The Daily - The ‘Grim Reaper’ of the Government Shutdown
Episode Date: October 6, 2025During the continuing government shutdown, President Trump has posted memes depicting Russel T. Vought, the White House budget director, as the grim reaper.Coral Davenport, a Washington correspondent ...for The Times, explains how Mr. Vought, a once obscure official, has become one of the most influential figures in Washington.Guest: Coral Davenport, a Washington correspondent for The New York Times, focusing on the Trump administration’s dismantling of federal rules.Background reading: Mr. Vought has exerted his influence over nearly every corner of President Trump’s Washington with his command of the levers of the federal budget.Both parties are resigned to deadlock as the government shutdown takes hold.Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty ImagesFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
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From the New York Times, I'm Natalie Kittrow-F.
This is the Daily.
Capital Hill is still closed for business as the government shutdown heads into week two.
We're six days into the government shutdown, and the Trump administration is capitalizing on the moment.
Far from working to end the shutdown, Donald Trump is using it as an excuse to ramp up his slash and burn.
cuts to the government. By freezing billions of dollars in spending in cities and states run by
Democrats and threatening to lay off thousands of government workers. So who is the man who appears
to have the high trust of President Trump and gets to decide which federal workers will stay and
which will go? The man at the center of that push to dismantle and reshape the American government
Russell Vote. Russell Vote. Who is Russ Vote? Is White House Budget Director Russell Vote.
Today, my colleague Coral Davenport explains how vote, a once obscure bureaucrat who worked on Project 2025, became one of the most influential figures in Washington.
Coral, Russell Vote is someone I've generally been aware of, but right now, because of the shutdown,
he has taken on much more of a protagonist role in the Trump administration.
Everyone seems to be talking about him.
So just to start, who is Russ Vote?
So Russ Vote is the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, which is normally a pretty
wonky role.
But at this moment, in the shutdown, he has really taken center stage.
He has had this plan to cut the government, cut spending, cut agencies, cut workers,
and now is kind of Russ votes time to shine to do that.
And we've seen that this week as Democrats have painted him as this villain in the shutdown scenario.
And even Senate Republican leader John Thune says,
we don't even know what this guy's going to do.
And sort of most spectacularly of all,
the president posted this video of Russ Vote as the Grim Reaper.
So in this video, you see Vote as literally the Grim Reaper striding in front of the Capitol
and Trump on the Cowbell.
The funds and the brain.
Here comes the Reaper.
Dends your babies.
Here comes the Reaper.
Gonna tie your hands.
Here comes the Reaper.
Won't be able to fly.
Here comes the Reaper.
Baby, end your plan.
They sing, like, now the time has come, their power's gone.
He ties your hands.
Russ wields the pen, the funds, and the brain.
Honestly, it's so cashy, let's be honest.
in. Come on. You know, this video is nuts, but it's also sort of the core of it is really accurate.
In so many ways, that's what's going on right now. The plan that Russ Vote has been putting in
place is about taking power away from Congress, tying the hands of Congress, bringing the power
over to the White House, to the president.
So, you know, it's like this crazy internet meme
that is kind of spot on.
Okay, so setting aside the question
of whether we can fact-check the AI imagery
in this truly wild video,
you're saying it accurately assesses votes role.
Absolutely.
I mean, normally the role of the White House budget director
is just this very kind of behind-the-scenes.
job that's really about taking the president's policy agenda and translating it into a budget.
Vote does far more than that. He is really using the role as an agenda setter itself. He has spent
years preparing this vision for the entire federal government. And I should say this comes from a
place of thinking of the federal bureaucracy as something that is deeply problematic. He calls it
woke and weaponized, and he really thinks that the federal government is the problem. And I should
say another thing that comes up in my reporting a lot is the word nerd. He really is this,
like, hardworking policy nerd who has focused his whole career on this objective of smaller
government with less spending and less workers. He's such a true believer. He even named his dog,
Milton, for Milton Friedman, the free market economist. Wow. And now he has met this moment of
shrinking federal government. Okay, you described him as a true believer. How does he arrive at those
beliefs? How does he get to where he is now on this mission to radically change the shape of government?
Natalie, I have spent weeks and weeks of reporting trying to get at that. And I should say that
Russ Vote did not grant me an interview for this piece, but I have read hundreds of pages of his
writings. I've listened to hours and hours of his podcasts. I talked to between 30 and 40 people
who are kind of in his orbit and have worked with him and know him and are his friends. And what kind of
came up is someone who really has believed this for a very, very long time.
I have spent my entire career caring about taxpayers and families.
He talked about that in his very first Senate confirmation hearing.
I come from a blue-collar family.
I'm the son of an electrician and a public school teacher.
He grew up in a conservative religious blue-collar family.
He is the youngest of seven children, grew up in Trumbull, Connecticut.
His father, interestingly, was a union electrician, and he was a Marine Corps veteran.
His mother was a public school teacher.
In both of those cases, you know, I don't think of that as being something that would
lead you into trying to work to minimize government, but he has described how his parents
worked incredibly hard to support him and his siblings.
I know what they went through to balance their budget and save for.
for the future.
My parents worked really long hours to put me through school,
but they also worked long hours to pay
for the high levels of government in their own life.
I think he really genuinely sees the burden
of paying for taxes in government
as weighing so heavily on families like his own.
My old boss called them the wagon pullers in our country.
Others have referred to them as the forgotten men and women.
They have always been my test for federal spending.
Did a particular program or spending increase help the nameless wagon pullers across our country, working hard at their job, trying to provide for their family and future without the luxury of watching C-SPAN at that particular moment to know that we might increase their burden at that minute?
It sounds like he was kind of turned against the idea of big government from the very beginning as a child seeing his parents navigate this country.
Yeah, and you really see that through line. You know, as soon as he graduated college, he went straight to Washington and got a job working for Senator Phil Graham, a Texas Republican who was at the time known as this icon of fiscal conservatism, fiscal austerity. And I talked to Phil Graham about rest vote. And he said something interesting. He said, usually, you know, people come to work for me because they really want to come and work for me. You know, that they're really sort of driven.
by this idea of slashing government. And I asked him, you know, what he remembered about
Russ Vote. And he said he remembered him as almost working too hard, you know, working by day
to support the agenda of cutting government and then going to law school at night.
So it's passion that's combined with this really intense work ethic. Passion plus discipline.
Absolutely. So after Phil Graham, he goes to work for the House Republicans. He focuses on budget
policy. This is kind of during the time of the rise of the Tea Party movement. So there's this
wave of intense fiscal conservatism, anti-government sweeping through Washington, and he's a
natural fit with all of that. And then he goes from there to the Trump administration. But I should
say it wasn't necessarily an automatic fit for him. You know, one way that Russ Vote is very different
from President Trump is he's very religious. He takes his face really seriously. He teaches adult Bible study
at his church. And before joining the first Trump administration, he actually thought about kind of
leaving the world of Washington policy and going to seminary and studying to be a pastor.
Resvote doesn't curse. President Trump has a foul mouth. He refers to Christians in the third person.
I think just culturally, there was some discomfort with that fit.
But in the end, the call of the White House won out, and he joined the first Trump administration.
He's there from the very beginning.
And what does he do in that first Trump term?
Washington has a spending problem, and it endangers the future prosperity of our nation for generations to come.
So he enters the first Trump administration as deputy budget chief.
By the end, he's running the whole office.
During that time, he argued that the president had the power to block federal spending that Congress had approved.
And we are saying to the American people, we can no longer afford the paradigm that Congress keeps giving us,
which is that we're never going to make any tradeoffs, that we're never going to align what we spend with what we take in.
And he tried to do that in a number of really memorable cases.
Breaking news, President Trump reportedly ordered to hold back military aid for Ukraine for at least...
He was part of a group of White House officials who froze military spending for Ukraine in defiance of Congress.
Listeners will probably remember that that essentially paved away to the president's impeachment.
The Trump administration will divert $3.6 billion in defense spending for 175 miles of the president's wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
He also helped...
come up with the idea of using emergency powers to redirect Pentagon spending to build a border wall,
also without congressional approval.
You could almost see the lawyers at DOJ, you know, their heads just spinning off their axis
because they are going to be the ones who have to defend this national workers.
Essentially saying, you know, the president can do what he wants with this money.
That new executive order that will make it easier to hire and fire some federal employees.
And he pushed an executive order that would have enabled the president to easily fire tens of thousands
of career civil servants.
And the idea of that was both saving money
by eliminating employees,
but also this idea that the bureaucracy,
the people who work in all these federal agencies,
remain here regardless of who is president.
And there's this sense of these federal agencies
are full of workers who he believes
tend to be more liberal leaning
and are not loyal to the president.
So the firing of these civil servants, it sounds like, is very much about going after what Trump and his allies see as the deep state, this group of people that are working against him and his agenda from within.
But at the same time, for vote, it's also about his really primary focus, which is giving the president control over spending and eliminating it as much as possible.
That's exactly right.
The philosophy is expand the president's power and use it to shrink the federal government.
But in the end, all of these efforts were undone or reversed.
You know, the budget office was eventually forced to restore the Ukraine money.
All the other moves were reversed by the Biden administration.
So despite all of votes grand ambitions and his efforts to really see them through in that first term, he gets stymied.
He does.
And then Trump loses the election.
He has to leave the White House.
But really, from the very last months in the White House to the minute he leaves the White House,
vote becomes obsessed with this idea of how can we do it different?
How can we take what we learned?
What went wrong?
How can we do it, right?
How can we cut off this money and make it last?
And I talked to a lot of people who said this was, he was so driven by this.
During these Biden years, during this kind of time in the wilderness, he just kind of becomes obsessed with like,
all right, well, how can we do it and have it stick the next time?
And how does he channel that obsession?
Like, what is he actually doing with his time
and on all of that energy during the Biden years?
So he leaves the Trump White House.
He goes and starts his own think tank.
It's called the Center for Renewing America.
In the first year that he's working there,
the tax records show he's the only employee.
And he rents out this space in this kind of grinned.
Roe House near the Capitol that was actually infested with some kind of clawing animal,
either rats or pigeons, clawing in the walls, such that it was distracting to people who are
visiting. And our colleagues, Annie Carney and Luke Broadwater, wrote about this in their book,
Madhouse, really conveying the idea that he is very much in the wilderness in these years.
A far cry from the White House. Yes. And so during this time, he's,
thinking really hard about what the comeback looks like, all the puzzle pieces, how to pave the
way to it. He's writing a lot of white papers, doing a lot of research, working with a lot of
fellow Trump alums, working with the folks, of course, also who are working on Project
2025, which was another one of these blueprints for the second Trump administration.
And I talked to a lot of folks close to him who said, you know, this really seemed to be a time
of getting radicalized, getting angry,
just kind of having this edge at that time.
What's an example of that harder edge?
Like, how do you see it show itself?
Well, so a few weeks after the 2024 election,
he goes on Tucker Carlson's show.
And there had been this clip
that had circulated of him
where he had talked about
how he wanted government employees to be in trauma.
Yeah, I remember that.
So Tucker asks him about it, and he leans into it.
One of the arguments that they're using in the press against me right now, as they say,
he called for trauma within the bureaucracies.
Yeah, I called for trauma within the bureaucracies.
The bureaucracies hate the American people.
He embraces it.
He says, yeah, I want government employees to be in trauma.
You go every agency, and it's not just big government, it's weaponized against the country.
Of course.
And so, yeah, we, I would want to provide trauma against.
that bureaucracy in a way that frees the American people from the people that have assumed
the type of power that the Constitution and no law, no public debate ever gave them.
And in that same interview, he also lays out how he is going to get this done.
He's got a very specific legal strategy in mind for how to cut the government, dismantle these
agencies, and get rid of these employees.
and that legal strategy is centered on this idea of impoundment.
Bring back the notion of impoundment.
And this is something that of what?
Of impoundment, the ability to not spend money.
For 200 years, presidents had the ability to not spend a congressional appropriation.
Impoundment is the idea that the president can block spending that has already been approved by Congress.
The Constitution and Article 2 gives Congress the power of the power of the
purse, the power to say how much money is going to be spent and direct where it's going
to be spent.
And essentially, votes reading is that if the president disagrees, the president can
refuse to execute that spending, can impound that money.
So 200 years, presidents are using impoundment.
They get money for something.
The president says, I don't think it's a good idea, or I certainly can do it better.
One way that vote has put it is that...
Congress gets to set the ceiling.
Congress can set the ceiling of how much will be spent.
But you weren't ever meant to be forced to spend it and it has become a floor.
But not necessarily the floor.
The idea being that the legislature, according to vote, can tell the federal government what the upper limit of spending is.
Like, you can't spend more than this amount.
But Congress can't compel the government to spend a minimum amount of money.
Exactly.
But the last time a president tried to actually follow through on this idea was Nixon.
President Nixon in the 70s decided not to spend money that had been appropriated by Congress
on things that he didn't want to spend.
It was clean water programs, environment programs.
Congress had appropriated this money, and the Nixon White House refused to spend it.
And Congress said, whoa, no, we want to make sure that you cannot do that.
And they passed a law.
They passed the empowerment control.
Act, which was really the Impoundment Elimination Act.
Called the Impoundment Control Act.
And I believe, as a budget guy, that was the original sin on why we can't do anything fiscally
from that moment on.
Arrest vote thinks that the Impoundment Control Act, that that law is unconstitutional.
Impoundment is vitally important, not just to save the country fiscally.
It is vitally important to be able to arrest control of the bureaucracy.
And he wants to get that impoundment power that he was not.
able to execute in Trump won. All those times that, you know, the White House tried to block
money or freeze money and it got undone and the president got impeached, he's trying to figure out,
well, okay, if the law got in the way of that, how can we change the legal landscape?
So what he wants to do is intentionally set up legal fights over the Impoundment Control Act
that will eventually go to the Supreme Court where people close to his,
him have said he is supremely confident that the Supreme Court will eventually either overturn
the impoundment control act or essentially determine in some way that the president has constitutional
authority to block this spending. And we know that he has a pretty friendly Supreme Court
where the conservatives have this six to three majority. I assume he's also banking on that
advantage. Absolutely. So, Coral, it's one thing for vote to have developed these
ideas in his four years in the wilderness coming into office for a second time. I'm wondering what
President Trump makes of this plan to radically change the way that money is spent in Washington.
I mean, vote would need Trump's buy-in to execute it, right? Do we know what Trump thought of it?
Well, vote is very much a loyalist and a good soldier who has been there with Trump from the very
beginning and an interesting thing about what vote wants to do is that he really is again deeply
driven by fiscal austerity and cutting budgets which is an issue that the president does not
particularly care about but the president sees in vote and in this plan something that can give
him a lot of power and i think that for vote vote sees trump when president as someone who can
help him realize this vision of much smaller government.
So both President Trump and Vote believe that there should be more power concentrated in
the hands of the presidency.
They have different reasons.
But in any case, there's this marriage of convenience.
They both have good use for one another.
Absolutely.
And so then we get to this moment where Trump and Vote are heading back to the White House.
Vote has done all of his homework.
He is so prepared.
He has plans and blueprints and contingencies, and he has mapped it all out.
He has a 360-degree vision for how it's all going to go, and he's ready to go into the White House and realize it.
But then he runs into the richest man in the world.
Elon Musk.
We'll be right back.
Coral, you said vote all ready to go runs into Elon Musk.
What did you mean by that?
Well, Musk had contributed more than any other donor toward the re-election of President Trump.
He's the richest man in the world.
And, of course, he came in with this idea of what would become doge, this move fast and break things, tear up the federal government.
And Vote very much had his vision.
They both envisioned, you know, clearing out all the inefficiencies and streamlining the government.
But beyond that, the practice of how, in fact, to do it was profoundly different.
How so?
Because it does seem like the two might be rowing in the same direction being kind of philosophically aligned on this issue.
Absolutely.
But, you know, the way one person put it to me is like, Vote did all his homework.
Musk did not do it at all.
You know, vote had to be brought in
to help brief Musk on how the government works.
And Musk came in and he had all this money
and he had access to the president
and he was kind of given free reign
to do what he wanted.
And in many ways, at least at the beginning,
vote was not sort of in the center.
He was kind of sidelined.
He was extremely frustrated.
And what Musk was doing drove vote crazy.
Can you give us an example
just of what the kind of frustration
of vote actually looked like?
I mean, when did Must get in his way?
How exactly?
Sure.
So early on in the Doge era, Doge informed all federal employees that every Friday,
they had to send an email listing five things that they had accomplished that week.
But the basic process by which that email had been sent out was not legal.
And there's a lot of federal agencies where people work on.
things that cannot be publicly disclosed. You know, it's the kind of thing you could probably
send out in a private company, but in the federal government, it set off all these legal
tripwires, caused all these problems. And crucially, what Doge was doing was sparking off
a lot of litigation that vote did not want and had not planned. Vote wants litigation. He wants
lawsuits, but he has a very specific roadmap of exactly how he wants those lawsuits to go.
the doge was just like breaking stuff and cutting stuff all over the place, doing things that
vote knew were illegal and were causing all this litigation that he didn't even want.
It's interesting. You hear a lot that the Trump administration, you know, has tried to do this
flood the zone approach of overwhelm your opponents with so many things that they just can't contend
with them all. But vote is really advocating the opposite, it sounds like. I mean, he is wanting a very
deliberate plan to be executed?
Absolutely. He is the consummate disciplined executor. In every way, the opposite, I think, of how
Musk operates. And that's why once Musk finally blew up with the president and left town,
that really is where we have seen the rise of Russell vote.
And what has that rise actually looked like? What's the manifestation of vote
unleashed, unencumbered by Musk.
So as soon as Musk leaves, you start to see vote enact this stepwise approach to legally
locking down a lot of the cuts that he wants to put into place.
First out, he sends this request to Congress saying, hey, I want you to cut about $8 billion
in foreign aid that we don't want to spend, that you've already appropriated.
Congress is very uncomfortable with this.
Even a lot of Republicans are very uncomfortable with this.
So what vote does is he inserts in that package something that he thinks that will make it irresistible to his fellow conservatives.
The proposal would rescind $1.1 billion in funding to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Which is cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Which has funded a politically biased public media system that has promoted radical and divisive ideologies at the American taxpayer's expense.
And that strategy ends up working.
On this vote, the yeas are 216.
The nays are 213.
The resolution is adopted.
And vote gloated about this.
We've talked about defunding Corporation for Public Broadcasting for decades.
President Trump's the first one to be able to do it.
He said, we budgeteers, we conservatives have tried for years and years to kill the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
And now we've finally done it.
So then he escalates this idea of taking the power of the purse from Congress.
Today, the president and Russ vote sent over to Congress a pocket of about $5 billion in rescission.
And what he said is, look, we have about another $5 billion in foreign aid that you Congress have appropriated that we don't want to spend.
And it's not just $5 billion.
It's $5 billion of the absolute world.
worst examples of foreign aid.
We're not going to spend it.
We're going to cancel it.
Unless you vote otherwise by the end of the fiscal year, which is September 30th,
kind of daring them to do this.
Daring them to vote against him.
Yes, but they didn't do it.
And so essentially that allows the White House to kind of roll over them and say, all right,
that money is now canceled.
There is this congressional watchdog agency, the government accountability office, that says,
this is absolutely illegal. And what I have been told by people close to vote is that he would
like to see them sue, that that's like a lawsuit that he wants to have and take to the Supreme
Court because he is so confident that he will win. So it sounds like in this case, vote has
basically gone to Congress and said, look, we're not going to spend this $5 billion in foreign aid
that you've already appropriated. Go ahead and challenge us on it. Congress does not challenge
the Trump administration on this.
And now he's waiting and wanting this watchdog office to bring a legal challenge because
this is a way to get the Supreme Court to rule on the issue he cares most about, which is
impoundment.
Basically, the ability of the president to not spend money that Congress has directed him to
spend.
Yes.
And, you know, I can't say that this is going to be the exact vehicle.
But they are definitely trying to line up these cases.
and kind of line up these moments where they are intentionally pushing against what is seen
as the lines of the law in order to engineer such a Supreme Court case.
Coral, I want to zoom out and just ask you a question that I've been thinking of as we've
been discussing votes aims. Is there not a risk that all this work he's done to empower the
executive could just make it even easier for the next president to do exactly what Biden did
last time, overturn a bunch of this stuff and undo all of votes work?
Like, what's to stop a powerful Democratic president from just turning back on these spigots
that he's turned off?
Great question.
And he's definitely thought about this.
And he's talked about this.
We can actually save the country.
And that's really what it comes down to.
The hour's late.
It's not too late, but it's really late.
And this isn't a lot.
He understands the people who he's working.
with very much understand that they're not going to stay in power, that they have a limited
amount of time to do what they want to do. If we don't execute, we may never have this chance
again. So creating something permanent is the ultimate aim. And so the way that vote has
described this is once they can kind of re-engineer presidential power to cut off spending
to agencies and programs, the idea is basically starve them to death.
We want to make sure that the bureaucracy can't reconstitute itself later in future administrations.
Cut off spending to foreign aid, to the Environmental Protection Agency, to agencies like the Federal Reserve,
cut off all this spending so profoundly that even if, you know, a very liberal Democrat president comes in after Trump leaves,
these agencies aren't just slimmed down or, you know, somewhat deprived of resources.
They've basically been scorched down to nothing.
And the idea is that it would need a generation or more for them to come back,
that just turning on the spigots would not be enough to bring them back.
The picture that you've described here, Coral, is one where you have an incredibly meticulous planner,
motivated and empowered to carry out a pretty radical vision.
And I wonder if we consider what it would look like
for vote to carry this all the way through,
for his vision to be fully realized.
How do the contours of the American government change
in a world where he really implements his plan to the fullest?
So vote has described how he thinks this would look.
If you have a radical constitutionalism, and that's really what I've been calling for,
given this crazy unconstitutional situation that we're finding ourselves in,
if you have a radical constitutionalism, it's going to be destabilizing.
He would call it radical constitutionalism.
He would say that he is trying to create a world that is what the founding fathers wanted.
There are no independent agencies.
Congress may have viewed them as such.
or the FCC, CFPB, the whole alphabet suit.
But that is not something that the Constitution understands.
The whole notion of an independent agency should be thrown out.
I think we would see independent agencies completely beholden to the White House or not existing at all.
But we would also see the powers distributed really differently between the three branches of government
with so much more power seated in the president.
where any kind of program, whether it's social, scientific, environmental,
no longer relies on that approval by Congress,
but really depends forever on whether or not the president wants it to happen.
We would see it fundamentally remade three branches of government
with a lot more power and authority in the executive
and less checks and balances in the other two.
I guess I'm wondering whether as vote progresses toward that,
goal, there's a world in which it starts to backfire on him. As he and the administration
move to fire thousands of workers, for example, during the shutdown to slash spending at this
time, you'd expect to see a negative economic impact, right? The government is one of the biggest
employers in the country. And you've told us Trump isn't as bought in as vote is on shrinking
the government from a philosophical standpoint.
So if this plan becomes politically costly for Trump,
might that lead to the president abandoning votes' vision?
That is the big question,
is what will the political and economic fallout of this look like?
I think the man driving the train right now
is driven by radical ideological
fire and ultimate preparation. But what will happen when the safety net is taken away, when jobs are
lost, when people really feel this? When the rubber hits the road. Yeah, I do think there is also
a bet from the White House that voters will like this, that voters will want to see government
drawn back and removed from their lives. That's what vote wants to see. I think that if
Americans realize they don't like that
and that there is a tremendous backlash
to the pulling back of all these safety nets
that Trump himself could get cold feet
and walk this vision back
and that vote might not get what he wants.
You know, we'll see what the political fallout looks like.
Well, Coral, thanks so much.
Thank you, Natalie. It was great to be here as always.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Israel and Hamas are set to begin a new round of negotiations in Egypt on Monday,
where the two sides, speaking through Egyptian and Qatari mediators,
will discuss President Trump's proposal for ending the war in Gaza.
They're expected to focus on the potential release of all
Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.
On Friday, Hamas said in a statement that it agreed to Trump's framework for returning to
Israel all living hostages and the bodies of those who had died.
But the militant group left many questions unanswered, including whether it agreed to the
White House demand that it be barred from political power in Gaza.
Trump told the news site Axios that he'll push to finalize a peace deal between the two sides
in the next few days.
Today's episode was produced by Rob Zipko, Caitlin O'Keefe, Carlos Prieto, and Anna Foley.
It was edited by Lisa Chow, and was engineered by Chris Wood.
It contains music by Dan Powell, Marion Lazzano, and Diane Wong.
That's it for the Daily. I'm Natalie Kittrow-F.
See you tomorrow.
Thank you.