"Life from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor, Johnston.
The White House is outlining the next steps toward ending the war with Iran and a national
“address last night, President Trump outlined what he considers accomplished objectives in”
the conflict, which is now in its second month. NPR's J. Parves has been tracking the response from the Iranian government." In the speech updating the nation on the war with Iran, President Trump said that the conflict would end soon, but the U.S. strikes on Iran would intensify over the next two to three weeks.
He also said this, "We're going to bring them back to the storages where they belong." There has yet to be an official response from Iran, but response from some officials on social media with Swift and Sharp.
For instance, said Najid Musabi, "The Aerospace Commander for Iran's revolutionary guard
wrote on XU with your poultry 250-year-old history, threatened civilization over 6,000 years old." The ex-account belonging to the consulate general of the Islamic Republic of Iran and Mumbai posted, "They said Iran needed to be great again." Now suddenly, the goalposts, the Stone Age, funny thing, civilizations that go back to
empires like the Archimedes, don't really do again, they just are.
“Shortly after President Trump's speech in which he also claimed that Iran's military capabilities”
were destroyed, Iran launched a series of missiles at Israel and Bahrain. He pavras and PR news, Vaughn Turkey. Now, Speaker Mike Johnson will attempt to get Republicans to back a bipartisan deal to fund all of the Department of Homeland Security, except its immigration enforcement teams. And PR's Eric McDaniel has more.
Beaker Johnson, last Friday, paned the proposal that he's now asking Republicans to support. "This gambit that was done last night is a joke." They voted down that plan from the Senate, and now he'll have to ask his members to support the same deal. It funds DHS immediately, except for ICE and parts of customs and border protection.
So folks like airport security can be paid in the short term, while a bigger three-year deal is worked out to fund all of DHS through the remainder of Trump's time in the White House. And thanks to a parliamentary maneuver called reconciliation, that long-term deal shouldn't need any support from Democrats.
“First though, Johnson has to convince hard-line Republicans that he's no longer joking.”
Eric McDaniel and PR News Washington. The Commerce Department says the U.S. trade deficit widened in February to just over $57 billion. "Imports and exports both increased during the month, but as NPR, Scott Horsley reports, imports rose more."
The news comes a year to the day after the President ordered double-digit tariffs on virtually everything Americans buy from other countries. What Trump called liberation-day tariffs were later struck down by the Supreme Court.
Some of the officials are now working on a process to refund $166 billion that was wrongly
collected. "That's NPR, Scott Horsley reporting. On Wall Street, the Dow is down 189 points. This is NPR News." Those who work in New England's fishing industry are among those feeling the financial strain
from the high cost of fuel. David Wright with Ocean State Media has more from Rhode Island. "At the fishing ports of Rhode Island, the price of dockside diesel fuel jumped nearly 50% last month. It's now 575 a gallon.
If it climbs much hires, he captains like Patrick Duckworth say it may soon become too expensive to fish." "Priced the fish doesn't come out, price of fuel don't go down, and you're going to see all this harbor full of awesome along." "Meaning they won't be going out on the water."
"Yup, won't be going on the water, and last morning, probably a lot of people I won't have jobs." See, food processors say it's a double whammy. Not only to hire fuel prices cut into the fisherman's pockets, they also hit harder for truckers who transport the fish where it needs to go.
For NPR News, I'm David Wright in Narraganset, Rhode Island." The Artemis II Orion spacecraft has entered high-earth orbit where it will stay for a day before heading toward the moon. Retired NASA astronaut and two times face shuttle mission commander Susan Kilrain tells ABC the mission is a test flight for the next Artemis mission.
"We're going back to the moon after more than 50 years, but we're going back there with a purpose. It's a new rocket, it's a new spacecraft, and we're going to get new lunar landers. So I mean, this is pivotal in the space program." This is NASA's first moon mission since the Apollo in 1972.
On Wall Street, the Dow was down 177 points. This is NPR." Iran, Lebanon, Israel, Gaza, with conflict unfolding in so many places.
First-hand reporting has never mattered more.
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