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NPR News: 05-29-2026 2PM EDT

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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.

A federal judge is temporarily blocking the Trump administration's nearly $1.8 billion

fund for people who claim they were targets of politicized prosecutions.

NPR's Ryan Lucas reports the decision is in response to a lawsuit filed by a legal advocacy group. In a two-page order, U.S. district judge Lini Brinkham abars the Justice Department from taking any further action to create the so-called anti-weaponization fund, including transferring money to the fund, considering any claims or making any payments out of it.

This temporary pause is necessary the judge says in order to give the court time for a full briefing from both sides on the legal arguments before any funds are irreversibly paid out. The fund was created as part of a settlement agreement between the Justice Department and President Trump, who in return dropped his lawsuit against the IRS over his leaked tax returns. The fund has faced intense backlash from Democrats, as well as many Republicans.

Ryan Lucas and PR News, Washington. Israel says its planning to expand its control over Gaza, and PR's A of a Trial We reports the plan would increase the territory under Israeli control from roughly two-thirds of Gaza to about 70%.

There's still no international peacekeeping force in Gaza, and no disarmament agreement

with Hamas. Instead, Israeli assassinations of Hamas commanders has ramped up, and Palestinian families say Israeli backed local militias have pushed them to relocate closer to the coast. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told an audience this week about the continued push.

The next step he says is to expand that control to 70%. He said Israel was tightening its grip on Hamas from every direction. Some members of his cabinet like the Defense Minister support displacing Palestinians from Gaza, or what they call "voluntary migration," Ayyabhattrawe and Pyrenees do by.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average crossed the 51,000 mark for the first

time ever today, and PR Scott Horsley reports stocks are trading higher as crude oil prices inch down. Speculators in futures markets are betting that oil will soon start flowing again through

the Strait of Hormuz, but businesses that actually use oil say falling futures prices

don't reflect the actual risk to supplies. Exxon mobile war in this week that physical stockpiles of oil are approaching record low levels, and unless they're replenished, oil prices could spike again in the coming weeks. Triple A says retail gasoline prices in the US dipped about 3 cents a gallon overnight, but the average price of 439 is still about a buck 40 higher than before the US launched its

war with Iran. The US trade deficit narrowed slightly last month. The Commerce Department says exports and imports both increased in April, but exports grew more. Scott Horsley and Pyrenees was Washington.

On Wall Street, the Dow was up 342 points. This is NPR. Republicans in Louisiana have approved a new congressional map that could help the party pick up a house seat in this year's midterm elections. The move comes after the Supreme Court struck down the state's redrawn map, which had

carved out a second majority black district.

Louisiana lawmakers quickly redrew district lines, eliminating the recently created congressional district. A federal judge in Washington, D.C. has rejected an attempt to stop an executive order from President Trump calling for redistricting voting by mail. Trump's order calls for the federal government to create lists of adult U.S. citizens in each

state. It also calls for banning the U.S. postal service from delivering mail-in ballots to anyone not on those lists. U.S. P.S. is a financial supporter of NPR. Separately a federal judge in Boston is preparing to rule on claims that the president's

directives violate the Constitution, which gives power to state legislatures and Congress, not the president to set federal election rules on Zila Wong and Pyrenees. The price of a forever stamp is that to increase by four cents this summer, the U.S. postal service has proposed raising the cost from 78 to 82 cents beginning July 12th. This is NPR News in Washington.

New shows, new music, new movies, keeping up with pop culture sometimes feels like a full-time job. Thankfully over at pop culture happy-hour, it's literally our job. We break down what's actually worth watching, listening to, and pretending you already knew about.

So the next time someone says, "Did you see that?" You can say, yeah, obviously, follow NPR's pop culture happy-hour wherever you get your

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