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NPR News Now

NPR News: 05-31-2025 5PM EDT

Sat, 31 May 2025

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Chapter 1: What are the EU's counter-tariff plans in response to US tariffs?

0.868 - 20.263 Jane Araf

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Herbst. The European Union says it's prepared to impose counter-tariff plans now that President Trump doubled his tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50 percent. An EU spokesperson says they had paused their tariffs in hopes of reaching an agreement.

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Chapter 2: How does the tariff increase affect the global economy?

20.663 - 38.879 Terry Schultz

Terry Schultz has more. A spokesperson for the European Union's executive says the bloc strongly regrets Trump's decision to raise tariffs on steel imports from 25 to 50 percent. The decision adds further uncertainty to the global economy and increases costs for consumers and businesses on both sides of the Atlantic, the spokesperson said in a statement.

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39.249 - 60.457 Terry Schultz

They added that this move also undermines ongoing efforts to reach a negotiated solution, which was the reason the EU decided in April to hold off imposing its own tariffs. But now the spokesperson says the European Commission is finalizing its decisions on countermeasures and will put them into effect on July 14th or even earlier if, in their words, no mutually acceptable solution is reached.

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60.877 - 62.678 Terry Schultz

For NPR News, I'm Terry Schultz in Brussels.

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Chapter 3: What were Elon Musk's contributions in the federal government?

63.298 - 74.807 Jane Araf

Elon Musk stepped down from the federal government yesterday, and some people, including Republicans, aren't sad to see him go. NPR's Maria Aspin spoke with Senator Mike Rounds of South Dakota.

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Chapter 4: Why are some Republicans glad Musk is stepping down?

75.048 - 86.477 Maria Aspin

Musk is leaving the Department of Government Efficiency, which is spearheading President Trump's efforts to shrink the federal bureaucracy. But many of Doge's indiscriminate cuts have likely made the government less efficient.

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Chapter 5: What did Senator Rounds say about Musk's approach to government efficiency?

87.222 - 97.947 Maria Aspin

Senator Rounds tells NPR that if Musk and Doge really wanted to be effective, they needed to be more careful with their cuts and spend more time digging into what he calls the finer details.

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Chapter 6: How did Trump respond to Musk's departure from the government?

98.247 - 105.551 Mike Johnson

I think the president wanted him to come in with a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer. And in some cases, Doge came in with a sledgehammer.

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105.851 - 117.682 Maria Aspin

Trump, meanwhile, wrote on his Truth Social network that Musk, quote, will always be with us, helping all the way. Elon is terrific. Maria Aspin, NPR News, Simi Valley, California.

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119.363 - 134.867 Jane Araf

The United Nations says Israel banned aid to Gaza from Jordan and Egypt. The move leaves hundreds of millions of dollars of food and medicine intended for Gaza stuck in warehouses and on trucks. And here's Jane Araf has more from Amman.

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135.167 - 147.71 Jane Araf

This UN warehouse on the edge of Amman is piled high with boxes of food, hygiene kits, and medical supplies. $24 million worth. It's been here for months. And now... We're looking at...

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148.51 - 153.321

boxes of food here which have been sitting here you know in some cases since January.

153.68 - 179.248 Jane Araf

That's Jonathan Fowler with the UN's Palestinian Refugee Agency. Among the food is 200,000 tons of flour at risk of being thrown out. Israel has started a new mechanism to get food into Gaza, but it can only come from Israel, says the UN in Gaza. The Israeli military declined to comment on the change. Jane Araf, NPR News, Amman. You're listening to NPR News.

181.732 - 205.351 Jane Araf

Pharmaceutical company Moderna says the Food and Drug Administration has approved its new COVID booster vaccine, although the agency did put restrictions on who can get it. This new booster is a lower-dose version that's a step toward next-generation coronavirus vaccines. Moderna says it expects to offer both the new vaccine and its existing COVID-19 shot this fall.

205.851 - 231.834 Jane Araf

The FDA approved the new vaccine for adults 65 and older and also for people aged 12 to 64 who are at higher risk from the coronavirus. That's the same limit that the FDA set in licensing another vaccine option from Novavax. When people get a scratch or an infection, the body responds better if it happens during the day. NPR's Burleigh McCoy reports on how the immune system tells time.

232.115 - 251.678 Stephen Fowler

Scientists have known that many cells in the immune system have built-in circadian clocks, genes that tell them to respond differently depending on the time. But scientists weren't quite sure how the immune system was telling time. To figure it out, researchers used baby zebrafish, which are transparent, with modified immune cells that give off fluorescent light.

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