PBS News Hour - Full Show - July 1, 2026 - PBS News Hour full episode

Episode Date: July 1, 2026

Wednesday on the News Hour, financial disclosures show President Trump making over $2 billion since returning to office, raising major questions about conflicts of interest. Venezuela continues the re...covery from two earthquakes as the hope of finding survivors fades. Plus, one year after the Trump administration closed USAID, we speak to the agency's former administrator about the consequences. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Good evening. I'm Amna Nabazz. And I'm Jeff Bennett. On the news hour tonight, financial disclosure so President Trump making over $2 billion since returning to office, raising major questions about conflicts of interest. Venezuela continues the arduous recovery from two deadly earthquakes as the hope of finding survivors fades. And one year after the Trump administration closed USAID, we speak with the agency's former administrator about the far-reaching consequences of that decision. People are dying because they don't have access to medicine. They don't have access to clean water. Welcome to the News Hour. President Donald Trump's latest financial disclosure
Starting point is 00:00:55 shows his various businesses generated more than $2 billion in income in 2025, his first year back in the White House. That is more than triple his reported income from the year before. The biggest gains came from the Trump family's cryptocurrency ventures. The president was asked about his finances this morning before leaving for North Dakota. You know, you saw the cash and you report the different things. And what they do is we gave it, I think it's called the blind account, but they basically they take it.
Starting point is 00:01:25 And I purposely, I never speak to any of the people that run the money, but they're at big institutions and they invest in whatever they invest. For more on this, we turn now to Eric Lipton. He's an investigative journalist for the New York Times and has reported on President Trump's business interests for years. Eric, thanks for joining us. Before we talk more broadly about his finances, I want to ask specifically. about a big chunk of it that's from cryptocurrency specifically.
Starting point is 00:01:49 The president made more than a billion dollars just from crypto businesses in his first year as president. Break that down for us. How did he do that? The two biggest chunks come from his meme coin, which he launched three days before his inauguration. It was a kind of a collectible that surged in value initially. And the people who quickly invested made a boatload of money, but then it crashed and hundreds of thousands of people then lost money. Trump made hundreds of millions of dollars from that gamble
Starting point is 00:02:20 that he asked people to follow him on, and many of his followers ended up as losers. The second big chunk of revenue comes from World Liberty Financial, a company that he and his sons started in October of 2024. That company is now one of the biggest issuers of what's called stable coins in the world, and it was bought secretly half of it by the United Arab Emirates in January of 2025, just as he was being sworn in to be president. And the UAE separately has invested $2 billion into its stable coin, making it one of the biggest stable coin issuers in the world. So, I mean, it is really intensely tied up with a foreign government,
Starting point is 00:02:58 and the president is profiting from that foreign government's investment in his own business, at the same time as he is acting as commander-in-chief and working with that foreign government to negotiate a war in the Middle East. And we should say it's not just crypto that's fueling the president's wealth. What other businesses and ventures and deals and settlements contributed to his income last year? I mean, there are new real estate deals in the Middle East in Vietnam, in Romania, in the Maldives. He's struck a bunch of deals that include some deals that are actually with foreign governments, like the government of Saudi Arabia and in Qatar as well.
Starting point is 00:03:36 And then there are, as you mentioned, settlements from lawsuits that are being paid to him from media companies. And there's also money in there from Melania from Jeff Bezos and Amazon for the documentary. I mean, there's just, you know, it's quite a crazy array of sources of revenue going to a sitting president. We just, there's nothing like this in American history. And more than 80 million in settlements, according to your reporting there, from some various networks and others. What about what we just heard from the president there about how his finances are structured? He says his investments are run by other people. It's in a blind account that he doesn't talk to the people making those.
Starting point is 00:04:13 investments. Is that all true? He was referring there specifically to his stock trades. And his stock trades are handles by professional investors who they assert to my colleague, Ben, protest, that they are making those individual stock purchases, and there are thousands of them, but they are making them without consulting with President Trump or his family. So that specific quote that you pulled from, he was referring only to his stock and trades, which there are, you know, hundreds of millions of dollars worth of stock trades. Again, unheard of that a president is, at least in his name, is seeing this much buying and selling of stocks while he's president of the United States. You know, in a statement to our White House correspondent, Liz Landers, the White House spokesperson, Anna Kelly, said this in part.
Starting point is 00:04:58 She said neither the president nor his family has ever engaged or will ever engage in conflicts of interest. All actions by President Trump and his administration are taken in the best interest of the American people. Eric, I guess the big question here is if Mr. Trump was not president, could he or would he have made the same amount of money that he did? It's hard to imagine that if he were not president, that his meme coin or it would be as profitable as it has been or that there would have been the scale of investment in World Liberty Financial and the stable coin. It seems as if his status as president is intimately intertwined with the success of those companies. And, I mean, the fact that he launched the meme coin as they were gathering at an auditorium in D.C., three days before his inauguration for what was called the Crypto Ball. It was a bunch of crypto executives and administration, soon-to-be administration officials there to celebrate his inauguration. And that's the night he launched it.
Starting point is 00:06:02 And it was like, follow me as I lead the world. These things are so intertwined. I think it's hard to imagine he would have made as much money. He's never made this much money in his entire life as he's made in this one year. So I think that's part of your answer right there. And unless the minors are we have left, how does that compare to how past presidents have handled their finances while in office? Again, nothing, anything remotely like this from any president in the history of the United States. Other presidents, for the most part, have attempted to disassociate themselves from
Starting point is 00:06:31 investments that could create conflicts of interest. Famously, Jimmy Carter put his peanut farm with an independent trustee. You know, Lady Bird Johnson sold off radio stations. I'm sorry, had hired an outside lawyer to run radio stations when her husband became president and Andrew Kennedy was killed. I mean, again and again, we see, you know, George W. Bush sold his stake in the Texas Rangers. We see presidents who are looking for ways to avoid conflicts, whereas President Trump has embraced all kinds of new businesses that bring conflicts.
Starting point is 00:07:03 Eric Lipton, investigative journalist for the New York Times joining us tonight. Eric, thank you so much. Thank you. In the day's other headlines, President Trump took his maiden voyage today on a new Air Force One, which was donated by Qatar last year, an unprecedented foreign gift. You can do two things. You can lokey it or you can show it. Before taking off for North Dakota this morning, the president told reporters,
Starting point is 00:07:41 he's proud of the retrofitted Boeing 747, which required hundreds of millions more dollars in defense and security systems. The jet boasts a new color scheme, red, white, navy, and gold. During the flight, Trump staffers posted photos of the new interior. The Katari-gifted jet worth $400 million, raised questions among some lawmakers and ethics experts. Mr. Trump has called it a necessary upgrade
Starting point is 00:08:07 from the previous model, which flew presidents for more than three decades. After Mr. Trump leaves office ownership of the new plane will reportedly transfer to the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation. Meantime in Qatar, negotiators from both the U.S. and Iran held more indirect technical talks today. The two sides spoke through regional mediators, and reopening the Strait of Hormuz was still a key sticking point. Iran insists it controls the waterway and state TV broadcast images today of a container ship that ran aground. after trying to use a route that Iran did not approve. Speaking to reporters following a military visit,
Starting point is 00:08:47 Vice President J.D. Vance remained optimistic about the talks and the future of the strait. We've got gas prices starting to come down, but really just ensuring that we continue to make the progress on that, and that's what they're focused on. And then, you know, we're going to, obviously, we're worried about the nuclear issue. We're going to start talking about that.
Starting point is 00:09:05 So right now the talks are going well. It's still pretty early, but talks are going well. A U.S. crew member is missing tonight after a Navy Seahawk helicopter had to make what officials were calling an emergency water landing in the Arabian Sea. Three others were recovered and are in stable condition aboard the USS George H.W. Bush. The Navy says there's no indication the emergency was caused by hostile action. In New York, a pair of masked climbers are in police custody after scaling the top of the Empire State Building's antenna. While there, they unfurled a banner that read when the... power of love beats the love of power, the world knows peace.
Starting point is 00:09:45 The duo then descended to a platform where one of the climbers got down on one knee and appeared to propose. They were later arrested. It's not clear how they gained access to that part of the famous skyscraper. A spokesperson for the building simply called their efforts unauthorized. In Italy, authorities said today they're keeping Mount Etna's alert level at yellow as bursts of gas and magma continue after its latest eruption. Show lava lighting up the night sky as molten lava flows down the mountainside of the island of Sicily.
Starting point is 00:10:18 At last check, scientists say the lava has traveled nearly 1,000 feet since the eruption started on Friday. Now, Etna is the largest volcano in Europe, and while eruptions are common, they rarely cause any threat to locals there. In World Cup action and fair warning, results are ahead. England clawed back from an early deficit against the Democratic Republic of the Congo, thanks to two second half goals from Harry Kane. They'll move on to the round of 16. Co-hosts Mexico have also advanced for the first time in 40 years
Starting point is 00:10:51 after beating Ecuador 2-0 last night in front of a home crowd. Hundreds of thousands of fans erupted into cheers at a massive watch party in the heart of Mexico City, but the festivities were touched by tragedy. Mexican authorities say three people died of suffocation in those packed crowds. The Trump administration said today it will not renew the U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement, also known as the U.S.MCA. Instead, U.S. trade representative Jameson Greer says the U.S. will engage with the other two nations to address what he called the agreement's shortcomings.
Starting point is 00:11:31 For now, the terms of the deal stay in place for 10 years with annual reviews rather than a 16-year extension. Meantime on Wall Street today, tech stocks once again weighed down on the broader markets. The Dow Jones Industrial average slipped just 14 points, so almost flat. The NASDAQ fell more than 170 points or two-thirds of a percent. The S&P 500 posted its eighth loss in the last 11 sessions. And Victor Willis, co-founder and lead singer of the Village People, has died. Willis also co-wrote many of the group's classic hits, including YMCA, which was added to the National Recording Registry back in 2020. He often performed hits like in the Navy and macho man in a police uniform or a naval officer's outfit.
Starting point is 00:12:23 The group's music remains a staple at proms, weddings, and LGBTQ marches, among others. More recently, their songs have become a staple at President Trump's rallies. Willis's wife said he died from a short but aggressive illness. Victor Willis was 74 years old. Still to come on the news hour, much of Europe and North America endure record temperatures with disruptive patterns driven by climate change. Progressive Democrats in Colorado notch primary victories in a potential bellwether for the midterms. And a new PBS News poll finds American pride is strong as people worry about the direction of the country. This is the PBS News hour from the David M. Rubenstein studio at WETA in Washington, headquarters of PBS News.
Starting point is 00:13:11 The search and rescue efforts in Venezuela continued today one week after a double earthquake struck that country. But fewer and fewer survivors are being found. A Venezuelan lawmaker today said nearly 2,300 people are now confirmed dead. Tens of thousands remain missing. And medical professionals say the biggest danger now is treating survivors' wounds and infections. I'm joined now by Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department Battalion Chief Daniel Gaefsky. His team has 79 people and six dogs in Venezuela. Chief Gajewski, welcome to the News Hour.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Thanks for joining us. Absolutely, thank you. So give us a sense of what it's like on the ground. I understand you and your team are in Lagueira. it's one of the hardest hate areas. What is it like there, and what's your focus? Is this still search and rescue or more recovery at this point? So we're still in the search and rescue phase.
Starting point is 00:14:04 We do not determine whether or not we go into the recovery phase. That's going to be the local government. So currently we have many recon teams out in the area. We're looking for survivors all the time, both day and night. We work 24-hour shifts. We're always out there looking. And when we identify where a survivor is located, we stay there, and then we start working that pile until they come out.
Starting point is 00:14:24 At this point, currently, USA One has removed five live victims. We're not stopping there. So currently we have four rescue teams out, identifying and triaging different buildings in the area that have collapsed that have potentially viable victims. And I know yours isn't the only team on the ground from outside doing this kind of work. How many strong are you and where else are you seeing the other teams coming in from? Teams are coming from all over the world. I believe we have over 27 countries that are represented in this response and over 53 international teams.
Starting point is 00:14:58 So, you know, you head out into some of these affected areas, and you see teams from all over helping out and trying to, you know, provide their service, their level of expertise to the local government and to the local responders. You mentioned some of the folks you've been able to save, and we have seen these incredible moments of rescues, people being pulled from the rubble, even days after the earth. Does any one particular moment like that stand out to you? It does. I've been on this team since 2011, and this is what we do. And for me, you know, I'm in my position as a sports leader, kind of sit in the background. But seeing, you know, the mother and child being pulled out on our first day here was extremely emotional, you know, not only for the guys and girls that are there doing it, but for everybody back here.
Starting point is 00:15:44 You mentioned the many years you've been doing this. I'm assuming you've been parts of similar missions before. I'm actually personally thinking back to the scale of the disaster after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, which I was on the ground covering and what that took. Can you compare what you're seeing now in terms of the scale of the destruction and the devastation to past missions? I mean, how bad is it? Yeah, it's pretty bad.
Starting point is 00:16:07 I mean, we just, you know, the most recent mission I could prepare this to do would be Turkey. You know, we arrived in country there and then got boots on the ground, which is just total devastation. And it's very similar here. I think Turkey is a little bit larger scale. You know, here we have a collapse, a large and multi-story buildings that have pancake collapsed. But with large voice spaces, with large voice spaces comes a lot of opportunity for rescues, very similar to Turkey. Can I just put to you some of the frustration we have heard from folks on the ground now who are obviously devastating, having lost everything. But there are folks saying heavy machinery in particular is needed in some areas.
Starting point is 00:16:44 Just take a listen to one man told us about what they haven't seen in their areas. days after the earthquake. We are waiting for the state's heavy machinery, and we haven't actually seen it here at Los Cocos Beach. We haven't seen the heavy machinery, the machines that can lift tons, and move the slabs as easily as a feather. We're waiting for that as soon as possible
Starting point is 00:17:07 because every minute counts for those people who are down under the rubble, waiting to be freed from it. So, Chief, for people who haven't yet seen those resources, what's your message to them? Is there enough? Is it coming? It's always what in any large disaster, that's always one of the big needs.
Starting point is 00:17:23 We're not surprised by what we're seeing. So case in point, when we see these heavy pieces of concrete and things that generally we wish we could move with heavy machinery, we know that, okay, if we don't have it, we're going to have to go through it. And we're first in that. We've had all the correct tools that we need to do it, and we can do it fast and effectively. And that's what makes our team so special. We've seen a lot of estimates, too, that the numbers we're seeing in terms of official death count could rise significantly.
Starting point is 00:17:50 Based on what you've seen, do you agree we could see that? Based on what we've seen, yes. I believe that's a bomb, Maryland. That is Battalion Chief Daniel Gaievsky, joining us tonight from La Cuala, Venezuela. Chief Gajewski, thank you so much for your time. Absolutely, thank you. Dangerously high temperatures are set to scorch much of the country this week as a brutal and long-lasting heat wave bears down on the East Coast and Midwest.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Hundreds of cities could hit record. High is by Friday when more than 175 million Americans will face either major or extreme heat risk, according to the National Weather Service. For more, we turn now to Jeff Beridelli, meteorologist and climate specialist at WFLA and Tampa Bay. Jeff, welcome back to the program. So the National Weather Service, as we said, described this as a prolonged and extremely dangerous heat today. What should we know as we head into the holiday weekend? It's going to get worse as we head towards Thursday, Friday, and also into Saturday. We're going to see the potential for a couple of all-time record highs or at least very close to those record highs.
Starting point is 00:19:04 Generally, the I-95 corridor, that's going to be ground zero for the hottest weather. We could see temperatures max out between 100 and 105. But when you factor in the humidity, there are going to be feels like temperatures around 110. Some places a little bit higher than that. And again, the worst Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and it starts to get a little better, little, slowly better as we head to Sunday. So give us a sense to the next few days. Walk us through it.
Starting point is 00:19:29 Yeah, the next couple of days, actual high temperatures, 95 to as much as 105 degrees. When you factor in the humidity, feels like temperatures are going to be about 105 to 110 in some of the hottest cities. And I think along the I-95 corridor, we will likely exceed 110 for that heat index. So it is going to be oppressive.
Starting point is 00:19:48 Yesterday, there was a heat index of 106 in Chicago, 113 in Milwaukee. We've seen cities like Philly in New York City declare heat emergencies. put this in perspective for us. How hot are these temperatures compared to average? Right. So again, we could see one or two all-time records, but the heat dome or the heat wave is not necessarily unprecedented. But I'd put it somewhere around the 95 to 100 percentile in terms of how strong it is. So it's one of the stronger heat domes or heat waves that we have seen because it's long-lasting, because of all the extra humidity, because of the intensity of it, you know, because it's affecting such a large part of the country.
Starting point is 00:20:28 Again, the worst of it's the next couple of days with, you know, temperatures getting close to 105 in cities like D.C., maybe even Philadelphia, probably a little less than that, New York. It's rare we get to numbers like that. What's the impact of El Nino on all of this? Yeah, so there's a lot of heat building in the tropical Pacific, the eastern tropical Pacific. In fact, we're on pace for a super El Nino. In fact, we're at record pace already. This is probably going to be the strongest El Nino we've ever seen. And we're already seeing it link up with the atmosphere.
Starting point is 00:20:56 and so extra heat is being put into the atmosphere already. It's early for this to be happening. So El Nino not only injects extra heat, but it also kind of augments the steering patterns across Earth. And so we end up oftentimes with events that are somewhat unprecedented, especially during strong El Nino years, and the heat domes tend to be that much more amplified. It's almost like a weather system on steroids, if you will.
Starting point is 00:21:22 And so we're seeing these heat domes play out all over the world right now. The last 11 years are the hottest on record. We know the ocean is getting warmer. The Earth's surface temperature is rising. Europe is experiencing unprecedented heat right now. What's the impact of climate change on all of this? You know, climate change underlies all of this, right? Air temperatures are about 3 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than they were just a little over 100 years ago.
Starting point is 00:21:47 So if you picture it like a building, if your foundation of the building is, let's say, three feet higher, well, then your building's going to be 3 feet higher. So climate change is making all heat domes, every heat wave, more intense, longer lasting, and also larger in scope. And what we're seeing is unprecedented type heat. In fact, the heat wave in Europe that played out over the past week or so, there was a study that was done by world weather attribution. They found that the heat dome was that likely about 6 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than it. Otherwise would have been just 50 years ago. And 50 years ago, it would have been.
Starting point is 00:22:23 have been virtually impossible without climate change. So that's the impact on the European heat wave. There's going to be another one shaping up as we head into the weekend and next week. For the eastern U.S., again, not an unprecedented heatwave, but climate change is certainly making it hotter than it would have otherwise been. Jeff Beardelli, meteorologist and climate specialist at WFLA there in Tampa Bay. Thanks again for being with us. You're welcome. In Colorado, progressive challenger scored upsets against Democratic establishment names up and down the ballot last night, part of a trend seen in some races across the country. Lisa Desjardin has more on what that means for the Democratic Party.
Starting point is 00:23:11 Democrats in the Centennial State sent their party two messages, move left and time for change. In the race for governor, the state's Attorney General, Phil Weiser, beat U.S. Senator Michael Bennett for the Democratic nomination. But the biggest surprise of the night may have been in the state's first congressional district. 29-year-old Democratic Socialist, Maylotte, Kiroz, unseeded, 30-year-old, incumbent 30-year incumbent, Representative Diana DeGette, by nearly 10 points. Still, Senator John Hickenlooper successfully staved off a primary challenge from progressive
Starting point is 00:23:57 state senator Julie Gonzalez. But the results are just the latest chapter in a growing storyline this election year. Establishment Democrats facing and losing challenges from progressive activists upset about the party's direction. For more on where the party stands ahead of the midterms. I'm joined now by former DNC communications director Moe Elithi. He now leads Georgetown's Institute of Politics and Public Service. Now, Mo, Diana DeGette was the third Democratic incumbent to lose in just the last two weeks, following Dan Goldman and Adriano Espiat in New York. And there were more down-ballot in Colorado last night. Why did they lose? Well, I think you see the energy in the Democratic Party splitting. In those races,
Starting point is 00:24:43 and in a number of other races, primarily safe democratic seats in large urban areas, which tend to skew more progressive and younger, the energy is certainly with the left, but more importantly, with the insurgents. But in the competitive races,
Starting point is 00:25:04 the races that will be competitive in the general election, the swing districts, they are far less successful. In most of those, And if you look at the numbers nationwide over the course of this primary season, in those safe blue districts,
Starting point is 00:25:19 the insurgent candidate won about 80% of the time. But in the more competitive, the swing districts, only about 25% of the time. So it seems like in blue districts, they're getting bluer. And in the purple districts, they're not chasing that shiny new object. They're kind of going with what's what's, tried and true. But that doesn't mean that there's not a big warning light flashing for the
Starting point is 00:25:48 establishment Democrats. I think there is an anti-establishment energy that's driven by two big desires among primary voters. One, fight. Fight harder. In that Colorado governor's primary, that was not an ideological split. That was not a left versus center. Those were two establishment Democrats. But one was seen, the Attorney General was seen as the bigger fight. than Senator Bennett. And the other is be bold. They're tired of incrementalism. And right now, the progressive wing of the party sounds bolder.
Starting point is 00:26:24 The moderate wing of the party, the centrist, the established wing, seems more incremental. And in this day and people, and someone who's going to be bold in pursuing change. The left flank is not just progressives now. It is democratic socialist. They have had a fantastic last couple of weeks in general as a group. My question to you about Democratic Socialists,
Starting point is 00:26:47 is this a Tea Party sort of faction of the Democratic Party, or do you think this is the future of the Democratic Party? It could be, and it's too soon to tell. In fact, when the Tea Party first started to emerge, nobody thought that was the future of the Republican Party. They thought they were a faction. They ended up hijacking the entire Republican Party and led directly to Donald Trump. That could happen on the Democratic side if Democratic leadership doesn't learn. those lessons that we just talked about. We have a history in the not, you know, in the not distant past, of bold centrist's
Starting point is 00:27:23 capturing the imagination and attention of the party. Bill Clinton in 1992, Barack Obama in 2008. They were not incremental candidates. They put forward a bold vision for the future and defeated more progressive candidates in their primaries. The two, the 2028, potentially Democratic field can learn something from them. If not, you could see the more progressive wing,
Starting point is 00:27:48 Democratic Socialists take more seats. Democratic Socialists are not going to help win back the House this time. They're in districts that are already going to vote blue. They're safe districts. You're not worried about them in the midterms. But the lessons that this wave teaches us incorporate the future of the Democratic Party. We need to get a big question for Democrats, which is Israel.
Starting point is 00:28:11 We saw in the Colorado race that being candidate Maylachiros, she ran against Diana after she was fired for posting a statement about Israel where she accused the true of committing genocide in Gaza. That is something that some Democrats find out. Other Democrats think it's the right phrasing. The party is divided. How does the party move forward,
Starting point is 00:28:34 can it both support Israel and also so sharply criticize it? Well, I think number one, this split on Israel. because they're the one we talked about. Younger voters, urban areas, they tend to be more passionate about more critical using language like genocide, whereas in more swing districts, it's not as much of a thing. In our last few seconds, though, how do you get through this? Democrats need to figure out, and some have started to, Democrats need to figure out how to be anti- Netanyahu and pro-Israel.
Starting point is 00:29:09 and that some of them have struggled, some have figured it out. That's where we can be. We can be for Israel and its role in the region and its relationship with the United States while denouncing Netanyahu in the way that he waged this war. Thank you for an important conversation. Thanks for having me. Today marks one year since the Trump administration dissolved the United States Agency for International Development or USCID as an independent agency, folding what remained of its
Starting point is 00:29:51 foreign assistance work into the U.S. State Department. For more than six decades, USAID was a central tool of American foreign policy, delivering humanitarian aid, fighting disease, responding to disasters and advancing U.S. interests around the world. The administration called move a necessary overhaul. Critics called it the dismantling of one of America's most important instruments of global influence. For perspective, we are joined now by Samantha Power, the last confirmed administrator of USAID. under former President Biden. She previously served as the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. during the Obama presidency. Ambassador Power, welcome to the newsag.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Thank you for having me. The dismantling of U.S. AID amounts to self-power suicide. A year later, where do you see the clearest consequences, not just in a few of the program, but in dimensionary leverage and influence? The length is estimated that 14 million people, including 4.5 million kids under 5 by 20.30. It is hard to quantify day by day, the deaths that are ensuing, but Boston University ran a tracker and documented 800,000 debts by February this year. So people are dying because they don't have access to medicine. They don't have access to clean water.
Starting point is 00:31:17 The cuts were done not on a glide path, as one would do, if one had conducted a reasonable review of programming, but it was a cliff. And by cutting off resources on a cliff, you do the most human harm possible. The cost to the 15,000 people who worked at USAID, Patriots, public servants, people who volunteer to serve most often in crisis zone. whether war zones, the scenes of natural disasters, really difficult living environments. They did so because they were motivated by just the cause of trying to help vulnerable people and advance U.S. interests in so doing. And they were escorted out often by security guards, given 10 minutes, 15 minutes to pack up their offices.
Starting point is 00:32:04 But this just, it's like taking away one of the great brands that America has ever projected into the world, created by John F. Kennedy, like a nice. Nike, a Coca-Cola, something that really engendered respect and influence all around the world and destroying that. Why? In just almost a fit of absent-mindedness, without any thoughtfulness, without any previous ideological acts to grind. Critics on the right, as you know, say the agency was bloated, that it was slow, that it was captured by contractors who absorbed a large share of every dollar before it ever reached anyone in need. Looking back, is there a version of reform that you would have supported, or was the agency's
Starting point is 00:32:49 scale important in and of itself? Marco Rubio has said that U.S. assistance needs to move at the speed of relevance, and that is one of the few things in the context of discussions about foreign assistance that I agree with Marco Rubio on. It absolutely should move at the speed of relevance. And I also think what the Trump administration is doing, which is moving more money through governments, That is something we also began to push really hard on under President Biden. What was hard were a set of congressional requirements, compliance requirements that were very well intended, but that added up over the years to ensure that these resources went exactly where Congress and USAID intended them to go. And what that meant was a ton of red tape, a ton of red tape that actually slowed down USAID's ability to move money from Washington out to the field and actually created distance between some of the incredible public servants who did this work and the communities that they came to USAID to serve.
Starting point is 00:34:00 So I think that could easily be cleaned up and you could see a kind of risk management approach embraced rather than a risk avoidance. approach, which is impossible in war zones and places like that. Well, as the U.S. retreats, who gains? Do you see a China or a Russia, for instance, trying to convert America's withdrawal from the world stage into a geopolitical advantage? No question. That authoritarian actors benefit. When you commit soft power suicide, who is going to be the biggest beneficiary? Of course, your largest geostrategic competitor, and that is China. when the United States is pulling the rug out from public health programming, it's not as if China's coming in and saying,
Starting point is 00:34:44 here's some malaria bed nets for your people. Look, we can run this programming too. That's not their thing. They are not about giving grants and doing significant humanitarian work in the world, but they are about using their media platforms to amplify the deaths and the harms caused by the United States closing down these programs in such an abrupt and deadly manner. Has this experience changed how you'd make the case for foreign aid,
Starting point is 00:35:15 less as moral obligation and more as hard-nosed self-interest? Well, I have long made the case in both ways, because not to cater to any particular audience, but because I think both things are true. It's an amazing thing for Americans to know that for the equivalent of $10 a month, For each of them, we are saving, the United States was saving three million lives a year. It's an incredible thing for them to know that 92 million lives were saved between 2001 and 2021 because of the work USA did in the world.
Starting point is 00:35:53 And that's not propaganda. That's a peer-reviewed academic study that shows the good the taxpayer resources did. At the same time, I think Americans know intuitively that American farmers who are not having an easy time of it these days for a whole set of reasons, tariffs, climate change, the works, it matters a lot when USAID buys $2 billion worth of American farm commodities, wheat and corn, and uses it to feed really hungry people around the world. It matters a lot when the United States and the USAID is contributing to growing middle classes in many developing nations, middle classes that will then buy American products and services. And it matters a huge amount when we think, especially in the wake of COVID, the fact that we had this crack outbreak response infrastructure built that the taxpayers had invested in over so many years and that we had gotten so good at smothering these outbreaks before they became pandemics, and that we would destroy that. Again, it's an own goal of epic proportions.
Starting point is 00:37:06 Ambassador Samantha Power, thank you for joining us this evening. We appreciate it. Thank you so much. With celebrations for the nation's 250th anniversary well underway, the mood of the country and its citizens can best be summed up as complicated. It's according to a new PBS News, NPR Maris Poll.
Starting point is 00:37:35 Most Americans the nation has drifted from its founding ideals. And a growing number say the divisions have become so severe that violence may be necessary to set the country back on the right path. Liz Landers has more insights from the poll and its respondents. Flags, fireworks, and fanfare. Beneath the pageantry of the country's 250th birthday, some feel a sense of national pride. I've been fortunate to travel and work with a lot of people from around the world. this is a good place.
Starting point is 00:38:09 You know, I mean, with all his faults, there's not much like it in the world. Gerald Jakubowski remembers America's bicentennial 50 years ago, which he says felt like a national party. He says something is different this year. This time it's, unfortunately, not as joyful as it could have been.
Starting point is 00:38:29 At this milestone moment, two-thirds of respondents in the latest PBS News NPR Maris poll said they are proud to be American, one-third are not. Those feelings are largely defined by political alignment, and the partisan gap is enormous. 93% of Republicans say they are proud. Just 45% of Democrats and 61% of independents say the same. I am not proud. It's embarrassing what is happening in this country. Veronica Valdivia Vera is a naturalized citizen and a political independent.
Starting point is 00:39:03 She says the Trump administration's anti-immigration agenda has her worried. I was born in Mexico, so it fills me with sadness to see what is happening to immigrants or their fellow immigrants and how we're being targeted because of color of skin. Nearly half of Americans say the country has moved far away from the principles and ideas on which it was founded. Just 16% say it still represent. the nation's founding beliefs. I think it's come a long way from the beginning. It was nowhere close to perfect at the beginning of this country.
Starting point is 00:39:41 And I think we've come a long way. Mark Hawking is a political independent from Indiana. He's proud, he says, but clear-eyed about how far the country still has to go. There are doubts about where we are and where we're headed. Lee Meringoff is the director of the Maris Institute for Public Opinion. I don't think it's really surprising. as much as it can be still considered shocking that after 250 years, this grand experiment in democracy, folks are having serious doubts
Starting point is 00:40:13 and wondering how far we've strayed from our principles. Those early founding statements that all men are created equal that the pursuit of happiness is a central right continue to face new tests in the 21st century. There are lots of people that are really questioning in this moment whether those things are true anymore. Beverly Gage is a historian at Yale University and author of This Land is Your Land, a road trip through U.S. history. There have always been in the United States deep concerns about whether the country would hold together, whether we're just this big mishmash of different kinds of people with different experiences and different beliefs,
Starting point is 00:40:53 or whether there's something that really unites the country. I think we're seeing a particularly acute sense of concern over these questions. But what does it mean to be an American? In the new poll, freedom or liberty was the most common response. More than a third of respondents said so. Other common answers included patriotism, constitutional rights, and diversity. To be an American, I think, just the opportunity. We, anybody can do anything based on ability, but also based on circumstance.
Starting point is 00:41:27 Despite clear differences in the view of American identity, there was some overworked, there was some overwhelming agreement. More than eight and ten, respondents said that the issues that divide the country pose a serious threat to the future of democracy. There's very few institutions who have not, you know, develop recent scars from just the kinds of sentiment that people are seeing when, you know, things are not improving. As Americans see stagnation in the direction of the country, there is also an uptick in acceptance of political violence.
Starting point is 00:41:59 37% of Americans believe their fellow citizens may need to resort to violence to get the nation back on track. That's a seven-point increase since October. It's not a great sign for our democracy. Gage says the current sentiment is not without historical precedent. Violence has been a part of the American story from the very beginning. But she says what distinguishes this moment is what makes it most alarming. The two things that I think are really distinct about our moment are one, the seeming popularity or resignation to the idea that violence might become necessary.
Starting point is 00:42:37 And secondly, the technology, the weaponry we have today, the widespread nature of gun ownership and the ways that violence can be turned into mass violence much more easily than it could in the past. And the poll finds the rising belief is driven most sharply by young Americans. More than half, 58 percent of respondents' under the U.S. age 30 say violence may be necessary. That's a 17-point jump since October. I think it's something that, you know, I can definitely see people doing. 21-year-old college student Jack Burchers is a Democrat. While he doesn't think he'd take up arms, he understands why other young people might. I personally do not want to see violence. I think that we need to resolve our issues without
Starting point is 00:43:22 violence, but I think that it's going towards that path. It's kind of an unavoidable. one half of the aisle doesn't seem to, you know, want to play by the rules. So it may be time for both sides to kind of agree that the rules need to be broken. Despite the grim outlook on creeping political violence, there is room for some optimism. A majority of Americans, 53 percent, say that America's best days are ahead. Administrations change. Maybe this one will go down as, you know, maybe that wasn't so great. But there's always another one. It can be better. I hope that, you know, those ideals and ideas that they came up with 250 years ago will still exist 50 years from now at the nation's 300th birthday. 250 years in, the poll finds a country with a common vocabulary. Freedom, opportunity, the promise of something better yet to come. Moments like the 250th, I think, also help people step back, take a little perspective on the moment that we're in.
Starting point is 00:44:23 and by the measures of history, maybe come to the conclusion that while there are certainly deep problems today, maybe all is not so doom and gloom. What still divides Americans today is whether they believe those founding ideals and the promises of a new nation are still being kept. For the PBS News Hour, I'm Liz Landers. If you have a furry friend, you might have noticed that veterinary care is becoming increasingly expensive. And as prices rise, attention is turning to a major shift in the industry. Private equity firms and large corporations buying up veterinary practices across the country. Paul Solman has the story.
Starting point is 00:45:17 Clyde, a nine-year-old boxer who lived in California with pet parent Kylie. I adopted him in April of 2020. So he's a pandemic baby. He was in mostly good health for about a year. And then he started vomiting pretty regularly. After a year plus of vet visits, Sweet Potato Clyde's diagnosis, cancer. We started him on chemo pretty early on. Costing how much?
Starting point is 00:45:42 In 2026 alone and just for my one dog Clyde, I have spent $3,500. At what point do you say enough? Jennifer Turnauer has spent some 20 grand on her daughter's beloved 14-year-old Balinese cat, Jupiter. If it was $20,000 all at once, I might have said no. But because it was a few thousand, a few thousand, a few thousand, a few thousand. then a few years passed, then a few thousand. It's really hard to draw a clear line. Look, we can bombard you with stories like these
Starting point is 00:46:11 because veterinary care costs have risen by roughly 60% since 2014, far outpacing overall inflation. The mission of this story to examine the role of corporate ownership, by private equity in particular. Rising prices are partly a story of inflation. They're partly a story of better medicine, partly a story of labor scarcity, and then it's partly a story of ownership and market structure. Economist Matt Saloy studies the industry.
Starting point is 00:46:40 And so the private equity component is a piece of that story. Sooy says it's hard to precisely quantify private equity's share of these costs, but they are real enough. And in fact, Clyde and Juniper have something in common besides their pathologies. They were treated by vets owned by the same private equity firm. Now, as we and others have reported, private equity buys businesses to hike their value, usually with a loan that's loaded onto the acquisition. The goal, increase profits and sell at a higher price. Private equity has started to move in very aggressively into the veterinary space.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Financial journalist Helene Olin. And what often happens is everyone from the customers to the employees get the short end of the stick. There's a lot of evidence out there now that what they do is they put a lot of pressure on the veterinary clinics themselves to increase revenue. They raise prices quickly and often. Soloy says that can happen, but in the vet world, so much depends on how the acquirers operate and how many practices they own. The entry of private equity into a veterinary practice in itself is not good or bad.
Starting point is 00:47:55 It's what kind of operating model. I think the problem here is one of size. It's easier for a smaller enterprise to maintain that level of trust between the veterinary team and the pet owner because the distance between decision maker and decision implementer is closer. And that becomes harder as an enterprise grows, as can happen in a corporate veterinary practice. In other words, the practice can wind up putting profits over pets. A government-backed investigation of vet clinics in the U.K. estimated
Starting point is 00:48:27 that corporate ownership added more than a billion dollars in costs for consumers over a five-year period. Back here across the pond, corporations owned only 10 percent of vet practices a decade ago. Today, it's estimated from about 30 to as much as 50 percent. And in specialty care, emergency medicine, oncology, and cardiology, 75 percent. Why? Because vet practices can be cash cows, given the emotional bonds between men. and beast. Happy birthday to you. If you're a pet owner that loves your pet, you're going to want to keep that pet alive. They're my babies. They're my kids. It's very hard to say no when something might extend their life. The status of pets in our society has gone up by a huge degree over the
Starting point is 00:49:18 course of our lifetimes. These private equity places, shops, see this and they think this is a guaranteed way to make money because people would just keep something. spending money on their pets. Stand a man. Michelle Forbes is a veterinarian who runs an independent vet practice in Ann Arbor, Michigan. When I started 22 years ago, it was you had to be a veterinarian to own your practice. It was a more locally functioning, connected, sort of we make decisions here in the moment in the hospital. And now it is, it's just much more business.
Starting point is 00:49:54 It's a business venture. Vets like Forbes are increasingly getting offers to sell their practices to private equity firms. Here's a recent bid she got and posted on TikTok. Initial corporate offer, 8.5 million. I on a daily basis will get requests from private equity companies to purchase my practice, and the numbers are so hard to walk away from. And she has walked away from every offer. That's what we think of selling to corporate.
Starting point is 00:50:23 Even so, she says, the rise of corporate-owned practices, has made it harder for her to compete. There are certain medications that for every dollar I spend, a corporate hospital spends 30 cents. So when I charge a client the same amount as a private equity, my profit margin is so slim that it's hard to stay alive. That's because she can't get the same huge volume discounts that come with size. But when vets like her sell or a close-up shop, the community may pay the price.
Starting point is 00:50:55 equity, consolidation in general, has the potential to reduce competition in local markets. And so if that happens, that pressure does contribute to higher prices. Independent practices, they're not just nostalgic. They are an important competitive force. We contacted some of the largest corporate-owned veterinary groups in the U.S. Mars, the Candy Folks, now a conglomerate, which owns three of those groups, and about 2,000 U.S. practices in all responded. Quote, diagnostics, treatments, and specialty care that did not exist a generation ago
Starting point is 00:51:32 are helping pets live longer, healthier lives. Those advances, along with industry-wide pressures, such as a national shortage of veterinary professionals and rising costs for medical supplies and equipment, have affected the cost of care. Our veterinarians have clinical autonomy. Mars rebrands its vet practices, but that's not usual for private. equity owners, so consumers often assume local ownership. Francis Wong's dachshund Pluto was sideswiped by a car rushed to a local clinic.
Starting point is 00:52:04 And we were just really disappointed in the way he was cared for. There didn't seem to be any continuity of care. The vets that he saw were relief vets, so they were coming in and out. And so they missed the internal bleeding that he had, and that's ultimately what led to his death. And the other thing that was really tortuous for us was just the way in which they were continually asking for additional authorization for payment, including after he had passed. Did you know it was private equity? So we didn't.
Starting point is 00:52:32 We complained. We didn't really hear anything back. And at that point, I started researching, you know, who owns the practice. The local vet had been acquired by a private equity firm, KKR. Wong appealed was offered a refund of this $13,000 bill, but... And that was in return for an NDA. A non-disclosure agreement. Meaning that we wouldn't be able to share anything about our experience.
Starting point is 00:52:57 And so instead, you know, what I decided to do was to try and honor Pluto in some way by setting this website that actually has a goal of bringing transparency to the ownership of veterinary practices across the U.S. His website, private equity vet.org, features a searchable map of corporate-owned practices, something he wishes he had had when he lost Pluto. Just a pet, some might say, but like so many, a price. member of the family. For the PBS NewsHour, Paul Salman. And that is The NewsHour for tonight. I'm Omna of Oz. And I'm Jeff Bennett for all of us here at The News Hour. Thanks for spending part of your evening with us.

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