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On Thru Line from NPR.
The consequences for the country would have been enormous.
It would have been a crisis.
The man who saw a dangerous omission in the US Constitution and took it upon himself to
fix it.
Find NPR's Thru Line wherever you get your podcasts. Live from NPR News in Washington. I'm Lakshmi Singh. Hours after he threatened Russia with
sanctions and tariffs until it reaches a ceasefire with Ukraine, President Trump says he believes
Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to end the war.
I believe him. I believe him. I think we're doing very well with Russia. But right now they're bombing the hell out of Ukraine and Ukraine.
I'm finding it more difficult, frankly, to deal with Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wants security guarantees.
He says Putin has reneged on peace commitments before and will do it again.
During a Q&A with reporters in the Oval Office today,
President Trump defended his on-again,
off-again approach to tariffs.
There'll always be changes and adjustments, he says.
Trump's threatened to impose reciprocal tariffs
targeting Canada's dairy and lumber sectors
may be as early as today,
after he announced a one-month reprieve
from tariffs on certain imports.
On the Monthly Jobs Report,
Trump claimed the numbers were better than the media had projected. month reprieve from tariffs on certain imports. On the monthly jobs report, Trump
claimed the numbers were better than the media had projected. They actually came
in below analysts' expectations, but the job gains in February were still strong
and PR Scott Horsley has more. U.S. employers added 151,000 jobs in February,
slightly more than the month before. Job gains were tallied in health care,
construction, and manufacturing. Bars and restaurants cut workers during the month,
and so did the federal government. The unemployment rate inched up in February
to 4.1 percent, even as the overall workforce shrank. Average wages last
month were up 4 percent from a year ago, which is likely more than enough to
outpace inflation. Wages have been climbing faster than prices for nearly two years now. That boosts workers' real buying power and helps to support consumer
spending, which is the biggest driver of the U.S. economy.
Scott Horsley, MPR News, Washington.
Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk has announced plans for every adult male to receive military
training in response to Europe's changing security situation.
Esme Nicholson reports Poland is increasingly anxious about Russia
without US support for Ukraine. Speaking to lawmakers in Poland's lower
house of parliament, Tusk said his government aims to introduce military
training for all adult men by the end of this year to create a reserve force that
can quote stand up to possible threats.
Situated on NATO's eastern flank, Poland already spends a higher proportion of its GDP on defence
than any other member of the alliance, including the United States. As concerns grow about Russian
ambitions to move further westwards, Warsaw is considering enshrining defence spending of at
least 4% of GDP into the
Constitution. For NPR News, I'm Esme Nicholson in Berlin.
US stocks are trading higher this hour. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up
167 points at last check at 42,746. This is NPR News.
French police say they have moved an unexploded World War II-era bomb into a hole and disposal experts destroyed its fuse. Authorities in Paris say the half-ton British-made bomb could have caused major damage had it exploded.
It was dug up overnight near train tracks north of Paris during maintenance work. Its discovery prompted officials to shut down transportation systems that affected hundreds
of thousands of people, both rail travelers and motorists.
Tens of thousands of worshippers prayed at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the old city of Jerusalem
today to mark the first Friday prayers of Ramadan this year.
That's despite restrictions Israel had placed on Palestinians leaving the occupied West Bank to pray.
NPR's Kat Lonsdorf has more.
Ahead of the prayers, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that only Muslim men over the age of 55
and women over 50, as well as children under 12, would be allowed.
All needed to obtain a special permit and undergo screening
in order to leave the West Bank and enter Israel.
The restrictions which Israel says are for security
and were similar to last year's during Ramadan
caused long waits and traffic
at the main Israeli checkpoints for Palestinians.
Still, according to Palestinian authorities,
nearly 100,000 people attended Friday prayers at Al-Aqsa,
one of
the holiest sites in Islam. Israel said it had deployed thousands of police across Jerusalem
to allow for freedom to worship safely. There were no serious incidents reported.
Kat Lonsdorf, NPR News, Tel Aviv.
I'm Lakshmi Singh, NPR News, in Washington.
