Live from NPR News, I'm Jial Snyder.
The Senate has brought the funding fight over the Department of Homeland Security to
an end, following a 42-day standoff.
“The Senate approved a bill overnight that funds agencies such as TSA and FEMA, but leaves”
out the Department's main immigration enforcement operations. Senate Republican leader John Thun took to the floor after the vote to blame Democrats for what he called a "peace meal approach." We wanted an issue, politics over policy, self-interest over reform, pandering to their base over actually solving a problem.
It's an appalling commentary on the State of the Democratic Party. Senate Democrats had refused a fund DHS over objections to immigration enforcement tactics following the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis, Democratic leader
Chuck Schumer Democrats held firm in our opposition that Donald Trump's rogue and deadly
militia should not get more funding without serious reforms and we will continue to fight for those reforms. So legislation still needs House approval before going to President Trump for his signature. Egypt, Pakistan, Turkey, playing a role in efforts to end the U.S. as Rayleigh War on Iran impures Ayah Baitrari reports.
“Iran says there are no negotiations with the U.S., and its list of conditions for”
halting the war include payments for damages and an end to attacks on Iranian back militias in the region. Trump, meanwhile, says he wants Iran to halt all nuclear enrichment and curb its missile and drone production. Egyptian Foreign Minister Baddrab Dalaii says Cairo is working to bridge existing gaps
between the U.S. and Iran's positions. So we are supporting the peace initiative by President Trump to open the door for negotiations with Iranian side. He says Egypt is communicating directly with Iran's foreign ministry Ayah Baitrari MPR News Dubai, with reporting by Ahmed Abohamda in Cairo.
"Ferro, Josh, has tossed a lawsuit alleging appetizers on the ex-social media platform
organized in illegal boycott, and here's Bobby Allen reports on the second major legal
setback for Elon Musk's week."
“Back in 2023, Musk sent from the stage of a public event if someone is going to blacklist”
me with advertising, then well, they can hit the road, except he used more graphic language. It was a reference to advertisers like Apple, Disney, IBM, and Comcast that had halted spending on X after concerns that anti-Semitism was spreading on the site unchecked. Musk sued over it, alleging a brand-organized conspiracy against him. Now, a federal judge in Texas has thrown the lawsuit out for a lack of merit.
The legal defeat comes days after a jury in San Francisco found Musk to fraud it investors in his purchase of the site once known as Twitter, Musk's lawyer has said the trial was corrupted by the judge's bias against Musk, Bobby Allen MPR News. "This is MPR, federal judge's brother and sister have been charged after an explosive device was found earlier this month outside a gate at McDill Air Force Base in Tampa.
Greg Kio is a federal prosecutor for the middle district of Florida. He says Allen Shang fled to China with his sister and Mary. He remains in China, but his sister was arrested upon her return to Florida." Kio says she's being charged with as an accessory to the crime for allegedly selling the car used to drop off the device.
"The bomb is placed on the 10th, they left on the 12th, on the 11th, they attempted to destroy evidence by selling the automobile involved to carmax." "The authorities say Allen Shang actually planted the device that made a 911 call saying there was a bomb at the base. Religious radio stations make up about one quarter of all broadcast stations in the U.S.
a new Pew Research study finds an even larger portion of Americans listen to faith-based radio in Pierce, Jason, to Rose reports." The study found that 45% of Americans listen to religious radio stations and they do so for a variety of reasons. For spiritual uplift, to relax, for advice, or guidance, and because programming is what
they consider family friendly. The kinds of programs listeners tune into vary, nearly 4 in 10 say they listen to religious music, 3 in 10, listen to sermons or religious services. While the analysis found that political commentary makes up a relatively small part of programming on these stations, 40% of those surveys said keeping up with news and politics was,
a reason for listening. Jason D'Ros and PR News, President Trump's White House is upending Democratic norms on a weekly basis. Trump's terms is in Pierce podcast where you can follow it all from ice to Venezuela, to Iran, to questioning election results, even minting a coin with his face on it.
Trump's terms brings you a single story every episode with same day coverage of the president and his policies.
Listen to Trump's terms on the NPR app
or wherever you get your podcasts.


