PBS News Hour - Full Show - May 22, 2026 - PBS News Hour full episode
Episode Date: May 23, 2026Friday on the News Hour, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard resigns, the latest high-profile shakeup in the Trump administration. We look at the many causes driving a decade-long decline ...in students' math and reading scores. Plus, as carbon credits to offset climate change often haven't lived up to their promise, some groups are now trying to change that. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
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Good evening. I'm William Brangham. I'm Nina Navaz and Jeff Bennett are away. On the news hour tonight, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard resigns, the latest high-profile shake-up in the Trump administration. We look at the many causes driving a decade-long decline in students' math and reading scores.
The pandemic was just the mudslide that followed seven years of steady erosion in student achievement.
And so-called carbon credits meant to offset climate change often haven't lived up to their promise,
how some groups are now trying to change that.
We want to make sure that we're not just paying landowners for things they would have already done,
because if that's the case, then you don't actually get additional carbon.
The atmosphere doesn't feel a difference.
Welcome to the News Hour.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard,
the highest-ranking intelligence official in the U.S. government, resigned today.
She said her husband is suffering from a rare bone cancer that requires her full attention.
Foreign and defense correspondent Nick Schifrin and White House correspondent Liz Landers are both covering this story and they join us now.
Nick, what did Gabbard say in her resignation announcement today?
Well, as you said, William, Gabbard said that she's leaving because of her husband's illness and she released this resignation letter, which reads in part,
My husband Abraham has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of.
bone cancer, I must step away from public service to be by his side and fully support him through
this battle.
In response, President Trump wrote that, quote, Tulsi's done an incredible job and we will miss her,
and the president announced that her principal deputy, Aaron Lucas, would become the acting
director of national intelligence.
So the president, using kind words there, William, and Tulsi Gabbard has executed some of his
key intelligence community priorities.
The Gabbard aide sent me a list of her accomplishments, listing,
cutting what Gabbard called, quote, agency bloat by more than 40 percent,
declassified, including high-profile cases like the JFK assassination,
and exposing what the president calls the weaponization of the intelligence community.
But former intelligence and Trump officials tell me that Gabbard was largely cut out.
She was frozen out of the policymaking process,
and that, frankly, CIA director John Rackcliffe has already been running the intelligence community.
Liz, you've been looking into one other part that Gabbard was involved in.
What can you tell us about that?
Gabbard took an unprecedented step and showed up in late January of this year in Fulton County, Georgia,
at a raid that the FBI was conducting at the Fulton County election headquarters there.
The FBI took all of the 2020 physical ballots, their tabulator tapes, all of their ballot images,
and their voter rolls at the time.
The FBI said that this was based on belief of probable cause of violation.
of retention and preservation of election records
and also deprivation of a fair election.
The Fulton County Board of Commissioners sued
almost immediately afterwards saying that the federal government
needed to turn over those ballots.
But this is all because the president keeps saying
and lying about the results of the 2020 election.
We know he has put pressure on the Secretary of State there
in the past, and Gabbard defended her presence there.
She wrote a long letter at the time to Democrats on the Hill,
And she said that the national intelligence director maintains election security is a national security issue.
And she said that President Trump told her to go.
When she was down there, she facilitated a call between the president and FBI agents who conducted a raid.
Again, a very unusual move there.
And she said in that letter at the time that electronic voting systems in the United States have long been vulnerable to exploitation by bad actors that could change or manipulate the outcome of an election, we are still waiting for evidence.
that those elections were manipulated.
Right, truly unprecedented.
Nick, can you go back to this relationship that she had with the president?
And how did it sour?
And what does that mean when it comes to a person in this office?
So a former intelligence and Trump official tells me
that it largely soured over the president's decisions over Iran starting last summer.
And right before the president authorized that attack on Iran nuclear sites last summer,
she released this video.
Because as we stand here today, closer to the brink of nuclear annihilation than ever before,
political elite and warmongers are carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers.
So a former official tells me that she never recovered from that.
The president didn't know about it beforehand, considered it an attempt to try and convince him not to bomb Iran.
And of course, he did decide to bomb Iran last summer, despite his promise beforehand not to get involved.
the Middle East Wars, which of course was a position that she promoted quite publicly.
And then she was also considered against this year's war against Iran, one of her key deputies
resigned over it.
And so the former intelligence official tells me she was on her way out anyway.
She was likely going to have to resign even before her husband's illness.
William, as for your key question, how important is this, well, look, the role of the
Director of National Intelligence has been debated since it was created some 20 years ago.
There have been bipartisan calls for reforms, including some of the cuts that Gabbard has implemented.
Some former officials tell me it's not an important job, and the president does not consider it an important job.
But other officials say, look, the role that Congress created is important, was not supposed to be political, involved in the things that Liz just talked about,
and that it does not help the intelligence community if this person is considered weak, considered politicized, or, frankly, has been frozen out by the president.
Nick Schifrin, Liz Landers, thank you both very much.
Thank you.
I'm joined now by Larry Pfeiffer.
He had a three decades-plus career in the U.S. intelligence community
where he served as chief of staff to CIA director Michael Hayden
and was deeply involved in post-9-11 intelligence reform,
including service within the office of the director of national intelligence.
He's now director of the Hayden Center at George Mason University.
Mr. Pfeiffer, thank you so much for being here.
I just wonder if you could give us your reaction to this resignation today.
Well, I would not disagree with anything Nick said.
She was inexperienced to begin with.
She should never have been nominated for the job.
Once in the job, I don't think she ever fully understood the responsibilities that she had
in managing this vast enterprise of 18 intelligence agencies,
many of which reside in other cabinet departments.
And when she began to lose favor with the president,
her way of dealing with it was to lean heavily into responding to his desire
to plumb into some of these conspiracy theories
that were discredited surrounding some of our past presidential elections.
I'm very sad, of course, to hear about her husband's situation,
and my heart is with them as they move forward there.
As Nick was describing, this office was created to sort of address the vulnerability that 9-11 revealed,
that siloed intelligence had blinded us in some way to a terrorist threat looming.
But Gabbard, often, as you were describing, seemed focused on other things.
How much of that do you believe was a reflection of her or a reflection of the office or a reflection of this president?
I would offer it was more a reflection of her and of the influence of the president, less so the specific position.
I mean, this position was created, as you said, in response to 9-11 as a way to try to break down some of the silos that existed within our national security structure.
But another key point was the framers of the law that created this were very concerned that the then DCI, director of Central Intelligence,
being dual-headed as the head of the community, as well as the head of CIA,
that was just too large of a job for one person to do.
And I will tell you, having worked with General Hayden,
who was the sole CIA director without the community management responsibility,
he was forever grateful he didn't have to worry about taking care of the community
while also trying to run such a robust agency as CIA.
So I don't think she fully understood the,
the grave responsibility she had in coordinating those various elements of the community
towards a common goal.
I mean, it has been two decades now since this office was created since 9-11.
Is it your understanding that the office itself is working as intended?
Are we safer because we have an ODNI?
So the DNA position in the OD&I was created by this intelligence reformed terrorism
Prevention Act legislation, which was like all legislation to compromise. The DNI role was
imperfect to start, but it has moved on for 20 years. I think they have made great strides through
the years in doing integration across the community, in establishing standards for the community,
so they're all speaking the same language, working on the same procedures. They've played a very
critical role in overseeing significant acquisitions. I mean, this is a large enterprise. They spend millions
and millions of dollars, they buy lots of very sensitive capabilities. And it's important to have
an enterprise that can oversee and manage that responsibly for the taxpayer. So I think, yes,
the DNI has done, has made stride through the years. Most of the strides they've made are
around boring things like I just described. Is it perfect? No. Any institution after 20 years
is probably worthy of review. My view is that if you,
you want to review the DNI, you want to review the structure of the intel community, how it's
governed. It's a serious discussion, and that should be something that should be done in a bipartisan
fashion. It should involve people who have expertise in these disciplines, people who've held these
positions, and no movement towards reform should be made without recommendations and discussion
from such a body, as I described.
All right, that is Larry Pfeiffer, director of the Hayden Center.
Larry, thank you so much for being here.
Thank you.
We start today's other headlines in Sweden,
where Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with NATO allies
amid confusion over recent U.S. statements on troop levels in Europe.
Rubio told the gathering of foreign ministers
that the U.S. remains committed to the military alliance,
but that the presence of American forces depends on what the allies themselves
contribute to NATO.
Yesterday, President Trump said the U.S. Trump said the U.S.
U.S. would send an additional 5,000 troops to Poland, citing his ties to that country's new president.
But earlier this month, the president said he would withdraw 5,000 from Germany after Chancellor
Friedrich Mertz said Iran had, quote, humiliated the U.S. Today, Rubio insisted that such
decisions are, quote, not political. I think it's well understood in the alliance that the United
States troop presence in Europe is going to be adjusted. This is not a decision that was made on
the back of a napkin. I mean, this has been an ongoing process. This troop change-up comes
amid a growing rift in the military alliance, with tension simmering over the Iran War,
the question of America's commitment to Ukraine, and the president's threats to seize Greenland.
Authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo are banning funeral wakes and large gatherings
to try and slow the Ebola outbreak there. Health workers are struggling to keep up with rising
cases amid public anger over the handling of the crisis. Today in Geneva, the World Health Organization
raised its assessment of the threat, saying it now poses a very high risk to the area.
Officials say there are now at least 750 suspected cases and more than 170 suspected deaths.
Neighboring Rwanda has shut border crossings to the DRC to prevent the spread of the virus,
which is putting a strain on locals.
Our work is here at the border.
When it is closed, we are all stranded.
It is this work that sends our children to school,
provides us with a home, gives us a livelihood.
And a hospital in Berlin released this image,
the child of an American Ebola patient
looking at their father through a window.
The hospital says the man is not critically ill
and his wife and four children have all tested negative.
A judge in Tennessee dismissed the human smuggling case against Kilmar Abrago-Garcia today.
He was mistakenly deported to El Salvador last year and then returned after the U.S. Supreme
Court ordered the Trump administration to do so.
Criminal charges stemming from a 2022 traffic stop followed, which the judge said today
amounted to, quote, selective or vindictive prosecution.
Thousands of Cubans gathered outside the U.S.
U.S. Embassy in Havana this morning to protest the Trump administration's indictment of former
President Raul Castro. They waved flags and chanted during the nearly hour-long pro-government
demonstration. Cuba's president and prime minister attended the rally, as did several others from
Castro's own family. The 94-year-old was indicted this week on murder charges over the
downing of two civilian airplanes back in the 1990s. Cuba's government says the charge
are just a pretext for future U.S. military action.
In Washington, the U.S. Federal Reserve officially has a new chairman.
Kevin Warsh was sworn in today by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Claren Thomas at the White House.
During the ceremony, President Trump said he wants Warsh to be, in his words, totally independent,
despite his aggressive attempts to get the prior chair, Jerome Powell,
to cut interest rates.
In his own remarks, Warsh pledged to, quote,
lead a reform-oriented Federal Reserve.
Our mandate at the Fed is to promote price stability
and maximum employment.
When we pursue those aims with wisdom and clarity,
independence and resolve, inflation can be lower,
growth stronger, real take-home pay higher,
and America can be more prosperous.
Orch steps into this role at a difficult time for the Fed.
Inflation is on the rise due to the war in Iran, and officials at the central bank are now considering
the possibility of raising interest rates rather than cutting them, as the president would prefer.
On Wall Street today, stocks posted decent gains to close out the week.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added nearly 300 points or more than half a percent.
The NASDAQ rose about 50 points.
the S&P 500 closed out its eighth straight winning week.
6.7 million viewers tuned in last night to watch Stephen Colbert's final episode of The Late Show.
That's according to preliminary Nielsen Data, and it's about triple his usual audience this season.
Colbert was joined by Sir Paul McCartney, among others, as he signed off after 11 seasons and more than 1,800 episodes.
CBS announced it was ending the show last year,
citing financial reasons. President Trump had long criticized Colbert and called on CBS's new
corporate owners to fire him. And another CBS mainstay is coming to an end. CBS News Radio is
shutting down tonight after nearly a century on the air. The storied service started in 1927 and gave
rise to such icons as Douglas Edwards, Walter Cronkite, and Edward R. Murrow. Together, they and their
colleagues brought history into our homes.
Murder had been done at Pugendval.
From the liberation of the Nazi camps in Germany.
There are many people in Dallas who sincerely and literally still have a very difficult
time believing what happened here today.
To the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
It looks like a nuclear war happens here.
You can't see the sky at all.
It's all gray smoke.
To the deadliest attack on American soil.
9-11. The company announced the closure in March, blaming what it called challenging economic realities.
So to borrow Mr. Murrow's famous phrase, we wish everyone at CBS News Radio one final. Good night and good luck.
Still to come on the news hour, the sale of an ostensibly sustainable clothing company to a fast-fashioned giant sparks outcry.
the effort to shore up trust in programs that claim to reduce carbon emissions.
And David Brooks and Jonathan Capehart weigh in on the week's political headlines.
This is the PBS News Hour from the David M. Rubenstein studio at WETA in Washington,
headquarters of PBS News.
As the school year is coming to a close, a new analysis shines yet another harsh spotlight
on what's being called a learning recession for America's students.
and it's a problem that started long before the pandemic.
That's according to the latest National Education Scorecard,
which is an annual deep dive into data about kids in grades K through 12.
The findings of this report are sobering.
Children had a steady decline in math and reading scores
beginning all the way back to 2013,
which happens to be when smartphones and social media really took off.
Compared to a decade ago, math scores today are down,
in 70% of school districts.
Reading scores are down in 83%.
Scores have climbed a bit since 2022,
but nowhere close to making up all the lost ground.
In fact, eighth grade reading scores
are now at their lowest level since 1990.
I spoke recently with Thomas Kane.
He's one of the authors of the scorecard
and a professor at Harvard University.
I started by asking him,
what stood out most about this latest report?
So the pandemic was just the mudslide that followed seven years of steady erosion in student achievement.
It was as if, you know, when Congress dismantled test-based accountability at the end of No Child Left Behind Act,
it was as if they turned off the smoke alarms just at the time when social media was setting fire to students' learning time outside of school.
There are lots of known issues about K through 12 education in America, but what problems
are most pronounced in your view that contribute to these, this really grim report?
So when I tell my kids that we used to be able to smoke on airplanes, they're incredulous.
And I think when they tell their kids 20 years from now that we allowed unfettered access
to cell phones inside schools and outside of schools,
I think their kids are going to have the same reaction.
Really, it's that profound.
But it's not just about cell phone bans.
So actually, the early evidence on the effect of cell phone bans
is that they are having modest effects on student achievement.
Right.
What that implies is that the mechanism by which social media are slowing student
achievement gains, it's not just through distracting kids in class.
It's about how they're using time
outside a school. It's about sleep disruption. It's about missing homework. It's about
just doing less reading in general. And the states that are turning things around are turning
things around by focusing on early literacy and encouraging, requiring more reading inside a school
to counteract the fact that kids are doing less reading outside of school.
It's so interesting you bring that up. We know, as you were mentioning, some states have been able to turn this around.
Mississippi being one of them. My colleague talked earlier with Dr. Lance Evans. He's the superintendent of the schools in Mississippi. Here's how he said they approach reading and math.
We have an array of coaches. So we have literacy coaches. We have math coaches. We have literacy coaches in special education. We have leadership coaches. We have data coaches. Let's just use the literacy coach as a continued example. Because the same methodology is used for our math coaches as our literacy coach.
What we do is we hire some number of coaches.
At this case, we've got about 85 of them.
Our literacy coaches are typically in our schools, some two days a week, some three days a week.
It just kind of depends on the proximity.
But it's not a thing where they're in there like once a month.
I mean, this is they are working hand in hand with teachers, with administrators.
That is a lot of coaches augmenting what teachers are doing.
how replicable is something like that?
So the key that is to the Mississippi system
is not just the coaches,
it's that the adults in the system
are being held accountable for student results.
The adults, meaning the parents or the administrators?
It's the administrators, it's the school district leaders,
it's even the state leaders.
Honestly, I think one of the challenges we've faced
since the end of the No Child Left Behind Act,
is that we're not holding our leaders accountable to the results.
It's not just teachers and students that are being held accountable
when we publish students' results.
It's the school district leaders.
It's the governors.
It's the state legislators that are all being held responsible
for trying to help students catch up.
There were also declines shown in both wealthy,
both of your districts and what we'd call poorer districts,
implying that money isn't the sole issue either.
So it's clearly money is not the sole issue.
It's part of the issue, honestly.
So the literacy coaches cost money,
the math coaches cost money.
Summer learning and high dosage tutoring
or another couple of strategies
that districts have been using.
But it's about focusing on student outcomes
and being honest with people about
about where students stand.
I mean, one of the striking things, William,
is that we only sort of woke up to what's been happening recently.
This is a decline that started more than a decade ago.
And honestly, the reason why it sort of slipped under the radar screen all this time
is because we weren't holding folks accountable for student results.
And that, honestly, I think, is going to be the first step,
when states and governors and state legislatures say,
hey, look, this is, we're gonna be held accountable
for what's happening with our students' achievement.
And we're gonna expect local leaders
to be accountable too.
You mentioned earlier that us getting away from testing
might have been one of the contributing factors here.
But a lot of people look at the testing regimen
and the teaching for the tests as a,
that that wasn't great.
either. What do you say to those people? So we looked at what happened prior to 2013, prior to the
recent declines. A lot of people don't realize prior to 2013, there was a two-grade equivalent
increase in fourth grade and eighth grade math achievement since 1990. And the states that saw the biggest
improvement during that time period, if you looked at the folks born in those states, they had higher
earnings, higher educational attainment, lower teen motherhood, lower arrest rates.
Across the board benefits. So it's not just test scores. Test scores are a leading indicator
to future outcomes. It's not the only thing that matters, but test scores clearly matter.
Does this suggest other solutions? Does your report help schools say,
here are some other things that we could be doing? So one of the key things,
probably the lowest hanging fruit is trying to lower student absenteeism.
Absenteeism is not the cause of the decline, but it is one of the things that is slowing the
recovery.
How bad is it?
So about 25% of students still are missing, or chronically absent, so missing 10% of
kids.
Missing 10% of the school year or more.
Wow.
And that's up from before the pandemic.
And so one of the first things that we can do is just try to get that back down, at least to the pre-pandemic levels.
Tom Cain, Harvard University.
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you.
A deal between two seemingly incompatible clothing brands has sparked controversy,
and it raises questions about the whole idea of what's known as sustainable fashion.
Our Liz Landers is back with more.
William, the Chinese fast fashion and low-cost giant Sheehan is often called the largest polluter in the industry.
It's riddled with controversies surrounding labor violations, design theft, and more.
Sheehan is now acquiring Everlane, a much-loved clothing brand known for what it called radical transparency.
The company had even gone so far as to tell consumers about the factory where its clothes were made and exactly what it costs to produce them.
For many customers, Everlane has been the face of a sustainable and ethical way to buy clothes online.
But that all may change with this deal.
For more, I'm joined now by Maxine Bedat, the founder and director of Sustainable Fashion Think Tank, New Standard Institute.
Maxine, thank you for joining us.
It's great to be here.
So earlier today, Vogue reported that Everlane's CEO, Alfred Chang, addressed this merger.
and he said in a message to staff that, quote,
will continue operating independently
with our design standards, brand philosophy,
and values intact,
and that this deal gives them the, quote,
stability and resources to make a larger impact.
Is that really possible?
Do you believe him?
I'm not sure what those vague terms mean.
I think if there was some clarity
on what that meant,
there would be more of a nail to hang on there.
But without that, it's really unclear.
Sheehan is a company that is known for its speed.
It's known for air freighting product, which is very high in emissions.
So it's not clear to me how this sustainable company is going to do emerging with, you know,
what is seen is the biggest and baddest.
Why do you think there's been so much backlash to this deal?
I think people really wanted to believe in Everlane.
I think this was part of that Obama-era enthusiasm that we could buy our way into sustainability.
And so to see this company, which people spent more money on their products, thinking that it was leading to a better place to a less impactful industry, while it's proven to be really untrue with this sale to Sheehan.
Sheen is known to be the largest polluter in fast fashion and its faced backlash.
in the past for using the term net zero language and they're advertising when they couldn't
substantiate that.
What has Sheehan done to the industry at large and how have they impacted the environment?
It's had a huge negative impact on the environment in a couple of ways.
Really, the basic core of the problem here is that Chean really represents not just fast fashion,
but hyper fast fashion.
It makes what we used to consider fast fashion almost seem slow and quaint.
They're introducing thousands of styles every day to consumers.
So it's getting customers to expect new things, to buy new things, to be expected to buy new things just regularly.
That's really the impetus of what is then a lot of waste and an enormous environmental impact.
I'd mentioned that they air freight their products directly to consumers.
That air freighting has an enormous climate impact.
I was just looking up from 2023 to 2024, they increased their emissions by 23% in one year.
That increase in emissions that one year represented more than all of GAPS emissions, just as a reference point.
So it's having a massive climate impact and chemical impact as well.
There's been a lot of testing from various different countries that are finding toxic chemical loads on their products.
So just a really significant, you know, environmental impact as well as a labor impact.
How do you think that this sale is going to impact Everlane's image?
It's hard to think that the customer is going to follow them.
You know, I imagine that for Sheehan, what they're looking for is access to a higher price point,
a marketplace that is more higher end.
And so, you know, it's kind of their equivalent of a Quinn sort of brand.
so I can see why they are thinking they're going to get something out of this.
We'll see if the shoppers, the consumers actually follow them there.
I think there's a lot of lost trust out of this exchange.
Do you think that this benefits Everlane in any way?
I think they're trying to present it as that, but do you think that that will translate to a consumer?
I think what is clear is this was a bit of a fire sale.
Well, Everlane has seen revenues decrease.
It has a high debt load, and I think its investors just want it out, and this was the way to do it.
So it allows them to carry on as a company, but I'm not sure it provides much beyond that.
Maxine, what is the viability of sustainable clothing when there are so many other brands that are veering away from that now?
I think we have to just move away from this idea that there is such a thing.
as sustainable clothing.
In every other industry, you know, when we talk about the environmental standards,
we're trying to create level standards across the industry,
rather than assuming that the consumer is the one expected to buy the product that has a lower impact.
I think this is really just the sale is a demonstration that we're not going to buy our way into
sustainability.
If we want a sustainable industry, we have to have legal standards in place.
and that's just not something that we have at the moment,
but it's a real clear indication that that's what's needed.
Maxine Bada, thank you so much for your time.
Thanks for having me.
The idea is a simple one, and it's been around for decades.
You plant or preserve trees as a way to offset the emission of carbon dioxide,
which warms the planet.
You then create a market to buy and sell these offsets.
They're known as carbon credits.
Supporters say these markets are a key tool to address climate change,
but carbon credits have also been criticized for being opaque
and not nearly reducing emissions enough.
Stephanie Syr reports on an effort to boost the integrity of carbon markets
and to open them up to small rural American landowners.
It's part of our ongoing series Tipping Point.
Well, it's nice to this section, though, is it has some nice trees in it, though.
Yeah.
On an unusually warm early spring, spring,
morning. Wayne and Michelle Strader walked through the woods with a forester.
We've got a good diversity of hardwoods here. Exactly what we're looking for to enroll.
Naturally regenerating hardwood forests. The expertise Isaac Sloan brings in helping them
manage their forest land is one of the reasons the Straders chose to participate in the family
forest carbon program. For committing to defer harvesting most trees on their land,
they also receive an annual stipend that's paying for the climate.
climate change causing carbon their forests sequesters.
It was about what's doing right for the environment, but also being able to utilize the land
and get something out of the land as opposed to it just sitting there, not producing any income
or something of that nature.
Almost 40% of the forested land in the United States is owned by people like the straiters
with relatively small acreages.
This program gives those landowners an opportunity to capitalize on the growing demand for
carbon credits which large corporations purchase to offset their own emissions.
They're not getting rich, but this is an annual source of income that helps them pay the bills
and keep going as a family landowner. Rita Height leads the American Forest Foundation,
which developed the program with the Nature Conservancy. Since launching in 2020, it has enrolled
200,000 acres across 20 states, paying between 200 and 260 an acre over the quarter of
course of a 20-year contract. Forests are ready right now capture and store about 15% of our
annual emissions, right? So they're already doing this hard job. And we expect over the life of this
program with just the offers we have right now to enroll about a million acres. So it's an opportunity
for probably about 1 to 2% of the families out there that are owning for us. But voluntary carbon
markets have not always been transparent. Recent research found only
about a quarter of projects that sold offsetting carbon credits by preventing deforestation
actually delivered real emission reductions. I think we have a lot of credits that are circulating
that may not represent the climate benefit that they are intended to. Rebecca Sanders-Demad at the
Clean Air Task Force co-authored a study that scored 20 different methods that have been used to
generate climate credits from forests. Not a single one was classified as robust and
to guarantee credits we're delivering the climate benefits they claim to.
We have to remember companies buy these credits to offset their emissions.
But if the credits they're using aren't high quality and don't represent the climate benefit that they're supposed to,
it can actually cause more harm than good because we think we're making progress and we're not.
Markets for carbon credits have also faced some political headwinds.
Corporations typically, you know, pre this administration would be shouting from the rooftops,
their purchase of carbon credits. Now they're doing it quietly, right? But they're still doing it?
But they're still doing it. And there is a race to integrity where we know that that claim
of carbon capture and storage is real. The project starts somewhere around these pines, right?
Right. Michelle and Wayne Strader say they see the climate threat coming for their own forest,
now filled with invasive grass and vines and scarred by severe storms.
And they're happy to have a climate-friendly option that offset some of their costs.
And, you know, as we kind of look through, I mean, there's still some bigger trees in here
that could be taken out now and allow some of the other smaller stuff to continue to grow up.
But now that it's in the forest program, I'm going to leave them beat.
In fact, the straters are logging some of their acreage not in the program right now,
But the 168 acres in the program will remain largely off limits from harvesting until the 2040s.
You're getting monies every year and it eventually starts to go up.
Whereas if you timber, hard timber, you get paid once.
The one parcel was the 40 acres.
It was purchased just as a timber track.
That was kind of the intent of why it was purchased, that we would timber it to get some of the value back out of what we paid
into the investment. So I think the program is definitely encouraged. What did you end up doing with
that 40 acres? It's in the program and it's right now we're not doing anything with it. It's growing
naturally and reducing carbon. How do you know that you're not just paying people for something
they would have done already, that they wouldn't already be taking care of and preserving their
forests with the side effect of it capturing carbon? This is at the heart of integrity. We want to make
sure that we're not just paying landowners for things they would have already done, because if that's the case, then you don't actually get additional carbon, right? You don't actually, the atmosphere doesn't feel a difference.
The family forest carbon program tries to account for this by comparing the plots of land in the program with control plots that are not, but with similar types of trees, owners, and even ground slope. Then seeing how they measure over time. It's an approach known as a dynamic baseline.
So at the end of the day, our enrollees essentially have to outcompete their neighbors.
We're only issuing credits if we actually measure the carbon and see the difference, right?
We're not projecting and saying, okay, we're going to, we think we're going to generate these credits
and we're going to tell you credits right now off of that. No, we're doing it based off of real-time data capture.
These dynamic baselines that use data from other locations are a real step forward.
In Sanders-Demot's study, the method that the family forest carbon program is using was the only one to score as, quote, satisfactory.
Science is evolving really rapidly in this space, but forest carbon credits and their accounting is always going to be really difficult.
It's certainly not a system that we can rely on to solve both our fossil fuel emissions reductions, nor to really provide the funding we need to get all that we can out of our forests.
I always thought, you know, when I was growing up that I was a water baby, but I'm not.
I'm a forest baby.
For Wayne and Michelle Strader, who moved to this rural stretch of West Virginia from urban Pennsylvania,
protecting the forest goes beyond just the carbon being collected.
When you come out here and you look at this project, are you thinking about climate change?
Are you thinking about those big picture issues and the role you're playing?
I don't want to say it's the forethought, but I mean, it's always in the back.
of your mind, you know, that what we're doing is making an impact on our future.
Here it's kind of, it's just a way of life. You do think about it, but for me, I'm thinking
more about the beauty of it and how I'd be broken hard if this was gone.
Taking care of the land they love while playing a small role in the big fight against manmade
climate change. For the PBS News Hour, I'm Steph Musai in Upshire County, West Virginia.
Even as another cabinet member departs his administration,
the president demonstrates once again his vice-like grip on Republican primary voters,
while Democrats release a clumsy analysis of why they lost to Trump in the first place.
So for more on the week in politics, we turn to Brooks and K. Part.
That's the Atlantic's David Brooks and Jonathan K-part of MS now.
Gentlemen, so nice to see you.
Jonathan, as I just mentioned,
Once again, the president faced with two Republican thorns in his side, Thomas Massey and Bill Cassidy.
The president says, I want you primary voters to chuck these two guys out and put my loyalists in their stead.
And they do. They get rid of two popular local political leaders.
What do you make of this ongoing ability that he has?
Well, I mean, on one hand, this is nothing new.
If you pay attention to the polls, you know that, one, the president only cares about his standing among Republicans,
particularly MAGA Republicans.
And two, Republicans, by and large, are still lockstep behind the president, although overall, less than they were before.
But MAGA Republicans haven't really moved.
They have stayed with the president.
And not just in getting rid of Cassidy in Louisiana, but also a few local legislators in Indiana who defied the president.
who defied the president and in his wishes for redistricting.
So, you know, if you are a sitting member of any legislature
and you've gone sideways with the president
and the president then says, I'm backing your opponent,
you have to...
Waking in your boots.
You have to fear.
And the primary was Saturday night.
And on my show, we were talking all about Louisiana.
My thought immediately went to Texas.
because if you were John Cornyn in that moment,
you were quaking your boots because you were waiting for the president
to endorse you.
And what did he do on Tuesday?
He didn't endorse Senator Cornyn.
He endorsed Ken Paxton,
a farther-right Republican in the race for the Senate.
And so...
And someone with a fair amount of political baggage, too.
So much baggage.
He's a Samsonite store.
I mean, and even Republicans will say that about him.
What do you make of all this?
Yeah, Trump has done something the previous presidents have not done, or at least not done effectively.
He really cares about his party.
A lot of presidents was all about themselves.
And so whether you're like it or not, ever since the first term, Trump has said, I want this to be a MAGA party.
And he's willing to take a short-term hit, apparently, in the midterms, lose a few seats.
If he can maintain this, this will be a MAGA party for the next generation, the next 30 years.
And that's sort of an impressive calculation.
but because he really does care about the party and legacy.
Where it's going to hit him is short-term, and I think the pain will be significant.
You get rid of John Corny.
John Cornyn was playing the game, sort of get rid of anyway,
was playing the game that I'd say two or three dozen Republican senators are playing,
which is I don't love this guy, Trump, but I'll play along enough.
Weather the storm.
And you don't kill me.
That's the assumed, the unstated deal they've all made.
And Trump says, throw out the deal.
Cornyn, you've been pretty loyal to me.
Right.
But you're not 100%.
I'm going with Ken Paxton.
So every other Republican senator who's in that case of which there are a lot
are looking around saying, what happened to our deal?
And John Cornyn, by the way, is a pretty popular guy in the Senate.
Remember, he came very close to winning the Senate Majority Leader.
He's got a lot of friends and supporters in the Republican caucus,
and he campaigned for a whole bunch of them.
And so a lot of Republicans are looking around and thinking, whoa.
This deal has been broken.
I gotta do some thinking here.
And according to my colleague, Lisa Desjardin, the move against Cornyn as well as this really
unprecedented anti-weaponization fund that the president set up, almost $2 billion to potentially
give out to people who claim they've been victims of political persecution, legal political
persecution, that did seem to drive a GOP mini revolt this week.
Do you see a Republican resistance growing here?
Sure, it might be a one-cell organism right now.
Tiny little amoeba.
But real quickly, this deal that you're talking about,
Republicans have to understand, and Cornyn is the latest example,
that deal is a one-way street.
You can do all the things,
and the president's not going to, is not going to do anything for you.
When it comes to this weaponization fund,
or as I've heard it called the Thug Fund.
And the revolt against it,
against the fund, against the ballroom,
against doing anything on reconciliation to fund ICE.
I mean, all of that happened after he endorsed,
the president endorsed Ken Paxton,
because Senator Cornyn is so popular among Republicans
and they were extremely angry with the president
and what he did.
And this is the way they are showing their fresh
showing their anger, but sometimes I kind of wonder if they're going to be like,
what was that general, the Russian general who got in the tanks in 2023 and rolled to Moscow,
but didn't quite get there against Putin?
Progoshin. General Progosion. I wonder if this revolt that we're seeing is going to be
the GOP equivalent of that. They're showing some backbone right now, but when they come back
from their recess, will they still be in revolt mode? You mentioned that this is.
some people call this weaponization fund, a thug fund.
My colleague Liz Landers talked to Enrique A. Tereo, the leader of the proud boys,
you know, white supremacist, a leader, a lead organizer of January 6th,
that he was thrilled by the idea of this fund. He thinks he's owed tens of millions of dollars
for what he has been through. Do you think, David, if, in fact, money starts to flow
to people who there is very good evidence, assaulted officers, or were deep,
involved in January 6th, that this will further that revolt?
Possibly. And it wasn't just the fund. Derek Thompson and independent journalist mentioned,
what happened this week? Trump got out of $100 million IRS fine. He had the immunity from future
tax investigations. This $1.8 billion slush fund, insider trading about a billion dollars.
This was like the Coachella of political corruption all in one week. And you take a look at that
and you're like, I don't care who you are. If you've got a shred of integrity, you're like,
what is going on here?
Walter Olson is a prominent legal analyst
said it was the biggest act of political corruption
of his lifetime.
And so it's just mind bogg.
I try not to be like Trump is atrocious here every week.
I try to, like, I don't want to be part of the same old monoculture.
But Trump is not helping.
No, this was an astounding week of atrocious behavior.
And seemingly, from the Republican Party,
not really the commensurate response.
Right.
And I'm probably four-notches thinking
that are more offended than Jonathan is,
that there might be some action.
You know, a lot of things are happening.
He's losing a war.
His approval's down into the 30s.
I've always saw when it gets down to 35, 33,
things begin to look very different.
They know them in terms of probably going to be pretty bad.
So there's just, if it's not now, never.
That would be my line.
Right.
We also saw this week this very ham-handed release of the DNC's autopsy.
This is basically an unfinished document that, I mean, if a high school or college student had submitted this thing, you would give them an F if you were feeling generous.
What does this tell you about the Democratic Party?
Well, what this tells you is why the Democratic chairman didn't want to release it.
And, you know, as a source said to me early on before the release,
Why aren't you releasing it?
Does it have damning information?
Does it call on the carpet?
You know, sacred cows within the pardon the person's said to it?
No, it's so poorly done that it would be horrendous to release it.
Now that it's out, and your description of it is terrific.
I just called it a trash can of warmed over conclusions
with none of the introspection of, say, the autopsy of 2012,
when Mitt Romney lost to President Obama.
I think right now what Democrats need to do
is stop with the fighting with each other,
looking at this terrible, whatever this is,
this autopsy such as it is,
focus on the here and now,
and what leadership of the Democratic Party
should be doing is figuring out
how to channel the anger,
the palpable anger among Democrats
into what their priorities are going to be
if they take back the House
and maybe even if they take back the Senate
and then how are they going to drive that to 28?
But right now, they're not there yet.
Yeah. I mean, the last minute we have, David,
one of the things in that autopsy was
Democrats have to stop being so anti-Trump
and come up with a positive message
as to why you would vote Democratic.
Do you think they're going to do this?
No. They've got to ask some questions.
The first is, why are center-left parties in seemingly terminal decline all around the world?
In Germany, in France, in Scandinavia, in Central Europe,
center-left parties are just gone boom, boom, boom.
Why?
What's the problem?
The fastest-growing states in this country are Republican states.
Most of the fastest-stricken states are democratic states.
Why is that?
What's the problem here?
What's wrong with blue governments?
That's going to mean there's going to be more house seats in red states after 2030 than there are now.
Why are Democratic approval ratings or favorability ratings lower than Republican favorability ratings?
These are structural issues.
It's not just about messaging.
The abundance agenda is fine, affordability, good issue.
But the center-left parties all around the world are facing deep structural issues related to the economic structure of the information age.
And if they're not thinking in those terms, they're missing the big picture.
David Brooks, Jonathan K. Part, thank you both so much.
Thanks, Julian.
Be sure to tune into Washington Week with The Atlantic tonight here on PBS.
Jeffrey Goldberg and his panel discussed Defense Secretary Pete Hegsess
controversial management of the world's most powerful military.
And watch horizons tomorrow for a look at UAPs,
which are what we used to call UFOs,
and the possibility of life beyond Earth.
Here's an excerpt.
Part of what has transpired, particularly over the last 25 or 30 years,
is rapidly advancing scientific and astronomical,
understanding of the size, scale, and scope of the universe that makes clear that life probably
exists all over our universe, likely even intelligent life exists all over our universe.
That, you know, as late as the 1990s, we did not know that there was a single planet outside
our own solar system.
And we now understand that potentially, you know, effectively every star likely has.
as planets orbiting it, some chunk of those would be in what are known as the habitable zone for scientists,
and that potentially there are something on the order of one sextillion habitable planets across our universe.
So you can think life is unlikely, you can think intelligent life is unlikely,
but do you really think Earth is a one in sextillion chance across the universe?
That's on horizons this weekend.
And be sure to watch Compass Points, where Nick Schifrin and his panel discuss the standoff between Iran and the U.S.
as President Trump weighs potential new strikes.
You can watch both Horizons and Compass Points on our YouTube channel or wherever you get your podcasts and on your local PBS station.
Check your local listings.
That is the News Hour for tonight.
I'm William Brangham.
On behalf of the entire NewsHour team, thank you so much for joining us.
You know,
