Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

NPR News Now

NPR News: 12-31-2025 11AM EST

31 Dec 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What recent military actions have escalated tensions in Venezuela?

0.098 - 14.023 Unknown

Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations and Eric and Wendy Schmidt through the Schmidt Family Foundation, working toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all. On the web at theschmidt.org.

0

15.472 - 42.306 Windsor Johnston

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston. Critics say the U.S. strike on a facility in Venezuela is pulling the country deeper into a dangerous conflict. President Trump confirmed new details this week about the operation targeting a dock where drugs were allegedly being loaded onto boats. NPR's Franco Ordonez reports it's the first known U.S. military action inside Venezuela.

0

42.286 - 48.993 Franco Ordonez

Until now, the U.S. has focused on strikes on boats it claims are trafficking drugs and some oil tankers.

0

Chapter 2: What impact does President Trump's veto have on rural water projects in Colorado?

49.474 - 57.122 Franco Ordonez

But both of those operations have been taking place in international waters. So this is a really big deal to strike on land. It's an escalation.

0

57.342 - 70.656 Windsor Johnston

That's NPR's Franco Ordonez reporting. President Trump has vetoed a bill to fund a drinking water pipeline project in rural Colorado. Alejandro Alonso Galva with Colorado Public Radio has more.

0

70.72 - 93.019 Alejandro Alonso Galva

The bipartisan Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act passed unanimously in both the House and Senate. It was meant to help finish a project that's been decades in the making and would bring clean water to 39 communities in the southeastern plains of the state. It was designed to eventually stop groundwater withdrawals in the area, which can produce water tainted with radioactivity.

0

93.62 - 100.626 Alejandro Alonso Galva

The veto is notable because it's in a rural portion of GOP Representative Lauren Boebert's district that voted heavily for Trump.

0

Chapter 3: How are different parts of the world celebrating the New Year?

101.23 - 116.569 Alejandro Alonso Galva

The project would also provide badly needed jobs for the area. While she did not threaten an override vote in a statement Tuesday night, the Republican lawmaker expressed her displeasure with the president's decision. For NPR News, I'm Alejandro Alonso Galva in Denver.

0

117.189 - 124.999 Windsor Johnston

While much of the world is still counting down the final hours of 2025, some parts of the globe are ringing in the new year.

0

125.399 - 129.364 Unknown

In Sydney... Three, two, one, happy

0

130.053 - 157.813 Windsor Johnston

Crowds gathered at the Harbor Bridge to watch the fireworks display over the Opera House to welcome 2026. In Tokyo... A traditional bell-ringing ceremony was held across Japan, marking the passing of the old year while welcoming the new one. Cities across Europe are also preparing to ring in the new year. In Paris, people are gathering along Champs-ƉlysĆ©es to watch the fireworks.

0

Chapter 4: What controversies surround child care funding in Minnesota?

158.493 - 167.265 Windsor Johnston

In New York City, Times Square is under tight security. Mayor Eric Adams says there will be heavy police presence throughout the area tonight.

0

167.245 - 180.545 Eric Adams

We will have plane closed, canine teams, officers on horsebacks, on our trains, subway stations, and in helicopters and on boats. Pedestrians and vehicle closures will be in effect.

0

180.645 - 203.519 Windsor Johnston

Millions are expected to pack into Times Square to watch the ball drop at midnight. On Wall Street, the Dow was down 168 points, the Nasdaq down 80. This is NPR News. The CDC has suspended child care funding to Minnesota and is calling for an audit over possible fraud in government programs.

0

204.02 - 220.438 Windsor Johnston

The agency cited a video posted by a right-wing influencer that accuses several Somali-run daycare centers in Minneapolis of being shell companies. Governor Tim Walz says the state was already investigating and slammed the move as federal interference.

0

Chapter 5: Who is the first Black woman elected to the Iowa state Senate?

220.418 - 231.472 Windsor Johnston

A Democratic candidate in Iowa became the first Black woman elected to the state Senate last night. Iowa Public Radio's Isabella Liu reports the candidate won in a special election.

0

231.913 - 252.318 Renee Hardman

Democrat Renee Hardman beat her Republican opponent by more than 40 percentage points. Hardman's win also means Republicans are one seat short of a supermajority and will need Democratic support to approve the governor's appointees. Hardman will represent part of West Des Moines where she serves on the city council. She also leads a nonprofit, Lutheran Services in Iowa.

0

253.199 - 256.662 Renee Hardman

Hardman says running a successful campaign in the winter was a group effort.

0

256.902 - 268.933 Isabella Liu

We just decided as a collective that we're going to get this job done and we are going to prevent the supermajority. And that is what helped drive our motivation to get this job done.

0

269.274 - 272.797 Renee Hardman

The seat was formerly held by Democrat Claire Salsey, who died in October.

Chapter 6: What health concerns are linked to the recent ground beef recall in Idaho?

273.478 - 275.94 Renee Hardman

For NPR News, I'm Isabella Liu in Des Moines.

0

276.055 - 294.098 Windsor Johnston

A company in Idaho has issued a recall for nearly 3,000 pounds of ground beef over possible E. coli contamination. The meat was produced by Mountain West Food Group and sent to distributors in six states, including California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, and Washington. This is NPR.

0
Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.