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NPR News Now

NPR News: 12-18-2025 6AM EST

18 Dec 2025

4 min duration
817 words
4 speakers
18 Dec 2025
Description

NPR News: 12-18-2025 6AM ESTLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Transcription

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

0.031 - 17.233 Unknown

Support for NPR and the following message come from the estate of Joan B. Kroc, whose bequest serves as an enduring investment in the future of public radio and seeks to help NPR produce programming that meets the highest standards of public service in journalism and cultural expression.

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18.194 - 20.838 Corva Coleman

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman.

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Chapter 2: What did President Trump address in his primetime speech?

21.118 - 34.101 Corva Coleman

President Trump delivered a primetime address last night. He sought to talk about his efforts to support the economy. But he spoke as new polling finds Trump's approval rating has fallen below 40 percent with voters. NPR's Danielle Kurtzleben reports.

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34.382 - 50.467 Unknown

Trump opened his speech with a succinct message the White House has been trying to hammer home amid discontent over the economy. Good evening, America. Eleven months ago, I inherited a mess and I'm fixing it. However, he broke little new ground during his roughly 18-minute address.

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Chapter 3: What are the implications of the Senate passing the defense policy bill?

51.027 - 72.755 Unknown

Trump took a defensive tone at times, blaming former President Joe Biden for current economic problems and casting his own current term as a massive success. Trump's economic approval rating hit a new low in the latest NPR-PBS News Marist poll, and the White House has been attempting to refocus on the topic as Democrats push their own affordability message. Danielle Kurtzleben, NPR News.

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72.955 - 94.162 Corva Coleman

The Senate has passed the $900 billion defense policy bill and sent it to President Trump. It also requires Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to release unedited video of a deadly September boat strike or lose his travel budget. This comes as the Pentagon announced a fresh strike on an alleged drug boat yesterday. It says four men aboard were killed.

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94.863 - 107.538 Corva Coleman

The White House is vowing to dismantle the National Center for Atmospheric Research, known as NCAR. From Colorado Public Radio, Sam Brash reports NCAR is a federally funded research hub headquartered in Boulder.

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107.598 - 130.489 Sam Brash

NCAR was founded in 1960 to improve weather predictions and better understand Earth's atmosphere. It now employs more than 800 people. But in a post on X This Week, White House Budget Director Russ Vogt promised to break it up, saying the center is now a major source of, quote, climate alarmism. Dan Powers leads CoLabs, a group supporting federal research in Colorado.

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130.709 - 134.178 Sam Brash

He says the news has left scientists frustrated and disillusioned.

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Science and research can sometimes be alarming, but...

Chapter 4: How is the White House planning to dismantle NCAR?

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Closing labs like NCAR doesn't make decades of facts any less true.

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144.927 - 154.885 Sam Brash

Colorado's Democratic congressional leaders blasted the move and promised to use every tool available to save the research center. For NPR News, I'm Sam Brash in Denver.

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155.165 - 170.287 Corva Coleman

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has unveiled new plans he says will combat anti-Semitism and hate speech. This follows last weekend's deadly mass shooting at a Hanukkah celebration in Sydney. Albanese says this includes limiting some visas.

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170.647 - 181.258 Unknown

The Minister for Home Affairs will also have new powers to cancel or reject visas for those who spread hate and division in this country or would do so if they were allowed to come here.

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181.639 - 206.542 Corva Coleman

Mourners held a funeral today for one shooting victim, a 10-year-old girl named Matilda. So many mourners came to pay respects. that a large screen was set up outside the hall for people to view the service. You're listening to NPR. The acting head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has accepted controversial recommendations from his vaccine advisory committee.

206.942 - 213.771 Corva Coleman

It's for the hepatitis B vaccine. As NPR's Ping Huang reports, this is now official government policy.

214.031 - 225.805 Ping Huang

The CDC's acting director, Jim O'Neill, has changed the agency's guidance to say that pregnant women who test negative for hepatitis B should talk with their providers first and consider delaying the initial dose of the vaccine.

Chapter 5: What measures is Australia taking to combat anti-Semitism?

225.785 - 246.527 Ping Huang

This guidance is not supported by any new evidence of safety concerns. Republican Senator Bill Cassidy had urged the CDC's leadership to reject the recommendations. Cassidy is a doctor who's treated patients with liver disease from hepatitis B. He says ending the previous recommendation for all healthy newborns to get the vaccine makes it more likely for cases to increase.

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246.507 - 256.204 Ping Huang

The shift comes over strong objections from professional medical groups. They're suing the health secretary, alleging that his changes to vaccine policy have not followed proper procedure and violate federal law.

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Chapter 6: What health care provisions were passed by the House of Representatives?

256.925 - 258.528 Ping Huang

Ping Huang, NPR News.

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258.949 - 280.883 Corva Coleman

The House of Representatives has narrowly passed a package of health care provisions backed by Speaker Mike Johnson. It's intended to lower health insurance costs for some people, such as those who work for small businesses. Separately, four centrist Republicans joined the Democrats in the House to push a plan that would extend subsidies for people on Affordable Care Act plans.

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281.484 - 286.251 Corva Coleman

None of these House measures will probably move forward in Congress until next year.

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Chapter 7: What changes has the CDC made regarding hepatitis B vaccination recommendations?

286.636 - 296.815 Corva Coleman

But people who receive the federal subsidies will lose them after January 1st, and costs are expected to soar for many. This is NPR.

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