Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman. Congress has passed a short-term spending bill and the government shutdown is now over. But the financial fallout for federal workers is not.
Chapter 2: What is the impact of the recent government shutdown on federal workers?
NPR's Windsor Johnson explains why their long-awaited back pay may feel smaller than expected.
When federal employees get their back pay, it will arrive as one lump sum deposit, covering every missed paycheck during the shutdown. But that big payment could end up feeling like a letdown. The IRS taxes lump sum in paychecks as if the entire amount was earned in a single pay period, which can push workers into a higher withholding bracket.
That means a smaller take-home deposit, at least for now. Many workers will eventually recover that money at tax time next year, but families who've been juggling bills or dipping into savings may have to wait months to see their full earnings. And for tens of thousands of federal contractors who've also gone without compensation during the shutdown, there's no back pay at all.
Windsor Johnston, NPR News, Washington.
Republicans on the House Oversight Committee released more than 20,000 pages of documents from the estate of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. This happened yesterday after Democrats on the committee highlighted three other emails that relate to President Trump. NPR's Stephen Fowler says Epstein had many emails about Trump.
Epstein said he had photos of Trump with girls in bikinis in his kitchen. Trump, quote, almost walking through the door, leaving his nose print on the glass as women were swimming in the pool. Reference to a girlfriend that, quote, after two years I gave to Donald. But most of these emails were obsessively tracking Trump's ascent to the presidency from 2015 to 2018.
NPR's Stephen Fowler reporting. The White House says these emails prove nothing other than that President Trump did nothing wrong. Trump has repeatedly called all Epstein-related accusations a hoax. Big tech company Google has launched a lawsuit against an organization that it claims enables phishing and text scammers. NPR's John Rewich reports...
The internet giant says its customers and brand are being hurt.
Google is targeting an enterprise it calls Lighthouse. In a court filing, it describes it as a well-organized criminal group that creates and distributes software and support for would-be cyber criminals. Basically, it helps them make phony phishing websites and hook victims with texts. Lighthouse is based in China, and Google says it does not actually know the names of the people involved.
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