Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Christian Wright.
President Trump is in the swing state of Pennsylvania today. He's visiting a Mac truck facility near Alentown to talk about the economy, NPR's Franco or Donia's reports. The president is under scrutiny by supporters from his own party, ahead of the midterm elections in November.
It's not just Democrats who are concerned about the economy under Trump. Republicans are as well, I mean, 22% of Republicans say they disapprove of Trump's handling of the economy. That's a really big number for a president who has long had an iron grip on Republican support.
I mean, Republican elected officials, lawmakers have been clamoring for Trump to zero in on the economy for months now, especially with the midterm approaching. They've been doing this over and over again, but the Trump administration continues to talk about these issues and foreign policy.
“I think the real question now is whether it's going to be soon enough for Trump to make”
a difference. NPR's Franco or Donia's reporting. Today is the 10th anniversary of the Brexit vote. When Britain's decided to exit the European Union, polls show up to two thirds regret that.
It ended up shrinking the British economy and contributing to a revolving door of prime ministers. NPR's law and frayer reports from London. The now caretaker Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, has convened his cabinet a day after resigning as leader of the ruling center left labor party.
Nominations opened July 9 for his replacement, who would become without an election the country's seventh prime minister in just 10 years. The front runner is Andy Burnham, the former mayor of Manchester, England.
If he runs uncontested, he could take office as soon as the third week in July.
But some labor lawmakers say the process is strengthened by competition and debate, and
“to other labor figures, a former armed services minister and Starmer's chief secretary”
said to be mulling Iran. Lauren Fryer and PR News London. A federal judge has found that a data tool the Trump administration created is unlawful. It's been used to verify voter eligibility by aggregating Americans' personal information and PR's due joffy block reports.
Last spring, the Trump administration overhauled a Department of Homeland Security data system known as SAVE, linking it to social security data to create a citizen ship look up tool. The Trump administration has promoted SAVE as a way to verify voter's eligibility. But SAVE has erroneously flagged eligible Americans as potential non-citizens.
Now a federal judge has rolled the changes to SAVE violated federal laws and the tool in its current form can no longer be used. The decision was celebrated by voting rights in privacy advocates. A Department of Justice statement says it will continue to aggressively defend the president's immigration enforcement agenda and DHS's use of SAVE.
Jude Jaffee Block and PR News. This is NPR.
“Firefighters in Utah are working to get a handle on multiple wildfires.”
Extreme heat and dry windy conditions are making that hard. People in the town of Yurika near Salt Lake City have evacuated. Fire near Beaver, Utah has burned more than 10,000 acres since yesterday. Each of Southern Utah is under red flag warnings today, so as much of Colorado. Severe wildfires have increased dramatically over the last four decades in California.
That's according to a new study that shows climate change is playing a role. NPR's Lauren Summer reports. In the 1980s, the majority of wildfires in California were low or moderate intensity. Those are the fires that the state's forests are adapted to. They clear out overgrown brush and don't kill the trees.
But over the last 40 years, extreme wildfire activity has grown rapidly. That's according to a study from researchers at UCLA and Stanford University. Severe fires are now the most common, because the atmosphere is hotter, drying out the vegetation, and because forests are denser. The risk is that severe wildfires kill many more trees, making it harder for forests to regenerate.
Lauren Summer and PR News.
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo is now the first player to score in six World Cup tournaments.
He made history just a little while ago scoring a goal against Uzbekistan in Houston. Portugal is looking for redemption after the team's draw, and it's opening match against the Democratic Republic of Congo. England takes on Ghana this afternoon, later it's Panama versus Croatia, and then Colombia will play the DRC.
I'm Cristiano Wright, this is NPR in Washington. Support. This is our glass. On this American life. When they're being like, it's a good mystery, sometimes about really big things, but most
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