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NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-28-2025 12PM EST

28 Nov 2025

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What happened to the National Guard members near the White House?

1.06 - 24.469 Nora Rahm

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Nora Rahm. One of the two National Guard members shot near the White House Wednesday died of her injuries yesterday. Her colleague remains in critical condition. A suspect, an Afghan national, is in custody. In two lengthy anti-immigrant social media posts overnight, President Trump said he will terminate immigration from certain countries.

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24.449 - 31.784 Nora Rahm

In addition, he said he will take citizenship away from select legal immigrants. NPR's Daniel Kurtzleben reports.

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31.925 - 44.01 Daniel Kurtzleben

In the posts, Trump casts immigrants as dangerous and draining public resources. Trump wrote that he would, quote, "...permanently pause migration from all third-world countries and terminate millions of Biden immigrant admissions."

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43.99 - 53.999 Daniel Kurtzleben

Trump also said he wants to denaturalize certain immigrants and, quote, deport any foreign national who is a public charge, security risk, or noncompatible with Western civilization.

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54.339 - 74.858 Daniel Kurtzleben

In the post, Trump also referred to Minnesota Democratic Governor Tim Walz using a crude ableist slur and referred to Minnesota Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar, who is Muslim, as, quote, always wrapped in her swaddling hijab. Trump finished by writing, quote, only reverse migration can fully cure this situation. Danielle Kurtzleben, NPR News.

74.878 - 88.113 Nora Rahm

Ukraine says it will continue to work with the American delegation on the revised peace plan elaborated alongside the Europeans in Geneva. NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports Russia's commitment is far from certain.

88.213 - 91.056 Eleanor Beardsley

Secretary of State Marco Rubio's comments that the U.S.

Chapter 2: What are President Trump's recent statements on immigration?

91.076 - 105.268 Eleanor Beardsley

will discuss long-term security guarantees for Ukraine after a peace agreement is signed is another blow to Kyiv. Nevertheless, Ukraine says it is committed to the process. On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his silence about the plan.

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105.669 - 123.492 Eleanor Beardsley

After vague words that it could serve as the basis for talks, Putin said hostilities would only end if Ukrainian troops withdrew from the territory. He was referring to Ukrainian land in the Donbass that Russia has been unable to fully conquer. If they don't, Putin added, Russia will seize the territory anyway.

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123.708 - 131.082 Eleanor Beardsley

Ukrainians say Russia does not want to end the war and is simply buying time with the Trump administration. Eleanor Beardsley, NPR News, Kyiv.

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131.482 - 142.543 Nora Rahm

A new report from the World Health Organization says deaths from measles have dropped sharply over the last 25 years. NPR's Maria Kadoy reports they've declined 88 percent worldwide.

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142.523 - 168.312 Maria Godoy

The report says nearly 59 million lives have been saved by the measles vaccine since 2000. That's more than any other childhood vaccine of the past 50 years. Even so, an estimated 95,000 people, mostly children under age five, died from measles last year. While that death toll is among the lowest in recent decades, WHO officials say it's still unacceptably high for a vaccine-preventable disease.

168.292 - 170.219 Maria Godoy

Maria Godoy, NPR News.

170.439 - 189.017 Nora Rahm

On this shortened trading day on Wall Street, stock prices are moving higher. The Dow is up 308 points. This is NPR News in Washington. Syrian officials say Israeli forces raided a village in southern Syria today, killing at least 13 people, including women and children.

189.658 - 214.015 Nora Rahm

The Israeli military says it was conducting an operation to arrest suspected militants when its troops came under fire and six of its soldiers were wounded. Israel says it acted on intelligence that the militants were planning attacks on Israel. Today marks the 100th birthday of the Grand Ole Opry. The venerable country music radio broadcast started in Nashville, Tennessee, on November 28, 1925.

214.175 - 221.604 Nora Rahm

NPR's Netta Ulaby reports it's still one of the longest-running radio broadcasts in U.S. history.

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