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NPR News Now

NPR News: 12-23-2025 7PM EST

24 Dec 2025

Transcription

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

1.111 - 4.897 Giles Snyder

Live from NPR News, I'm Giles Snyder. The U.S.

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Chapter 2: What recent Supreme Court decision affects President Trump's use of National Guard troops?

4.917 - 27.134 Giles Snyder

Supreme Court has dealt a setback to President Trump's use of National Guard troops in largely Democratic-led cities. In a 6-3 opinion, the court lets stand for now a lower court's ruling that blocked the deployment of Guard troops to Chicago. Four governors from states along the Atlantic coast say they'll fight President Trump's latest effort to block wind power developments.

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Chapter 3: How are governors responding to Trump's wind power project block?

27.154 - 34.867 Giles Snyder

Trump paused completion of five major offshore wind projects Monday, citing national security concerns. Here's NPR's Brian Mann reporting.

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34.927 - 49.207 Brian Mann

Trump has opposed wind power for years, and his administration now says five big projects along the Atlantic coast need further review from the Defense Department. Critics point out the projects all received federal permits after extensive scrutiny by the military.

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Chapter 4: What does the latest Commerce Department report say about U.S. economic growth?

49.607 - 63.563 Brian Mann

In a joint statement, governors from Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island called this pause baseless and reckless. They said further delays for completed and nearly completed wind projects will cost jobs and drive up electricity costs for consumers.

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Chapter 5: What are the implications of Israel's defense minister's remarks on settlements?

63.984 - 77.989 Brian Mann

Trump's opposition to wind power hasn't fared well in the courts. Earlier this month, a federal judge struck down Trump's executive order halting offshore wind projects, calling the ban unlawful, arbitrary and capricious. Brian Mann, NPR News, New York.

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78.369 - 88.83 Giles Snyder

The U.S. economy expanded in the third quarter. The latest report from the Commerce Department says economic growth hit a 4.3 percent annual rate from July through September.

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Chapter 6: What legal action is being taken against President Trump regarding the Kennedy Center?

88.81 - 96.764 Giles Snyder

fueled by consumer spending and a rebound in exports. But bank rate analyst Ted Rossman says other factors are weighing on the economy.

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96.804 - 109.266 Ted Rossman

Prices are still too high for many people's liking, and tariffs could be making that worse. We also have a very unequal economy. We have the rich getting richer, the poor getting poorer. Consumer sentiment is in the dumps.

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109.55 - 112.733 Giles Snyder

Following the Commerce Department report, Wall Street closed higher.

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Chapter 7: How are holiday shopping sales performing compared to last year?

112.773 - 137.717 Giles Snyder

The S&P 500 rose half a percentage point, up 31 points to close at 6,909 and topping a record set earlier this month. Israel's defense minister said the military will help establish Jewish settlements in northern Gaza. Remarks that contradict President Trump's ceasefire plan signed by Israel. But as NPR's Aya Petraoui reports, the minister appeared to walk back his remarks only hours later.

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137.697 - 159.553 Aya Batraoui

Defense Minister Israel Katz was addressing Jewish settlers in the West Bank to mark the expansion of 1,200 new housing units there when he said, God willing, in due time, Israel will establish Israeli communities in areas of northern Gaza where Jewish settlements were dismantled 20 years ago. And he said, quote, we will not leave all of Gaza.

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159.533 - 178.55 Aya Batraoui

But only hours later, the Israeli defense minister issued a statement saying the government has no intention of establishing settlements in Gaza and that his remarks were made solely in a security context, without elaborating. But his initial comments had already grabbed headlines in Israel and were welcomed by a far-right settler group. Aya Batraoui, NPR News.

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178.871 - 199.463 Giles Snyder

This is NPR. An Ohio Democrat is suing President Trump for adding his name to the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. The lawsuit also names Trump appointees to the Kennedy Center board. NPR's Chloe Veltman reports on Representative Joyce Beatty's lawsuit alleging the new Trump-Kennedy Center name is unlawful.

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199.443 - 210.425 Chloe Veltman

Joyce Beatty's federal lawsuit argues that rechristening the Kennedy Center requires an act of Congress. One of Beatty's counsels, Norm Eisen, says the former name was established through legislation in 1964.

210.565 - 221.687 Unknown

The law is very clear. The Kennedy Center is to be named after John F. Kennedy and only John F. Kennedy.

221.802 - 226.748 Chloe Veltman

New signage bearing Trump's name appeared on the centre's website and facade late last week.

226.768 - 247.253 Chloe Veltman

In a written statement to NPR, the centre's Vice President of Public Relations, Roma Daravi, blamed critics like Congresswoman Beatty for having, quote, sat idly by while America's cultural centre slowly crumbled, and justified the change of name by pointing to the millions of dollars she says Trump has raised to repair the building. Chloe Veltman, NPR News.

247.273 - 271.047 Giles Snyder

New data show cash and credit card sales rose during the first seven weeks of the holiday shopping season. MasterCard's spending pull says sales since November 1st rose 3.9%, and Visa's consulting and analytics division says sales rose 4.2%. Both say the increase is less than the same period last year, and Visa says when adjusted for inflation, retail sales rose more modestly.

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