"Lie from NPR News," I'm Lakshmi Singh.
President Trump has dropped his multi-billion-dollar lawsuit against the internal revenue
“service according to court filings today.”
The development comes after a judge in Florida raised questions about whether the case was properly filed in the statement the department said the $1.7 billion fund will allow the DOJ to settle in pay cases. ABC News for a support of the fund would be used to assist people who believe they were wrongfully investigated and prosecuted under the Biden administration.
The department said the legal precedent of the fund came from the Obama-era Keeps Eagle case, which created a $760 million fund to redress various decades-old claims of racism against the federal government. The White House says China has agreed to purchase at least $17 billion of American agricultural goods that follows President Trump's visit to Beijing last week.
The Chinese side has given far fewer details, we have more from NPR's Jennifer Pot.
China says it reached a preliminary agreement with the U.S. on agricultural trade and
aircrafts, though it did not specify a purchase amount. The Chinese Commerce Ministry says both sides agreed on tariffs imposed on each other's
“exports, which reached sky high levels last year before a truce was called.”
Same time, China says the U.S. guaranteed it could buy what it sorely needs, aircraft engines and related parts. China's statement also did not mention rare earth minerals to the U.S. It says economic and trade teams from the U.S. and China are still finalizing the details. Jennifer Pack and PR News, Shanghai.
Republican Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana is the latest casualty in President Trump's campaign to target Republicans. He sees as "disloyal." Cassidy's Trump-backed opponent, Congresswoman Julie Letelo, advances to a runoff against state, treasure, John Fleming, fears and PR Sam Greenglass.
Cassidy was one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump after the January 6th insurrection. Next year, at least five of them will be gone from the Senate, leaving fewer Republicans in Congress willing to criticize the president. Cassidy has indicated he will not finish his term quietly.
"Our country is not about one individual. It is about the welfare of all Americans and it is about our Constitution." The Louisiana primary was the latest test of Trump's grip on the party. He also helped defeat many of the Indiana GOP state senators who blocked mid-cycle redistricting last year.
A House primary in Kentucky this week will be another test. Sam Greenglass and PR News Washington.
“The Senate Parliamentarians blocking a billion-dollar secret service provision from being”
included in a Republican-backed immigration in force in Bill Aziz, Senate Republicans that proposed taxpayer funding for security upgrades to President Trump's White House Ballroom. From Washington, this is NPR News. Labor unions in South Korea are in last-age negotiations with corporations Sam, St.
Electronics, about 50,000 workers could go on strike Thursday if no agreements reached. Piers Anthony King reports from solo strike could aggravate a global shortage of memory chips. Sam sung filed for a court injunction to stop the strike. The court said workers could go on strike, but they must ensure production safety and
may not occupy key facilities. The unions said they'll negotiate in good faith, but if talks fail, the court's ruling won't keep them from striking. The unions want fixed performance bonuses, equal to 15% of Samsung's operating profits, which grew by more than 700% in the first quarter of this year due to high prices
for memory chips. NPR's Anthony King reporting at the PGA Championships Sunday, England's Aaron Rice separated himself from a bunch of fuel, and emerged as the unexpected winner. Championship is a second of Golfs 4 majors this year. Greg Ecclin has more from outside Philadelphia.
Aaron Rice's signature moment was a 68-foot birdie-pot on the 17th green. The 31-year-old Rye became the first from England to win a PGA championships since 1919. And achievement he doesn't take lightly.
To be a person that's the first one to avoid any such a long time from England is an amazing
thing and something to be extremely proud of. Before the weekend, Rye had won just once on a PGA tour of three times on the European tour. He won by three shots over John Rye of Spain and Alex Smolley of Greensboro, North Carolina. It's NPR.
This week on up first one trend, emerging this election season, President Trump actively opposing Republicans he sees as disloyal and endorsing their primary challengers who have toppled in combits in multiple states. We're watching Keep primaries on Tuesday in Kentucky and elsewhere to see if that narrative holds up.
And what those races might tell us about November. Listen to up first every morning on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.


