Up First from NPR - Israeli Embassy Employees Killed, Israel's Occupation Plans, Trump Bill Latest
Episode Date: May 22, 2025Officials in Israel and Washington are condemning the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy employees outside a Jewish museum in Washington. Plus, Israel seeks full control of Gaza as a condition to e...nd its war with Hamas, and Republicans close in on passage of a massive bill at the heart of President Trump's domestic agenda.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 Gigi Douban, Kevin Drew, Carrie Kahn, Kelsey Snell, Ally Schweitzer and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Zac Coleman and Josh Sauvagvau. Our technical director is Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Two Israeli embassy employees were shot to death in Washington, D.C. last night outside
of a Jewish museum. Local and federal authorities are investigating.
The killings come as Israel faces pressure over a humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
I'm Michelle Martin with A. Martinez and this is Up First from NPR News.
Aid is starting to trickle into Gaza after Israel lifted a nearly three-month blockade
on food and other essentials. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also says he intends
for Israel to take full control of the enclave.
And House Republicans are racing to pass President Trump's domestic agenda before Memorial Day.
I think that all of our colleagues here will really like this final product. We're excited.
I believe we are going to land this airplane.
How does the bill look now and what's ahead in the Senate?
Stay with us.
We've got all the news you need to start your day.
Two staff members with the Israeli embassy in Washington were shot and killed outside
an event in downtown D.C. last night.
The shooter police say chanted, Palestine after being detained. President Trump has condemned
the shooting calling it an act of anti-Semitism. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
his heart ached for the victims. NPR's Becky Sullivan joins us now. Becky, what do we know
about what happened? Yeah, so this took place right around 9 p.m. last night here in DC. It was just outside an event for young Jewish foreign policy professionals.
The event was put on by an advocacy organization called the American Jewish Committee.
It was held at a local Jewish museum in downtown DC, just under a mile from the Capitol.
Outside this event, a man was observed pacing back and forth, police said, and then a group
of four people left this foreign policy professional networking event.
And the man up in fire killed two of them.
And so here's the DC police chief, Pamela Smith, speaking to reporters about this late
last night.
Pamela Smith, DC Police Chief After the shooting, the suspect then entered
the museum and was detained by event security.
The suspect chanted, free, free Palestine.
SONIA DARA, DLN Reporter And there's a video of him circulating on social
media of this exact moment that the
police chief described.
There's a keffiyeh with him, which is the recognizable scarf of the Palestinian movement.
You can clearly hear him say those words, free, free Palestine, before he is quickly
detained by security, I mean, taken outside.
Police say they have tentatively identified this man as Elias Rodriguez, who's a 30-year-old
from Chicago, they say, at this early stage. Apparently no prior encounters with law enforcement and still obviously a lot to learn about
when and why he came to D.C., whether these victims were targeted specifically.
The FBI says they are investigating this as a possible hate crime, a possible act of terrorism.
Okay.
What do we know about the victims?
Well, we know that they were a young couple, a man and a woman.
Israel's foreign ministry has named them as Yaron Lashinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgram.
Milgram worked in public diplomacy at the embassy.
Lashinsky was a researcher who focused on issues related to the Middle East and North
Africa and in fact on his LinkedIn he wrote about the importance of quote, interfaith
dialogue and intercultural understanding when it comes to these issues.
Israel's ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, told reporters a little bit about the pair.
It's a young couple about to be engaged.
The young man purchased a ring this week with the intention of proposing to his girlfriend
next week in Jerusalem.
They were a beautiful couple who came to enjoy an evening in Washington's cultural center.
Obviously, just incredibly tragic situation.
Yeah, sure sounds that way.
What's the reaction been from officials from everywhere?
Yeah, I mean, there has been an outpouring
of statements of condemnation from politicians,
diplomats in the US and Israel and beyond.
I mean, this is an incident that involves
diplomatic staff on foreign soil.
It's a really big deal.
You mentioned a Yahoo statement earlier.
He blamed this attack on rising anti-Semitism and what he called incitement against Israel.
He also said he'd ordered an increase to security at Israeli diplomatic missions around the
world here in the US.
The condemnation came from both sides of the aisle.
President Trump, as you mentioned, Secretary of State Marco Rubio called it a brazen act
of cowardly anti-Semitic violence.
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said, antisemitism is a threat to all we hold dear
as a society, must be confronted and rooted out everywhere.
So a lot of unity there in this response.
That's NPR's Becky Sullivan.
Becky, thanks for getting us up to date here.
You're so welcome.
Moving to Gaza now, a trickle of aid has entered the enclave this morning.
Israel has begun letting in aid trucks this week after its nearly three-month-long total
blockade of everything from food to medicine.
United Nations says a handful of bakeries are now operational in south and central Gaza.
And last night, in his first press conference with Israeli journalists in five months, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended his plan to expand the war.
And Piers Hadil al-Shalchi is with us now with the latest from Tel Aviv.
Good morning, Hadil.
Good morning.
So Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took questions from reporters last night.
What did he say about Israel's stepped-up military campaign now in Gaza?
Right.
So Netanyahu went through his order for the Israeli military to mobilize this expansion
of the war.
He reiterated that the plan is to push all Palestinians who are in
northern Gaza right now into an area in the south.
And then in fact, the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for
the entire northern part of Gaza yesterday.
That's at least 100,000 Palestinians right now,
according to Gaza first responders.
And we need to know like like, the South is almost entirely
destroyed because of the two years of war.
It has very little resources, let alone space to live in.
But Netanyahu also said that he is willing to end the war
with certain conditions.
The hostages come home, Hamas lays down its arms, and...
We implement the Trump plan, he said.
That's Trump's proposal to displace Palestinians out of Gaza fully.
Netanyahu called it a brilliant and revolutionary plan.
Yesterday, NPR sat down with U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, and he staunchly
defended Israel's sovereign right to conduct the war as they need to.
In a statement, Hamas condemned Netanyahu's pledge to Trump's plan,
saying it undermined Washington's role as a, quote, mediator. And I'd like to mention the UN's
human rights chief said that Israel's plan to force people to move under airstrikes, the methodical
destruction of entire neighborhoods, the denial of humanitarian assistance, he said that all of this
appears to be a push for permanent demographic demographic shift in Gaza and that is against international law and he
said it is quote tantamount to ethnic cleansing.
Hadil, what have we heard from Palestinians inside Gaza?
Well under this major international pressure Israel finally said it would
allow a quote minimal amount of aid into Gaza. According to the UN, about 200 trucks entered
carrying some critical supplies.
That's compared to 600 trucks,
which were crossing daily during the January ceasefire.
So the UN is really calling this week's development
a quote drop in the ocean.
NPR's Anas Baba met a woman
at the malnutrition department of a hospital in Gaza city.
Elham Abdul Hafidh was carrying her one-year-old daughter.
She can't find milk to feed her baby anymore, so she's been giving her water instead.
My daughter is very thin, the mother says. She was in hospital because of malnutrition
hooked up to needles and IVs. I'd cry every day, my heart breaking for her, she said.
So, Hadiya, if we could turn to the fatal shooting last night in D.C., what's the reaction that
you're hearing in Israel?
There's been a string of condemnation from here.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog and the foreign minister are calling or called the shooting
despicable and anti-Semitic.
The foreign ministry posted a statement saying, quote, may their memory be a blessing.
And Netanyahu has said that he's instructed to increase security at Israeli missions around
the world.
That is NPR's Hadil El-Shilchi in Tel Aviv.
Hadil, thank you.
You're welcome.
After a long session on Capitol Hill, House Republicans might be closing in on passing
a massive bill at the heart of President Trump's domestic agenda.
Here's House Speaker Mike Johnson talking to reporters yesterday.
I think that all of our colleagues here will really like this final product.
We're excited.
I believe we are going to land this airplane.
The bill would, among other things, extend President Trump's 2017 tax cuts before they
expire at the end of the year. MPR's congressional correspondent, Claudio Grisales, has been following all this.
Claudio, so despite, I mean, these long negotiations, it's not clear if the
Republicans are gonna land this plane, as the speaker says. Where do things stand?
Where's the plane?
Well, they're still trying to land right now. They're on the House floor at this
very moment debating the bill, but they do appear to be closing in on potential passage of this massive tax and spending bill.
It's quite the turnaround from just a few hours ago.
They overcame a series of hurdles overnight from GOP holdouts to opposition from Democrats,
pushing this plan out of a House Rules Committee that lasted more than 20 hours and a key procedural vote.
President Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson may have pulled off another one of these one-two
punches we've seen a number of times this year to get GOP holdouts back in line.
These fiscal conservatives, they're members of the House Freedom Caucus, may now be on
board after an hours-long White House meeting yesterday.
So okay, House Republican leaders released an updated version of this plan.
That's the plan that, uh, president Trump
calls his quote, big, beautiful bill.
What's different now?
Right after this White House meeting, as
Johnson previewed to us, there was going to be
some changes to the bill.
We should note the big bill kept a lot of its
big provisions.
That includes extending the Trump tax plan,
major policy changes in immigration and energy campaign promises like no tax on tips. It also has a major win for GOP
supporters raising the cap on state and local tax deductions for individuals and couples.
But there were tweaks to the bill to win over these holdouts. Ultimately, that included moving
up new work requirements from Medicaid to next year and phasing out some energy tax credits. These holdouts did
successfully stall momentum on the plan over concerns it could add trillions to
the US deficit but these changes along with incoming plans for new presidential
executive orders appears to have flipped momentum back in the conference's favor.
Now we also saw Democrats work to delay the plan as well.
Right. Unlike the House Freedom Caucus members, however, Democrats don't have much influence here.
However, they slowed the process down as much as possible, helping drag out that House Rules hearing
and leading fiery arguments on the floor, railing against plans for cuts to Medicaid
that could jeopardize coverage for many Americans.
Now, House Speaker Johnson had said he wanted the House to send this bill to the Senate by
Memorial Day. So what's next for that to happen? Right. This is a major step. It looks like they're
on track, but there's still a very long way to go. Senate Republicans have raised plenty of their
own concerns about the bill already. So now Senate Majority Leader John Thune coming with passage of this bill
will face a tough task, which would be threading the needle between this plan and concerns
from his conference, from his own fiscal hawks in the chamber, as well as moderates concerns
about those potential Medicaid cuts. So they've already made clear they plan to make a
lot of changes to this House bill. So maybe the landing gear isn't down yet on the plane.
Exactly. They got to switch it out. MPR's Claudia Grisales, thanks a lot.
Thank you.
And finally, the Justice Department says it wants to withdraw an oversight agreement negotiated
with the Minneapolis Police Department.
City leaders and the Justice Department signed the federal consent decree after a white police
officer killed George Floyd, who was black, five years ago.
They made the agreement just before President Biden left office.
Now the Trump Justice Department says it's factually unjustified.
More on that story on Morning Edition, the radio show, and on our website,
npr.org.
And that's Up First for Thursday, May 22nd. I'm Michelle Martin.
And I'm Amy Martinez. How about listening to Consider This from NPR? Up First covers three or more big stories of the day.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Kevin Drew, Kari Kahn, Kelsey Snell,
Ali Schweitzer, and Alice Wolfe. It was produced by Zia Butch, Nia Dumas, and Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from Zach Coleman in Washington, DC, and Josh Savajow
at NPR in St. Paul, Minnesota. And our technical director is Carly Strange. We hope you'll
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