"Live from NPR News in Washington on Corv.
attacks on Iran's power plants for five days."
“He says, "That's because his team is having "productive conversations with Iran."”
But NPR's Franco Ordonu's reports Trump also says he's not guaranteeing anything." Trump's made clear he wants to reach a deal, but Emily Harding from the Center for Strategic and International Studies says Trump knows the politics. He knows the midterms are coming and sees the oil market struggling. She recommended taking Trump's provider with a grain of salt.
It really fits his ML. This is how he prefers to negotiate. He makes a real maximalist pressure demand, and then he seems to want to find a way to negotiate out of it so he can take the pressure off and declare victory. But it kind of goes either way, right?
I mean, the adversary gets a boat. "She points out we've heard these kind of things before, including about reaching a deal with
Russia over the Ukraine war, which never materialized."
Franco Ordonu's NPR News
“Iran state media say there is a new leader for the country's national security council,”
former revolutionary guard commander Muhammad Bogger Zogater is to take over from Ali Larajani, who was killed in an air strike. The U.S. Senate is confirmed Oklahoma Republican Senator Mark Wayne Mullin, as Secretary of Homeland Security. It will take over an agency that's partially shut down, and beer Sam Greenglass reports,
lawmakers and the White House are squaring off over immigration enforcement. Mullin is inheriting a department at the center of a national debate about immigration, after federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis earlier this year. While I still has billions of dollars at its disposal, despite the funding laps, employees at other agencies under DHS like TSA are going without pay.
And absences are causing long wait at major airports. Some lawmakers hope their colleague will be a steadier hand compared to his predecessor,
Kristi Nome, who Trump ultimately fired.
“But most Democrats still opposed his nomination, saying they don't believe a change in”
leadership is enough of a course correction. Sam Greenglass and PR News Washington. Meanwhile, hundreds of TSA agents have quit, others are calling out. President Trump has now deployed ICE agents to some major airports to assist with security.
Many air travelers at Atlanta's major airport had to wait five hours to clear security. Georgia Public Broadcasting Sophie Grattas says ICE agents are there. Most of the ICE agents have been kind of walking around near the main security checkpoints at the airport and just observing the area. They weren't wearing any face coverings, and they seem to be doing more patrolling than
actually helping with security lines. And besides that, Atlanta, ICE isn't really saying publicly where else agents have been deployed. We do know they've been seen at about a dozen airports. Sophie Grattas reporting from Atlanta. On Wall Street in pre-market trading, Dow futures are lower.
This is NPR. New York's LaGuardia airport is open today, but federal officials say traffic is very slow. Passengers should expect to wait more than four hours for flights. Officials are reviewing how an air candidate jet collided with a fire truck as it landed Sunday night at LaGuardia to pilots were killed dozens of people were injured.
The New York Times and other media outlets report President Trump has cast a male ballot in a special local election today in Florida. He's used this method before in 2020. But NPR rather Trump continues to rail against male voting, calling it cheating. This also comes as the U.S. Supreme Court heard a case yesterday that would limit the use of
some male ballots. This case is being pressed by Republicans. In rivers around the world, many types of fish undertake massive migrations. They cross international borders and provide people with food and jobs. But as NPR's Nate Rot reports, a new assessment finds many of these migrations are collapsing. The New York United Nations letterport offers the most comprehensive look at the world's
freshwater fish migrations ever. And its findings are sober.
Migratory fish populations have fallen by more than 80 percent globally since 1970.
325 different species it says should be considered for protection. And protecting those species will require international coordination. The assessments authors say with rivers being treated as connected systems. A challenge, some scientists say, given the broader state of international affairs. Nate Rot and PR News.
Again, on Wall Street in pre-market trading, doubt futures are lower. It's NPR.


