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NPR News Now

NPR News: 12-30-2025 6PM EST

30 Dec 2025

Transcription

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

1.06 - 23.571 Unknown

This holiday season, the team at Up First is still hard at work with all new episodes, but the news does not take a holiday. And we know it's harder than ever to keep up this time of year. Listen for three essential stories in under 15 minutes. Get caught up and get on with your day. Up First, listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.

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24.592 - 44.265 Ryland Barton

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. Israel is barring 37 more aid organizations from operating in Gaza, including internationally recognized groups that have been on the ground for decades, like Doctors Without Borders. NPR's Aya Batraoui reports Israel says these aid groups failed to meet security standards.

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44.445 - 57.78 Aya Batraoui

Israel's decision revokes the permits of groups like Oxfam, the Norwegian Refugee Council, Mercy Corps, and Doctors Without Borders, or MSF. These aid groups work respectively on issues related to water and desalination, tents and shelter supplies, food distribution, and health care.

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57.76 - 74.689 Aya Batraoui

And they have also documented in detail Israel's war in Gaza, criticizing the breadth of destruction and killing by Israeli forces, while also providing firsthand accounts from Gaza at a time when international media remains banned. Humanity and Inclusion, which handles unexploded bombs left by the military, is also among the banned groups now.

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74.669 - 88.554 Aya Batraoui

Israel says staff of some groups were involved in terrorist activity and that the 37 aid groups did not meet security and transparency requirements. MSF says this prevents organizations from providing essential services to people in both Gaza and the West Bank. Aya Batraoui, NPR News, Dubai.

88.895 - 97.47 Ryland Barton

Cases of the flu are surging in the United States. That's according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NPR's Gabriela Emanuel has more.

97.501 - 117.67 Gabriela Emanuel

The latest data comes from the period before people gathered for Christmas. It shows a steep increase in cases, and more than 19,000 people were hospitalized for flu in that one week, almost twice as many as the previous week. Andrew Pekosz with Johns Hopkins University says the surge started in the Northeast.

117.785 - 126.339 Andrew Pekosz

All across the Midwest, you're seeing massive increases in activity as well as to the south. A couple of states out in the west have been spared the activity yet.

126.64 - 132.429 Gabriela Emanuel

The strain of flu driving up cases is not a great match for this year's flu vaccine.

Chapter 2: What are the latest developments in Gaza's aid organizations?

132.91 - 140.603 Gabriela Emanuel

But experts say the shot provides more protection than no vaccine at all. Gabriela Emanuel, NPR News.

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140.684 - 154.102 Ryland Barton

The Federal Reserve decided to lower interest rates earlier this month to prop up a sagging job market. Minutes from that Fed meeting released today suggest the central bank may wait a while before cutting rates any further. NPR's Scott Horsley explains.

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154.422 - 173.91 Scott Horsley

Minutes show most members of the Fed's rate-setting committee think interest rates will continue to come down so long as inflation moderates, but the timing of the next rate cut remains uncertain. Some Fed policymakers say it will likely be appropriate to hold rates steady for some time. after cutting rates by a quarter percentage point at each of the last three Fed meetings.

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174.43 - 195.784 Scott Horsley

The vote to cut rates in December was not unanimous. Two members of the committee wanted to stand pat, while a third voted for a supersized half-point rate cut. The central banks caught between worries about a softening job market, with unemployment climbing to 4.6 percent, and inflation that remains stubbornly above the Fed's 2 percent target. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.

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195.764 - 218.92 Ryland Barton

Stocks fell slightly on Wall Street today. The S&P 500 slipped a tenth of a percent. This is NPR News. More artists have canceled performances at the Kennedy Center after President Trump's name was added to the facility. Saxophone player Billy Harper criticized the venue's association with Trump, citing concerns over racism and cultural destruction.

219.271 - 234.9 Ryland Barton

Kennedy Center President Richard Grinnell says the cancellations are politically motivated and that the center has received inquiries from artists wanting to perform. President Trump's move to reschedule pot is being welcomed by marijuana companies, but as NPR's Bill Chappell reports, questions remain.

235.015 - 243.51 Bill Chappell

For state-licensed marijuana retailers like Sam Brill, moving pot from Schedule 1 to Schedule 3 could let them claim basic business tax deductions.

243.75 - 250.882 Jillian Schauer

I'm paying a full tax bill on my gross margin, which no other company does except for people in our industry.

251.163 - 265.824 Bill Chappell

Brill, the CEO of Ascend Wellness, says the change would free up millions of dollars for his company. The Trump administration says rescheduling will also boost research. But Jillian Schauer of the Cannabis Regulators Association says some key details are in limbo.

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