespread corporate takeover of residential housing
  It’s common knowledge that the nation’s housing market – especially in growing areas like North Carolina – has become prohibitively expensive for millions of people, and a new report from researchers at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and the Center for Geospatial Solutions (which is housed at the institute) highlights a major culprit […]

Natalie Murdock on North Carolinians struggling to cover healthcare and the loss of food assistance
  The record federal government shutdown may be over, but the dysfunction to which it gave rise and helped spur continues to plague North Carolina. Here in our state alone, millions of average people who have long relied upon government structures and services to help make basics like health care and access to food more […]

Andrew Willis Garcés of Siembra NC on the chaos and fear caused by the latest immigration crackdown
  One of the top news items at the start of the holiday season here in North Carolina has been the Trump administration’s latest anti-immigrant crackdown. The mass border patrol enforcement action has spurred chaos in several communities with tens of thousands of students skipping school, workers afraid to report to their jobs, and business […]

NC Newsline reporter Brandon Kingdollar on the impact of the Border Patrol’s immigration crackdown
  The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown is causing heartache and consternation for thousands upon thousands of North Carolinians. What’s more it’s not just people lacking proper documentation who are being negatively impacted. As NC Newsline journalist Brandon Kingdollar recently reported, in many instances, it’s American citizens and lawful residents who are being wrongfully targeted and […]

NC Newsline reporter Greg Childress on the state’s vexing affordable housing shortage
Affordable housing remains one of the most vexing problems in North Carolina and around the country. What’s more, as we were reminded in a conversation this past week with NC Newsline poverty and housing reporter Greg Chidress, it’s a challenge that’s only been made worse by real and threatened federal funding cuts and the uncertainty […]

UNC law professor and author Gene Nichol discusses his new book on the troubled state of democracy
  One of the most visible and prolific voices for progressive policy change in 21st Century North Carolina is UNC Professor of Law Gene Nichol. Since taking up residence here three decades ago, Prof. Nichol has taught, written and advocated with remarkable energy and clarity for public policies that promote economic, social and political justice. […]

Meech Carter of the NC League of Conservation Voters on climate change and Trump policy changes
  Few national policy changes of the past year have drawn more attention or caused more controversy that President Trump’s on-again off-again economic tariffs. But when it comes to lasting global impacts, it’s all but certain that tariffs will pale in comparison to another controversial policy shift – the Trump administration decision to abandon our […]

NC farmer Mary Carroll Dodd on the economic tariffs that continue to roil the U.S. economy
  One of the most visible and controversial economic policy shifts to be implemented during the first year of the second Trump administration has been the return of big economic tariffs (that is, federal taxes) on foreign imports. The President claims that tariffs will boost domestic businesses, but results thus far – especially given the […]

Newsline government and politics reporter Galen Bacharier on the government shutdown and SNAP cuts
  The federal government shutdown continued to have an array of devastating impacts in recent days and, by any fair estimate, one of the most harmful has been the shutoff in SNAP food assistance. While a pair of federal court rulings appear to have forced the Trump administration to restart benefits for the millions of […]

NC Justice Center’s Rebecca Cerese on Congress refusing to extend health insurance tax credits
  The government shutdown and its devastating impact on millions of federal workers and average citizens is not the only dysfunction emanating from Washington these days. Thanks to the refusal of Congress and the Trump administration to extend health insurance tax credits enacted during the Biden years, millions of Americans are facing astronomical price spikes […]

Melissa McDonald of the NC Community Schools Coalition on schools as the center of community support
  Amid the federal government shutdown and the pause in SNAP benefits, a growing number of groups and individuals are coming together and collaborating to promote the success and well-being of students and their families. One such group in our state is the North Carolina Community Schools Coalition – a nonprofit that’s working hard to […]

Jared Bernstein, former chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, on the state of the economy
  Over the last couple of decades, few if any American economists have played a more prominent role in the national debate over the economy or in actually crafting economic policy than Jared Bernstein. Bernstein served as chair of the national Council of Economic Advisers under President Biden and is currently a senior fellow at […]

Senator DeAndrea Salvador discusses AI – its policy implications and abuse of the technology
  It’s almost impossible to turn on one’s computer, phone or TV these days without hearing about or, indeed, experiencing the impact of AI – artificial intelligence. The rapid rise of this remarkable technology is reshaping our world in many important ways – some that provide grounds for great hope and others that give rise […]

Samuel Gunter of the NC Carolina Housing Coalition on the state’s dire affordable housing shortage
  North Carolina faces a dire shortage of affordable housing. One need merely talk to friends and family members – even those with middle class incomes – to understand just how difficult it is to find affordable rental housing, much less homeownership opportunities. That said, the numbers are bleak. The National Low Income Housing Coalition […]

Amy Beros of the Food Bank of Central and Eastern NC on hunger and the threat to SNAP benefits
  In 34 central and eastern North Carolina counties, one-in-five people – that’s well over half-a-million men, women and children – suffers from food insecurity. And sadly, things aren’t going to get better any time soon. Indeed, thanks to recent acts of Congress and the state legislature, SNAP food assistance and other parts of our […]

Elon University poll director Jason Husser on the rapidly changing world of college athletics
  Few areas of modern American popular culture have undergone greater or more rapid changes in recent years that college sports. Thanks to a series of successful legal challenges, the nation’s longstanding practice of treating college athletes as amateurs has been completely upended and, especially at big schools engaged high-profile sports like football and basketball, […]