The NPR Politics Podcast - Roundup: Kash Patel Confirmed As FBI Chief; China Sees Opportunity As USAID Gets Cut
Episode Date: February 21, 2025Kash Patel was confirmed as the new FBI director yesterday despite questions about his qualifications. The vote was the narrowest in recent memory with two Republicans joining the Democrats in voting ..."no." Then, Donald Trump is undertaking efforts to slash federal government spending, which includes international pro-democracy and human rights groups. Is China moving in to fill the vacuum the U.S. leaves behind? This episode: political correspondents Ashley Lopez and Susan Davis, justice correspondent Ryan Lucas, international correspondent Emily Feng, and senior editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro. The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs & Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, it's Amartinez. I work on a news show. And yeah, the news can feel like a lot on
any given day. But you just can't ignore las noticias when important world changing events
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Time on Friday, February 21st, 2025. I'm Ashley Lopez. I cover voting.
I'm Ryan Lucas. I cover the Justice Department.
And I'm Domenico Montanaro, Senior Political Editor and Correspondent. S.D. Cash Patel was confirmed as the new FBI Director yesterday. Despite questions about
his qualifications, Ryan, this was a pretty tight vote, even though it seemed like his
confirmation was never really in doubt, right? R. No, it wasn't really in doubt. Republicans did,
for the most part, kind of unite and lockstep behind him. But this vote came out to 51 to 49.
There are two Republican senators who voted against confirming Patel. That would be Maine's Susan
Collins and Alaska's Lisa Murkowski. And if you look at the three directors immediately
before Patel, they all received at least 92 votes in favor. So that gives you a sense
of how controversial a nominee Patel is to lead the FBI, which to remind people is a really big job. The FBI is responsible for investigating counterterrorism,
bank robberies, cybersecurity, all sorts of things across the spectrum. And there's a
lot of crime going on. And a lot of this comes down to the FBI to fight. So this is a very
big job. And there are a lot of people, whether they be Democrats
and also former national security officials who have concerns about Patel, about his qualifications,
about his experience, his temperament, and whether he's really the right man for this
job.
Yeah. Can you talk to me more about what concerns people had going into his confirmation?
Well, there are a whole bunch of them. There's the fact that he's a very close ally of President
Trump. There are concerns about whether he can be independent from the White House or
whether he's somebody who's going to do exactly what President Trump wants him to do. Traditionally,
the FBI is independent, and it's something that has been very important historically.
There's also just the fact that he's made a lot of inflammatory comments over the years. He's talked about wanting to root out the deep state. He's called public servants,
law enforcement officials who investigated Trump gangsters. He says that people who stormed
the Capitol on January 6th, who fought with police, he says that they are political prisoners.
That's of course, echoing the sort of comments that we've heard from the president. And more broadly, he's just a very fierce critic of the FBI itself. He has said on a bunch of podcasts,
appearances that he wants to shut down FBI headquarters on day one. He wants to turn it
into a museum to the deep state. Lawmakers, certainly Democrats asked him about a lot of
these things during his confirmation hearing. And Patel tried to push back on them. He said that he would not politicize the FBI, that he wants
to take politics out of the FBI. He wants to focus on traditional crime fighting. But
those comments did little to assuage the concerns that Democrats have.
And that just simply wasn't who Cash Patel was before he was at that Senate hearing.
This is somebody who was known for being provocative,
who wrote a book not just about the government gangsters,
as he noted in the book title,
but he wrote a children's book called The Plot Against the King
that seemed to depict someone with blonde hair as the king,
looked like maybe President Trump,
and somebody who looked like Nancy Pelosi
as one of the people who was engaging in the plot against and someone who maybe looked like Cash Patel who seemed to
be the sorcerer behind the king.
It's one thing when you're trying to sell books and get yourself on podcasts.
It's another thing when you want to run the FBI, which is one of the most important structures
in this country for fighting crime. And he says that he's not going to
engage in political weaponization or try to go after enemies and all of that. But
we saw people who said one thing at the hearing, which defied what they believed
before the hearing seemingly, and then when they got confirmed did something
else. And really one of the biggest concerns with Patel centers around
things that he has said
about wanting to go after his perceived enemies and Trump's perceived political enemies.
And now you have Patel in charge of an organization, the FBI, which has these vast, vast investigative
powers and there are a lot of concerns that he will make good on those statements that
he made when he was not at the FBI about wanting to go after perceived enemies. Yeah, given those concerns that were
mentioned, what do we expect from him as director? I will say that Patel takes
over at the FBI at a tumultuous time for the organization. The new leadership at
the Justice Department has pushed out at least eight senior leaders there, uh, really top level folks with a lot of experience.
Um, and more broadly, the, the new leadership at the justice department
has demanded and now received a list of.
Thousands around 5,000 or so FBI employees who worked on January 6th
investigations, remember that was one of the largest investigations, if not the
largest in justice department history touched every state in the US. They've demanded a list of
everyone who worked on that. And that has led to concerns at the FBI for a lot of these
concerns from folks who worked there of potential mass firings, they're essentially a purge.
And so the impact that something like that would have on the FBI's ability to do its
job and to protect the American public
is a significant concern and how Patel is going to deal with that and how he's going to try to lead an organization as
Big and important as the FBI is something that we're just gonna have to wait and see how that pans out
Yeah, well Ryan, thank you so much for being here today. Thank you. Okay, let's take a quick break
And when we come back how China is responding to the cuts at USAID.
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And we're back and we're now joined by international correspondent Emily Fang.
Hi, Emily.
Hey, Ashley.
So, Donald Trump is undertaking efforts to slash spending at the federal government level,
which includes a lot of international pro-democracy and human rights groups.
Emily, can you just start with the basics here?
Why did the U.S. start funding these programs to begin with?
It began really in the early 1980s in the middle of the Cold War under President Ronald
Reagan.
At the time, the U.S. was competing with the Soviet Union both for political influence
but also in the ideological sphere.
And so Reagan gave a speech in 1982 where he spoke about funding what he called the
infrastructure of democracy.
And what resulted is billions of dollars
in foreign assistance funding through agencies like USAID,
through the State Department,
and then the creation of other foundations
like the National Endowment of Democracy.
And when the Cold War ended,
all that funding evolved into going to support
humanitarian work abroad,
civil society work around the world,
especially in countries that are authoritarian or were devastated by war. So think countries like Iran or China
or now Ukraine.
Yeah. And why is it that the Trump administration is reversing this long held position of the
U.S. when it comes to diplomacy abroad?
It's been done under the umbrella of trying to shrink the federal government and its budget and it's really been driven by
Elon Musk and President Trump. Musk has also accused these agencies that I just mentioned of, for example, USAID, of being behind
what he called a hoax of Russian influence in the Trump administration.
He also said the USAID agency
spreads leftist propaganda without giving evidence and then he's also been resharing posts on X, the social media site that he owns that
has implied the national endowment for democracy as a CIA front.
Again, no evidence.
But what's interesting to me is this is exactly the same kind of criticism that authoritarian
countries like China have long said about US foreign assistance funding.
And this reversal now on cutting foreign assistance funding and this reversal now on cutting, you know,
cutting foreign assistance funding is notable because this was actually kind
of an issue that Republicans have long championed, especially Republicans like
Marco Rubio who is now the US Secretary of State. He's now in charge of defending
and implementing these foreign assistance cuts, but when he was a US
senator he was a big proponent of foreign aid. He saw it
as essential to US national security by promoting US democratic values abroad, and he said that
cutting it would not bring us to balance, but now he's been a big defender of these
cuts.
And Domenico, I wonder what you think this means for sort of having the end of quote
unquote soft power in US foreign policy, what this sort of means going forward?
Well, I mean, the idea that the US would walk back from the idea of soft power really kind of
flies in the face of decades of what was American foreign policy following World War II and then the
ascent in the 1960s and into the 80s and early 90s of the Cold War against Russia. Really the idea was to counter communism and what Russia was trying to do around the world.
Now the US has a different calculation to make, which is China, because China is in
places like Africa trying to build infrastructure projects and try to, by the way, also mine in places where they're helping those countries
out to try to take some of those natural resources from those places, but also try to win over
some of those populations in some of those countries to try to win allies.
It's a really America first sort of approach, but one that a lot of critics believe is really
short-sighted and something that's
too transactional for the long-term success and power of the United States.
Yeah.
And Emily, I think it's worth mentioning a good portion of this funding has actually
supported Chinese dissidents.
I wonder how China is seeing this.
Is this welcome to them?
Yeah.
US funding was supporting basically the last remaining traces of Chinese civil society.
And with the cuts, China has not said very much publicly
because honestly, they could just sit back and do nothing
to reap the benefits of this US retreat
and funding soft power because the groups
that are seeing their funding cut are the ones
that really were a long-term nuisance to China.
I'm talking about labor rights organizations,
civil society groups,
human rights investigation organizations. A lot of them had been forced to flee from China,
given the political controls there, and that's why they needed funding from the U.S.
And I talked to seven of these groups focused on China, but now based in the U.S.
because they don't have funding anymore. They are already furloughing or laying off their employees,
and a lot of them have paused their programs.
Now there's evidence that China's moving in already to fill this US funding gap in just
the last few weeks.
Big caveat, funding soft power is not China's strong suit.
They're often really heavy handed about it or inefficient, but they're making an effort
and I actually managed to talk directly with a Chinese state representative here in DC who answers to the government in China.
They requested anonymity when meeting because they're not authorized to speak publicly,
but they're here in the US because they reached out to at least one China focused group who
is at risk of losing their funding and proposed to this group.
You know, instead of criticizing people and organizations in China publicly, perhaps they,
as a Chinese government representative, could facilitate private conversations with China
to achieve the social change that the organization wants.
And one of the groups that this representative was in contact with said they kind of felt
like this was a tactic to buy their silence, but the Chinese representative argued it was
a more effective way for organizations to work.
So you're already seeing this competition between the US and China, given the risk of
losing all the civil society funding.
And Domenico, I wonder if you have a sense of how this would actually affect Americans,
because this all does seem a little bit abstract, but I'm wondering if there's a way in which
Americans could actually feel the end of this funding back home.
Well, morality and humanitarianism
is something that a lot of Americans believe in,
although it's not always a great argument
for a broad swath of Americans,
because of course they're concerned
about kitchen table issues and how it affects their pockets.
And one area that maybe a lot of people don't think about
is farming and how American farmers could be affected by cuts in USAID because a lot
of the food that USAID uses to feed others in the world and the developing world comes from places
like Kansas where grain sorghum farmers are supplying USAID and as that's cut, you're going
to see those American farmers hurt as well.
I would argue this matters because the US and China have been competing on technology, on political influence, on industrial standards, and definitely on soft power.
And the US is cutting back its foreign presence and its foreign assistance funding at the very moment that China has stepped up and pledged tens of billions of dollars more in places like Africa.
And so the potential trade-offs have never been bigger.
All right, Emily, thank you so much for bringing your reporting to the pod.
Thanks so much for having me on.
It's time for one quick break.
And when we get back, can't let it go.
And we're back and it's time for everyone's favorite Friday segment, Can't Let It Go.
That's the part of the show where we talk about the things from the week that we just
can't stop thinking about, politics or otherwise.
And we have with us political correspondent Sue Davis.
Hey Sue, thanks for joining us.
I am so happy to be here today.
All right, well, we're going to start with you.
What can't you let go of this week?
You know, I was going to talk about something else this week, but then before the podcast, I saw a hot take that got me literally so hot. It is now the thing that
I can't let go. And it is a column in Time Magazine in which someone defends voice notes in a column
entitled, We Should All Send More Voice Notes. Now, if you don't know what that is, it's when
someone will literally on their phone, like record themselves talking to you and then like text it to you.
And I cannot tell you how much I disagree with this sentiment. I'm sorry if either of
you are voice note people, but please don't send voice notes. This is not something that
this is a social contagion. I need to stop here at this podcast. I think I only get them from younger, maybe Gen Z folks, but also just some people who
have like, like this, they're really bought into it. Like they refuse to text any other
way. And I do talk to those folks less because it is, it's too much for me to, it takes too
much of your time.
I think it's super annoying. I agree with you. I mean, and I've always been a little confused
by it because this is kind of like going backwards in time. I don't know. I mean, and I've always been a little confused by it because this is kind of like going backwards
in time.
I don't know.
I can't understand anything anymore.
Frankly, I get a voice note and I'm like, now I have to listen to this.
I got to make my phone quieter.
You know, just text me what you want to say.
Also, you know, it helps you think about what you want to say first before you, you know,
just spit it out.
Also, like if you want to leave a message, just do a voicemail because the thing I appreciate
and also don't leave a voicemail just text me.
But if you do leave a voicemail at least your phone now will transcribe the voicemail so
you can like look at what they said really quickly like a voice note sent to you is diabolical.
And anytime someone sends me a voice note I'm not lying I delete it and text them and say
what do you want to tell me?
That's a confusing thing because I thought that voicemail was going out of style.
I'm so confused.
I don't know what's going on.
What's old is new again.
I will say, I think we're the wrong audience for this because we have to deal with audio
forms of people's voices all day and other people maybe just want to hear like actual
people's voices, but not us, clearly.
Just text me girl, just text me.
Or call, we can call and have a conversation.
I'd rather do that.
I love a phone call. Text me call and have a conversation. I'd rather do that.
I love a phone call.
Text me first and say, can you chat? And then when I say, yeah, give me a call. Actually,
what about you? What can't you let go of?
So what I can let go of this week is for those who didn't catch it, there was a concert,
a concert event basically to celebrate Saturday Night Live's 50th anniversary. I didn't watch
the whole thing. It was three hours long, which this is the same reason I haven't
watched The Brutalist yet.
I cannot commit to something that long.
But I was really happy to catch parts of it
because the thing that I can't let go of
is I saw the like a mashup of all the Lonely Island songs,
like some of the hits.
Do you guys know what I'm talking about?
No. No.
Okay. Like some of the titles are not suitable
for a podcast, but there were all these music videos Do you guys know what I'm talking about? No. No. Okay, like some of the titles are not suitable
for a podcast, but there were all these music videos
that came out in the aughts with Andy Samberg
and then Akiva Nyarma were like part of his comedy group.
And they had, remember like that video
about getting cupcakes and Chronicles of Narnia
and like all of those little segments with Justin Timberlake.
This was like such a specific time in SNL history.
But every time these videos came out,
they were such a big cultural moment when I was in college,
that seeing all that stuff played again just remind me how
older millennials have gotten because Andy Samberg looks like such a dad now.
I just cannot stop thinking about like how big of a deal
those SNL they were called I think SNL shorts or something that came out it was
like they were moments and they had like some pretty big stars to come on
I'm remembering this now because I remember it as you said Andy
Sandberg and they did the the one I remember the most is Lazy Sunday is that
right? Yeah that was like one of the first big digital sketches to come out of SNL.
It was a big moment.
They also did a really hilarious one with Natalie Portman,
in which she is this like demure actress,
but in the skit she's like this hardcore gangster rapper
and it was really funny.
Well, I ran so far away, you look like a very hairy
Jake Gyllenhaal to me was always a funny line
I always thought about Ahmadinejad.
Who could make that joke? Right? I mean, it's just so crazy. I love SNL because it's always
been so countercultural and, you know, has lasted as long as it has, and especially when
at a time when music videos were going out of style.
I love this too because it allowed us to work in an Ahmadinejad reference into the
can't let it go segment. So congrats.
All right, Domenico, what can't you let go of this week?
Well, what I can't let go of, and I'm sorry if you're eating anything, is boogers.
Oh.
I'm a mom. Say more.
Not my own. Okay, I have to clarify that. This has to do with Elon Musk's very young
son. He was in the White House this week and he picked and wiped. Something that you're
not supposed to do. We tell our kids all the time, but he did it on the resolute desk at the White House where
Donald Trump was sitting, the President of the United States. And if that's not funny enough,
word then came out this week that the resolute desk, Donald Trump reports on Truth Social,
is being lightly refinished, a very important job. This is a
beautiful but temporary replacement." Oh my gosh. Well, he's kind of a germaphobe, right?
Yeah. Yes, known germaphobe. And you know, whether or not it's not clear that it's related to that
exactly, but that didn't stop places like the New York Post, which are generally pretty friendly
toward Trump from jumping to that conclusion saying in their lead, which I love, the White House has assured the public it's not a permanent
change.
All right.
That's all from us today.
Our executive producer is Mithoni Maturi.
Casey Morrell edits the podcast.
Our producers are Bria Suggs and Kelly Wessinger.
Special thanks to Krishna Dev Kalamer.
I'm Ashley Lopez.
I cover voting.
I'm Susan Davis.
I cover politics.
And I'm Domenico Machininelli, our senior political editor and correspondent.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.