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NPR News Now

NPR News: 06-03-2026 8PM EDT

04 Jun 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What recent developments have occurred in the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire agreement?

0.588 - 20.757 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. Israel and Lebanon have agreed to renew a ceasefire. The plan creates a number of what a joint statement calls pilot security zones inside Lebanon where Hezbollah militants would be banned. It's not clear how the zones would be created, but the agreement calls for the Lebanese army to take full control of those areas.

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21.057 - 42.728 Ryland Barton

This week, Iranian state news agencies said Iran had stopped communicating with mediators brokering a ceasefire with the U.S. because of Israel's incursion into Lebanon. A bipartisan majority in the Republican-led House has voted to end the war with Iran. NPR's Claudia Grisales reports this was the clearest rebuke yet of President Trump's handling of the conflict and the subsequent fallout.

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42.828 - 54.047 Gregory Meeks

New York Democrat Gregory Meeks helped force the vote to end the Iran war that's now 90 days in. He thanked the five Republicans who joined Democrats to get the war powers resolution over the finish line.

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54.067 - 60.76 Unknown

We're at the point. where you have to put people, the American people, over politics.

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61.02 - 69.061 Gregory Meeks

One of those Republicans, Pennsylvania's Brian Fitzpatrick, argued once a conflict passed the 60-day mark, it violated the War Powers Act.

69.422 - 77.962 Brian Fitzpatrick

I follow the law. People have a hard time being consistent around here. They apply different rules to different presidents, different wars, different errors. The law is the law.

78.102 - 86.454 Gregory Meeks

For now, the vote remains symbolic. Even if it were to pass in the Senate too, Trump would be able to veto it. Claudia de Salas, NPR News, the Capitol.

86.474 - 100.379 Ryland Barton

The Senate is debating legislation to fund immigration enforcement agencies after weeks of delay. It comes after Republican leaders stripped $1 billion in funding for White House security and President Trump's ballroom that had been included in an earlier draft.

100.72 - 121.201 Ryland Barton

But there are still concerns over a proposed anti-weaponization fund for Trump's allies, which Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch said yesterday was not moving forward, but Trump suggested today could be resurrected. Democrats and some Republicans have said they won't support the measures. Copper prices are near an all-time high, in part because of the AI data center boom.

Chapter 2: How is the U.S. Congress responding to the ongoing war with Iran?

180.949 - 201.224 Ryland Barton

The U.S. government has granted a visa to Wadensky Pierre, the only member of Haiti's national soccer team living in the Caribbean country. He was awaiting permission to travel for the World Cup. Teammates arrived last week to start preparing. This is only the second time Haiti has qualified for the World Cup. NASA is officially ending one of its Mars missions.

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201.385 - 207.175 Ryland Barton

As Joe Palka reports, the space agency lost contact with a probe called MAVEN in December last year.

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207.239 - 230.005 Joe Palka

MAVEN is an acronym for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution. The probe's mission was to help scientists understand why the Martian atmosphere has largely disappeared over the last 3 to 4 billion years, a change that turned the planet into the dry, cold place it is today. The spacecraft has been collecting data and sending it to Earth since it went into orbit around Mars more than a decade ago.

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230.625 - 247.062 Joe Palka

But last December, a brief radio signal indicated the craft had suddenly started spinning out of control. That meant it was no longer able to point its solar panels towards the sun, and that meant the batteries went dead, making the probe inoperable. For NPR News, I'm Joe Palka.

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247.303 - 261.597 Ryland Barton

A rare albino buffalo named after Donald Trump for its distinctive blonde tuft is drawing a huge crowd at the National Zoo in Bangladesh's capital. The animal was saved from being slaughtered as part of a religious ritual of sacrifice during the Eid festival.

261.847 - 279.45 Ryland Barton

The animal had been already sold, but after widespread public interest, authorities refunded the buyer and kept it in the zoo, where it's now the main attraction. U.S. stocks retreated from their records today. The Dow dropped more than 1%. The S&P 500 fell nearly three-quarters of a percent. This is NPR.

280.19 - 299.274 Unknown

New shows, new music, new movies. Keeping up with pop culture sometimes feels like a full-time job. Thankfully, over at Pop Culture Happy Hour, it's literally our job. We break down what's actually worth watching, listening to, and pretending you already knew about. So the next time someone says, did you see that? You can say, yeah, obviously.

299.615 - 303.7 Unknown

Follow NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour wherever you get your podcasts.

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