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wants primary elections, handed mayors, and Ron Momsdani of victory.
“They advanced all three of the congressional candidates he endorsed.”
In South Carolina, Attorney General Alan Wilson defeated President Trump's initial pick and wrote the primary runoff for governor. South Carolina Public Redeals Gavin Jackson reports. Lieutenant Governor Pamela Everett received Trump's coveted endorsement in late May before the primary, but it didn't land as expected.
Wilson gained momentum during the two-week rough period, fueled by support from former opponents like Congressman Ralph Norman and Nancy Mace. With Trump's gubernatorial picks in Iowa and recently Georgia losing, and polling pointing to another loss, he made a dual endorsement last week for both candidates, saying in part quote, "With either one you can't go wrong quote."
Wilson, the four-term attorney general, was declared the winner of roughly 30 minutes after polls closed. He says his administration will be transformational for the fastest growing state in the country, with a focus on infrastructure and efficiency. He faces Democratic State Representative Germaine Johnson in November.
“For MPR News, I'm Gavin Jackson and Columbia, South Carolina.”
The two biggest teachers, union, surging Democratic governors to reject the Trump administration's private school voucher program as impurities to knock you metal reports.
The Trump administration is launching the first major federal program that will give taxpayer
dollars to parents, to spend on private school tuition. Democrats have historically opposed private school vouchers, arguing they take money away from public schools, but at least four Democratic state leaders have said they plan to take part. That includes New York Governor Kathy Hoekul and Colorado's Jared Polis.
In an open-lettered Democratic governor's leaders of the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, called a program "Attrojan Horse," that's carrying private school vouchers even into states where voters have rejected them. The program is set to launch in January. Janaki Mepha and Pierre News
Officials say two Lebanese men have been killed by Israeli forces and southern Lebanon, while
“trying to clear roads of debris following a ceasefire, Israel without providing proof said”
they were terrorists and Pierre's Dana Raffes in Beirut. The mayor of Upper Navatia, Zayn Randur, was in the area when the shooting took place. He tells NPR one of the men killed was driving a bulldozer in a municipality project, clear roads, and removed rubble from destroyed houses. He says ambulances followed behind the bulldozer to help search for bodies from previous attacks,
while civilians also followed. Israel said the men were, quote, "Hesbal terrorists on a bulldozer and motorcycle who crossed into its expounded, self-declared securities own in Lebanon." Iran backed his bulldozer called the shooting a violation of a ceasefire that took effect Friday with Israel.
Iran has called Israeli attacks in Lebanon, a red line, "Jayn Raff and Pierre News, Beirut." This is NPR News. President Trump is calling Tuesday's Senate vote on a war power's resolution poorly timed and meaningless. And on social media Tuesday night, he called the Forest Senate Republicans who voted with
Democrats to pass the resolution losers. Senate approved the measure on the 10th try on a 50-48 vote. Officials in Northern California say the 18-year-old suspect in a shooting at a library that left poor people dead as to be a rain Thursday. The shootings incurred Monday evening at the shade the Chico branch of the Bukh County
Library. Authorities say the suspect demonstrated an affinity for the 1999 Columbine shooting. Over a week, teams of sea gores have been traversing a 750-mile span of water between Washington State and Alaska, and they've been doing it with no engines. It's part of a human and wind-powered voting competition known as the Race to Alaska.
The winning team crossed the finish line Monday night, 100 Morrison of Membersation K, R.B.D. was there to greet them. Before men, guide their yellow, multi-hole sailboat into this downtown harbor, Nigel Oswald steps off and rings a bell, marking his team's completion of the journey. Oswald in his winning team wanted to take on the challenge of the race to see what they
were made of. And they did it, and a boat spilled for much shorter journeys. Getting that boat, that isn't designed for this kind of thing with these guys, too here just feels awesome. This year, more than 60 teams entered the race.
They'll trickle in or tap out over the next few weeks. You're listening to NPR news. This is our glass. On this American life, when they mean like, it's a good mystery. Sometimes it's about really big things, but most times, the little mysteries are the best.
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