NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-12-2025 6PM EST
Episode Date: November 12, 2025NPR News: 11-12-2025 6PM ESTLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Rylan Barton.
The House of Representatives is poised to vote on a bill to end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.
Democrats railed against the measure during today's final floor debate for not further extending Affordable Care Act tax credits, which expire at the end of the year,
and said Republican leaders gave lawmakers a paid vacation during the shutdown.
Representative Michelle Fishbach of Minnesota defended Republicans' decision.
We were doing the work we were elected.
to do. And the real story here is not about the absence. It is about the commitment. And for
Republicans, we never wavered. If the Democrats cared so much about working, they would not have
shut the government down. The bill would temporarily fund the government through January with
longer term funding for a few key functions like SNAP food assistance. It would also reverse the
firings of workers who were let go during the shutdown. If it passes the House, the measure would
still need President Trump's signature to become law. Republicans on the House Oversight Committee
have released more than 20,000 new pages of documents from the estate of the late financier
and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. NPR's Stephen Fowler reports this comes after
Democrats on the committee highlighted three emails that relate to President Trump.
An NPR review of the latest batch of Epstein files finds court documents, financial market
outlooks, and many messages to and from Epstein about Trump. That includes one message from
2017, where Epstein wrote that, quote, I have met some very bad people, none as bad as
Trump. The Republican document dump comes as a counter to three emails released by Democrats that
suggests there was more to Trump and Epstein's previous relationship that has been reported.
Like a 2019 message in which Epstein said that Trump, quote, knew about the girls.
Epstein died by suicide awaiting trial on charges of trafficking underage girls for sex.
Stephen Fowler, NPR News.
As the Trump administration is ramping up, it's
deportation efforts. Democratic members of Congress are warning governors that immigration officials are
accessing state driver's license data. NPR's Jude Jaffe Block has more. A group of 40 Democratic
senators and representatives sent a letter Wednesday to 19 governors from their party, urging them to block
ICE's access to their residence driver's license data and photos to stop the Trump administration from
using them from what the lawmakers call, quote, unjustified politicized actions. States share their
residents' drivers' license data with each other and law enforcement across the U.S. and Canada
through a nonprofit called NLETs. The lawmakers say ICE and Homeland Security investigators
have made hundreds of thousands of queries through NLETs in the past year. Five states had
already blocked ICE's access. ICE did not return NPR's request for comment. Jude Jaffe
Block, NPR News. U.S. stocks closed mixed today. The SMP 500 added a tenth of a percent
nearing its all-time high set a couple weeks ago. You're listening to
NPR News from Washington.
The South Carolina Supreme Court has ruled that state lawmakers improperly gave themselves a $1,500 monthly raise.
The justices said the increase counts as a salary, which can't start until after the next election in 2026.
The court said the raise should have been labeled as an expense fund, not compensation, to comply with constitutional requirements.
The global rate of tuberculosis has declined for the first time since the COVID pandemic disrupted health service.
services. Both the number of people falling ill with TB and dying from it are down. But as NPR's
Gabriella Emmanuel reports, TB remains the world's top infectious disease killer. TB claimed
over 1.2 million lives last year. That's an improvement. And Africa, in particular, has made
progress with deaths down 46% in the past decade. Tedros at Hanom Gabrieses heads the World Health
Organization. He says there's other good news, too.
first time in over a century, new effective TB vaccines for adolescents and adults are within
reach.
18 TB vaccine candidates are in clinical development, but he warns that funding cuts to
international aid threaten to reverse the hard-won gains.
Gabriela Emmanuel NPR News.
Actors Matthew McConaughey and Michael Cain are partnering with voice cloning company 11
labs.
Kane says the technology celebrates humanity by amplifying.
voices not replacing them.
McConaughey says he'll use the technology to voice his newsletter in Spanish.
All right, all right, all right, all right.
This is NPR News from Washington.
