Up First from NPR - Biden's Reelection Woes, French Election Results, Biles Punches Olympic Ticket

Episode Date: July 1, 2024

President Biden's debate performance has led to concerns about his reelection campaign. French voters have given the country's far right a victory in the first round of parliamentary elections, and Am...erican gymnast Simone Biles is heading to her third Olympics in Paris next month.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Dana Farrington, Nick Spicer, Russell Lewis, Janaya Williams and HJ Mai. It was produced by Claire Murashima, Chris Thompson and Lindsay Totty. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Democrats want to shift the conversation away from President Biden's listless performance in last week's debate. But can they convince voters to focus on former President Donald Trump's policies instead? I'm Michelle Martin, that's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News. In France, the far right has won a decisive victory in the first round of parliamentary elections. What does this mean for the centrist government of President Emmanuel Macron? And gymnast Simone Biles dominated at the U.S. Women's Olympic Trials last night. Getting back in the gym and working hard and trusting the process, I knew I'd be back. She is headed to Paris to compete in what will be her third Olympic Games.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Stay with us. We've got all the news you need to start your day. Now, our change will honour 100 years of the Royal Canadian Air Force and their dedicated service to communities at home and abroad. From the skies to our change, this $2 commemorative circulation coin marks their storied past and promising future. Find the limited edition Royal Canadian Air Force $2 coin today. We all hear things differently. That can be tough when there's so much noise. This election year, we're a space to speak up and to listen. Listen to 1A for the latest on election 2024, only from NPR. President Biden's debate performance has worried many about his re-election prospects.
Starting point is 00:01:36 Yes, Democrats have spent the last few days in uncomfortable public and private debates following the official presidential one last week. Instead of focusing on Biden's performance, they're trying to shift the conversation to Trump's character and policies. Here's former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi yesterday on CNN. It's not about performance in terms of a debate. It's about performance in a presidency. All right, here to discuss the state of the campaign is NPR senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith. Tamara, since the debate, all I've heard about is different possible scenarios that would change the ticket. But what's the reality here for Democrats? There are some loud calls from places like the New York Times editorial page for President Biden to step aside. But Biden and his team have a long history of being counted out and
Starting point is 00:02:19 then proving the doubters wrong. It's basically in the Biden DNA, a political DNA at this point. He and his aides have been working the phone since the debate on Thursday, talking to Democrats, donors, party leaders, and others, and admitting that the debate was bad, and talking about how to move forward. And the campaign has raised a lot of money since the debate. So based on everything people in the campaign and the White House have told me, Biden isn't going anywhere. But Maryland Congressman Jamie Raskin told MSNBC Democrats are talking about next steps. We're having a serious conversation about what to do. One thing I can tell you is that regardless of what President Biden decides, Our party is going to be unified and our party also needs him at the very center of our deliberations and our campaign. I can't tell you how widespread or serious this
Starting point is 00:03:13 conversation is. Publicly, top elected Democrats are already coalescing behind Biden once again. And if they didn't want an 81-year-old to be the nominee, these conversations had to have happened two or three years ago and actually led to action. Yeah. All right. So what's the math looking like now? Well, Biden was trailing Trump narrowly before the debate in most polls. So far, at least the campaign doesn't think that that has dramatically changed. That's because the electorate is super polarized and voters didn't start being worried about Biden's age on Thursday night. This is a pre-existing condition. The reality is Biden has already locked up the Democratic nomination and has enough pledged delegates to avoid a fight at the convention. So at this point, essentially the only way Joe Biden isn't the nominee is if Joe Biden decides to step aside.
Starting point is 00:04:07 And as we've said, that isn't in his nature. If he were to drop out, there would be a huge fight among the next generation of Democrats and it would be an accelerated one. There's no guarantee that any of the names you hear thrown around would have a better chance against Trump. So this is a very challenging position that Democrats have actually been in the entire time against an opponent they see as an existential threat to democracy. Okay, those are the Democrats. What are Republicans doing? Well, they're consolidating further behind former President Donald Trump. NPR obtained a memo where Trump's top advisors say they plan to streamline and simplify the Republican Party platform.
Starting point is 00:04:46 This year's approach will mean fewer specifics, fewer pages, and a message built around Trump. You know, they feel like they are winning and they want to avoid putting anything in the platform that critics can run with. That process, I'm told, will be closed to the press and take place a week before the convention later this month, which is unusual. Typically, cameras are in the room. And actually, more big news for Donald Trump on the horizon as we're waiting for Supreme Court opinions this morning, including on presidential immunity. Indeed, the justices were considering Trump's argument that a president should have absolute immunity. The decision would clear the way for the federal trial in D.C. on
Starting point is 00:05:26 criminal charges for Trump's actions on and around January 6th. Or more likely, the court could foreclose any chance of this getting in front of a jury before the election. That is NPR senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith. Tamara, thanks. You're welcome. French President Emmanuel Macron's gamble in calling a snap election has apparently backfired. French voters turned out massively Sunday to choose candidates for a new parliament, but they did not choose Macron's party. Their first choice was the far-right national rally of Marine Le Pen.
Starting point is 00:06:05 Macron's party came in a distant third of three main voting blocs after the left. There will be a second round runoff next Sunday to decide how France's 577-seat legislature will be divided up. All right, let's go now to NPR's Eleanor Beardsley in Paris, who has been following it all. Eleanor, polls had predicted that the far-right would lead, so is any of this really a surprise? Well, no, though Macron clearly hoped until the end that the French would mobilize to support him over the two extremes, which is how he portrayed things in the short campaign leading up to yesterday's vote. And we're told that as his party saw the huge surge in voter turnout yesterday, more than 65 percent, Macron's camp became hopeful. But as you said,
Starting point is 00:06:45 his plan to get a mandate for his last three years in office clearly backfired. Let's listen to an elated Marine Le Pen, leader of the far right, addressing her supporters shortly after returns came in last night. She says democracy has spoken and the French have placed our party in the lead, practically erasing Macron's bloc in parliament. And then Le Pen added that the French have clearly chosen to turn the page on seven years of what she called corrosive and contemptuous power. The far right now says it must have an absolute majority to be able to put in place its program of getting France back on the rails. So they are gunning for at least 289 seats going into this second round. All right. So has President Macron said anything? No. His young prime minister who led the campaign, Gabriel Attal, was put out front.
Starting point is 00:07:36 He spoke. Imagine Macron did not even consult Attal before he dissolved the parliament in the first place. He was said to have been taken by total surprise, but he played the game, he campaigned hard, and this loss was clearly a huge disappointment. Attal looked glum and very worried when he spoke last night. Let's listen to him. He says, never in our democracy has our parliament risked being dominated by the far right.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Attal said, our objective is clear, to keep the far right from getting majority in the second round and putting in place its dangerous agenda, he called it. And he said everyone in his party must not give one single vote to the far right. So what happens now? We are heading into a week of furious campaigning with very high stakes. Many are warning that French democracy itself is under threat if the far right gets an absolute majority. So everyone but Le Pen supporters is calling to block what is being called a racist, divisive far right that doesn't share French universal values. The left came out in second place. They're still hoping maybe they could get the majority. It's not very likely, but let's see. The choice today seems to be between having a parliament where there's no majority, in essence, what's called a hung parliament, or having the far right in power.
Starting point is 00:08:48 So a far right that's a France that's far right versus a France that's ungovernable. And many clearly prefer the latter. What would happen, though, if the far right does get an absolute majority? Well, it means that Jordan Bardella, 28-year-old young protege of Marine Le Pen, the new star of the party, is made prime minister. They will put their agenda in place, slowing or stopping immigration, restoring order, as they say. But no one really knows what to expect. The far-right party has never been in power. It's always been portrayed as the boogeyman. French voters have always banded together to keep them out of power.
Starting point is 00:09:20 So we are in uncharted waters, and I can tell you I have never seen France more divided than it is today. That's NPR's Eleanor Beardsley in Paris. Thank you. Thank you, A. Gymnastics superstar Simone Biles is heading to her third Olympics. She is looking to cap her remarkable comeback after pulling out of some events at the Tokyo Games three years ago amid struggles with her mental health that came in the wake of revelations she'd been among those abused by a former team doctor. Now she's ready for Paris. She won the U.S. Olympic trials last night by five and a half points, a huge margin. NPR sports correspondent Becky Sullivan was there in Minneapolis.
Starting point is 00:10:05 Becky, how did Simone Biles look? You know, she looked loose. She looked happy. And I say that for the most part because she did have a couple missteps, but she still finished, as you said, like just well ahead of the pack. And so some of these missteps I'm talking about, she had like a big slip on the balance beam. She fell off, which wasn't just her. A couple others had the same issue with the beam. And then she also had a few extra steps in the vault landing. But the difficulty of what Simone Biles is attempting here is so high that the little mistakes like that just doesn't matter. And so afterwards, she just had great humor about her night, the slips and all. We have a lot of weight on our shoulders to go out there and prove that we're better athletes.
Starting point is 00:10:41 We're more mature. We're smarter. We're more consistent. But don't quote me on that because not tonight. But, you know, we have to get that out of the way. You feel me? We have to get that out of the way. But we are in training. So if we can just do what we do in training, then I think we're going to hit it out the ballpark. So you can just hear it in her voice there.
Starting point is 00:11:01 I mean, she feels good. She's back. Yeah, she can laugh because she qualified. I mean, if she didn't qualify, maybe it wouldn't be so funny. Now, what might we see from her in Paris? Well, she is instantly going to be the favorite for the individual all-around medal, as well as the vault and the floor exercise. She also did win the balance beam at a world competition recently.
Starting point is 00:11:19 And so that could be in play. And I think a thing I should mention here is that she's 27 now. And so her main competitors will all be younger than her. And it just doesn't matter. With her competing, the U.S. will also be the favorite to win the team all around, which is something that the U.S. won back in 2012. Again, in 2016, they took gold. But then in Tokyo, they took home silver after Biles withdrew from that event.
Starting point is 00:11:42 And so winning gold there is now a focus of the women. Biles and her teammates used the word redemption to talk about it. So here's Suni Lee, who's also one of the ones headed to Paris. I think that we really want a team gold. I feel like this is the same team basically as 2020. So it's kind of like a redemption tour. All right. So who else is on the team? Well, so there's Lee, of course, who you just heard. She was the surprise kind of breakout star of the Tokyo games three years ago. She won the gold medal in the individual all around after Biles withdrew. So she's back. The other people who are returning are Jordan Childs and Jade Carey. So there's lots of experience on this team. And then there is one newcomer. Her name is Hesley Rivera. She just
Starting point is 00:12:22 turned 16 last month. This is her first Olympic games. All right. So when it comes to gymnastics, the women's team is always the main event. What about the men, though? Do they have a shot at a medal? You know, they might have a shot at that medal. So the men's team hasn't won a team medal since 2008. And then they didn't even win any individual medals in Tokyo, which was an incredibly disappointing showing. But this year, they have a star in the making in Fred Richard. He is a 20-year-old who has made it his mission not just to have success in the Olympics, but also to raise the profile of men's gymnastics overall. So he says he's not aiming just for any old medal. He wants gold.
Starting point is 00:12:56 That'll be an uphill battle for the men, but we'll see what they can do. That's NPR sports correspondent Becky Sullivan at the Olympic Trials in Minneapolis. Becky, thanks. You are welcome. And that's Up First for Monday, July 1st. I'm E. Martinez. And I'm Michelle Martin. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Dana Farrington, Nick Spicer, Russell Lewis, H.J. Mai, and Jenea Williams.
Starting point is 00:13:20 It was produced by Claire Murashima, Chris Thomas, and Lindsay Totti. We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent, and our technical director is Zach Coleman. We hope you'll start your day here with us tomorrow. And thanks for listening to Up First. You can find more in-depth coverage of the stories we talked about today and a lot more on NPR's Morning Edition. That's the radio show that Steve Inskeep, Leila Fadal, Michelle Martin, and I host. You can find Morning Edition and your NPR station at stations.npr.org.

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