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NPR News Now

NPR News: 02-24-2026 5PM EST

24 Feb 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

0.031 - 3.819 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton.

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Chapter 2: What recent investigations involve President Trump and Epstein files?

4.22 - 19.764 Ryland Barton

House Democrats say they're investigating why some Epstein files that mention President Trump have not been made public. It follows an NPR investigation that found the Justice Department withheld documents related to sexual abuse accusations against the president. NPR's Stephen Fowler reports.

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19.984 - 36.687 Stephen Fowler

A review of FBI case records, emails, and discovery logs released in the latest tranche of files finds more than 50 pages of documents haven't been published. These include what appear to be FBI interviews as well as notes from conversations with a woman who accused Donald Trump of sexual abuse decades ago when she was a minor.

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Chapter 3: What immigration policies is President Trump expected to address?

36.667 - 47.368 Stephen Fowler

Now, Democrats on the House Oversight Committee say they're launching an investigation into those files. The White House says in a statement that Trump is, quote, totally exonerated. Stephen Fowler, NPR News.

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47.548 - 50.815 Ryland Barton

President Trump will deliver the State of the Union address tonight.

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Chapter 4: How is Ukraine responding to the anniversary of the Russian invasion?

50.915 - 55.063 Ryland Barton

NPR's Jasmine Garce has more on what the president's expected to say about immigration.

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55.043 - 69.839 Jasmine Garst

President Trump won the 2024 election largely on the promise of a mass immigration crackdown. Tonight, he's expected to talk about the fulfillment of that promise. A year into his presidency, illegal border crossings are at a historic low.

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Chapter 5: What are the implications of the U.S. military's access to AI technology?

69.879 - 86.058 Jasmine Garst

There are over 70,000 people in immigration detention. The president has often said his policy targets criminal immigrants. However, DHS data shows that of the people in immigration detention, over 70% have no criminal conviction.

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86.398 - 102.077 Jasmine Garst

Polls show most Americans now disapprove of the way immigration is being enforced, especially after a months-long operation in Minneapolis ended with two American citizens killed by federal agents. Jasmine Garst, NPR News, New York.

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102.057 - 109.766 Ryland Barton

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he wants to hear President Trump say he's still on Ukraine's side during the State of the Union address.

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Chapter 6: What misconduct allegations are facing Texas Congressman Tony Gonzalez?

110.126 - 116.173 Ryland Barton

Today marks four years since Russia invaded its neighbor. Zelensky says Russia has not broken Ukrainians.

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116.493 - 127.986 Volodymyr Zelensky

We didn't lose our country, our independence and freedom. We have it. Now we speak in the capital. Russia is not winning.

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Chapter 7: How are Chicagoans expressing their views on President Trump's immigration policies?

129.448 - 137.92 Volodymyr Zelensky

This is very important. And everybody's asking how long we can hold the line and how long we can stay.

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138.16 - 155.588 Ryland Barton

The anniversary comes as U.S.-brokered peace talks between Russia and Ukraine have made little progress. The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and created instability far beyond its borders. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is pressuring Anthropic to give the military broader access to its A.I.,

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155.956 - 176.468 Ryland Barton

Hegseth gave Anthropic a Friday deadline to open its technology for unrestricted military use or risk losing its government contract. Anthropic is the maker of the chatbot Claude, which is used in classified military networks, but the company has refused to allow its technology to be used for lethal attacks or mass surveillance. The U.S. stock market rose today.

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176.709 - 191.953 Ryland Barton

You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Waymo is sending its robo-taxis to four more cities in Texas and Florida, expanding the territory covered by its fleet of self-driving cars to 10 major metropolitan markets.

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192.389 - 213.744 Ryland Barton

The move into Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, and Orlando, Florida, widens Waymo's early lead in autonomous driving, while rival services from Tesla and Amazon are still testing their robo-taxis in a few cities. Texas Republican Congressman Tony Gonzalez is under pressure from fellow Republicans to resign following a report alleging an affair with a former staffer who later took her own life.

214.185 - 218.312 Ryland Barton

Gonzalez has denied the allegation. Texas Public Radio's David Martin Davies has more.

218.343 - 242.715 David Martin Davies

Republican Colorado Congresswoman Lauren Boebert was the first of Gonzalez's colleagues to publicly demand the South Texas congressman step down over allegations of misconduct. Boebert wrote on the social media platform X, at Rep. Tony Gonzalez, resign. Attached to her message was a screenshot of sexual text messages allegedly between Gonzalez and his staffer Regina Santos-Aviles.

243.216 - 263.74 David Martin Davies

Santos-Aviles took her own life last September. South Carolina Representative Nancy Mace and Florida Representative Ana Paulina Luna echoed the call for Gonzalez to resign. House Speaker Mike Johnson is defending Gonzalez's right to due process and says the investigation process should play out. For NPR News, I'm David Martin Davies in San Antonio.

263.72 - 279.99 Ryland Barton

Chicagoans took a jab at President Trump choosing to name a snowplow Abolish Ice in a contest. Trump sent ICE officers into the city during a crackdown last year. They arrested more than 4,000 people and clashed with protesters. This is NPR News from Washington.

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