The NPR Politics Podcast - Summer Camp... David: Biden Welcomes South Korea, Japan Leaders
Episode Date: August 18, 2023President Biden welcomed the men in an effort to foster unity as the United States works to counter China's influence in the region. And Alabama is once again in court over its congressional district ...maps.This episode: political correspondent Susan Davis, White House correspondent Asma Khalid, senior political editor and correspondent Ron Elving, voting correspondent Hansi Lo Wang, and Gulf States Newsroom reporter Stephan Bisaha.The podcast is produced by Elena Moore and Casey Morell. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi. Unlock access to this and other bonus content by supporting The NPR Politics Podcast+. Sign up via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Connect:Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.orgJoin the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey there, this is Haley from Boston, Massachusetts.
After throwing everything I could spare at my student loans over the past few years while
interest was paused, I'm finally preparing to submit my last payment to settle my balance
before interest starts up again.
This podcast was recorded at 12.51 p.m. on Friday, August 18th.
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freedom.
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That was a very wise financial decision.
You take advantage of no interest rates when you have them in this life.
Congratulations, Haley.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Susan Davis.
I cover politics.
And I'm Asma Khalid.
I cover the White House. And I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House.
And I'm Ron Elving, editor-correspondent.
And President Biden is hosting leaders of Japan and South Korea today at Camp David,
the famous presidential retreat located in rural Maryland. Asma, you are there. I should note the
weather is beautiful today in the D.C. region, and it's been a while since the president hosted
any foreign leaders there.
That's right. No foreign leader has come here to Camp David since 2015. So we're talking about eight years. And, you know, I think that the reason that this is so noteworthy, I think,
is, you know, of course, we can talk a lot about the sort of storied, tense relationship that Japan
and South Korea have had. That goes back to when Japan colonized the Korean
Peninsula. But, you know, I think that part of why this meeting is also very significant is that it
is happening here at Camp David, which has such a storied legacy of, you know, really important
diplomatic moments in American history. Asma, there's a lot of symbolism behind a Camp David
invite. What is the symbolism here? And what's the message the
White House is trying to send with this meeting? Yeah, I spoke to a former naval commanding officer
here at Camp David. His name is Michael Giorgione. He's, in fact, written a book about what it's like
to be inside Camp David because he's one of the few families who's lived here year round. And he
kind of had an eyewitness to history, seeing different foreign leaders come and go under
both former President Clinton and George W. Bush.
If I were invited to Camp David, I think if I were world leader, I'd value that more than going to the White House.
It's like bringing someone into your family room.
When I think of Camp David, I think of sort of high stakes diplomatic negotiations.
What is the point behind this meeting? What are they working on?
The three leaders are trying to strengthen security cooperation in the Indo-Pacific. And I will say from the Biden administration
standpoint, from this White House, they may say that this is not really exclusively about China.
But what I will say, having covered the Biden White House, is that much of the president's
foreign policy is about China, about trying to counter Chinese influence. And so, you know, I think really
bolstering relationships, alliances with two key allies in the Indo-Pacific, that certainly,
you know, China is the subtext here. It's certainly not the only thing at stake here.
But what they're trying to do is really improve the security cooperation. And they're planning
to announce a range of things, you know, comprehensive military exercises, a new crisis hotline, as well as a commitment to just consult each other on security
issues of concern. And so we'll see how this all pans out. What they're hoping is to kind of
institutionalize this trilateral relationship and have annual meetings of this sort every year.
It obviously, the China subtext is clear, but it is worth noting that this is the first time
this type of trilateral between South Korea and Japan and the U.S. has ever happened, in part because of that very complicated and often contentious relationship between Japan and South Korea.
So it's also historic on their end.
Of course, of course. Right. And I do think that what you'll hear from this White House is that this is really setting the stage for a new era in the relationship with the United States and Japan and South Korea. Ron, Camp David has played a very storied role
in presidential history and has been used by many presidents for very, you know, symbolic and high
stakes meetings. Absolutely. You go back to Franklin Delano Roosevelt meeting with Winston
Churchill there 80 years ago when the camp was quite new. Roosevelt, by the way, called it
Shangri-La. Then later, President Eisenhower called it Camp David in honor of his grandson.
Eisenhower met with Khrushchev there. JFK met with Khrushchev. And of course, the most famous
Camp David meeting, a summit meeting, was when, 45 years ago, Jimmy Carter met with Menachem Begin of Israel and Anwar Sadat of Egypt
and concluded what became known as the Camp David Accords.
And that was peace in the Middle East, at least to some degree,
at least between the two largest antagonists in the long-running Middle East struggle.
And it really mattered a great deal.
Bill Clinton tried to do something similar a dozen years later, didn't quite work out. But everyone has always reached
for that Camp David magic. And you'll notice that what comes out of this meeting is being dubbed
the Camp David principles. And if I can just jump on that, Ron, I mean, I think that there is no
doubt this White House is trying to tap into the historic legacy you're describing. By having
the meeting here at Camp David, it is, you know, I think an attempt to elevate the relationship
with Japan and South Korea and really put it in that kind of category of monumental historic
negotiations that have occurred here. Yes. And in addition to elevating that relationship,
it's also very deliberately intended to elevate this
president and his presidency and put it in that pantheon of important presidencies that I just
ticked through. This is what the Biden people want to do looking a year and a half ahead to
his reelection. All right, we need to take a quick break, but Ron and Asma, don't go far.
We're going to have you back for Can't Let It Go. Bye now. Bye. Talk to you in a bit. All right. After the break, a chat about Alabama Republicans ignoring a recent Supreme
Court ruling. And we're back with NPR's Hansi Lawang. Hey, Hansi. Hey, Sue. And Stephen Basaja
of the Gulf States Newsroom. Hi, Stephen. Hey, thanks for having me. Thank you both for being
here. So the Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that Alabama's congressional district map likely violated the Voting Rights Act.
And before we get into the latest court fight here, Hansi, can you remind us exactly what the Supreme Court ruled?
Yes.
OK, quick recap.
The map Alabama used for last year's midterm elections, a panel of three federal judges ruled that map needs to be
replaced to get in line with Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. And that was a ruling upheld
by the U.S. Supreme Court in June. And those judges on that panel said Alabama needs to increase the
number of voting districts where Black voters have a realistic opportunity to elect their preferred
U.S. House candidate. Instead of one, there should be two of
those opportunity districts, the judges said. And we should keep in mind that because voting in
Alabama is so racially polarized, if you want to have two opportunity districts for Black voters
in Alabama, they will need to be two districts where Black Alabamians make up the majority of
the voting age population or something quite close to it, the judges said.
Hansi, let's do a little point of clarity because I think we shorthand a lot and call this a
majority black districts. But when we say that, we don't mean it's 50 plus one majority. It just
means, well, you explain it. Well, in this case, the judges have found that it's possible that
black Alabamians don't necessarily have to make more than 50 percent of the voting age population.
It could be something quite close to it.
And so that's the kind of rub here.
All right. So we're talking about this case again because the maps went back to Alabama lawmakers and they recently passed a new map responding to this ruling.
But it still does not have sufficient districts where Black voters would have the possibility of electing a candidate of their choice.
Stephen, that's put this all back in court.
How did the lawmakers who redrew the map defend that decision?
Yeah, that was the big question going into the court date was how they were going to justify this.
Because, again, one of the districts is only like 39.9 percent black, while the other one was just barely over 50 percent so they went in there
and the state's argument was hey this is a new map and also we pass new standards for how we draw
these maps your old order pertaining to our old maps and old standards that does not apply here
and these new standards are things like making sure keeping as many counties together so you're
having fewer congressional districts that slice through a county.
And particularly they had fewer of these kind of county splits than what advocates were kind of proposing for as alternative maps.
They also said it's really important that we, with these new standards, keep communities of interest together.
So we're talking about like the Gulf Coast. So that little nub of Alabama that's touching the Gulf of Mexico, keeping that community together, as well as keeping together
Alabama's black belt. And this is a stretch of land across the center of Alabama. And whenever
you look at different election results maps, like 2020s presidential maps and how counties voted,
Alabama, it's a very red state, but you have this line of blue that slices across the state.
So these maps do a better job
of keeping that black belt together.
And I should say,
black belt is named for the fact
that it's actually the soil,
this very black, rich soil,
not the fact that it is a very black area,
though it actually is.
It's a consequence of the fact that,
you know, this is where there were cotton plantations
because of that soil. That's where a lot of former slaves ended up staying after
the Civil War. That kind of goes into the geography of how the state is split up politically.
And it's not uncommon to hear defenses of maps talk about communities of interest and
contiguous districts. How did the judges respond to that argument?
The judges did not seem to be too interested in this argument.
These were the same three federal judges that started this all off, the three judges that said, hey, you do need to add a second black majority district or something close to it.
So when the state and its solicitor general, Edmund LaCour, when they were making their closing arguments, the judges kept on going, hold on here.
You're basically ignoring us, aren't you?
And they kept on asking this question and the state would say, look, this is the best we could do without violating other parts of law, without violating these other standards.
We're not supposed to be considering race when we are making these maps.
And the judges kept on coming back and being like, well, okay, so how are you able
to create new standards whenever we give you an order? They did not seem too pleased with
the state's arguments here. And what about the opponents, or I should say the plaintiffs in the
case? What is their argument against it? Yeah, they say, well, look, you can actually consider
race when you're talking about something that's a potential voting rights violation like that was
found here. And the other thing they said was you don't really get brownie points for keeping the
black belt together if people in the black belt can't actually vote for their candidate of choice.
What you've got to actually pay attention to is the election results that these maps create.
And projecting those out, we still would only have one district where black Alabamians would be able to pick their candidate of choice.
And you would think with all this, with this kind of setback in Alabama coming up forward with this map, that a lot of the activists and plaintiffs would be upset.
But it was kind of celebratory on the steps in the courthouse after the hearing when i was talking with the lead attorney he was
mentioning how this is kind of what happens with civil rights laws that a judge might find it
discriminatory the state comes back with a slightly modified law to see if they can if that will pass
for the judges and it's that slow progress and that slightly modified law often does not actually
address what the judges initially complained about so So their use of this, the fact that the judges seem to be not too keen to the arguments of the state,
made the advocates feel pretty positive about the results.
What are the potential outcomes here?
And is this one of those legal challenges that observers would say is also an effort to get something back to the Supreme Court?
Or is it just going to be contained here? Yeah, I believe the state's hope, and they've kind of hinted at
this, different lawmakers in Alabama hinted that they want this back in front of the Supreme Court.
During the hearing, they mentioned the idea of Brett Kavanaugh seemed to really care about the
idea of counties being split up. So, and hey, look, counties not being split up as much, that
was part of the state's new standard.
So that seems to be one thing they're hoping is that Brett Kavanaugh actually sided with also John Roberts.
They were the ones that sided with the liberals that, hey, Alabama, you actually need to follow this order here.
They're hoping to flip Brett Kavanaugh and that one if they could get this from the Supreme Court again.
The other option here that could work in the state's favor
is maybe the judges just side with them.
Again, they don't seem too happy with the state's arguments right now,
but the map is currently law.
This is not a temporary map.
This is the law.
The map they passed is a congressional map,
but the judges can say this is not a good one and we need to redo it.
And in that case, what they could do is assign a
special master to draw a new map, essentially take the power of creating a congressional map
out of the hands of the state and have the judge's own handpicked special master do this instead.
Hansi, this case is about a lot more than just Alabama. The Supreme Court ruling has had ripples
beyond the state, and there's a lot going on in the redistricting space, even though we're a couple of years after the census.
Yeah. And, you know, what's important to point out here is we're talking about the possibility of more majority black districts in the South that are likely to vote for Democratic candidates.
So what could happen here is that Alabama could end up with two Democrats in the U.S. House after next year's midterm elections.
And there could be more Democratic pickups in House races in Louisiana and in Georgia,
depending on how similar redistricting lawsuits there pan out.
You know, I also think it's unrelated to this to this court fight,
but there's also a redistricting battle going in New York for other different reasons that could also give Democrats an advantage. And I think redistricting is going to be so crucial to 2024 because the way that it
could tip more races towards Democrats' favor is really important when you think about the fact
that Republicans only have a very narrow four-seat majority. Yeah, I think that what's why there's so
much attention on this Alabama case is because it's coming out of that Supreme Court ruling that upheld the past rulings on Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
It really sets up a pathway for more Democratic pickups in these House races in the South.
And I think the thing to keep in mind here is that Alabama's strategy of potentially trying to get this before the Supreme Court, that could get rid of that pathway.
But voting rights advocates I've talked to think that it's very unlikely the Supreme Court would
take back its earlier ruling in this Alabama case.
All right, Stephen Passaha and Hansi Lo Wang, thank you both so much for your reporting.
Thank you.
You're very welcome.
We're going to take a quick break. And when we get back, time for Can't Let It Go.
And we're back.
And Asma Khalid, Ron Elving, welcome back.
Great to be back with you.
And it's time to end the show like we do every week with Can't Let It Go,
part of the show where we talk about the things from the week we can't stop talking about, politics or otherwise.
Ron Elving, what can't you let go of this week? Story in the Washington Post about a collection of human remains in the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. This has been collected from back in the early part of the
1900s and reflected the interests and the beliefs of a curator of physical anthropology there named
Alice Herdlicka. He was the head of the Eugenics Society in the United States,
and these were people trying to find a scientific basis for racism, really, basically,
was what they were trying to do, trying to clothe their attitudes towards race in some degree of science.
Discredited, debunked many years ago,
and many of these human remains were taken from families who didn't realize that
they had lost part of their relatives to science in this sense. They were not obtained with the
cooperation of the families, some of it, and some of it that remains is in that category.
Story caught my eye on a slightly personal ground because it had a picture of a woman named
Mary Sarah who came from far northern Scandinavia and was a picture of a woman named Mary Sarah who came from far northern
Scandinavia and was a part of a group of people known as the Sami, S-A-M-I, and they had different
language, different kind of background from other Scandinavians. They'd come from points east
and they were held in some degree of, well, they were held at arm's length at the very minimum by
other Swedes and Norwegians and people from further south.
Many of them went to other parts of the world.
One of the people who came to the United States and was born quite near Mary Sarah at about
the same time was my grandfather on the maternal side. And our family has always talked sort of vaguely
about our heritage and about the Sami people being part of that heritage, but very, very,
if you will, vaguely, let's just put it that way. So it was interesting to see the degree to which
they were regarded by these researchers as people who had to be studied to see why their brains and presumably their humanity was inferior.
Ron, did this story make you want to find out more about your Sami heritage?
Absolutely. Absolutely.
My sister has found out a good deal more about it and explored it more over the years, but it was clearly part of the sort of Sado-Voce discussion of my grandfather's
background in that part of the world. He had come to the United States and worked as a
woodcutter and then in the Anaconda copper mine in Montana, and never had much education and was
sort of a somewhat mysterious presence. That's fascinating.
Well, that is a very deep and philosophical,'t let it go and is a very harsh transition
into mine, which is very much into campaign politics this week.
The thing I can't let go of, I don't know if y'all saw this story, but a campaign memo
for Ron DeSantis' debate strategy was posted online by the main super PAC that's supporting his campaign.
And it outlined what his strategy should be ahead of next week's first Republican debate in Milwaukee.
And I can't let it go because I can't think of a worse thing to happen to any candidate in the days before a veryprofile debate than to have your entire strategy about the debate
leaked for the whole world to see it.
So does he follow the strategy now, or does he defy it?
That's the trap, right?
David Axelrod, the former Obama campaign strategist,
tweeted that very point where it's like,
now if he does anything that was outlined in this memo,
things like attacking Vivek Ramaswamy
or former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie,
or if he follows the prescriptive plan, it's going to seem super inauthentic,
but also pivoting on a strategy that usually campaigns work for weeks and weeks, if not months and months on.
I just think it puts him in a very bad bind and certainly increases the focus that's going to be uniquely on his performance
next week. I would not want to be Ron DeSantis now going into this debate.
I also don't understand who thought it was a wise idea to do this. Just strategically,
right, when you look at campaigns, who thought that this would be a smart plan? And my understanding
is the DeSantis campaign has said that this was not a campaign memo and they've really tried to distance themselves from it. But either way, you know, strategy, campaign strategy wise,
don't recommend doing this. Well, that's part of what makes this story a fascinating bit of
politics because super PACs and official campaigns are not technically supposed to coordinate,
right? Like that's against the law. So a lot of times PACs will put things in the public domain
so everybody can see it,
but specifically the campaign, because then it's not technically coordination. It's unclear
how this leak came to pass, but it was posted on the business website for the strategy group run
by the Super PACs main strategists. This has happened before in campaigns, especially for ads,
like Super PACs will post B-roll footage on YouTube,
so the campaigns can sort of sweep it up and use it for free. I mean, there's lots of
trickery around how SuperPax and campaigns can communicate with each other. But oftentimes,
it works out well. This time, I don't think it worked out so well.
Yeah, the only word for this is oops.
Asma, what can't you let go of this week?
So New York City.
I've heard of it.
So I can't let go of New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
You know, he is someone, it strikes me, who kind of just says what is on his mind,
however it is on his mind, however it is interpreted politically.
And this week he decided to take a stance on outdoor dining.
So New York City apparently changed their rules
to make outdoor dining permanent in the city
and sort of offered some guidelines around this all.
And apparently he was trying to sell outdoor dining
as a good strategy for New Yorkers.
I don't need to make his pitch.
I think we need to listen to him make his pitch.
You know, bring your boo to a restaurant. know somebody you're trying to you know keep your marriage
together uh little outdoors will help you um you know come and try it man you know you look into
you know your date you may drive by you may see eye candy sent down somewhere you may want to park
and you know come and slip your number listen come man. You know, outdoor dining is the way to go.
And so people who are opposed to it.
So that infomercial for outdoor dining brought to you by the mayor of New York City.
I love the idea that outdoor dining needs a selling point.
Like, it's outdoor dining.
People just like to do it.
Yeah, I mean, I think the idea that this is really the pitch for outdoor dining
is dating advice from the mayor of New York City.
There are many reasons you may like outdoor dining,
but from his perspective, I guess this should be something you all should keep in mind.
Look, it's never a bad idea to take your boo outdoor dining,
so I'm going to give the mayor a point there.
All right, that's a wrap for us today.
Our executive producer is Mathoni Mottori.
Our editor is Eric McDaniel.
Our producers are Elena Moore and Casey Morrell.
Research and fact-checking by our intern, Lee Walden.
She is headed back to school this fall.
We are going to miss her.
She has done a bang-up job, and we know she's going to do great things
and maybe be our boss one day.
Thanks to Christian of Calamer and Lexi Schapittle.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics. I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House. And I'm Ron Elving,
editor correspondent. And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.