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NPR News Now

NPR News: 06-01-2026 5PM EDT

01 Jun 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What recent legal developments involve the Trump administration's anti-weaponization fund?

0.689 - 21.723 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. The Justice Department says it will abide by a federal court order that temporarily pauses the Trump administration's nearly $1.8 billion fund for people who claim they were targets of politicized prosecutions. The fund has come under sharp criticism from Democrats as well as many Republicans. NPR's Ryan Lucas reports.

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The so-called anti-weaponization fund has been on hold since a federal judge temporarily blocked it last week. in response to a lawsuit challenging the fund's creation. The order barred the Justice Department from taking any action to create the fund, transfer money into it, consider claims, or make payments out of it.

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Chapter 2: What are the implications of Tina Peters' release from prison?

40.105 - 52.279 Unknown

The pause is necessary to give the court time to hear from both sides on the legal arguments. Now, the Justice Department says in a statement that it strongly disagrees with the court order, but it says it will abide by it.

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The Trump administration continues to face intense and even bipartisan blowback from lawmakers over the fund, including over the possibility that Capitol rioters who attacked police could receive payments from it.

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Chapter 3: How is Iran's suspension of talks with the U.S. affecting regional stability?

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Ryan Lucas, NPR News, Washington.

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67.519 - 85.26 Ryland Barton

Former Colorado elections clerk and conspiracy theorist Tina Peters has been released from prison. She served less than a quarter of her nine-year sentence for her role in a scheme to copy her county's election system. Democratic Governor Jared Polis commuted her sentence, saying she had to express regret about her actions.

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85.561 - 98.939 Ryland Barton

Today, she appeared on right-wing podcaster Steve Bannon's program, repeating debunked conspiracy theories that voting machines cheated Trump out of re-election in 2020. Iran says it is suspending talks with the U.S.

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Chapter 4: What are the potential impacts of Anthropic's IPO on the AI industry?

98.999 - 112.159 Ryland Barton

over Israeli military operations in Lebanon and Gaza. Israel has continued to bomb South Lebanon, and the southern suburbs of Beirut considered Hezbollah strongholds, even though a ceasefire was reached in April. NPR's Hadil El-Shalchi reports.

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Chapter 5: How is the Iran war influencing the search for fertilizer alternatives?

112.4 - 134.445 Hadil El-Shalchi

The semi-official Iranian news agency Tasnim, which is associated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said that Tehran was demanding the end of what it called the aggressive and brutal Israeli army operations in Gaza and Lebanon. It also called for the complete withdrawal of Israeli military forces from Lebanon. Iran said that unless those conditions were fulfilled, talks with the U.S.

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134.465 - 144.828 Hadil El-Shalchi

to end the war would halt. There was no immediate confirmation from senior Iranian officials that messages, mostly relayed via Pakistan, between the warring parties were being suspended.

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Chapter 6: What changes has New York City made regarding children's bedtimes during the NBA Finals?

145.309 - 157.49 Hadil El-Shalchi

The U.S. and Iran said last week they were close to a tentative 60-day ceasefire extension. and framework to start talks to end the war, but the agreement is waiting on President Trump's approval. Hadil Al-Shalchi, NPR News.

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157.77 - 179.5 Ryland Barton

AI company Anthropic is moving toward going public on Wall Street. The maker of chatbot Claude says it has submitted a confidential filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering. Anthropic has risen from a little-known research laboratory to one of the leading AI companies valued at $965 billion. This is NPR News.

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180.897 - 198.645 Ryland Barton

Governments are pressing to find fertilizer alternatives like dung and compost to reduce dependency on chemical fertilizers as the Iran war drives up prices. The Gulf region produces 30 percent of globally traded chemical fertilizer. Experts say the shift away from chemical fertilizer could benefit the environment.

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199.286 - 206.517 Ryland Barton

The Trump administration is working to stop federal investment in behavioral sciences like sociology and psychology. NPR's Katie Riddle reports.

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206.564 - 226.986 Katie O'Riddle

The funding that the administration is targeting comes through the National Science Foundation. Though the money for this kind of research still exists, only a handful of awards have been made in 2026. Scientists say the impacts of withholding this money are far-reaching into fields like artificial intelligence. Tom Griffiths studies cognition and computer science at Princeton.

227.202 - 237.091 Tom Griffiths

There are fundamental questions that we want to answer about how human minds work. And the answers to those questions are important, not just for understanding humans, but also for building intelligent machines.

237.612 - 244.278 Katie O'Riddle

The Trump administration defends these cuts, arguing that this kind of science is ideologically driven. Katie O'Riddle, NPR News.

244.298 - 254.728 Ryland Barton

New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani signed an executive order today allowing kids of all ages to stay up to watch the Knicks take on the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals.

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Here is our mayor's order.

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