NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-16-2025 2AM EST
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Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Wilman.
Protesters marched in Charlotte, North Carolina, Saturday as Border Patrol agents began making arrests in a citywide immigration crackdown.
Nick Diggett La Canal from member station WFAE has more.
Hundreds rallied in Uptown Charlottes, demanding Border Patrol leave the city.
Hours earlier, agents were seen arresting people across several immigrant corridors.
At one East Charlotte car repair, the owner Jessica Arias says agents tackled an employee who tried to run
and took him away in a van.
He's one of the best worker here.
So the board of patrol is not here for criminals.
They are taking working people.
Some restaurants locked their doors with customers inside.
Other businesses closed.
In a statement, the Department of Homeland Security said it's surging agents to Charlotte
to ensure Americans are safe and to remove public safety threats.
For NPR News, I'm Nick Delac Canal in Charlotte.
The eight senators are brokered a controversial deal to reopen.
The federal government continue to face political backlash from
Democrats, but as Kevin Miller with Maine public radio reports, Senator Angus King says it was a necessary
step. King, who is an independent, has faced intense criticism in Maine for joining seven Democrats
in voting to reopen government. As part of the deal, Republican leaders agreed to hold a Senate
vote on whether to extend subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. The two Democratic caucuses
had been demanding an outright extension. But King says the onus is now on Republicans.
We're either going to be successful and get an extension of the tax credit.
probably with some amendments that are negotiated, or the Republicans will say no,
and then they're on record clearly as being opposed to fixing this problem.
King Handley won re-election last year.
For NPR News, I'm Kevin Miller.
Thousands of young people rallied in Mexico City on Saturday.
They were expressing their frustration with what they say are systemic issues in that country's
government, from corruption to impunity from committing violent crimes.
NPR's Ada Peralta attended the rally.
He says the government is dismissing the protesters, calling their actions political.
Well, they're saying that this was a march organized by the opposition.
I mean, to be honest, I've covered many marches in this country where they do tend to bus people in.
This is not that.
This is a cross-section of Mexican society from the upper class to the lower class, from old to young.
And so this seems like Claudia Shembaum's president Claudia Shembaum's first real test as a president.
That's NPR's Hader-Pralta, police through tear gas and stun grenades, an effort to break up the demonstration.
The Vatican is returning 62 artifacts to indigenous peoples in Canada.
On Saturday, Pope Leo the 14th, turned the artifacts along with supporting documentation over to the Canadian Conference of Bishops.
The artifacts include an iconic Inuit kayak.
The items are expected to reach Montreal by December.
6th. This is NPR News.
Congo has signed a framework agreement
for a peace deal with the rebel group
M23. The deal with the Rwanda-backed rebels was signed
Saturday in Qatar. This agreement outlines
measures that are needed in order to sign a final
peace deal. M23 is one of more than 100 armed groups in
eastern Congo. The U.S. Postal Service says it's planning to make
changes after ending another fiscal year with a net
loss in the billions. As NPR's Hansi Luong reports,
USPS is proposing to increase shipping prices next year to help stabilize its finances.
Even though it's a government agency, the U.S. Postal Service generally receives no tax dollars
and relies on stamp and service fees to keep running.
In the past fiscal year, USPS had a net loss of $9 billion.
That's down about a half billion dollars compared to the previous year, in part because of drops
in transportation and workers' compensation expenses.
Postmaster General David Steiner says in the new year, he hopes to increase shipping services,
especially in rural areas that private companies don't serve and improve delivery times.
Service is still not where we expect it to be, nor is it what our customers deserve.
Starting in mid-January, the cost of shipping with USB may go up between 5 and 8 percent,
but a first class forever stamp is staying at 78 cents, at least for a few more months.
Hansi Luong, NPR News.
In college football, number 5, Georgia beat number 10, Texas Saturday night, 35 to 10,
number 11 Oklahoma surprise, number 4 Alabama at home on Saturday,
coming up with 17 points off
turnovers for a 23 to 21 win
that snapped Alabama's 17-game home winning streak
and Lorenzo Fenner
caught six passes for 130 yards
and three touchdowns.
South Dakota beat Southern Illinois
53 to 51 in a five-time
overtime thriller. This is NPR.
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