Up First from NPR - FBI Director Wray To Step Down, U.S. Life Expectancy, DNC Seeks New Leadership
Episode Date: December 12, 2024What does a change at the top mean for the FBI? Director Christopher Wray announced he will resign next month. Shooting an insurance executive in the back produced a disturbing response about America'...s healthcare industry. The Democratic National Committee is meeting in Washington over the next two days to reflect on the election results and hear pitches from candidates for leadership positions.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 Anna Yukhananov, Diane Webber, Megan Pratz, HJ Mai and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Ben Abrams. We get engineering support from Neisha Heinis and our technical director is Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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What does a change at the top mean for the FBI?
Director Christopher Wray is resigning.
President-elect Trump appointed him in 2017, but now he wants a nominee who promised retribution
for Trump's critics.
I'm Stephen Skeep with Amartinus, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Shooting an insurance executive in the back produced a disturbing response and that includes
real life conversations about health care.
So our correspondent pursues a question.
Why do we spend so much on health care for a life expectancy that is comparatively low?
And what do Democrats want from their next party chair?
The Democratic National Committee is meeting in Washington over the next two days to reflect
on the election results and hear pitches from candidates.
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We now know how the FBI director will respond
to the president-elect who wants to replace him.
Yeah, President-elect Trump appointed Christopher Wray
during his first term back in 2017,
but now Trump wants to nominate a loyalist, Cash Patel, and made it clear he wants Wray to
go.
The director says he will step down at the end of the Biden administration next month
and three years before the end of his term.
NPR Justice correspondent Ryan Lucas is covering this story and he's come by our studios very
early this morning.
Ryan, good to see you.
Good morning.
So how did Wray explain his decision?
Well, Wray made this announcement in a town hall that he had yesterday with FBI employees.
And what he said is that he's given us a lot of thought and he came to the conclusion that
stepping down in January with the change in administration is the right thing to do for
the FBI. He said this is the best way to avoid, as he put it, dragging the Bureau deeper into
the fray. He also said this. This is not easy for me. I love this place. I love our mission. I love our people. But
my focus is and always has been on us and on doing what's right for the FBI.
Now, Ray said the the FBI's work is critical. That won't change. And he also said that the
FBI's commitment to
independence, to objectivity and its defense
of the rule of law, he says that those things
must not change.
Which of course, Trump's critics fear that's
exactly what Trump wants to change with this
new appointee.
What has Trump said about Ray's decision?
Well, Trump was quite happy with it.
He called it a great day for America and said
that Ray's departure means an end to what
Trump says is the weaponization of the justice system.
Now, Trump, of course, is the guy who made Chris Ray FBI director after he fired James
Comey in 2017.
Ray came on, tried to steady the FBI at what was a very tumultuous time.
This job, of course, comes with a 10-year term, something that in theory is supposed
to insulate it from partisan politics.
Ray certainly defended the Bureau's independence. He tried to keep it out of the political fights
on Capitol Hill, but that was almost impossible to do with the sort of politically charged
investigations that the FBI has been involved in over the past several years. And I'm thinking
here of the Russia investigation, the investigation into the January 6th attack on the US Capitol,
the investigation into President Biden's son, on the US Capitol, the investigation into President
Biden's son Hunter. And then of course, there are the investigations into Trump's efforts to
overturn the 2020 election, as well as his handling of mishandling of classified documents.
Trump was and remains, as we noted at the top, a fierce critic of Ray and the FBI. But I have to
say, he's not alone. Republicans on Capitol Hill have also soured on Ray
over the seven years that he's led the FBI.
Some of that relates to Trump and some of it
is because of separate issues.
Got it.
Okay, so now the confirmation fight is over Kash Patel,
the nominee to replace Ray.
What are his prospects?
Well, look, Patel is a polarizing figure.
He's a close ally of Trump.
He'd worked at the Justice Department then on Capitol Hill
and held several positions in the first Trump administration.
He is seen as a loyalist.
He's talked a lot in public about dismantling the deep state,
going after Trump's perceived political enemies
that includes in the FBI, the Justice Department elsewhere
in the government, but also in the media,
something, of course, that Democrats are concerned about.
Like Trump, Patel claims that the justice system
has been weaponized against Trump and conservatives more broadly, a lot of
Republicans agree, they are frustrated with the FBI, they think it needs a
shake-up, and they see Patel as someone who wants to do that. So at this point at
least, Patel doesn't appear to be generating the sort of blowback that
some of Trump's other picks have, but we're still more than a month away from
Trump's inauguration, so we're gonna have to see how this all plays out.
And Piers, Ryan Lucas will be covering it, whatever happens.
Good to see you.
Thanks, Steve.
At first, the targeted killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson triggered a flood of posts
about America's health insurance industry.
Yeah, even disturbing celebrations.
Now, since suspect Luigi Mangione's arrest,
some attention has turned to a handwritten note
that police say they found on him.
According to the AP, which obtained a copy,
the note talked about the disconnect
between the expensive healthcare system
and low life expectancy in the United States.
And that is something MPR Selena Simmons-Duffin
has reported on a lot.
So she's here to tell us more about it Selena,
how long are Americans expected to live for?
Well, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
latest calculations put America's life expectancy
at 77 and a half years.
And that's quite low compared to the life expectancy
for countries like Canada and Japan and Australia.
The average
for high income countries is 80 years. So at 77 and a half years, American life expectancy is on
par with countries like Ecuador and Croatia. Okay. So what more does that figure tell us though?
Well, life expectancy isn't just do elderly people live to 77 or 80, just a few years difference.
It really captures people dying at all stages of life. And in the U.S 80, just a few years difference, it really captures people
dying at all stages of life.
And in the US, there are a few things that researchers say pull our life expectancy numbers
down.
All of the problems everybody knows about about how expensive and fragmented and frustrating
our health care system is, that contributes, but it is not the whole story.
Here is Dr. Stephen Wolf of Virginia Commonwealth University, who's written a lot on this topic.
Research shows that about 10 to 20 percent of health outcomes are attributable to health care.
So the majority of the reason for poor life expectancy in the United States
exists outside of the health care space.
Outside of the health care space. So, you know, what are those factors?
Well, there's everything from poor diet
and physical inactivity to child poverty,
to traffic fatalities.
It would be nice if there was just one simple answer,
but the truth is it's really complicated.
Wolf worked on a landmark report
about 10 years ago on this.
It's 400 pages long.
It's called Shorter Lives, Poorer Health. It's called shorter lives, poorer health.
He says public policies also play a role. For example, lax regulation of industries
and products can lead to health problems. We see it in the food industry. We see it
in the firearm industry. The opioid epidemic began with the licensing of OxyContin, a drug
that other countries throughout Europe
and elsewhere would not approve.
Drug overdoses account for many deaths of young people,
people in their prime,
and that is one thing that drives US life expectancy down
compared to countries that don't have an opioid epidemic.
But I heard Dr. Wolff mentioned the firearm industry,
so what role does gun violence play?
Well, gun deaths in people in their youth and midlife is another big reason why the
U.S. has lower life expectancy. Guns have been the leading cause of death for Americans
under age 17 for several years now. One expert I've spoken with estimates that two years
of the difference between the U.S. and other countries could be attributed to the ready availability of guns here.
So there is an irony to this.
The victim in this case, the case that sparked this conversation, United Healthcare CEO Brian
Thompson was only 50 years old when he was fatally shot.
That's NPR's health policy correspondent, Selena Simmons-Duffitt.
Thank you very much.
You're welcome.
The next chair of the Democratic National Committee will have their work cut out for them.
Yeah, the party lost control of the White House and the Senate and failed to retake control of the House of Representatives.
They're also out of power in most states.
Over the next two days, top DNC members will meet
in Washington to discuss rules for picking new leadership
and reflect on 2024.
MPR Stephen Fowler has been talking with Democrats
across the country about last month's election results
and also about what might come next.
So Stephen, the future of the Democratic Party
is probably not gonna be solved in the next few months,
but its leader will be
What's that process gonna look like? So today the DNC rules and bylaws committee meets it's gonna be very mundane
They're working through logistical things like how many signatures you need to be nominated for these positions key deadlines and other
Procedural stuff there's also gonna be four forums for leadership candidates in January ahead
of the vote, both virtually and in person, for people to make their pitch ahead of the vote
February 1st. It's important to note, A, that those with the say here are not everyday Democrats,
but rather about 450 Democratic lawmakers, elected committee members, activists, and
state party chairs like the head of the Mississippi Democrats,
State Representative Sheck Taylor.
He told me this week it's also important to note that Democrats aren't in the White
House or in control of either chamber of Congress.
And that means that the next DNC chairman will be able to rule this party, Carblanc,
which is actually pretty exciting if you choose the right person.
So with that kind of power, though, I mean, what do these Democrats want from their next
party chair?
The last few election cycles have seen the National Party fade in relevance and strategy.
Campaigns and super PACs have taken the lead in highly specific and very expensive battleground
races.
But Taylor's one of several Dems that I've spoken with who say that there's growing
recognition that the DNC has to invest more into things like year-round organizing and
candidate recruitment and fundraising, and to help state parties, especially in Republican-controlled
states with those efforts too.
That's an area that Shasti Conrad, chair of the Washington State Democrats, says she
wants to focus on as she runs for a vice chair position.
We have got to move the money out of the beltway. It cannot just stay in the same sort of consultant
class that have been getting it wrong over and over and over again. There's also a feeling among
a lot of party leaders I've spoken with that the next DNC chair needs to be someone with experience
leading that type of always-on campaigning
style. So it is no surprise that two of the leading candidates are current state party
chairs as well. That's Ken Martin of Minnesota and Ben Wickler of Wisconsin.
Steve, I mean, right after the election, there was a lot of finger pointing about what went
wrong and what could be changed. So it's been a month. How are Democrats feeling now?
Depends on who you ask.
Electing a new head of the party is not going
to magically solve the political issues laid bare
in November's election.
But a look under the hood shows that 2024 did not create
a mandate for Republicans or sound a death knell
for Democrats.
I mean, control of the White House, the Senate, and the House of
Representatives came down to a very, very small number of votes spread across a very few number
of districts and areas. Also, a Donald Trump is Donald Trump. Democrats already have nearly a
decade's worth of a playbook they feel they can use to win back more voters, both Democrats that
stayed home and those
that might have voted for a Republican this time.
That's NPR's Stephen Fowler in Atlanta.
Stephen, good to talk to you again.
Thank you.
And that's up first for Thursday, December 12th.
I'm Ami Martinez.
And I'm Steve Inskeep.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Anna
Yukoninoff, Diane Weber, Megan Pratz, H.J. Mai, and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by
Isaiah Butch, Nia Dumas, and Ben Aitrums. You get engineering support from Nisha
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