"Lie from NPR News in Washington, I'm Lakshmi Singh.
The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down President Trump's order to end birthright citizenship.
The High Court affirms that virtually all children born in the U.S. to parents unlawfully or temporarily in the country are subject to the jurisdiction of the United States and therefore are citizens at birth under the 14th Amendment. More from NPR is Kerry Johnson. What a complete surprise given the way the oral argument went in this case.
“Remember, Chief Justice John Roberts actually said to the solicitor General John Sauer.”
It may be a different world with respect to people being able to travel to the United States. Way more easily than they did in the 1890s, but it's the same constitution, the same 14th Amendment. NPR is Kerry Johnson reporting. On his social media platform, truth, social president Trump suggests congressional Republicans
could still pass a bill that supports the ban. However, the Supreme Court also handed Trump and the GOP some legal victories today and won a majority of justice struck down spending limits on political parties and candidates. Another adult a big setback to transgender individuals and P.R.S. Hammer Keith has that story. The Supreme Court ruled that states may ban transgender athletes from participating in girls
and women's sports at publicly funded schools. In a social media post, President Trump wrote "big win." The United States Supreme Court just ruled against men playing in women's sports. Wow! That takes that ridiculous situation off the table.
“Trump made banning transgender girls and women from competitive sports a key part of his campaign”
in 2024 and has often used the issue as a wedge to argue Democrats have overreached. In recent years, 27 states have enacted similar bans. Tamar Keith and P.R. News, the White House. New Jersey Congressman Thomas Caine Jr. is back at work after more than three months absence in a speech on the House floor today.
The Republican disclose that he had been hospitalized with depression. Venezuela's opposition leader in exile says she will return to the country and P.R.S.
April to reports it comes as Venezuela recovers from two powerful earthquakes.
In a video posted on social media, the Nobel laureate Maria Curina Machado said she was in Panama awaiting a flight to Venezuela. Machado accused the government of closing off the airspace to stop her from flying, but commercial flights have continued to several Venezuela and airports. Machado said she wanted to be in Venezuela to help coordinate relief efforts.
"It would be Venezuela to help coordinate relief efforts." I will be in Venezuela to cry over our loss, to pray together, to hug each other. Venezuela authorities say more than 1,700 people are now confirmed dead from the earthquake. Thousands are still reported missing. 8 o'clock in P.R. News.
It's NPR. A judge in Michigan has ordered that prediction market site Calshy stopped most of its activity in that state. NPR's Bobby Allen reports dozens of U.S. states are cracking down on the prediction market industry.
While she says it will block anyone in Michigan from betting on sports after the state's attorney general accused the company of violating gambling laws. The Michigan judge ordering the ban makes it the second state where Calshy has been pushed out following a similar restriction in Nevada. Both cases centered on sports betting on Calshy which represents more than 80% of the app's
betting. Unlike sportsbooks though, Calshy allows weight during on sports without the approval of state regulators or having to pay state taxes. President Trump has vowed to protect the prediction market industry where traders can bet on everything from the color of Trump's tie to foreign policy decisions.
This month alone, sun nearly $30 billion traded on Calshy, Bobby Allen and PR news.
Some major repairs are happening this hour outside the international space station orbiting Earth at an altitude of approximately 250 miles. Yes, you take a plate for now, we're going to do a reach of Allen and we'll see what we can do. Now is a video of astronauts, Chris Williams and Jessica Meer. In a space walk that started this morning and was expected to take about six and a half
hours.
“They were placing a malfunctioning wrist joint on a Canadian robotic arm that's key to ISS operations”
like intercepting, unpilited cargo vehicles. This is NPR News Every episode of It's Binnen Minute, NPR is what's happening in culture podcast. Starts by asking three questions, who, how, why now, if the culture is asking it, we're talking about it.
At NPR, we stand for your right to be curious and indulge your cultural curiosity. Follow it's Binnen Minute wherever you get your podcasts and we'll break down the zi-guicy


