Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst. Around 1,400 flights were canceled today after the Trump administration ordered cuts to flights at 40 airports around the country on a phased-in basis as the FAA deals with staffing issues with air traffic controllers who are working without pay. NPR's Amy Held has more.
A stressed system is stressing out flyers.
Total headache.
Chapter 2: What flight disruptions occurred due to the government shutdown?
Disaster nightmare.
Richard Olverio's Philadelphia to Florida flight was rebooked twice. Working unpaid, fewer air traffic control workers are showing up. The Senate, meantime, showing up for its first Saturday session in the shutdown. Capping the week, it became the longest in history. surpassing the record 35 days under the first Trump administration.
Mounting travel disruptions then pressured lawmakers and Trump to compromise. Now, weeks before the Thanksgiving rush, with billions of dollars and millions of travelers on the line, travel industry groups are imploring Congress to end this shutdown and avert what they say would be a crisis. Amy Held, NPR News.
The Senate adjourned their session today without any deal. A federal judge ruled the Trump administration violated the First Amendment rights of Education Department employees when it replaced workers' out-of-office messages during the shutdown. NPR's Corey Turner reports.
The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by a public employee union that represents Education Department workers. Soon after the shutdown began, the Trump administration replaced workers' out-of-office email notifications with partisan language, blaming Democrats for the government shutdown. The union sued, and Friday, U.S.
District Judge Christopher Cooper wrote in his decision that, quote, when government employees enter public service, they do not sign away their First Amendment rights, and they certainly do not sign up to be a billboard for any given administration's partisan views.
Cooper ordered the department to restore union members' personal out-of-office email notices, and the department did not respond to a request for comment. Corey Turner, NPR News.
Ukraine is working to restore power after Russian drone attacks on energy infrastructure caused blackouts in many regions. Residential areas were also hit, killing at least six people. The BBC's James Landale has more.
A lot of the targets were energy infrastructure. There's a clear attempt by Russia now to make living in Ukraine very, very hard. They want to make it very hard, particularly in the east, for people to get access to electricity and to get heating. And that's not just a question of trying to damage Ukrainian morale, but it's also trying to damage Ukraine's economy.
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