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NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-13-2025 2AM EST

13 Nov 2025

Transcription

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

2.14 - 5.454 Shea Stephens

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Shea Stephens.

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Chapter 2: What recent political battles are affecting health insurance subsidies?

6.178 - 26.557 Shea Stephens

Democrats have lost another battle to get health insurance subsidies extended beyond December 31st. now that Congress has voted to end the government shutdown. A dispute over expiring health care subsidies held up agreement on a stopgap bill until seven House Democrats broke rank and sided with Republicans. Here's House Speaker Mike Johnson saying the shutdown was unnecessary.

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26.738 - 35.926 Unknown

They admitted that they were using the American people as leverage in this political game. They knew that it would cause pain, and they did it anyway.

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Chapter 3: What are the implications of the government shutdown on health care?

35.946 - 40.45 Unknown

The whole exercise was pointless. It was wrong, and it was cruel.

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40.987 - 45.534 Shea Stephens

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffrey says Democrats remain passionate about health care.

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Chapter 4: How are Senate Republicans responding to health care subsidy demands?

45.654 - 56.85 Hakeem Jeffries

House Democrats will continue to fight to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits for tens of millions of Americans. This fight is not over. We're just getting started.

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Chapter 5: What does the latest Gallup poll reveal about U.S. religiosity?

57.05 - 75.071 Shea Stephens

President Trump has signed the bill to reopen government and has called for direct consumer health care subsidies for low-income Americans. Some health care consumers are pushing Senate Republicans to keep their promise to vote by mid-December on extending the Affordable Care Act subsidies. Chuck Kornbach reports from Milwaukee.

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75.411 - 100.193 Chuck Kornbach

As part of a Senate measure this week to end the federal government shutdown, GOP leaders promised a vote on extending tax credits for premiums paid under the Affordable Care Act. At a news conference held by Wisconsin Democratic Senator Tammy Baldwin, CARE Act enrollee and freelance author Nancy Pesky said she needs the credits because her health insurance costs may triple next year.

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100.393 - 102.356 Nancy Pesky

It's not just my health insurance that's going to go up.

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Chapter 6: What recent legal developments have occurred regarding the Boeing 737 MAX crash?

102.757 - 106.262 Nancy Pesky

It's everybody's, right? We're all in this together.

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106.327 - 116.744 Chuck Kornbach

Wisconsin officials say 275,000 state residents benefit from the enhanced premium tax credits. For NPR News, I'm Chuck Kornbach in Milwaukee.

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117.164 - 125.318 Shea Stephens

The FAA says a 6% reduction in domestic air traffic at 40 major airports will not be raised to 10% by the end of the week as planned.

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Chapter 7: How is the Federal Reserve's leadership changing in 2026?

125.878 - 139.941 Shea Stephens

The ongoing restrictions are meant to address staffing shortages at air traffic control towers. The shortages were triggered by the shutdown. U.S. residents are rapidly becoming less religious. NPR's Jason Derose reports on a new Gallup poll.

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140.502 - 161.409 Jason DeRose

Over the last decade, Gallup has found a 17-point drop in the percentage of U.S. adults who say religion is an important part of their daily lives. Now, just 49 percent say it's key. Gallup says that decline is among the largest it's recorded in any country over a 10-year period. and that such a large drop is rare among the 160-plus countries it studies.

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161.97 - 179.398 Jason DeRose

Chile, Turkey, and Portugal have seen similar declines. Gallup's analysis finds that only a few countries have experienced larger losses in religiosity, among them Greece, Italy, and Poland. Jason DeRose, NPR News. You're listening to NPR.

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181.522 - 206.418 Shea Stephens

A federal jury has awarded over $28 million to the family of a U.N. consultant killed in the March 2019 crash of a Boeing 737 MAX jet in Ethiopia. Shikha Garj was among 157 people killed when Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed. Boeing has negotiated pretrial settlements in most of the dozens of wrongful death lawsuits stemming from the mishap.

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206.438 - 213.655 Shea Stephens

The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta is stepping down when his term mix ends early next year. More from NPR's Scott Horsley.

213.871 - 230.381 Scott Horsley

Rafael Bostic has served as president of the Atlanta Fed for the last eight years. In addition to taking part in the central bank's interest rate decisions, he's overseen activities of the bank in a region that covers all or part of six southeastern states. The terms of all 12 regional Fed presidents expire in February.

230.721 - 250.064 Scott Horsley

Those who decide to stay on will have to be confirmed by the Fed's Board of Governors here in Washington. While President Trump will choose the next Fed chairman and any new members of the governing board, leaders of the regional Fed banks are chosen by regional boards of directors, typically drawn from local businesses. Regional Fed bank presidents get a rotating vote on interest rates.

250.384 - 255.91 Scott Horsley

The president of the Atlanta Fed's next turn comes in 2027. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.

256.31 - 279.501 Shea Stephens

The World Health Organization says the fighting in Sudan has killed at least 40,000 people and displaced 12 million others. since April 2023, when the Sudanese army and the rival RSF forces began fighting. The two sides are former allies that were supposed to oversee Sudan's transition to democracy following the end of a civil war in 2019. This is NPR News.

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