Live from NPR News in Washington, on Ryland Barton, the Supreme Court has cle...
way for the Trump administration to begin mass deportations of people who've been living
“and working legally in the U.S. for years, NPR's Vanessa Romo reports it's another victory”
for President Trump's efforts to curtail immigration. The 623 ruling along ideological lines allows the Department of Homeland Security to strip more than 330,000 Haitians and about 4,000 Syrians of temporary protected status, writing for the conservative majority, just as Samuel Alito says TPS recipients from the two countries are not entitled to legal intervention and that the president has unreviewable authority
to end the program.
There are approximately a million people from a dozen countries who've been designated with
TPS, following natural disasters, armed conflicts, or other extraordinary conditions. They've been vetted and allowed to live and work legally in the U.S. since they cannot return safely to their home countries, Vanessa Romo and PR news. The Trump administration had already and did temporary protected status for Venezuela's U.S. pharaoh, the executive director of Venezuela and American caucus says yesterday's
deadly earthquakes near Caracas, underscores why Venezuela and Venezuela's need TPS from the American government. We have been fighting for Venezuela and TPS for more than a year now. If there is a reason for TPS to be created and pass in Congress is for this. If they didn't believe us when we told them that he was not safe to go back to Venezuela
for political persecution, criminality, et cetera, et cetera, then they have to admit that they're going to believe us when we tell them that Venezuela's can't go back to this Venezuela. Federal judges blocked parts of President Trump's executive order that restricts voting by mail. The ruling applies to 23 mainly Democratic-led states and D.C. that challenged the order
and PR's Hansi-Lawong reports.
“A key part of President Trump's order from March calls for the U.S. Postal Service to come”
up with lists of eligible voters and deliver mail and ballots only to people on those lists. U.S. P.S. has financial support of NPR. U.S. is your judge and dear to Alwani and Boston found that Trump's order exceeds his authority under the Constitution, which gives power to state legislatures and Congress,
not the president to set federal election rules. So far, the order has not directly affected mail and voting for this year's elections, but the judge's ruling sets up an expected appeal by the Trump administration. In similar lawsuits based in Washington, D.C., Democrats are appealing a decision by another federal judge who last month refused to put out an emergency order that would block
parts of Trump's election order because the Trump administration had not carried it them out yet. And the world cup is reached its midpoint with 54 matches completed in 50 to go before the final in New Jersey. The U.S. faces off against Turkey tonight, but all three hosts, the U.S. Mexico and
Canada have already qualified for the knockout round. You're listening to NPR news from Washington. Ukraine's president, Volodamir Zelensky, says Russia is moving air defenses to protect
“key targets like Moscow and as Ukrainian drones hit deep inside the country, Ukraine's”
aerial campaign is disrupted and Russian supply lines and caused fuel shortages. Zelensky says this shift could leave other Russian areas vulnerable to Ukraine's long-range drones. Apple is raising prices amid a shortage of computer memory chips, and Piers John Ruech reports. Apple quietly boosted prices on its website for a range of products, including MacBooks
and iPads.
In many cases, prices went up around 15 to 20 percent, so for instance, a 14-inch MacBook
Pro that cost $1,699 yesterday, according to Archived Webpages, now starts at $1,999. Apple TV 4K is now $1.99 instead of $1.29. For Apple's most popular product at the iPhone, it kept prices flat. The rapid expansion of AI data centers has created a surge in demand for memory and storage leading to a spike in chip prices.
Apple says that's created an unprecedented challenge for the entire consumer electronics industry. Apple says it shielded customers for a while, but the cost of memory chips has reached a point where it needs to start raising prices. Several other major players have already done so.
John Ruech and PR news Apple's a financial supporter of NPR. She eyed Muslims around the world are marking ashura, a holy day symbolizing sacrifice that holds special significance for many after months of war and Iran and Lebanon. Ashura commemorates the martyrdom of a mom who sane, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, the event cemented the schism between Sunni and Shiite Islam.
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