The NPR Politics Podcast - Weekly Roundup: Tariffs, Texts & Turtles
Episode Date: March 28, 2025President Trump signaled more tariffs would come in April, signed an executive order about voting, & withdrew the nomination of his proposed United Nations ambassador. We look at that and more in our ...weekly roundup. This episode: political correspondent Susan Davis, senior political editor & correspondent Domenico Montanaro, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.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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Hi, this is Kyle from Annapolis, Maryland. Right now
I'm about to walk on stage for the final performance of week three out of five of the show, Working the Musical.
This podcast was recorded at 1203 PM on Friday, March 28th.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this. Places on with the show.
Hey, break a leg. Hey there, it's the MPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Susan Davis.
I cover politics.
I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent.
And I'm Mara Eliason, senior national political correspondent.
And it's Friday, so it's time for our weekly roundup.
And we're going to start on Capitol Hill where someone was about to leave Washington, bags
were packed, they were on a farewell tour, and then things changed.
New York Congresswoman
Elise Stefanik had been tapped to be the Trump administration's ambassador to the United Nations,
but her candidacy was withdrawn yesterday. Mara, what did the Trump administration say about why
they were withdrawing her nomination? Well, what they said was kind of a really backhanded compliment.
They said kind of anybody can do the UN job, but we really need a lease in Congress. And this is an extraordinary story and we'll talk about the politics, but
their margins are very slim. And until now, the White House acted as if it didn't matter
that their margins were slim because they were able to get such incredible unity among
Republicans. But looking forward, they are not that confident.
Yeah. I mean, Domenico, we should do a little bit of math, but as we sit here today, Republicans
have 218 seats, which is exactly the number you need to pass anything if all members are
present and voting. There's two Republican held vacancies for two House races in Florida
coming up next week, but there's signs out there that there's some nervousness in the
Republican Party about what might be happening in these races.
And these are not districts that there should be any problem for Republicans winning.
These are very heavily Republican seats.
Stefanik won her seat with 62% of the vote.
It's upstate New York, fairly rural seat, something she held easily.
Republicans expected to hold easily, just like these two seats in Florida, including for Mike Waltz, who's the national security advisor now who got caught up in that signal
chain chat group kerfuffle this week.
But all of these races, there appear to be some issues at least for Republicans when
it comes to fundraising, candidates, the national Party needing to get involved. And clearly, what we saw this week,
having Trump saying on social media that the Republicans can't risk it with their very slim
majority. And that's the first real sign that we've seen that really the Republicans are facing
some political headwinds as opposed to having the wind at their backs because of what may be in more
unpopular than not unpopular agenda for President Trump and Republicans
right now.
Mara, it does seem like an almost remarkable change of energy when you think just nine
weeks ago when Trump was sworn in and talking about mandates and sweeping change and the
Republican Party was feeling very bullish.
And suddenly it seems like, you know, there's a little bit of nervousness.
Well, that's what this looks like.
You know, the Republican Party has been ascendant, unified, consolidated.
Trump gets lockstep unity and obedience from Republicans in Congress.
You saw them pass a continuing resolution, something that they actually couldn't do for
years and years and years because they couldn't get their own party all on pulling on the
same oar.
Although, that makes you go in a circle.
No, that's the wrong metaphor.
But that is the impressions that they presented
and it looked like events were bearing that out.
But now it seems they are less than confident
about their abilities to pass legislation.
Now, Donald Trump is the EO president
and he likes to do everything himself,
but there are a lot of big things on his agenda
that he does need Congress for
and he doesn't wanna take any chances.
It also does seem to foreshadow a little bit
that they haven't really had any tough legislative fights yet,
but one's coming.
They wanna extend President Trump's tax cuts
and they wanna put a whole other bunch of policies in there.
But Domenico, I think this is also a sign
that that might not be as easy as it seems.
It's not, but it's also a reminder that for as much as Mara talks about Trump doing
all these things by executive order, for things to have a lasting effect, permanent effect,
president needs Congress. It needs the force of law. These executive orders don't have
that. Certainly, Trump has been able to get a lot done because he's willing to use resources
of the federal government to intimidate various groups, whether it's universities or law
firms or anything else.
But they don't have the effect of law like something that Congress could pass.
We've reported a number of times, obviously, on the battles within the GOP conference.
It's not a guarantee that Mike Johnson,
the Speaker of the House, can keep every single Republican in line for every
single spending fight to come. Let's also talk about another White House decision
this week. It's a 25% tariff on any cars or auto parts made outside the US. Mara,
the White House continues to present that tariffs are going to be great for the US
economy but the way the world works, you know, the economy doesn't seem particularly
convinced of that argument.
Well, this is a controlled experiment in Donald Trump's long held, fervently held belief that
tariffs are almost like a magic wand.
They're going to make the country rich.
They're going to immediately bring all sorts of companies back to the United States and
manufacturing will be revived here.
Well, the business community and the markets who are not cowed by anything, they just respond
to facts, don't see it that way.
And this tariff on cars and auto parts made outside the US is going to increase costs
for American
consumers.
And even though Treasury Secretary Scott Besson says that the American dream isn't supposed
to be made up of cheap baubles from abroad, tell that to a family that is trying to pay
their rent and healthcare and buy a car.
If we were to take this into the macro, right? There's grievances that the labor unions,
auto workers have, you know,
because of these free trade deals
that were started in the 1990s,
and they feel, you know, obviously ship jobs overseas,
but the issue is that made things cheaper,
but it also hurt American workers' jobs
and being able to retire and their pensions
and all of that.
Their hope, and that's why the unions are actually supportive of these tariffs, is that
you can have more jobs, again, in the United States that are manufacturing, that give people
good paying jobs and all of that.
At the same time, this administration is not very pro-union.
In the micro, this is a president
who was elected to bring prices down.
And he said that he would bring prices down on day one.
And his actions, experts say,
are gonna have the opposite effect,
at least in the short run.
And he acknowledges that.
That's the most interesting thing to Manico.
How much the administration has started to acknowledge
that there will be some short-term pain.
You know, Besson kind of dismissing this as, oh, we shouldn't rely on cheap products from
abroad, talking about a detox period.
And even Donald Trump, who won't rule out that this could cause a recession.
And there is a certain irony here, you know, in having all of the billionaires in this
administration make that argument that the American dream, as Scott Besson said, is not the right to have cheap stuff.
Well, I mean, like you said, tell it to the people who have real kitchen table issues
are going paycheck to paycheck.
And it's really easy to be able to try to engineer something in a macroeconomic way
when you have no problem paying your groceries.
And tariffs come in many different shapes and sizes. Joe Biden actually kept some of
Donald Trump's first term tariffs on China because he felt it was important for U.S.
national security to be able to make certain things like computer chips here instead of
importing them. But these new Trump tariffs are very across the board, very sweeping.
They're more of a sledgehammer than a scalpel.
All right. Let's take a quick break
and more when we get back.
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And we're back and another move
the Trump administration made this week was an executive
action related to voting. It says in part that in order to vote, people need to provide
proof of citizenship and that ballots have to be counted by election day. Mara, states
traditionally administer these elections. Congress is also supposed to legislate around
how voting should work. Largely, it's not a federal issue. So why is the president choosing this issue now?
Yeah, not a federal issue
and certainly not a presidential issue.
Why wait in?
Because I think Donald Trump,
who leads a party that will not accept the results
of a presidential election unless they win,
Donald Trump is a candidate
who will not accept the results of an election
unless he wins.
I think he wants to make elections easier
and easier for Republicans to win.
And for some reason, he believes that if ballots
are counted by election day,
that will be an advantage for Republicans.
As far as the proof of citizenship,
this is a false narrative without evidence
that Trump has pushed for a very long time that the elections
are rigged and full of fraud and that there are tons and tons of non-citizens voting in
elections.
In fact, a minuscule number of people without citizenship vote in elections.
In fact, just to cite some data on that, Republicans in Ohio did a study that took them a year that they released this past January and they identified, get
this, 137 potential non-citizens in the statewide voter registration database.
Not even that they voted out of millions of people that there were 137 who might be non-citizens
in their voter registration database after a year of investigation on this.
So it really, and this has been studied over and over again, including by the George W.
Bush administration 20 years ago, that found it to be very small numbers.
So it is not a real problem, but it's one that again, continues to be something that
Republicans put out there to drum up fear of something that could be real
and has gotten a lot of people who see it as a cultural
signpost almost to wave around and say,
you know, we can't have people who are not citizens voting
when it doesn't really happen.
But the real reason is to destroy trust
in our election system.
So it's easier for a candidate like Donald Trump to say,
I won't accept the results unless I win, because by definition, if I don't win, there must
have been a lot of fraud. And this has been going on for years.
I also think it's built on sort of a fact that is proven to be untrue in recent years
in that Republicans often supported voter ID laws because the idea was that the more
people voted, the better Democrats would do. But that understanding has largely been flipped on its head.
I mean, there's been a lot of sort of post mortems
on the election that show actually
when voters turn up in mass right now,
they would benefit Republicans more.
So Republicans putting up these sort of barriers to voting
might actually be hurting their political interests
but more than helping them right now.
Yeah, and we saw that there are certain states,
Republican-led states, that have almost a total mail-in
ballot system.
And now that Donald Trump has won the popular vote,
I would think that Republicans would want as many people
as possible to vote, because they are increasing
their registration numbers around the country.
But he still sticks to these false narratives
about how more people voting is bad for Republicans.
It also is, to me, just viewing this
from the point of Capitol Hill,
it is very interesting to watch,
which I think is becoming a reality of this administration,
how much power Congress is acquiescing to the White House.
And these types of issues around voting reform
really fall under the
purview of the legislative branch. But they don't seem to be putting up any pushback
to things that the White House is doing, whether it be shuttering agencies that Congress should
have a role in or cutting spending that Congress has already appropriated. And now they seem
to be almost legislating with executive actions that Congress should be doing. But if Congress
isn't willing to fight back on it, you know, you cede power, it just goes over to the president. It just increasingly
speaks to how powerful Donald Trump is in this moment, I think.
But Sue, have we ever seen a Congress abdicate to the executive on so many things?
I can't say in like forever in history, but certainly not in the modern presidency.
Not in our lifetimes.
No. And there used, I would say like even as recently as like Obama and George W. Bush, there was much more dissent within the parties over policies that they were doing. And there's
almost no dissent sort of ideologically within the party now. You know, 30, 40 years ago, you had way
more institutionalists in Congress and the Senate. You don't have that many institutionalists,
especially in the GOP conference right now. Most of the Republicans, many of the Republicans who were swept in, you know, beginning with
the Tea Party, are people who don't like government, who think that government does too much, that
they want to see the president, who they agree with, be able to do more.
They don't like a lot of the rules that are put in place.
They don't really have a ton of respect for everything that came before.
They feel like they agree with what Trump wants to do and they want to see him get it done.
Domenico, what do you think the chances are that this holds up to legal scrutiny?
Well, look, I mean, we don't know if it's going to be constitutional or if the courts
are going to block it because we're supposed to have decentralized elections in this country
and they very well may do that, but the enforcement has always been the issue.
And Trump really is kind of putting the bully back in the bully pulpit here because what
we've seen with a lot of these executive orders is him trying to say to universities
or institutions like law firms and the rest that he's going to withhold federal funding.
We don't know if he's going to do that kind of thing, but it's certainly been his MO in
these EOs to go and try to, you know,
hold something over them to make them comply. And we've seen groups, you know, kind of
on their own kind of capitulate because they don't want the heat.
And finally, I think we need to talk a little bit about Signalgate. That's the disclosure
via group text of plans to the Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg to launch missiles against
Houthi rebels in Yemen. I'd say to both of you, I think it's fair to say that this is the first crisis the president
is facing.
Aside from the legal questions it raises, what are your political takeaways for how
this has been handled and how consequential do you see it?
Well, politically, it's been handled terribly, but I don't think it's very consequential
politically.
I mean, I don't think that this is going to really hurt Donald Trump the way the retreat
from Afghanistan hurt Joe Biden.
I mean, this is not something that touches a lot of people's lives.
It certainly makes the Trump administration look incompetent.
Their defenses on this don't really add up.
But I think as something that is a long lasting
political problem, I don't see it.
Well, and the Trump playbook partially is to muddy
the waters and make things seem more complicated
than they are.
I mean, they've really, what we've seen is this
Trump spin cycle that's gone into overdrive,
kind of using that Trump playbook, denying, downplaying,
attacking the
messenger, of course.
And you know, Trump and others have made this more about, you know, the problem, the mistake,
quote unquote, was letting a reporter into the chat, not the fact that they were using
this app in the first place to discuss such sensitive details.
And I think that that is a place I thought was interesting listening to Trump, because
he was clear that he thought that too, because when they asked him, when reporters asked him about Pete Hegseth, who had been the one to deliver so many of the specific details of this upcoming imminent military attack plan, he said that Hegseth, how do you bring Hegseth into it? He had nothing to do with it. Look, it's all a witch hunt.
So for him, the it really had to do with
that Mike Waltz or his staff
let this journalist into this chat,
rather than the much bigger issue of the security
of these kinds of details
that any American foreign adversary
would wanna get their hands on.
The it here is we got caught.
That's the problem that Trump sees
that because they let in the reporter, this got published. He doesn't think the fact that they
were doing something without any kind of protection for national security secrets was the problem.
No, we got caught. That was the it. That was the problem. I am a admit, I'm a little surprised that
no one's been fired and someone may still be fired
over it, in part because I think that Donald Trump has long seen that as effective management.
You fire people.
And I always thought one of his better moments in his debate against Joe Biden is when he
attacked Biden saying, you haven't fired a single person.
I felt like that was a solid political hit.
Like, accountability is still popular.
And Trump likes to fire people. And this seemed like such an obvious thing that you could maybe fire
someone and move on, but maybe he still will. It hadn't happened yet.
Aaron Powell Well, who he did fire five days after he was inaugurated were more than a dozen
inspectors general. When you have a bipartisan group of senators, Roger Ricker from Mississippi,
who is the Armed Services Chairman, saying, hey, we want to get an expedited inspector general review, makes it a little
harder when the Pentagon inspector general has been fired.
Good point.
All right, one more break.
And when we get back, time for Can't Let It Go.
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That's the part of the show where we talk about the things we just can't stop thinking
about, politics or otherwise.
Domenico, I'm going to let you go first this week.
What can't you let go of?
You know, I can't let go.
Honestly, what's nice is this is my favorite time of the year. It's not just the weather changing, but it's the idea of
spring and spring being, you know, hope springing eternal, right? And there's so many signs of that,
whether it's the cherry blossoms here in DC or in something that I really enjoy, opening day for
baseball, which happened this week, of course.
It's a little cold for baseball, frankly, in my opinion, in a lot of parts of the country
in the Northeast.
But it still makes you feel like, you know, there's still a chance.
And everyone starts out 0 and 0.
Unfortunately, the Mets lost their opening day.
So now we're 0 and 1.
So things are not quite as sunny.
But it's still just great to be able to have baseball,
to have March Madness, to have the cherry blossoms.
It's just a great time of year.
I love springtime, Domenico.
You're so cheerful and optimistic.
I just take my allergy medicine.
Same, same.
So Sue, what can't you let go of?
The thing I can't let go of this week, and I genuinely tried to find something else to
talk about because it is a little horrifying, but it is truly the thing that I cannot let
go of. I don't know if you all saw this story out of Barton County, Kansas, where local
news reported there was a babysitter and like many scared kids at bedtime was telling her
there's a monster under my bed, there's a monster under my bed.
Oh, I saw this.
And she said, no, there's not and bent down to look under the bed to show them that there
was no monsters under there and came face to face with a man lying under the bed.
And I would say, as someone who both was a kid who had those fears, who was a babysitter,
who often did that, and now as a mom who has to be the person that assuages the child,
I was like, you never thought this was something that could actually happen.
But everyone's okay.
And it wasn't the dad playing a joke. It was not a joke. It was actually, it was someone that had lived in the house before
and was supposed to, it was under a restraining order to stay away. So it sounds like they
might have known the person, but once she screamed, they had an altercation. He fled
the house. He was later picked up by police. But I feel like what a traumatic event for
both, but how vindicating in some ways for that child, right? Like imagine if she would
have been like, just get in bed and you're fine. Yeah, but how many nights is she gonna be sleeping with mom now?
Because I don't know if I'd go back to bed to be totally honest with you. It's like, it was kind of
a little bit scary to even watch Monsters, Inc. as fun a movie as that is. You know, you've got
somebody coming out the closet that's like literally your worst nightmare as a kid. That would end in
my babysitting career in high school for sure.
Mara, what about you?
What can't you let go of?
Well, mine is just so trivial compared to the beauty
and optimism of spring and the existential terror
of someone under the bed.
My Can't Let It Go is a story from the Associated Press.
A Pennsylvania man was going through security
at a New Jersey airport and he was found
to have a live turtle
concealed in his pants.
He was, TSA found it because the body scanner alarm
went off, now I don't know what about a turtle
causes the alarm to go off, but it was in his groin area
and he was questioned and he reached into his pants,
pulled out the turtle, it was only five inches long,
it was wrapped in a towel.
Oh my God.
He said it was a red ear slider turtle,
which is popular as pets,
and my son used to have a turtle.
Anyway, he was escorted from the checkpoint area
and missed his flight,
and we don't know what happened to the turtle.
It was confiscated.
There's a lot of innuendo there, Mara.
Yeah, almost too much for this podcast. I'm glad it wasn't a snapping turtle. All right that is all from us this week. Our
executive producer is Mathony Mottori, Casey Morrell edits the podcast. Our producers are Bria Suggs
and Kelly Wessinger. Special thanks to Andrew Sussman. I'm Susan Davis, iCover Politics. I'm
Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent. And I'm Mara Eliasson,
senior national political correspondent. And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
Does one of you want to ask me? So what's yours, Sue? What's yours? Can you do it with a little
feeling? What's your can't let it go, Sue? This message comes from Wyse, the app for doing things in other currencies.
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