Line from NPR News and Washington, on Crove of a Coleman, President Trump is ...
to hold a cabinet meeting this hour at the White House.
“This comes as the status of a P-Steel between Iran and the Trump administration remains”
cloudy. Former President Joe Biden is suing the Trump administration. He says that in two weeks, the Justice Department is planning to release his private conversations. These were central to a special counsel investigation into Biden's handling of classified
documents. And beer's Christian Wright reports. Biden says interviews with the ghost writer of his 2017 memoir were personal conversations, recounting some of the most politically consequential and painful times of his life. The lawsuit claims the audio recordings and transcripts are private and exempt from disclosure.
The Justice Department got the materials as part of an investigation into Biden's handling
of classified documents after his vice presidency. Now, under President Trump, DOJ is planning to release the files to the conservative heritage foundation, which made a public records request and to Congress. Biden argues the House Judiciary Committee has no legitimate reason to have the records. Trump responded to Biden's lawsuit on true social, calling him a crooked politician,
Christian Wright and P-R news. There's more construction underway at the White House besides President Trump's ballroom. Workers are building a temporary arena outdoors, it will host events by the ultimate fighting championship in honor of the nation's 250th birthday. The fights are scheduled for June 14th, also Trump's birthday.
The fight events are organized by the head of the UFC and the President's friend, Dana White, who says safety is his main focus in mixed martial arts.
“Nothing is more important than health and safety does.”
Think about this.
30-year history of the UFC never a death or serious injury.
In 30 years, cheerleading can't say that. He spoke in an NPR video interview. The National Weather Service says unseasonably hot weather is stuck over the northern plains and upper Midwest for the next few days. Forecasters say it will be 100 degrees or hotter in northern Montana today.
Meanwhile, heat records are being shattered in much of Europe, that's where afternoon highs have been reaching the mid to upper 90s, and Pierce Eleanor Beardsley reports from Paris. French authorities have linked seven deaths to the unprecedented scorching temperatures, much of Europe is under a heat dome originating in North Africa and trapped under a high pressure system across the European continent.
Climate scientists warn the extreme weather is a result of the effects of global warming. Europe is warming faster than the global average, partly due to ocean currents and air movements across the continent.
“Restrictions on outdoor work were imposed in parts of Italy and temperatures have reached”
95 degrees as far north as London, Eleanor Beardsley and Pierre News Paris. Unwalsery, the Dow Jones and Dustreels are up about 300 points. This is NPR. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will be the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate this fall.
He defeated longtime U.S. Senator John Coranon for the GOP nomination yesterday. Paxton had gotten President Trump's endorsement. He'll face Democratic State Senator James Talloreco in the fall election. NASA is unveiling plans for more permanent presence on the Moon's surface, NPR's William Jones reports.
The newly released rendering some NASA share astronauts, Moonbuggies, and hopping drones spread across the Moon's surface. At an event in Washington to unveil the next stage of the Artemis program, Dr. Laurie Glays who leads NASA's exploration missions says they're eyeing a more sustained lunar presence. With Moonbase, Artemis astronauts will stay longer, explore farther, and conduct the kinds
of science that advances exploration itself. It's a multi-decade effort, and NASA says the aim is to develop a lunar habitat at the Moon's South Pole by 2032. Here's Carlos Garcia Galland, who's heading up the mission. Then we'll be able to say, "Hey, we're permanently here and we're not giving it up."
The hope is that this Moonbase will provide a hub for astronauts to work alongside robots to study the Moon, and also help prepare for future Mars missions. William Jones NPR News Officials in Sydney, Australia say nearly 90 twinkling show drones crashed into the city's famous harbor Monday night during a festival display. No one was heard.
The drone company blamed radio interference for the miss-hap. Australian authorities are trying to fish the drones out of the Sydney harbor now. One core of a Coleman NPR News Each story you hear on planet money starts with a question. What happens if we refund tariffs?
Why are grocery so expensive? An NPR we stand for your right to be curious, because the forces shaping our world can be hard to see. Follow NPR's planet money wherever you get your podcasts, and start seeing how the economy


