Up First from NPR - S. Korea President, Texas Abortion Lawsuit, Coffee Prices
Episode Date: December 14, 2024South Korea's parliament impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol for his attempt to impose martial law on the democracy. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued a New York doctor for prescribing abortion med...ication to a Dallas-area woman. A drought in Brazil has caused the price of coffee on the futures market to reach a 47-year high.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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South Korea's president has been impeached.
Earlier this month, he tried to impose martial law as he struggled against his political opponents in the government.
I'm Scott Simon.
And I'm Ayesha Roscoe, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Thousands of protesters outside the parliament building cheered when the measure was passed. The impeachment has significant implications for U.S. foreign policy.
We'll have more on that story.
Plus, Texas sues a New York doctor for prescribing abortion medication to a Dallas woman.
And coffee prices soar after a bad drought hits Brazil.
Stay with us. We have the news you need to start your weekend.
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South Korean President Yoon Sung-yeol declared martial law 11 days ago only to reverse his
order hours later in the face of public outrage.
The political crisis threatened to pull an established democracy back to its days of
military rule.
And Bears Anthony Kuhn joined us now from Seoul.
Anthony, thanks for being with us. My pleasure, Scott. Parliament has tried to
impeach Yoon just a week ago. How did the vote go this time? Why was it different?
Well, this time all lawmakers in South Korea's Parliament called the National
Assembly voted. The vote ended up 204 to 85. Here's what it sounded like when the vote was announced in the main chamber. Of course there's a lot of celebrating in the streets as well. Now
Yoon's original rationale for martial law was that opposition politicians who
were sympathetic or in league with North Korea were paralyzing the government. But
he never really stood that charge up. It never really resonated beyond his base of conservative
supporters, and it became clear that there was no war or breakdown of public
order or anything that legally justified martial law. And as his ministers and
generals were arrested or questioned, it became clear that Yoon and not his
subordinates were the one who was the one who was orchestrating martial law.
Anthony, how does South Korea choose a new president now?
Well, Yoon's official duties have already been suspended and South Korea's prime
minister Han Dook-soo will stand in his acting president. Next, South Korea's
Constitutional Court will have a hundred and eighty days to reject or uphold the
impeachment. If they uphold it, Yoon will be officially removed from office and a new election for president
will have to be held within 60 days.
Has South Korea's democracy passed a stress test? Is there lasting damage?
It seems that way. One thing that happened was that Yoon tried to hand
power over to his ruling party, said, I'm not going to manage things, they will.
But experts said that's an unconstitutional arrangement so for a while people were
not really sure who was leading South Korea and so many top generals were
suspended from their duties there was also concern about military vulnerability
the country technically remains at war with North Korea I think South Korea's
public image has taken somewhat of a beating. This is a country that with the US co-hosted a summit for democracy and yet here was its leader
trying to use the military to roll back people's civil rights. And you know, a lot of people
are celebrating right now, people who wanted UN impeached, but I think the sense you get
from living here is that this has been a very stressful, even traumatic 11 days for South
Koreans.
And how does it affect the U.S.-South Korean relationship and shared policy goals?
Well, publicly at least, the U.S. said it was relieved that Yoon's declaration of martial law
was lifted, but I think privately Biden administration officials have got to be
absolutely exasperated that Yoon shot himself in the foot because Yoon was instrumental in forging a three-way coalition of the U.S., Japan, and South Korea
to help deter North Korea, support Ukraine, enforce export controls on China, all these
policy goals.
Then again, think about this.
Yoon is likely to be replaced by a liberal North Korea-friendly administration.
And if the Trump administration and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un want to do the
diplomatic dance again, South Korea could help broker some
diplomacy. And Paris Anthony Kuhn, thanks so much for
being with us. Thank you, Scott.
Since Roe v. Wade was overturned two years ago, out-of-state doctors have been prescribing abortion medication to patients in states with strict abortion laws.
A new lawsuit by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton challenges that practice, as well as
the SHIELD laws that blue states pass to protect their doctors and Paris Alissa Nadwarni covers reproductive rights and joins us now.
Thanks for being with us. Good morning. What does the lawsuit say? So the lawsuit
accuses a New York doctor of violating Texas law by providing the two drugs
used in an abortion to a pregnant patient living in the state and the suit
says this 20 year old woman who received the pills ended up in a hospital with
complications.
There aren't any criminal charges involved.
It's a civil suit, but it seeks up to $250,000 and aims to stop the doctor from continuing
to provide abortion medications to patients in Texas.
In a statement, Ken Paxton, the Texas AG said,
in Texas, we treasure the health and lives
of the mothers and babies,
and this is why out-of-state doctors may not illegally
and dangerously prescribe abortion-inducing drugs
to Texas residents.
The patient in question received pills under a shield law.
Tell us more about that shield law.
So at least eight Democrat controlled
states have enacted these shield laws, like the one in New York. They give
abortion providers some protection from criminal prosecution, civil claims,
extradition, things like that. But the laws have yet to be tested. So this case
essentially pits a state with a near total abortion ban against the state
with laws that not just protect abortion rights, but specifically protect doctors in the state
from prescribing pills to people in other states through telehealth.
So Texas is essentially trying to test what the state of New York is going to do with
respect to defending the actions of this doctor who was providing legal care in the state of New York.
And Alyssa, what is New York's position?
Well, the New York Attorney General released a statement saying that New York will quote
protect our providers from unjust attempts to punish them for doing their job.
The governor of New York, Kathy Hochul, who signed the state's shield law, said in a
statement she will do everything in her power to enforce the laws of New York State. David Cohen, a law professor at Drexel University who helped craft that
New York law, talked to me yesterday. Here's his take on the legal wrangling between the states.
The courts of Texas are going to try and force the doctor in New York to participate in the lawsuit,
and they don't have jurisdiction over her, so they have to get the New York
courts to try and cooperate and the New York courts are not going to cooperate.
And yet despite that, anti-abortion groups are already celebrating the legal challenge.
And Alyssa, what do we know about the doctor in this case?
So the New York doctor is one of the founders of an organization called Abortion Coalition
for Telemedicine.
They help pass shield laws and offer support for providers
doing telehealth abortions.
In a statement, they said that the Texas Attorney General
was, quote, prioritizing his anti-abortion agenda
over the health and well-being of women.
Now, Scott, it's worth noting that telehealth
has made it much easier for people
to access abortion medication.
Like, even after the Supreme Court stopped decision,
which struck down Roe v. Wade,
the number of abortions in the US has gone up. About a fifth are now via telehealth.
And then, you break that down further, medication sent by shield law providers now accounts for as many as 12,000 prescriptions a month.
And how could this case potentially affect women in getting access to abortion medication? Well, you know, long-term worry for abortion rights supporters is that this case ends up
in federal court and it has the possibility of making it harder for women in states with
bans to get abortion pills by mail.
But for now, nothing changes.
I talked to Angel Foster about this.
She runs the Massachusetts Medication Abortion Access Project.
They call it the MAP, to be more discreet.
They operate under Massachusetts SHIELD law.
They have four OBGYNs that prescribe abortion medication to people no matter which state
they live in.
We knew it was coming.
Obviously it's disappointing and it's a little scary and it's not unexpected.
She says the only impact to her organization is that they're going to talk to their lawyers
more. Just yesterday they mailed about're going to talk to their lawyers more.
Just yesterday, they mailed about 150 pills to people all across the country.
The largest number went to Texas.
And they predict they'll end up sending about 3,000 pills to people mainly in states with
bans this month alone.
And Piers, listen to that, and thanks so much.
You bet. Scott, did you know coffee is the second most popular beverage in the U.S. after water?
To some of us, the only form of water I drink is in coffee.
As a matter of fact, the Isha.
And for me, I just drink a lot of Coca-Cola,
but I am thinking of all the millions of coffee drinkers
out there because this week, coffee prices
on the futures market hit their highest level
in nearly half a century.
We invited NPR's Alina Seljuk here
to explain what's going on.
Welcome to the podcast.
Hello, hello.
Can you guess what I brought?
Did you bring some coffee to keep you going?
Brought my latte.
Okay, you brought your latte.
What is happening with coffee prices?
Yes, coffee prices have soared
and it all started with problems with harvests, first
in Vietnam and then in Brazil. These are the two top growers of the most common types of coffee
beans. And the culprit was abnormal weather, which many in the industry attribute to climate change.
I talked to some longtime importers of green coffee, that's raw beans. One of them is John
Cassette from Royal Coffee in California. And he says, first you had Vietnam with a serious drought, followed by heavier rains than usual,
and that drove up prices for the bean that grows there, and already had people scrambling to switch
to the bean that grows in Brazil. And then Brazil had one of the worst droughts on record. Here's
Cassette. Once they start harvesting the coffee, it's kind of nice to have dry weather when you're
harvesting, but as soon as it's done, you want it to start raining, you know, get the
soil moisture up and initiate flowering. And it just didn't happen. It really freaked
people out.
Eventually it did rain, but farmers later said a lot of the damage was irreversible.
And so the price of the most common coffee that's called Arabica jumped 70% this year.
The price of the other type of coffee called Robusta at one point doubled in price.
Both cost more than they ever did.
Arabica and Robusta, how different are these?
Yeah, so they have different flavor based on where they grow.
What I have here in my cup is Arabica.
It is the most common.
Brazil is the biggest grower.
And this coffee grows at higher altitudes.
It has a softer, sweeter taste.
And that's what you find often in your roast coffee,
your ground coffee.
Robusta grows at lower elevation.
Vietnam is the biggest grower.
And this bean has a harsher, more bitter taste.
It's used a lot for instant coffee.
Oh, okay.
I think my mom drinks something like that. But back to the prices. Was it
just the irreversible damage to harvest that drove up the cost?
You know, coffee markets are complicated, like all commodities. Many of the traders
actually need the physical coffee, the bags of beans, but many traders are just financial
speculators. They're trying to game the price change, you know, buy cheaper, sell higher. And everyone bets on how much they think beans
will cost in the future. And so when people think those beans won't grow or there won't
be enough, those who need those beans scramble, speculators go nuts, and it all only spirals
the price further, which is what's happened. And it doesn't help that this week, one of
the world's biggest coffee traders made a
forecast that Arabica, coffee like I have here, could see supply decline by nearly a
quarter in the next cycle.
Okay, so now we've been talking about record prices on the futures market, but I don't
buy coffee at the futures market, right?
You buy it at the grocery store or at Starbucks.
So how is this gonna translate?
So I'm sorry to say those prices have already been rising.
If you shop at the supermarket, brands like Nescafe,
Maxwell House, Folgers, Dunkin',
they've all had waves of price increases.
They've cited higher cost of the green raw coffee.
At your local coffee shop,
it really depends. It depends on how they source their products. But yes, likely they're feeling
the pressure to raise prices and they're just trying to assess how to do that without scaring
away shoppers. But fact of the matter is as a world, we are drinking more and more and more coffee.
So demand has not waned so far. People so far have been willing to pay those
higher prices for their coffee habit. The markets will probably eventually calm down.
Importers I talked to pointed out historically adjusted for inflation. We've actually been
paying pretty low prices for a pound of coffee. So maybe it's the days of cheap coffee that
are over.
That's probably bad news for coffee drinkers, but we got to give it to you straight.
No cream and sugar here.
That's NPR's Alina Selyuk.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
And that's it first for Saturday, December 14th, 2024.
I'm Scott Simon.
And I'm Ayesha Roscoe.
Our producers Martin Patience with help from Danny Hensel, Andrew Craig, Chris Thomas, and Gabe O'Connor.
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