PBS NewsHour

March 21, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode

Thursday on the NewsHour, the Justice Department and 16 state attorneys general sue Apple for maintaining a monopoly. With a vote to avoid a government shutdown set for Friday, House Speaker Mike Johnson works to keep his chaotic majority intact. Plus, an Arizona lawmaker talks about why she publicly announced her decision to terminate her non-viable pregnancy.

Military suicide rates highest among tank brigades

8m 34s

The military has experienced suicide in its ranks for decades. In recent years, it was partly attributed to the stresses and strains members experienced in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But those conflicts are over and suicides remain at what the Pentagon calls an unacceptably high level. Nick Schifrin reports.

Previews + Extras

  • WWII 'Ghost Army' soldiers receive Congressional Gold Medal: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    WWII 'Ghost Army' soldiers receive Congressional Gold Medal

    S2024 E82 - 1m 6s

    Some 1,100 World War II soldiers who served in the so-called "Ghost Army" received long overdue recognition at the U.S. Capitol. During the war, they belonged to units that specialized in trickery to outwit the Germans. Their methods included inflatable tanks, sound effects and phony radio transmissions. Thursday, three of the seven known surviving members accepted the Congressional Gold Medal.

  • Unionizing marks latest challenge to student-athlete model: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Unionizing marks latest challenge to student-athlete model

    S2024 E82 - 5m 38s

    March Madness is underway and underlying the excitement of brackets and potential upsets is a conversation around athletes' efforts to unionize. It is the latest challenge to the student-athlete model that has defined college sports. John Yang discussed what could happen next with Gabe Feldman, director of Tulane’s sports law program and the school’s associate provost for NCAA compliance.

  • How evictions can have deadly consequences: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How evictions can have deadly consequences

    S2024 E82 - 8m 7s

    With pandemic protections like eviction moratoriums and emergency rent assistance drying up, eviction filings have risen more than 50 percent in some cities. New research shows that housing instability can have deadly consequences. Stephanie Sy reports.

  • Calif. passes homelessness plan, critics say it's not enough: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Calif. passes homelessness plan, critics say it's not enough

    S2024 E82 - 6m 6s

    California voters narrowly passed a ballot measure that will fund billions of dollars to help the state tackle its homelessness crisis. Gov. Newsom celebrated the victory, but opponents say it doesn’t do enough to keep people from becoming homeless in the first place and gives the state too much control over mental health spending. William Brangham discussed the initiative with Christine Mai-Duc.

  • Arizona lawmaker on decision to end non-viable pregnancy: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Arizona lawmaker on decision to end non-viable pregnancy

    S2024 E82 - 6m 27s

    The patchwork landscape of abortion restrictions in post-Roe America can be both confusing and dangerous. This is true even for some lawmakers, one of whom took to the floor of the Arizona state Senate to describe her experience with a non-viable pregnancy. Amna Nawaz discussed that with Eva Burch, the Democratic Whip of the Arizona Senate.

  • How dysfunction has defined the House: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How dysfunction has defined the House

    S2024 E82 - 6m 30s

    Congress is on the verge of passing its yearly budget, six months into its fiscal year and with less than 48 hours left before the government shuts down. Dysfunction is one of the defining features of this House narrowly divided along party lines and within its Republican majority. Lisa Desjardins reports on what's made this Congress one of history's most dysfunctional.

  • Why the DOJ is suing Apple in a landmark antitrust case: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Why the DOJ is suing Apple in a landmark antitrust case

    S2024 E82 - 5m 58s

    The Department of Justice and more than a dozen states sued Apple in a landmark antitrust case. They argue the tech giant created a monopoly in the smartphone market by using excessively restrictive hardware and apps that keep customers locked into Apple’s ecosystem, putting a “chokehold on competition.” Amna Nawaz discussed the case with Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Doha Mekki.

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