Do you remember when discovering a new artist felt like finding buried treasure?
At All Songs Considered, NPR's music recommendation podcast, we put that kind of magic back into discovering new tracks.
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We'll help you make music feel fun again, only on All Songs Considered from NPR.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Shay Stephens.
The Trump administration has granted a partial reprieve from some of its steep tariffs on imports from China.
As NPR's Scott Horsley tells us, there are signs that more car valves may soon be announced.
iPhones and laptops made in China are getting a temporary break from President Trump's punishing new tariffs.
The administration announced late Friday
that electronic goods will not be subject to the 145% import tax applied to other Chinese products.
The president also says he's considering suspending the 25% tariff on imported cars and car parts that he ordered less than three weeks ago.
The news helped keep a relief rally going in the stock market,
but it also adds to uncertainty about the size and shape of tariffs in the months and years to come.
That uncertainty has left many businesses in limbo and reluctant to make big bets on an unpredictable economic future.
Scott Horsley in NPR News, Washington.
The Maryland man deported after being accused of belonging to a Venezuelan gang remains in limbo.
Kilmar Obrego Garcia is incarcerated in an El Salvadoren prison.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his return,
but Attorney General Pam Bondi says the onus is upon the Salvadoran government.
That's up to El Salvador if they want to return him.