NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-06-2025 6PM EST
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Transcript
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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Rylan Barton.
President Trump says a Supreme Court ruling against his tariff policies would be catastrophic and hurt his ability to defend the country.
I think it would be devastating for our country, but I also think that we'll have to develop a game two plan.
We'll see what happens.
Trump's comments come after conservative justices seemed skeptical of his authority to unilaterally impose tariffs on nearly every country.
in the world. Challengers say Trump is illegally using an emergency power to claim nearly
limitless tariff power, and American small businesses are paying the price. The administration
argues tariffs are part of the president's power to regulate trade. The head of the U.S. Postal
Service says the federal mail agency has a new plan for cutting costs and boosting package
deliveries in the coming year. As NPR's Hansi Lo Wong reports, the plan comes after the new
leader of U.S.PS spoke out against privatizing the country's mail service. The U.S. Postal
Service generally receives no tax dollars and relies instead on stamp and other service fees to
keep running. And in a new video to postal workers, Postmaster General David Steiner says its financial
situation is precarious. No organization, even the Postal Service, can lose billions every year
without consequence. Over the coming 12 months, we're going to act with urgency to get on a
financially sustainable path. With fewer people and businesses using first-class mail, Steiner
says he wants to expand the Postal Service's package delivery service. USPS is
still carrying out a reorganization plan that began under its previous leader, Louis DeJoy.
The plan has led to stamp price increases, plus fewer mail pickups in many rural communities and longer delivery times.
Hansi Luong and PR News.
The world's richest man, Elon Musk, is one step closer to becoming the world's first trillionaire.
Tesla shareholders voted to give their CEO a pay package worth $1 trillion if he hits certain performance targets over the next decade.
The vote followed weeks of debate over his management record and whether anyone,
deserved such an unprecedented windfall.
Stocks fell sharply today on worries about the job market
and possible overinvestment in tech companies.
NPR's Scott Horsley reports the Dow Jones Industrial Average
tumbled nearly 400 points or 8 tenths of a percent.
All the major stock indexes fell during the day,
with the S&P 500 sliding 1.1 percent,
and the tech-heavy NASDAQ dropping almost 2%.
Investors are nervous that the run-up in technology stocks
fueled by the artificial intelligence boom
could turn out to be overdone.
Ordinarily, investors would have been looking for a report from the Labor Department this week on the job market,
but that's been held up by the government shutdown.
That's giving extra attention to other measures to the labor market,
including a report from outplacement firm Challenger Gray and Christmas,
which showed it was the worst October for layoff notices in more than two decades.
Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.
The National Retail Federation predicts shoppers will spend over $1 trillion during the holiday season for the first time.
This is NPR News.
The International Criminal Court has confirmed war crime charges against Ugandan warlord Joseph Coney.
The charges include murder, sexual enslavement, and rape while he led the brutal Lord's Resistance Army.
Coney was thrust into the global spotlight in 2012 when a video about his actions went viral.
For the trial to proceed, the ICC would need to have Coney in custody.
Brazil's Congress has approved a new bill to exempt tens of millions of poor and middle class workers from paying
income tax while increasing taxes on the rich. The landmark tax reform was one of the leftist
president's main campaign promises, as NPR's Kerry Kahn reports. The bill allows Brazilians
an exemption from taxes, raising the limit the poor and middle class can make to the equivalent
of about $900 U.S. dollars a month. Previously, only those making less than about $500 a month
were exempt. To make up the difference in lost income, the government will increase taxes on Brazil's
top earners and their dividends. Supporters say,
it's common sense legislation, those who have less, pay less, those who have more, pay more.
President Luis Anasio Lula de Silva is set to sign the bill, handing him a major political victory
as he plans to run for re-election next year.
Congress is still also looking to tax new outlets, including fintech companies and betting operators.
Kerry Kahn, NPR News, Rio de Janeiro.
A former Justice Department employee who threw a sandwich at a federal agent during President
Trump's law enforcement surge in Washington, D.C., has been found not.
guilty of assault. A viral video made Sean Charles Dunn a symbol of resistance to Trump's
deployment of federal agents. I'm Ryland Barton. You're listening to NPR News from Washington.
