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NPR News Now

NPR News: 10-25-2025 10AM EDT

25 Oct 2025

Transcription

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

0.773 - 4.238 Giles Snyder

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Giles Snyder.

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Chapter 2: What donation did President Trump discuss on Air Force One?

4.878 - 23.483 Giles Snyder

On board Air Force One late last night, President Trump was asked about the person who is said to have donated $130 million to help support military pay during the government shutdown. Trump did not reveal the identity of the donor, but said the man is an American citizen and one of his supporters.

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23.503 - 31.924 Donald Trump

He's a great patriot. He's obviously a very substantial man. and he contributed $130 million toward the military.

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31.984 - 40.603 Giles Snyder

The Pentagon has confirmed that it has accepted the donation through what a spokesman said is the Defense Department's general gift acceptance authority.

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Chapter 3: How is the government shutdown affecting Americans?

40.623 - 59.944 Giles Snyder

The donation, however, raises ethical concerns. Trump was traveling to Asia for a six-day trip. The government shut down now in its 25th day, and more Americans are beginning to feel it. Pennsylvania is delaying a program that helps families heat their homes, and there is anxiety about food aid under the government's SNAP program.

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60.344 - 64.728 Giles Snyder

Christopher Ivey works for a Detroit-area nonprofit called Forgotten Harvest.

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Chapter 4: What are the implications of the SNAP program during the shutdown?

64.888 - 78.222 Christopher Ivey

Our neighbors, the guests we serve every day, are impacted through the government shutdown and through the SNAP benefits ending. As of right now, it's the anxiety on the unknown as to what that will mean for them.

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78.322 - 90.137 Giles Snyder

Members of Congress and also state and local officials urging the administration to not let SNAP funding dry up in November. Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro accusing the U.S. of fabricating a war.

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90.518 - 114.609 Nicolas Maduro

They promised they would never get involved in another war. And now they are inventing a war, which we are going to avoid. How? With the mobilization of the peoples of South America. Because South America and the Caribbean all say no to war, yes to peace, yes to prosperity.

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114.709 - 118.435 Giles Snyder

Nicolas Maduro heard there through a BBC interpreter the U.S.

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Chapter 5: What recent developments are there regarding voting rights in the U.S.?

118.455 - 133.344 Giles Snyder

is sending an aircraft carrier strike group to join ongoing operations against South American drug traffickers. Federal appeals court has declined to review a panel ruling that weakens federal voting rights protections in seven states, as NPR's Hansi Lomong reports.

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133.785 - 153.192 Anzi Luang

The immigrant advocacy group Arkansas United sued over a state law that bans a person from helping more than six voters cast ballots. A part of the Voting Rights Act, known as Section 208, generally allows voters who need help because of a disability or inability to read or write to get help from a person of their choice. The judge ruled the Arkansas law violated the Voting Rights Act.

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153.172 - 168.837 Anzi Luang

But after Republican state officials appealed, a panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled private groups like Arkansas United and individuals did not have the right to sue. Only the U.S. Attorney General does. The full 8th Circuit now has rejected a request to review that ruling.

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169.257 - 175.607 Anzi Luang

Two similar cases are before the Supreme Court, which is also reviewing the constitutionality of another key part of the Voting Rights Act.

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Chapter 6: How is Tropical Storm Melissa expected to impact the Caribbean?

175.868 - 177.17 Anzi Luang

Anzi Luang, NPR News.

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177.671 - 198.31 Giles Snyder

And this is NPR News. Tropical storm Melissa is expected to strengthen into a hurricane today. Forecasters are warning that Melissa could touch off catastrophic flash flooding and landslides in Jamaica, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic through the weekend. The National Hurricane Center says Melissa could dump more than two feet of rain through Monday.

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198.39 - 214.453 Giles Snyder

Melissa is the 13th named storm of the Atlantic season. Polls are open today in Ivory Coast with its octogenarian leader seeking a controversial fourth term. Kate Bartlett reports that major opposition contenders have been barred from contesting the election.

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214.533 - 222.786 Kate Bartlett

Ballot stations opened in Ivory Coast, with over 8 million people registered to vote in the West African country, which is the world's biggest cocoa producer.

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Chapter 7: What is the current political situation in Ivory Coast regarding the presidential election?

223.407 - 245.211 Kate Bartlett

Alassane Moutara, who came to power in 2010, says changes he oversaw to the constitution in 2016 allow him to run for more than the two-term limit. Ahead of today's vote, he restricted gatherings and deployed thousands of security personnel. Four candidates are challenging the 83 year old for the presidency, but the major candidates have been blocked from running.

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245.63 - 255.823 Kate Bartlett

Contested elections in the country, which fought a brutal civil war in the early 2000s, have seen deadly violence break out in the past. For NPR News, I'm Kate Bartlett in Johannesburg.

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255.883 - 279.147 Giles Snyder

Final results from yesterday's presidential election in Ireland are expected later today. The latest vote tallies, however, suggest a left-leaning lawmaker, Catherine Conley, has a significant lead for the largely ceremonial post, and her rival, Heather Humphries, has conceded. I'm Giles Snyder. This is NPR News from Washington.

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