Up First from NPR - GOP Platform Released, NATO Summit Begins, Advancements In Organ Donation
Episode Date: July 9, 2024The Republican Party has released its Trump-inspired platform for 2024. European leaders are meeting in Washington, D.C. for the 75th NATO summit, and a new method for organ harvesting is raising lega...l and ethical concerns.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 Nick Spicer, Will Stone, John Helton, Janaya Williams and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Kaity Kline. We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent. And our technical director is Stacey Abbott.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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The Republican Party platform for 2024 is now public.
The document promises a mass deportation, tax cuts, and speaks very carefully about abortion.
How does it appeal to the voters former President Trump needs in the fall?
I'm Steve Inskeep with Leila Fadl, and this is Up First from NPR News.
President Biden is hosting European leaders at the NATO summit in Washington today.
The alliance is focused on supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia,
and leaders are also thinking about the election in the United States.
And doctors have a new way to perform organ transplants for people in need of a liver,
kidney, or heart.
That would have been science fiction just a few years ago.
The procedure is saving lives, but it's also raising major legal and ethical issues.
Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day.
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The Republican Party has published its platform, the principles it will run on for this fall's campaign.
At the urging of former President Trump, the document is very short compared with the documents that both parties have put out in past elections.
It is revealing for what it says and what it leaves out.
NPR's Stephen Fowler has been reading and he joins me now. Hi, Stephen.
Hey there.
So what's your impression?
On the surface, Layla, yeah, it's brief. In 2016, Republicans had more than 66 pages of dense text that sketched out numerous policy
goals if they took power. Now, just 16 pages, that sounds a lot like a rally speech and reads more
like a post on Trump's Truth Social website. There's short bullet points about plans to make
America great again, plus 20 promises typed in all caps,
vowing to do things like seal the border and stop the migrant invasion.
Okay, so a lot of slogans and that term, migrant invasion, to describe people crossing the border jumps out at me.
It's language that was also thrown around a lot during the Trump administration
and then echoed in the racist screed of the shooter in El Paso back in 2019
who carried out that deadly
attack on Latinos in a Walmart. So other than these slogans, do we learn much? You can if you
also combine that with what Trump did his first four years in office before and what he said on
the campaign trail this year. I mean, there's the pledge to enact the largest ever deportation
operation in American history that's central to his stump speeches. He said that would require
help from local police and the National Guard. There's also the suggestion to bring back a travel
ban for Muslim-majority countries he pushed during his first year in office, about to bring back
extreme vetting of immigrants and their backgrounds as they seek to come into the country,
and an aggressive plan to use the military to secure the U.S.-Mexico border.
Okay, a theme there. What else?
Well, there's a call for same-day voting, even though the GOP is pushing its voters to, quote,
swamp the vote and cast ballots early this year. Calls to make America the dominant energy producer in the world come as the U.S. is already the world's leading oil producer, while also including
shout-outs to artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency, two things that are heavy energy consumers.
And Trump's economic proposals, Leila, include more tax cuts and new tariffs on foreign goods that some experts say could lead to more inflation.
So I didn't hear you mention abortion, though, which is a big issue this election.
Trump has been evasive at times on what he would sign into law. Anything on that?
Here's where we see both the political impact of the platform as well
as its limitations. After 35 mentions of the word abortion in 2016's platform, the current platform
only has one. Because of Trump, the official stance now is that states can decide what level
of restrictions to enact. I mean, Republicans have been consistently on the losing side of
this issue at the ballot box ever since that Dobbs Supreme Court decision.
While Republicans do not commit here to a national abortion ban, this platform is not binding in any way, and it doesn't change the views of many of his allies and advocacy groups
who still want that type of restriction and will likely still push for it if Trump wins,
especially given language in the platform about the 14th Amendment's guarantee to life
that leaves the door open for more. And what's been the reaction to the policy paper? Well, even though some anti-abortion groups
are upset at the softening of the language there, there's still Republican unity behind Trump
heading into the convention next week. Democrats are tying it to the larger Project 2025 proposed
by Trump allies to go even further with its proposals to reshape the
government. And everyone seems to agree a second term Trump could get more of this done thanks to
more allies in Congress and the courts. That's NPR's Stephen Fowler in Atlanta. Thank you, Stephen.
Thank you. NATO allies are gathering for a summit in Washington on the 75th anniversary of the alliance's founding in the city, where it all began.
The alliance faces some of its biggest challenges as it looks ahead to political uncertainty in a number of countries, including the United States.
Terry Schultz has covered NATO for many years and joins me now. Hi, Terry.
Good morning, Leila.
Good morning. So just yesterday, Russia launched one of its most brutal attacks on Ukraine to date,
destroying the largest children's hospital in the country.
Will this impact decisions being made at the summit?
Well, Leila, NATO's actually come to expect that Russian President Vladimir Putin will do
something to draw attention to himself ahead of
big events like the summit. But I think in this case, this horrible hospital attack will actually
reinforce support for Ukraine and its longstanding plea for more air defense to block these Russian
missiles and save civilian lives. So we're likely to see announcements on that at this meeting.
Yeah, I was really shocked to see that hospital destroyed. I was there at the beginning of the
war talking to kids being treated.
We know Ukraine will not be offered membership at the summit,
but what is teed up in terms of other kinds of support?
That's right, no membership.
But there are a few items they'll get in this summit declaration.
Leaders are expected to approve, for example, handing over to NATO
the coordination of training Ukrainian soldiers
and the logistics of getting weapons delivered to Ukraine. Those are things the U.S. has largely headed up till now out of
Wiesbaden, Germany. And the idea is that it would be NATO-ized or institutionalized.
The final declaration will also pledge to keep NATO-wide military contributions to Ukraine at
the level of 40 billion euros collectively for at least the next year. Now, Leila, these are
things Secretary General Stoltenberg proposed in part specifically because he was worried about what
might happen if Donald Trump is elected and follows through on those promises to cut off
U.S. participation in NATO and cut off aid to Ukraine. Would this declaration really compel
a potential Trump administration to support it? That's a question I also have because the
declaration isn't binding and NATO doesn't have
any enforcement mechanisms. So if Trump wins another term, I don't see how you hold him to
these pledges. He's even indicated, of course, that he doesn't even feel bound by NATO's most
sacred principle of collective security, the all for one, one for all pledge, which by the way,
as we recall, has only been ever used to help the US after 9-11. And Trump has also tied U.S. solidarity to how much
NATO allies, other NATO allies, spend on defense, believing that the U.S. is carrying everyone else.
He definitely does. And that's been very unsettling to the alliance. And it got
only more so in this campaign cycle when, as you probably remember, Trump said Russia should just
do whatever the hell it wants to NATO allies under spending on defense. And that's, of course, according to this NATO goal of 2% of GDP. Now, 23 of the 32 allies are spending that 2%. But it's
still true that there are too many military capabilities that NATO without the US wouldn't
have. And so allies urgently need to fill those gaps in any case. So it sounds like the allies
were trying to Trump-proof NATO. Did they succeed? It's too early to know, of course, but I'm surprised by one thing.
They're not going to set a new higher target for defense spending.
They all know that 2% of GDP is too low now,
and more ambition might be seen positively by Trump,
but they're not going to do it.
There's, of course, a lot of concern about how admiringly
Trump seems to view Vladimir Putin,
but I think people are quietly optimistic
that he wouldn't actually cut off all U.S. involvement in NATO. And I think, Leila, their best Trump-proofing plan
is having chosen former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte to take over as the next Secretary
General October 1st. Trump knows him. He's even described him as a friend. And Rutte obviously
knew a Trump re-election was a possibility, so he must feel up to it. That's Terry Schultz
reporting from Brussels. Thanks, Terry. Thanks, Layla.
Next, we have news of a new approach to organ donation.
It's a technique to retrieve livers, kidneys, or hearts for those in need. The overall process
is well-estab established. People put
right on their driver's licenses that they're willing to be organ donors. Their organs may
save a life through a transplant. What's new here is the technique for retrieving those organs.
NPR health correspondent Rob Stein got an exclusive chance to watch this happen.
And I'll warn you right now that some people may feel uncomfortable with this story. Hi there, Rob. Hey there, Steve. What is the new technique? It's called NRP,
which stands for normothermic regional perfusion. And it involves hooking up a special external
pump to the organ donor to restart circulation. And sometimes the heartbeat right after the donor has been declared dead.
The idea is to keep the livers, kidneys, and hearts from getting damaged. Dr. Marty Sellers
is a surgeon with Tennessee Donor Services in Nashville who let me shadow him on two recent
attempts to perform the NRP procedure. It's hard to overstate the importance of it. It's
revolutionized the number of organs that we are able to get for transplant, and it's also improved the function that they have when they get transplanted. We are saving lives. That would have been science fiction just a few years ago.
But, you know, Steve, this new way of getting organs is hugely controversial.
I can imagine, but what is the issue here? Critics say restarting circulation and sometimes the heartbeat
is essentially reversing the very conditions upon which the donor has just been declared dead,
and that's permanent cessation of circulation. And you know, Steve, the surgeon also cuts off
blood flow to the brain to make sure any brain activity doesn't resume, and that's controversial
too. Alexander Capron is a lawyer and bioethicist at the
University of Southern California I talked to about this. I believe the procedure raises very
major ethical and legal issues, and yes, I find it disturbing. So what was it like when you witnessed
this process that must feel to some people like taking the dead and briefly making them undead.
It was incredibly intense, Steve.
I have to say, you know, the procedure was canceled in the wee hours
of the morning because the donor continued to breathe on her own even after life support was
withdrawn. So I flew back to Tennessee about a week later to see another attempt, this time in
eastern Tennessee. Again, it was quite dramatic. There were a lot of complications again, but this
time I watched for hours as Sellers was finally able to retrieve two kidneys from that donor
using a modified version of NRP.
It was pretty powerful and eye-opening watching all this unfold in the operating room.
Here's Dr. Sellers again.
I don't want to oversimplify it, but it's life or death. And while people are discussing the pros and cons of it, people are dying.
During that second procedure, a surgeon from another state joined Sellers to learn how he
could start doing NRP2. So, you know, Steve, it's clear this debate won't end anytime soon.
Rob, thanks for creeping me out. I really appreciate it.
Sure. Anytime, Steve.
That's NPR Health correspondent Rob Stein.
And that's Up First for Tuesday, July 9th. I'm Laila Faldin.
And I'm Steve Inskeep. Your next listen is Consider This from NPR News.
Up First brings you the news of the day. Consider This goes deep on one story.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Nick Spicer, Will Stone, John Helton,
Jenea Williams, and Alice Wolfley.
It was produced by Ziad Butch, Ben Abrams, and Katie Klein.
We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent,
and our technical director is Stacey Abbott.
Join us again tomorrow. Thank you.