Up First from NPR - Government Shutdown Looms, Brazil's Ex-President on Trial, Earthquake in Afghanistan
Episode Date: September 2, 2025Congress returns to Washington following the August recess as a deadline to avoid a government shutdown looms. The former President of Brazil is on trial for attempting to overthrow the government. An...d, the Taliban is calling for international aid as rescue efforts continue following a deadly earthquake in Afghanistan. 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, Tara Neill, Ryland Barton, Lisa Thomson and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Congress returns to the Capitol today with Republican leaders under pressure to release the Epstein files.
There's also the small matter of funding the entire federal government. So how's that going to work?
I'm Steve Inskeep with Leila Faddle, and this is up first from NPR News.
The former president of Brazil goes on trial today accused of plotting a coup.
President Trump applied pressure for his preferred verdict, and some Brazilians support them.
Basically, Trump is restoring the democracy of Brazil.
What's the evidence against the ex-president?
And authorities in Afghanistan say they need the world's help with rescue efforts after an earthquake that's killed hundreds and injured thousands.
Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day.
Congress returns to Capitol Hill today after an August recess that was anything but quiet.
Angry constituents confronted some lawmakers at town halls across the country.
They focused on economic turmoil and presidential overreach.
And now lawmakers face those same issues in Washington, where a government shutdown deadline comes at the end of this month.
Joining us now is NPR congressional correspondent Claudia at Grisales.
Hi, Claudia.
Good morning, Leila.
Good morning.
So the last date of fun, the government, is September 30th.
Could the government shut down by the end of the month?
It's possible.
That's the hardest job on tap for lawmakers.
parties remain deeply divided. Many House Republicans want to see another stopgap measure to keep
funding level static, but Democrats want a regular appropriations plan. Then underlying all this,
we have seen this Republican-led Congress seed their power of the purse to the president.
The most recent example happening this past week when the president unilaterally clawed
back billions more in foreign aid using what's known as a pocket rescission. That's when
the president asked lawmakers to rescind funds so close to the end of the fiscal year,
it runs out the clock on the 45 days Congress would have to deliberate for a traditional
rescission's request. So we expect to hear a lot from President Trump during this process.
And Democrats say they're going to fight these efforts in a new way after facing plenty of
blowback from their base that they are not doing enough. Now that they're back, what else is set
to take priority? Well, I did hear a lot from
lawmakers who faced angry constituents while they were on recess. For example, I was traveling
in Texas where redistricting just took place. A lot of voters there are really worried about the
economy. And so we'll see if lawmakers want to take any steps related to addressing these
concerns. And then meanwhile, they also heard a lot of complaints about the signature bill
past this summer. President Trump called it the big beautiful bill and even said that maybe they
should rename it because it should focus on benefits from middle class families in terms of what
that name would be. And that's a signal this plan is not landing as they intended. So that could
shape discussions on Capitol Hill as well. We also saw President Trump push the extent of his
executive power this past month with tariffs. He tried to fire a Federal Reserve governor and
ousted the CDC director. So once again, testing the checks.
imbalances that many argue Republicans have just ceded. What do you expect Congress to do?
Right. Lawmakers are going to have to make a political calculation here. How much do they want to
pay the price in terms of pressures they may face because of these efforts by President Trump? For example,
the ousting at the Federal Reserve could create new pressures for the economy, for the markets.
And then when we look at the CDC director situation, there's concern that there's new confusion
about U.S. vaccine policy. We're going to hear from health secretary.
Robert F. Kennedy before a Senate committee this week. And finally, President Trump's efforts on tariffs,
that's under legal challenge. Now, whether that power really rests with Congress, so that's something
we could hear about in the coming days as well. And really quickly, what happens with the Epstein files now that
the Congress is back? Right. Lawmakers are going to return to a real crossroads here. Republicans
continue to face demands from their base to release records related to the Jeffrey Epstein case.
and be more transparent when it comes to the prosecution of this late sex offender.
We did see the House Oversight Committee have a very busy period,
recently issuing subpoenas for documents, for witness testimony.
The Justice Department has started turning over files from its investigations,
and the committee intends to make records public,
but Democrats say that Republicans are going to make that limited.
It will be far from comprehensive.
And they have an ally in Kentucky Republican Thomas Massey,
who's teamed up with Democrats to try to force a full vote on the House floor
to release the records comprehensively.
That's NPR congressional correspondent, Claudia, Chrysalis. Thank you.
Thank you.
Today, Brazil's Supreme Court puts a former president on trial.
J.R. Bolsonaro is the country's former far-right leader.
He's accused of plotting to stay in.
power after losing his 2022 re-election campaign.
Many Brazilians see this trial as pivotal for their democracy.
Bolsonaro has won support from overseas where President Trump has tried to use U.S. power
to stop the case.
NPR's Carrie Khan is covering this story from Rio de Janeiro.
Hey there, Carrie.
Good morning.
Okay, amazing story.
What exact charges does the former president face?
There are five charges, and they include attempting to violently end the Democratic rule of law,
plotting a coup and forming part of an armed criminal organization.
There are two other charges.
There are lesser charges and they're related to damage of property and historical items
during the January 8, 2023 riots by Bolsonaro's supporters on the Capitol in Brasilia.
Prosecutors say they have extensive evidence against Bolsonaro,
including the discovery of a plot to assassinate President Luis Anasio Lula de Silva
and the Supreme Court Justice Alessandro de Marais.
Much of the evidence is in text messages, electronic communications, and cell phone calls
between Bolsonaro and the seven other defendants that are on trial today.
Bolsonaro's closest aide took a plea deal for a reduced sentence and is the prosecution's key witness.
Really interesting to hear that Bolsonaro's own words would be part of the evidence here.
Has Brazil ever had a trial like this?
This is unprecedented.
There have been presidents accused of crimes before, but an ex-leader has not been successfully brought to trial
for trying to overthrow the government.
You know, Brazil's democracy is very young.
It emerged from a military dictatorship just 40 years ago.
So Bolsonaro's prosecution is really testing the strength of its institution,
especially the judiciary and the Supreme Court,
which hears criminal cases against politicians.
And the other really unique thing about this is that there's a lot of intervention
on the part of the United States.
President Trump has said he is closely watching the case
and has called it a witch hunch against Bolsonaro.
He's demanded it be dropped.
He slapped 50% tariffs against Brazil,
and the U.S. has sanctioned the lead justice overseeing the case
and revoked visas for many of the justices on the Supreme Court.
All this before the Supreme Court has even judged the evidence.
What does Bolsonaro say in his defense?
He says he's done nothing wrong.
He said if any discussions were had about not giving up power,
they were all in search of constitutional ways to stay in the press.
presidency. Bolsonaro has never conceded that he lost the election. His son Eduardo Bolsonaro,
a congressman here, actually moved to the U.S. to lobby the Trump administration for help for his
father. And I spoke with him before the trial, and he praised Trump's intervention in the case.
Basically, Trump is restoring the democracy of Brazil. But there are also many in Brazil that are
condemning the U.S. intervention in the case. And they've rallied around President Lula,
the current president now, who says Trump is assaulting.
Brazil's sovereignty. I guess from what you're telling me that the Brazilians have resisted
the U.S. pressure so far. The tariffs, for example, did not cause the Supreme Court justices to
suddenly drop this case. No, not at all. So what happens now? The trial could last about two weeks.
If convicted, Bolsonaro, who is 70 now, has few appeals ahead of him and could face as much as
40 years in prison. And there are also concerns that if Bolsonaro's convicted, the U.S. will
impose even more sanctions against Brazil. NPR's Carrie Khan is in Rio de Janeiro. Thanks
so much. You're welcome. More than a day after an earthquake devastated parts of Afghanistan,
rescuers are still trying to reach victims. Afghanistan's Disaster Management Authority says
more than 950 people are dead and they expect that toll to rise. On the line with us is NPR's
Dia Hadid. She covers Afghanistan from her base in Mumbai. Hide.
Hi, Leila.
So what is happening with the rescue effort?
Well, aid workers and residents are telling us they're still trying to reach impacted areas,
particularly a remote mountainous district called Kuna.
You can get a sense of what it looks like from drone footage shared by the disaster management authority.
There's collapsed mudbrick homes, and they're perched on steep hills that overlook narrow river valleys.
One aid worker told me some places were only accessible by goat trail before the quake.
That includes one village called Dugal.
and it appears to have been wiped out.
This is Ibrahim Ahmed from the Islamic Relief Aid Group.
They are taking those injured people walking for three hours
until they arrive to the first point
close to Dugal where Islamic Relief was one of the first respondents.
Wow, walking for three hours with wounded people.
What's happening in other areas?
Authorities are trying to rescue people in other places by helicopter
and they're trying to reach places by car,
but these are long, difficult journeys over dirt roads.
Two residents told us locals are just trying to dig out people by hand.
But Leila, the remoteness isn't the only thing that's making this crisis potentially worse than it should be.
What else might be making it worse?
There's the heavy rains that came days before, and it potentially loosened the ground
and may have made these mountain villages more vulnerable to collapse.
And this earthquake comes as aid groups are already stretched thin.
That's after President Trump suspended most aid early this year.
I mean, claims that the Taliban was siphoning off some of it.
But America was the largest aid donor to Afghanistan, and these cuts have had a calamitous impact.
Hungry people are going without.
Hundreds of medical centers have shut down in recent months.
Midwives were telling us as early as March that they were seeing more babies die
because birthing women couldn't get to health centers on time.
Yeah, now the UN says they're trying to raise money for an emergency appeal.
Do we have any sense of whether the international community will step up?
Countries may donate to the UN, but the spokesman of the Taliban's disaster management authority told NPR they're also contacting national and international aid groups.
But donors are unlikely to hand over money directly to the Taliban, considering those allegations of siphoning off aid, and frankly, because the Taliban's restrictions on women, which have made it difficult for even female aid workers to help female victims.
What do you know about the victims so far?
Well, what we know is from what one of our producers heard from a man who was trying to rescue people.
out of their homes and he said he heard women and children crying out for help.
That's to be expected because the quake occurred while people were sleeping in their homes.
But a senior aid worker for World Vision also told us that the victims likely include
some of the more than two million Afghans who were deported from Iran and Pakistan this year.
She says many of those families were encouraged to settle in areas that were impacted by this quake.
NPR's dear Hadid, thank you for your reporting.
You're welcome, Leila.
And that's up first for Tuesday, September 2nd.
I'm Leila Faldon.
And I'm Steve Inskeep.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Anna Yukoninov, Tara Neal, Rylan Barton, Lisa Thompson, and Alice Wolfley.
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We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott, and our technical director is Carly Strange.
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