Up First from NPR - Global Markets Plummet, Wrongful Deportation Deadline, Second Measles Death
Episode Date: April 7, 2025President Trump's trade war has prompted further market declines. The Trump administration has a midnight deadline to return a man deported to El Salvador in what a federal judge has called a "grievou...s error". And, a second child in Texas has died of measles according to state health officials. 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 Kara Platoni, Russell Lewis, Marc Silver, Lisa Thomson and Janaya Williams. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. 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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President Trump's trade war prompted even more market declines, which he dismissed.
I don't want anything to go down, but sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something.
What's making investors panic and why have the odds of a recession gone up?
I'm Steve Inskeep with A Martinez and this is Up First from NPR News.
The Trump administration has a midnight deadline to return a man deported to El Salvador in
what a federal judge called a grievous error.
So why has the Department of Justice put its attorney on administrative leave?
On day one, I issued a memo that you are to vigorously advocate on behalf of the United
States.
And a second child in Texas has died of measles. It's not surprising that in an outbreak of this size, that we're starting to see deaths.
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We find out soon just how much lower
the world financial system may go.
Markets have fallen since last Wednesday
when President Trump launched a trade war
against most of the world.
Asian and European markets fell overnight
and not by a little.
Japan's Nikkei index dropped almost 8% of its value.
Here in the United States, economists are increasing their odds of a recession.
The investment bank Goldman Sachs
says we're close to 50-50 odds.
And in making that estimate,
Goldman assumes that Trump will not go through
with a plan for the biggest tariffs to hit on Wednesday.
If that should happen, Goldman simply forecasts recession.
MPR financial correspondent, Marie Aspen,
joins us now with more. US markets erased $6 trillion in value
late last week, Maria, what are we looking at this week?
Well, last week was pretty terrible,
but it's looking like this week may be even worse.
By the end of last week, the Dow had fallen almost 8%,
with the other major indices tumbling even further.
The tech-having NASDAQ is
now in a bear market, meaning it's fallen more than 20% from a recent high. And
it's looking like the pain will continue today. We'll get a clearer idea later
this morning when US markets open, but when the futures markets opened last
night, meaning that traders could start putting in their orders to buy and sell,
prices immediately turned red. By early this morning, Dow futures were down around 1300 points or more than 3%.
And it's not just stocks.
Oil futures are down and Bitcoin, which trades around the clock, is down below $77,000.
Remember, it hit $100,000 not that long ago, weeks after President Trump was elected on
the industry's hopes for a more crypto-friendly president.
Oh yeah, I remember a lot of Wall Street figures backed Trump last year. What are they saying now?
Well, Wall Street has been slow to speak out, but today or last night, billionaire fund manager and
Trump supporter Bill Ackman, who endorsed the president during last year's election,
has warned on X that
the U.S. is destroying confidence in the U.S. as a place to do business.
And he's called for a 90-day pause on tariffs to avoid what he calls economic nuclear war.
And he is just one of many people sounding the alarm.
NPR last night talked to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.
He says Wall Street is panicked.
Investors are very nervous about what's going on.
I'm sure they're calling lawmakers and the White House to pressure them to come to some
kind of terms with other countries over these tariffs, bring this global trade war to an
end because if they don't, soon the economy is going to go into recession.
And he's hardly alone with that warning.
The investment bank JP Morgan also warned last
week that if Trump keeps the tariffs, they could push the US and the world into a recession.
Even if things don't get that bad, this current market sell-off could have real consequences
and real pain for most consumers. About 60% of US households own stocks, and a lot of people have
their retirement accounts and other long-term savings invested in the market.
And also, let's not forget these new tariffs are widely expected to raise prices on almost everything that Americans import.
Okay, so a lot of warnings from Wall Street for the president. What has he said about the market sell-off?
Trump has mostly shrugged it off. Yesterday Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CBS that the tariffs are here to stay.
And then last night Trump was asked by reporters about how much pain he'd be willing to tolerate.
And this is what he said.
I think your question is so stupid.
I don't want anything to go down.
But sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something.
But while Trump is calling these sweeping tariffs medicine,
almost everyone else is warning that they are bad
for consumers, investors, businesses,
and the global economy.
All right, that's NPR's Maria Aspin.
Thanks a lot.
Thank you.
The Trump administration has until midnight to return a man who was deported to a mega
prison in El Salvador by mistake.
A federal judge ordered the administration to bring back Quilmar Armando Albrego Garcia,
who was arrested and deported last month in what the judge described as an illegal act.
The Justice Department is appealing that order and it placed the attorney who argued its
case on administrative leave. MPR correspondent correspondent Joel Rose joins us now with more. So Joel, let's start with the judge's
order. Why did she direct the Trump administration to bring him back? Yeah, the Trump administration
has admitted that he was deported by mistake because of what they describe as an administrative
error. Abrego Garcia had been living in Maryland for over a decade. He has a form of legal protection
known as withholding of removal. In spite of that, ICE officers arrested Abrego Garcia had been living in Maryland for over a decade. He has a form of legal protection known as withholding of removal.
In spite of that, ICE officers arrested Abrego Garcia last month and a few days later he
was deported to El Salvador along with hundreds of other men accused of being gang members.
But the Justice Department argues there is nothing they can do now because Abrego Garcia
is already out of the US.
Federal District Judge Paula Zines rejected that argument.
She found that his arrest was, quote, wholly lawless.
His ongoing detention in a Salvadoran prison, quote,
shocks the conscience.
She noted that the US is paying El Salvador
to hold these prisoners,
and she ordered the Trump administration
to bring him back to Maryland by midnight tonight.
All right, what has the Trump administration said?
They are not backing down.
The White House insists that Abrego Garcia
is a member of the Salvadoran gang called MS-13,
though his lawyers deny that.
They say that allegation dates back to the time
he was arrested in 2019 in the parking lot of a Home Depot.
His lawyers say the gang allegation is based largely
on a confidential informant who accused Abrego Garcia
of being a member of the gang in New York,
which is a state where he has never lived.
Abrego Garcia's lawyers say he has no criminal record in any country.
Nevertheless, the White House has doubled down, calling a Brago Garcia a leader in MS-13
and a convicted gang member.
But if the Trump administration has evidence to support that, they have not put it on the
record in this case.
Judge Zinni said during the hearing that without any evidence, like a criminal indictment or
complaint, these gang allegations are just quote unquote chatter.
Joel, I saw over the weekend,
the Justice Department put the attorney
who argued the case on Friday on administrative leave.
Why did that happen?
This is remarkable.
The Justice Department lawyer, Erez Reveni,
argued the case on Friday.
Reveni has argued many cases on immigration
for administrations of both parties. And he had some very candid answers for Judge by the Justice Department. Here is Attorney General Pam Bondi explaining why yesterday.
He said,
I have not received to date an answer that I find satisfactory.
The next day he was put on leave, administrative leave by the Justice Department.
Here is Attorney General Pam Bondi explaining why yesterday.
He said,
I have not received to date an answer that I find satisfactory.
The next day he was put on leave, administrative leave by the Justice Department.
Here is Attorney General Pam Bondi explaining why yesterday on Fox News Sunday.
I firmly said on day one, I issued a memo that you are to vigorously advocate on behalf
of the United States.
He shouldn't have taken the case.
He shouldn't have argued it if that's what he was going to do.
So Joel, what what's, what's happens now?
The justice department is appealing.
They argue that courts do not have jurisdiction over this case because
Abrego Garcia is in the custody of El Salvador and essentially there is
nothing that judge Zinni's can do.
The justice department is asking the fourth circuit court of appeals
for an emergency stay, but if they do not get one, that midnight deadline
will still be in place.
And then the big question is whether they will comply with it.
All right, that's MPR's Joel Rose.
Joel, thank you.
You're welcome.
A second child in Texas has died of measles,
according to state health officials.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attended the child's funeral
on Sunday and identified the child as 8-year-old Daisy Hildebrand. Until this year, the United
States had not reported a measles death for nearly a decade. Now an outbreak centered
in Texas has 481 confirmed cases.
MPR's Maria Godoy has been following all this for us.
So Maria, the second child to die of measles this year,
we've learned that she died on Thursday.
What else do we know about her?
Well, Texas health officials say the girl was not vaccinated
and had no reported underlying health conditions.
She was hospitalized after getting sick with measles
and she died from what doctors described as measles pulmonary failure,
which basically means the lungs can't really provide enough oxygen anymore.
And is this a common complication from the measles?
You know, measles is a respiratory illness, and it can often lead to serious lung complications,
including pneumonia and super infections of the lung, as well as other complications like brain swelling.
Vaccines work so well that many of us have forgotten just how devastating measles can
be.
This latest death serves as a terrible reminder.
So how worried should people be for the possibility of more deaths?
Well before the first measles vaccines were developed in the early 1960s, measles used
to kill 400-500 people in this country every year.
Even now, about one or two out of every one thousand measles cases are fatal. I spoke with Dr. Adam Ratner.
He's a pediatric infectious disease specialist in New York, and he is unfortunately not surprised by these fatalities.
Every time a child gets the measles, you roll the dice and you have a one in a thousand or two in a thousand chance of that child dying.
you rolled the dice and you have a one in a thousand or two in a thousand chance of that child dying. And so it's not surprising that in an outbreak of this size that we're starting to see deaths.
Ratner says these are deaths that vaccines could prevent.
And you know, vaccination rates have been trending downwards nationwide for several years.
He says, especially in areas like Gaines County, Texas, where the outbreak is centered and where vaccination rates are just above 80%, that just sets the
stage for outbreaks because measles is extraordinarily contagious.
Yeah. How has the Trump administration responded to all this?
Well, Secretary Kennedy traveled to Texas on Sunday. In a post on X, he said he went
to console the family of the child who died, he said the CDC is deploying teams to Texas to help with the outbreak, and he called the measles vaccine
quote, the most effective way to prevent the spread of measles.
And that is notable because in prior statements, he's called vaccines a personal choice.
But in another post Sunday, Kennedy praised doctors use of treatments that have no evidence
to support them when it comes to measles.
And, you know, meanwhile, President Trump was asked about the outbreak on Sunday night.
He downplayed the size, but he said if it progresses, the US will have to take what he called very strong action.
And I should note that we are seeing these outbreaks at a time when the administration has moved to cut more than
11 billion dollars in public health
funding to states.
So, Maria, I mean, what's now with measles in the U.S.?
Well, so measles was declared eliminated in this country in 2000, but this year we have
five states where measles is currently spreading.
In fact, the U.S. has already seen more than 600 measles cases this year.
That's more than double the number of cases it reported in all of last year, and it's
only April.
That's NPR's Maria Godoy. Thank you very much, Maria.
My pleasure.
That's Up First for Monday, April 7th. I'm Ian Martinez.
And I'm Steve Inskeep. Your next listen is Consider This from NPR.
We here at Up First give you three big stories of the day and our colleagues at Consider This
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Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Kara Platoni, Russell Lewis, Mark Silver, Lisa Thompson, and Jania Williams.
It was produced by Ziad Butch, Nia Dumas, and Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from Nisha Hines and our technical director is Carly Strange.
Join us again tomorrow.
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