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NPR News Now

NPR News: 04-02-2026 8PM EDT

03 Apr 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

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

0.554 - 19.785 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. President Trump says Attorney General Pam Bondi is leaving her post. He says Bondi will transition to the private sector and that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanch will serve as Acting Attorney General. Bondi made major changes to the Justice Department, as NPR's Ryan Lucas explains.

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Chapter 2: What changes has Attorney General Pam Bondi made to the Justice Department?

20.066 - 34.577 Ryan Lucas

Traditionally, the Justice Department has been independent to a degree from the White House. That's particularly true when it comes to investigations. And that's to try to insulate those from partisan politics. Bondi tossed that independence out the window. The department has targeted the president's perceived enemies.

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34.557 - 50.584 Ryan Lucas

And then more broadly, the past 14 months have just been an incredibly chaotic time at the Justice Department. Career prosecutors and FBI officials have been fired. Entire sections of the department have been gutted. And the credibility of the department before the courts has suffered as well.

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50.845 - 74.301 Ryland Barton

NPR's Ryan Lucas reporting. The attorneys general of California, New York, and Massachusetts sent a letter to Trump officials today to voice concerns regarding The letter was sent by the U.S. Department of State.

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74.281 - 110.8 Marc Bettencourt

We'll be right back. A Biden-era rule requires the government to provide unaccompanied children access to abortion services, but the administration is currently trying to remove that rule. The attorneys general say the policy change could keep the girls from getting, quote, life- or health-saving abortion care. For NPR News, I'm Marc Bettencourt.

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110.92 - 119.29 Ryland Barton

The Trump administration is designating microplastics and pharmaceuticals as contaminants in the nation's drinking water. NPR's Will Stone has more.

119.27 - 135.676 Will Stone

The Environmental Protection Agency is placing microplastics and pharmaceuticals on what's known as the Contaminant Candidate List alongside other chemicals like PFAS. The list gets updated every five years. The action doesn't require the agency to move forward with regulations, though it could set the stage.

136.177 - 156.792 Will Stone

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said it was a landmark step, but some environmental groups pushed back. saying the administration is doing this even as it works to unravel regulations on chemicals in the environment. The administration also said it would be investing more than $140 million in a research effort to study microplastics in the human body. Will Stone, NPR News.

156.812 - 179.091 Ryland Barton

Britain is accusing Iran of holding the global economy hostage as diplomats from over 40 countries discuss ways to press Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. was absent from the virtual meeting. President Trump says securing the waterway is not the responsibility of the U.S. French President Emmanuel Macron says reopening the Strait by force is unrealistic. This is NPR News.

180.934 - 199.483 Ryland Barton

President Trump's new White House ballroom has gotten final approval from a key commission. This comes after a federal judge ordered a halt to construction unless Congress approves the project. A spokesperson for the National Capital Planning Commission says the agency is moving ahead with the vote. because the judge's ruling affects construction activities, not planning.

Chapter 3: What concerns did attorneys general from California, New York, and Massachusetts express?

245.256 - 254.749 Michael Kaluki

deportees and raise questions about the private interests who will profit from the agreement. The Ugandan government is yet to respond. For NPR News, I'm Michael Kaluki in Nairobi.

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254.769 - 279.045 Ryland Barton

A company in eastern China is using an AI-powered machine to sort clothes and boost recycling. The fast-sort textile machine was named one of Time magazine's best inventions of 2025. The equipment can sort more than 200 pounds of clothes in two to three minutes. It takes one worker around four hours to do the same thing. This is NPR News from Washington.

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280.291 - 296.556 Unknown

On Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, the NPR News Quiz, we've had some of the biggest stars in the world come on the show, but we don't ask them the questions everybody else does. You know, the ones they can answer. We ask them questions about things they don't know anything about. Some of them seem to enjoy the novelty. Join us for the show that always zigs when they say jump.

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296.836 - 300.021 Unknown

That's NPR's Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, wherever you get your podcasts.

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