Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is your twenty four to seven use update the
latest use this hour in just four minutes. Illinois governor
is condemning a report that President Trump is planning to
send federal troops to the streets of Chicago. A report
Saturday in The Washington Post says the Pentagon's been planning
a military deployment to Chicago for weeks and that a
(00:23):
few thousand National Guard members could arrive as soon as
next month. Governor JB. Pritzker says in a statement, Trump
is attempting to manufacture a crisis and, in his words,
politicize Americans who serve in uniform and to distract from
the pain he's causing working families. A group of residents
of Texas are now suing their governor, Greg Abbott over
(00:44):
the new congressional map passed by Texas lawmakers Saturday, designed
to give Republicans more power in the US Congress. The
lawsuit says the new map, which gives Republicans five more
seats in Congress, is racially discriminatory and violates voter protection.
The sixty seven page complaint also says that redrawing congressional
(01:04):
maps in the middle of a decade is blatantly unconstitutional.
President Trump said Saturday he'll know in a couple of
weeks if he made any progress in bringing peace to Ukraine.
Two weeks, We're going.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
To find out WHI shway it's going to go, and
I'd better be very happy. Trump has attempted to broker
a piece deal meeting with Russia's Vladimir Putin, then with
Ukraine Zelensky and US European allies. Friday, from the White House,
Trump was asked about new Russians strikes against Ukraine and
said he wasn't happy about anything with the war. I'm
Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
President Trump's borders are is defiant after a federal judge
ordered the closure of Florida's so called Alligator Alcatraz. Speaking
with News Nation, Tom Holman said the order is not
going to stop the operations of immigration and customs enforcement,
and he says federal authorities will continue making arrests. The
judge ordered the immigration detention center, located in the Everglade,
(02:00):
to close within sixty days. Florida state officials have appealed
the injunction. I'm Scott Carr, lawyers for the Salvadoran immigrant
kilmar At Brezio Garcia say the US government is now
threatening to deport him to Uganda unless he pleads guilty
to charges of human smuggling. In a court filing Saturday
at Bregio, Garcia's lawyers claimed the Trump administration offered to
(02:22):
deport the Salvadoran to Costa Rica if he pled guilty
to the charges, but if he didn't agree, they would
deport him to the African nation of Uganda. He was
living in Maryland earlier this year when he was accidentally
deported to El Salvador and what the White House had
called an administrative error. In football, there's a new development
and the saga of the Browns wanting to move out
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of Cleveland.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
There are still a number of challenges, but the City
of brook Park has agreed to a rezoning plan. Cleveland
dot Com reports city council this past week voted six
to one to rezone one hundred and seventy six acres
of the former Ford Plans from industrial to a planned
unit development district. The paper quotes brook Park Mayor ed
Orcutt saying he's one thousand percent confident the project will
be a go, and he says the issue of the
(03:05):
domed stadium being too tall to be next to Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport is being resolved. I'm Jack Crumley.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
The National Park Service is saying that wildfires this year
have meant the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park
in northern Arizona will have to stay closed for the
rest of the current season. We get more from Lisa Carton.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
The closure follows the Dragon Bravo wildfire, which damaged or
destroyed about seventy structures in July. The historic Grand Canyon Lodge,
the North Rim Visitor Center, and many guest cabins burned
to the ground. Visitor services along the North Rim are closed,
but the South Rim remains open. I'm Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Utility bills are on the rise across the country, Federal
data showing electric costs are higher by more than five
percent and natural gas prices have risen by nearly fourteen percent.
The agency says reasons for the higher prices include Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, which has interrupted energy supply chains, and
high man with so many data centers in the US
(04:02):
coming online. I'm Scott Carr