The Associated Press is an independent global news organization dedicated to factual reporting.
Associated Press
Latest from Associated Press
-
Arizona Republic Journalists Among Hundreds Striking to Demand Change at Newspaper Chain
Journalists at two dozen local newspapers across the US walked off the job Monday to demand an end to painful cost-cutting measures and a change of leadership at Gannett, the country’s biggest newspaper chain.
-
BREAKING: Sinema Joins Republicans in Vote to Overturn Student Loan Debt Relief
Should the legislation pass the US House and make its way to the President’s desk, it will almost certainly be vetoed.
-
Phoenix Faces Dueling Lawsuits Over Homeless Crisis as Advocates Scramble for More Shelter
Phoenix is facing dueling lawsuits as it tries to manage a crisis of homelessness that has converted its downtown into a tent city housing hundreds of people as summer temperatures soar.
-
Low-Income Tenants in Phoenix Lack Options as Old Mobile Home Parks Are Razed
Families are being forced out of a plot of land that Grand Canyon University bought for student housing.
-
Brittney Griner Gets Rousing Welcome in Phoenix Home Game After Release From Russian Prison
Brittney Griner scored 27 points, grabbed 10 rebounds, and blocked four shots in the Mercury’s home opener.
-
Arizona Diamondbacks Pitcher Accidentally Kills Bird With Pregame Throw
“It’s kind of a freak accident,” Diamondbacks pitcher Zac Gallen said. “It’s unfortunate.”
-
Arizona Coyotes’ Bid for New Arena Appears to Be Rejected by Tempe Voters
In the first release of results from Tuesday’s referendum, voters in Tempe were strongly against three propositions to build a $2.3 billion entertainment district that would include a new arena for the Coyotes.
-
Phoenix Sky Harbor Among 16 US Airports Testing Facial Recognition Technology
Critics pointed out the possibility of bias in facial recognition technology, and possible repercussions for people who want to opt out.
-
This Tribe’s Land Was Cut in Two by US Borders. Its Fight for Access Could Help Dozens of Others.
Tribe members still face border officials who they say lack the cultural awareness to process them without problems.
-
Havasupai Tribe in Arizona Marks a Spiritual Homecoming: ‘We Are Still the Grand Canyon’
Today about 500 of the nearly 770 tribal members live in Supai Village on the reservation adjacent to the Grand Canyon, so remote it can be reached only by foot, mule or helicopter.



















