Up First from NPR - Trudeau Resigns, Guantanamo Prisoner Release, Minneapolis Police Reform
Episode Date: January 7, 2025Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced he is resigning, only 15 detainees remain at the U.S. military prison in Guantánamo Bay and the Minneapolis Police Department is now under federal... oversight, nearly five years after the murder of George Floyd. For 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, Barrie Hardymon, Cheryl Corley, Janaya Williams and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Ben Abrams. We get engineering support from David Greenberg, and our technical director is Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is resigning after facing mounting calls to step down.
After a landslide victory during his first run as Prime Minister, how did he become so unpopular?
I'm your Martinez, that's Michel Martin, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Nearly half of the detainees have been released from the U.S US military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Only 15 men remain. What led to the dramatic transfers in the final weeks of the Biden administration?
And major changes are coming to the Minneapolis Police Department almost five years after the murder of George Floyd.
We now have a roadmap for reform that will help this community heal while strengthening trust between law enforcement and the people
they serve.
Stay with us, we'll give you the news you need to start your day.
Support for NPR and the following message come from GoodRx.
Looking for relief from cold and flu symptoms this new year?
With GoodRx, you can save an average of $34 on cold and flu medications.
Plus, GoodRx lets you compare prescription prices at over 70,000 pharmacies and instantly
find discounts of up to 80%.
And even if you have insurance or Medicare, GoodRx may beat your copay price.
Save on cold and flu prescriptions and more at GoodRx.com slash up first.
Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced he's resigning, capping almost a
decade in power.
The 53-year-old face calls from all corners of the country to step down over his handling
of the economy, immigration, and other issues.
Now it's a far cry from 2015 when he was first elected in a landslide.
NPR International Affairs correspondent Jackie Northam has been following Trudeau's rise
and fall over the years, and she's with us now to tell us more about it.
Good morning, Jackie.
Good morning, Michelle.
Jackie, there have been calls for months now for Trudeau to resign, even from members of
his own Liberal Party.
What happened?
Well, momentum had been building for some time for him to step aside.
His poll numbers and the parties are in the low 20s.
A couple of weeks ago, Christian Freeland,
who was both his deputy prime minister
and finance minister resigned.
And she had been a key steadfast ally for Trudeau.
And frankly, he faced a no confidence vote
and it was pretty clear he was going to lose that
and he likely wanted to get ahead of it.
So he announced his resignation.
This is quite a fall for somebody who,
more than nine years ago had a landslide
victory during his first run as prime minister. Just tell us more about him.
Well, you're right. I mean, he won by a landslide. You know, he had or has matinee idol looks.
He was tall, athletic, his face graced the covers of magazines around the world. And
he just energized the 2015 elections
and he had brought appeal for voters,
especially young voters.
It was the same type of popularity
that his father Pierre Elliott Trudeau had.
And he was twice prime minister
and he was also a charismatic figure.
Justin Trudeau also promoted social causes
such as gender equality.
And there was an equal number of women and men in his first cabinet.
Also more taxes on the wealthy, more effort to protect the environment.
So a progressive agenda that the public seemed to embrace at the time that he was elected
and seemed warmly embraced, what happened?
Why has he become so unpopular?
Well within a few years of first being elected, it was pretty clear that the honeymoon was
over.
There were scandals, resignations in his cabinet.
Now, he did get good marks for his handling of the COVID pandemic, but the country never
really seemed to rebound.
And Canada now is experiencing many of the issues that we see here in the US, high inflation,
housing shortages.
I spoke with Nick Nanos with Nanos Research, which is a
leading polling firm based in Ottawa, and he said that there was also a
backlash against immigration. Here he is. Although Canadians are supportive of
immigrants, they were not supportive of the level of immigration that the
Broules had, and this created a significant stress on the housing
market. It puts significant stress on the healthcare, education.
You know, Michelle, all of these issues came together
and affected Trudeau's popularity.
And this decision to resign comes just as President-elect
Donald Trump is due to head back to the White House in the U.S.
The two leaders have not had the best relationship.
So what is the next Canadian leader
going to have to deal with?
Well, you're right. It's never been an easy relationship
between the two leaders. and since the presidential election Trump has been
Needling Trudeau suggesting Canada become the 51st state and calling Trudeau a governor rather than a prime minister
And more importantly Trump is threatening to impose 25 percent tariffs on many Canadian products
Now Trudeau will still have to deal with Trump as he's staying on as prime minister until the Liberal Party chooses a new leader.
But it's quite likely that Trump will be dealing with someone from the Conservative Party after
that.
That is NPR's Jackie Northam.
Jackie, thank you.
Thank you.
The number of people being held at the US military Court in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba has
been cut nearly in half.
That's after the Biden administration transferred 11 detainees to Oman yesterday.
It's part of Joe Biden's final push to try and close the detention facility before leaving
office.
NPR's Sasha Pfeiffer has been covering Guantanamo for years, and she's with us now to tell us
more about it.
Good morning, Sasha.
Good morning, Michelle.
Who are these 11 people?
All of them are men. All are from Yemen. All were captured after the 9-11 attacks and all
are former al-Qaeda, according to the Pentagon. All had also been held for more than two decades
without charge or trial. Now, eventually they were approved for transfer after national
security officials said they weren't dangerous enough to keep holding.
And they had been approved for transfer for at least two years, sometimes much longer,
once since 2010.
But they had stayed behind bars due to diplomatic and political challenges like resistance to
releasing them.
And the really difficult, slow process of finding countries to take them, the problem
is they could not go back to their home country of Yemen because it's unstable. So the US had to negotiate with another country to take them.
Finally, Oman agreed to do that. It says it will give them jobs, housing, other supports. Some of
them will be monitored for security reasons and also face travel restrictions. And for Guantanamo,
the end result is just 15 prisoners are held there now. Well, you know, Democrats have been trying to close this facility for years, and the
Biden administration had four years to do this. Tell us about this last minute flurry
of transfers weeks before leaving office. How did this all come together?
And it really has been a flurry. You know, in recent weeks, four other Guantanamo prisoners
were released. We know of at least one more transfer in the works. This is partly
Biden racing to fulfill his goal of closing Guantanamo. A less charitable view is that
it would have taken more political courage to do this when he was not a lame duck, but
now that he's on his way out, it's easier to do hard and controversial things. I do
want to note that yesterday's 11 prisoner transfer almost happened in October 2023, but it was
called off after the October 7th Hamas attack because some members of Congress were worried
about Mideast stability. So finally, in these final weeks, that plan got resurrected. It's
also motivated by Trump returning. Trump has said he wants to keep Guantanamo open. So
the assumption is that once Trump is back in the White House, there may be no more Guantanamo
transfers under him.
And Michelle, at some level, it's also Biden acknowledging that Guantanamo has been a failed
legal system.
As you know, there's still been no 9-11 trial more than two decades after the September
11, 2001 attacks.
There's worldwide criticism of Guantanamo as a human rights embarrassment because of
the unlawful detention happening there.
It's also really expensive, $15 million per year per prisoner.
That is way more than a federal supermax.
It's as Biden saying, it's time to shut the place down.
Well, as you've been reporting for all this time, a very complicated kind of moral, political,
and legal issue.
So what's been the reaction to this?
It tends to be predictable along party lines. Republicans claim this is like
releasing terrorists. Democrats say this should have happened a long time ago.
It's a moral stain on America, they say.
This is complicated by the new fresh upheaval in the Middle East because there's
some concern these men could end up back on a battlefield somewhere.
But remember, national security officials has made the decision these men no longer
pose a significant threat.
I got a more hybrid or nuanced view from Scott Rehm of the Center for Victims of Torture.
He's glad the men were released, but he says it could and should have happened sooner.
And he says because it didn't happen sooner, time is now running out on transferring others
before Trump comes into office.
Releasing this many men in just a few weeks makes clear what could have been done over
the rest of the last four years had the administration acted then with the same urgency and commitment
that it's acting now.
Sasha, before we let you go, could you remind us of the history of the Guantanamo prison
and how many people have been held there over the years?
The prison and the military court were set up to prosecute suspected foreign terrorists
after the September 11, 2001 attacks. The first prisoners arrived in January 2002.
Over the years, a little under 800 people have passed through there. Most were never charged,
yet held for years. The majority were eventually repatriated to their home countries or resettled
in other countries. There are now 15 left, all of them racing the clock as Trump is about to get into office.
And the commonality among the 15 left is that if you're not out by January 20th, you're
expected probably not to get out.
That is NPR's Sasha Pfeiffer.
Sasha, thank you.
You're welcome.
The Minneapolis City Council has voted unanimously to enter an agreement with the U.S. Department
of Justice to reform the city's police department.
The consent decree is intended to address decades of discriminatory policing.
Nearly five years ago, George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer, which sparked
protests around the country and around the world.
Minnesota Public Radio's Estelle Timor Wilcox is with us now to talk about the agreement
and what it proposes to do.
Good morning, Estelle.
Good morning, Michelle.
So the Justice Department began its scrutiny of the Minneapolis Police Department just
after George Floyd was killed.
What did they find that led to this consent decree?
Well, they found a pattern of racial discrimination and excessive use of force, particularly against
Black and Native American people.
They also noted inappropriate responses when people were experiencing a behavioral health
crisis.
City officials have been in talks with the Department of Justice since then to try to
reach this consent agreement.
And the state at the same time reached a separate settlement with the city about a year ago,
also mandating several reforms, which the department is now working towards.
Yeah, the mayor, Jacob Fry, said the agreement set a clear path forward for police and the
community.
What's in it?
Well, the department will have to draft a new use of force policy.
It bans chokeholds and neck restraints and limits the use of pepper spray.
One of the big concerns centered around investigations
into a complaint against an officer,
those will now continue even if an officer quits or retires.
Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clark called the settlement
a critical step for constitutional policing.
George Floyd's death was not just a tragedy,
it was a galvanizing force for the city and for the nation. All eyes remain on
Minneapolis. And with this consent decree, we now have a roadmap for reform that will
help this community heal while strengthening trust between law enforcement and the people
they serve.
You know, I want to mention here that this agreement is the 16th policing settlement
that the Justice Department is currently enforcing
That's according to the assistant attorney general Kristen Clark. Do these agreements work?
Well Clark says they do and she noted success stories in other cities that have consent decrees like Seattle
Which she said drastically reduced the use of force and New Orleans which reached its lowest rate of critical incidents in 2023 and
Force, and New Orleans, which reached its lowest rate of critical incidents in 2023. And here in Minneapolis, lots of police accountability activists were actually pushing for a consent
decree. Michelle Gross was one of them.
We have to have this agreement. Even if it isn't ideal, even if it isn't perfect,
we need this agreement to go forward.
Even so, activists say it's not an end-all solution to police brutality.
And the city council, as you were noting, voted unanimously to enact this consent decree.
And what happens now?
Well, once a federal judge signs it, it'll go into effect.
And advocates are hoping that will happen before Donald Trump's inauguration because
Trump's last administration opposed using consent decrees.
Once it's enacted, a federal judge and an independent monitor will oversee progress on it,
and it'll stay in effect until the federal courts decide that all the conditions have been met,
which could be years from now.
Matthew 16 That is Minnesota Public Radio's Estelle T. Mart-Wilcox. Estelle,
thank you so much for joining us.
Estelle T. Mart-Wilcox You're welcome.
And that's up first for Tuesday, January 7th. I'm Michelle Martin.
And I'm A. Martinez. Remember, you can listen to this podcast sponsor free while financially
supporting public media with Up First Plus. Learn more at plus.npr.org. That's PLUS.npr.org.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Nick Spicer, Barry Hardiman, Cheryl Corley,
Jenea Williams, and Alice Wolfley.
It was produced by Ziad Butch, Nia Dumas, and Ben Abrams.
We get engineering support from David Greenberg,
and our technical director is Carly Strange.
We hope you'll join us again tomorrow.