Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Hurst.
Chapter 2: What challenges are hunger nonprofits facing in the U.S.?
Hunger nonprofits are trying to meet the surging demand from millions of Americans missing their first monthly installment from the SNAP program. Blake Farmer of member station WPLN reports from a distribution event in rural Tennessee.
A nonprofit called One Gin Away that serves Tennessee and Alabama has been adding more opportunities to get food as it becomes available, and right now the demand far outstrips the supply. Peggy Martin's raising three grandkids and says she's using the free groceries to fill the gap left by $500 in federal food benefits she normally receives.
If Iowa had not been raised country... and knew how to survive, I would really be in a fix. I can bake, I can hunt, I can forage too. I think we're okay. We'll make it.
Martin says she's worried for those who aren't as self-sufficient. More than 40 million Americans rely on the food assistance program. For NPR News, I'm Blake Farmer in Hickman County, Tennessee.
President Trump on social media today urged Senate Republicans to send funding for Affordable Care Act subsidies directly to people and not insurance companies. They expire at the end of the year, raising premiums much higher for millions of people. But that would require an act of Congress.
This after Democrats yesterday put up a proposal that had an extension of those subsidies for a year in order to reopen the government, but Republicans rejected the offer. Senate Majority Leader John Thune.
The Democrats' proposal is just more of the same, masking rising premiums and padding insurance companies' profits with more taxpayer dollars.
speaking on the Senate floor in a rare Saturday session on ending the shutdown, which is now the longest in history. The Senate adjourned without taking action. They return tomorrow afternoon. Trump has also repeatedly urged the Senate to get rid of the filibuster, which Republicans are reluctant to do.
A single infusion of an experimental gene-editing drug appears safe and effective for cutting cholesterol, possibly for life. The approach could someday offer a powerful new weapon to fight heart disease, which is the nation's leading killer. NPR's Rob Stein has more.
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