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NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-18-2025 6PM EST

18 Nov 2025

Transcription

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

0.031 - 15.328 Unknown

This message comes from Subaru, celebrating the Subaru Share the Love event now through January 2nd. By year's end, Subaru and its retailers will have donated more than $350 million to charity. Subaru, more than a car company.

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16.73 - 33.895 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. Congress has passed a bill compelling the Justice Department to release documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. President Trump threw his support behind the effort after initially opposing it. NPR's Sam Greenglass reports.

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34.155 - 53.663 Sam Greenglass

For weeks, President Trump and Republican House leadership fought a vote on the files. But once a bipartisan petition got enough signatures to force the issue, Trump reversed. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene was among the Republicans pushing the disclosure, saying the victims, some of whom were watching in the chamber, deserve transparency.

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53.778 - 69.745 Unknown

This was a fight that we should have never had to wage. It should have been the easiest thing for every single member of Congress. It should have been the easiest thing for the Speaker of the House. It should have been the easiest thing for the President of the United States.

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69.725 - 73.996 Sam Greenglass

Trump says he will sign it. Sam Greenglass, NPR News, Washington.

74.157 - 85.928 Ryland Barton

The bill's now headed to the president's desk after the Senate approved it by unanimous consent. The Trump administration unveiled its most extensive plans yet to dismantle the Department of Education, NPR's Corey Turner reports.

85.908 - 102.765 Corey Turner

The department says it has signed six agreements with other federal agencies to essentially outsource the work of the Education Department. For example, work normally done by the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education will be moving to the Department of Labor, as will the work of the Office of Post-Secondary Education.

Chapter 2: What recent legislation did Congress pass regarding Jeffrey Epstein?

103.285 - 125.277 Corey Turner

Other work will shift to the State Department, Interior, and HHS. Staff will also be moving, with just a few Education Department leaders remaining behind to provide oversight. The Trump administration says this is all part of its plan to return education to the states. Critics say these offices were placed at the Education Department by Congress, and only Congress can move them.

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125.878 - 127.18 Corey Turner

Corey Turner, NPR News.

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127.641 - 137.059 Ryland Barton

NPR has been speaking with U.S. citizens swept up in President Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. NPR's Adrian Florido reports their stories are getting attention in Washington.

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137.09 - 158.522 Adrian Florido

Javier Ramirez says when Border Patrol agents raided the auto junkyard where he works near Los Angeles, he heard one say to another, I just hear him like, hey, just get him. He's Mexican. That's when they threw me down to the ground. Andrea Velez says the ICE agents who arrested her on an L.A. street kept addressing her in Spanish even after she declared her citizenship in English.

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158.903 - 165.713 Unknown

Like, they had not heard me before speak English. And then I was like, I speak English, too.

165.946 - 178.321 Adrian Florido

Both say they were racially profiled. They may testify when congressional Democrats kick off a series of hearings later this month probing the treatment of U.S. citizens caught up in the government's immigration dragnet. Adrian Flarido, NPR News.

178.722 - 195.362 Ryland Barton

A federal court has blocked Texas from using a congressional map that would give Republicans an edge in winning five more seats in Congress. President Trump urged lawmakers to pass the map. The ruling is a blow to GOP efforts to keep its narrow control of Congress. This is NPR News from Washington.

197.08 - 218.19 Ryland Barton

The leader of an Eastern European neo-Nazi group has pleaded guilty in New York to recruiting others for violent attacks against Jews and racial minorities. The plans included a plot to dress as Santa Claus and hand out poisoned candy to children. Federal prosecutors say they will seek up to 18 years in prison for the Georgian national Mikhail Chikvishvili. The U.S.

218.25 - 228.155 Ryland Barton

and many other wealthy countries are cutting their foreign aid budgets. NPR's Jonathan Lambert reports on an analysis. suggesting those cuts could lead to millions of additional deaths.

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