Up First from NPR - What Trump Said Last Night, Trump On Immigration, China Tariff Confidence
Episode Date: March 5, 2025In his first address to Congress of this term, President Trump criticized Democrats and highlighted his administration's policy achievements. Trump used his address to Congress to highlight his admini...stration's aggressive immigration policies, including designating certain gangs as terrorist organizations. And, China's premier outlined the nation's economic priorities and Beijing's retaliation against new U.S. tariffs.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 Roberta Rampton, Kevin Drew, Ryland Barton, Alice Woelfle and Mohamad ElBardicy.It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Chris Thomas.We get engineering support from Neisha Heinis, our technical director is Stacey Abbott.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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President Trump addressed Congress promising new waves of tariffs on products Americans buy and criticizing Democrats for not smiling or applauding.
What did the speech reveal about the administration's next moves?
I'm Michelle Martin. That's Steve Inskeep. And this is Up First from NPR News.
The president also talked up a plan to let rich foreigners buy U.S. residency for $5 million.
He also spoke of current migrants as terrorists.
Every last one will be rounded up and forcibly removed from our country.
His homeland security czar says they are short of resources, so what's the president's need from Congress?
Also, how is China responding to U.S. terrorists?
The communist government has its own public ritual, the annual meeting of its one-party congress. Our colleague John Ruich is there and helps us to listen in. Stay with
us. We've got the news you need to start your day.
President Trump took the occasion of a speech to Congress to proclaim in his view that America
is back.
For more than 90 minutes, he talked of securing the border, slashing government and imposing tariffs.
And he said he did not expect much support from Democrats.
These people sitting right here will not clap, will not stand, and certainly will not cheer for these
astronomical achievements. They won't do it no matter what.
The opposition party did spend most of his speech stony faced, seated or protesting.
NPR White House correspondent Franco ArdoƱez was listening to all of those minutes and
he joins us now. Franco, good morning.
Good morning, Steve.
What was it like?
Yeah, I mean there was always some kind of tension in these kind of speeches, but last
night that tension was really so much higher. I mean, in the first five minutes, a Democratic congressman, Al Green of Texas,
stood up in protest.
He was waving his cane and calling out
that Trump didn't have a mandate.
And when he wouldn't sit down,
House Speaker Mike Johnson actually had him
escorted out of the chamber,
which was a first as far as I can remember.
And throughout the speech, Republicans were cheering, Democrats were holding up these
signs that read things like false and save Medicaid.
And just repeatedly, Trump would go after former president Joe Biden by name and calling
Democrats radical left lunatics.
I mean, the partisan nature of this speech is really likely what this is going to be
remembered for. Well, the president certainly celebrated some of his more divisive or partisan achievements.
Yeah, Trump actually spent a lot of time touting the work of Elon Musk and his project to cut cost
known as the Department of Government Efficiency. And he got into some of the nitty gritty giving
this long list of examples that he said were being cut. Here's a small part.
$40 million to improve the social and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants.
Nobody knows what that is.
$8 million to promote LGBTQI plus in the African nation of Lesotho which nobody has ever heard of. Now Steve
Trump's critics have said some of these cuts were for necessary services like
aid for starving children and in some cases the White House did acknowledge
this and rehired people but NPR has also looked into some of the claims of
savings posted on the Doge website and documents show that most of those savings
don't actually exist.
Well, did the president talk about his plans
for the year ahead?
This can be a table setting moment.
Yeah, a little bit.
He asked Congress to pass his tax cuts.
He talked about a plan that he announced this week
to expand production of critical minerals in the US.
But he really spent most of his time talking about things
that he's already done.
Well, did he use guests in attendance to make his points as presidents often do?
He did.
He did.
And that kind of shows, you know, the priorities.
A lot of the guests were victims of crime or worked in law enforcement.
There was this really heartwarming moment when Trump honored a 13-year-old boy who has
fought brain cancer.
He was dressed in a police uniform,
and Trump said he had a special surprise for him.
Tonight, DJ, we're going to do you
the biggest honor of them all.
I am asking our new Secret Service Director,
Sean Curran, to officially make you an agent
of the United States Secret Service.
Trump's Secret Service Director then came out and gave him a badge
and a hug.
In this 90 minute or more speech, Franco, did anything go unsaid?
Well, I mean, one of the biggest concerns Americans have is their grocery bills and
Trump promised to cut high prices, but we really didn't hear anything new about those
plans. He just blamed Biden.
That's White House correspondent Franco Ordonez.
Franco, thanks so much.
Thanks, Steve.
Now, Democrats took note of what the president
didn't say about prices.
Senator Alyssa Slotkin of Michigan
delivered the party's response.
President Trump is trying to deliver
an unprecedented giveaway to his billionaire friends.
He's on the hunt to find trillions of dollars
to pass along to the wealthiest in America.
And to do that, he's going to make you pay in every part of your life.
Grocery and home prices are going up, not down, and he hasn't laid out a credible plan
to deal with either of those.
Slotkin argued that Trump's tariffs and other proposals will raise prices the opposite of
what voters said they wanted in last year's election.
Another big issue in last year's election was immigration, and the president spoke last night
of rounding up migrants that he described as terrorists.
Every last one will be rounded up and forcibly removed from our country,
or if they're too dangerous, put in jails, standing trial in this country.
NPR's immigration policy reporter, Jimena Bustillo, is listening in and is with us after a long night. Jimena, good morning. Good morning, Steve.
Well, how did the president highlight immigration as you listened? There were
several guests in the audience invited that showcased this priority not just
for the administration but for Republicans. One was House Speaker Mike
Johnson's guest, who was White House border's Art Artam Homan. Homan is one of the
key advisors designating and directing Trump's immigration policy through the federal agencies
and has been one of the spokespeople for the administration's goals. Other guests of the White
House included Roberto Ortiz, a U.S. Border Patrol agent. And also there were family members of Lake
and Riley. You might recall that she's a Georgia nursing student whose murder became a rallying cry for Republicans criticizing the Biden
administration's immigration plan. The first law Trump signed in his second term was named
after Riley and it expanded the scope of who could be deported.
Now the president made a claim during the address that illegal border crossings are
at the lowest level ever recorded. What do the facts show you?
The agency has not reported the numbers for February yet. That's the Customs and Border
Protection. However, posts on social media by the president suggest the administration
is on track to report about 8,500 arrests at the U.S.-Mexico border in the month of
February. This could be the lowest number of crossings since Homeland Security started reporting the data in 2000.
Okay. So that is a drop.
Right. And these numbers can ebb and flow depending on various factors. During President
Biden's administration, unlawful crossings nationwide peaked in 2022. There was another
peak again in 2023, but they've been declining ever since and were on a downward trend when
Trump took office.
Now, the president, interestingly enough, also talked about letting people in to the
country, future action on visas.
What's he talking about?
Trump recently announced a plan to create a so-called gold card, which he said would
allow, quote, very high-level people to apply to become lawful permanent residents.
His administration has pitched this as a replacement to the current EB-5 immigrant investor visa.
But the president can't solely create a new visa.
That power lies within Congress.
So far, a formal proposal has not been issued by the Trump administration.
And speaking of Congress, Trump also took this speech as a reminder to lawmakers that
his administration is asking for more money to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
Speaking to reporters at the White House earlier in the day, Border Czar Tom Homan described
the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency as being, quote, in the hole.
And he said that they needed more money for detention beds and flights to send people
out.
But that money has to come from Congress.
And Piers Jimena-B Bastio. Get some sleep.
Thank you.
Okay, President Trump was not the only world leader to give a big speech in front of a
legislature in the past day.
Yes, Chinese Premier Li Qiyong delivered an annual government work report on the first
day of the first day of
the annual session of China's parliament.
It's a State of the Union type address, and it gives us an idea of what's on the minds
of the leaders of the world's number two economy.
And Piers, John Rewich was at the Great Hall of the People, big building in the middle
of Beijing, to hear this, and he's on the line.
John, hi there.
Hi, Steve.
So did China's leaders use this occasion to respond
to what President Trump was saying here,
including about them?
Well, no, Li Chang's speech was wrapping up
as Trump was getting started.
So we haven't really seen a Chinese response
to Trump's speech yet.
The Chinese government responded though
to the new tariffs by Trump.
He ratcheted tariffs on Chinese imports up to 20% yesterday.
They retaliated with their own tariffs on American chicken, wheat, corn, soybeans, and
such.
It's blacklisted about 15 US companies.
The Chinese premier did not mention the US by name in his address.
It's the kind of document that's drafted over the course of months, doesn't change with
headlines.
But he did talk about, quote, an increasingly complex and severe external environment.
Now those are words we've heard from Chinese leaders before.
And analysts say they're basically code
for this confrontational situation they have with the US.
On that front, Lee flagged some concerns
that that external environment
may actually have a greater impact on China going forward.
Rank and file delegates to the National People's Congress
didn't seem too worried though about the tariffs.
Oh, this is really interesting.
I've been talking with economic and business figures
connected with China who seem to think
the tariffs will hurt Americans
more than they're going to hurt the Chinese.
But what are you hearing where you are?
Yeah, well, we had a chance to talk to a handful of delegates
on their way into the opening session today.
One of them was Tian Xuan, who's a professor of finance, part of the Shanghai delegation.
So he told me that China is basically in a better position to handle the tariffs now and to offset
them than before. China has a huge domestic market, for instance. It's got comprehensive supply
chains. He says the authorities are taking steps to stimulate domestic demand.
And he says the tariffs are also kind of a motivator for China to promote high tech and
to expand relations with other countries.
Economists, like you say, say the tariffs will probably start to hurt, especially if
they keep going up.
But these handpicked delegates to parliament were projecting confidence, as you might expect.
OK, so that's the spin.
And there's not nothing behind the spin.
But also, China's economy nothing behind the spin, but also
China's economy has really been struggling, sputtering and doing strange things the last
couple of years. So how do they address that? Well, the premier flagged the risks like that
external environment, like sluggish domestic demand, but he also projected some confidence.
He set a growth target of around 5% this year. It's about the same as last year. And to get
there, announced some fresh fiscal stimulus,
a willingness to pursue more accommodative monetary policy,
to increase funding for industries of the future
like quantum technology, AI, these type of things.
Okay, so I just wanna note, there's a one-party Congress,
not likely to have a failed vote
or a close vote on anything,
but it does, I guess, signal where the government is going,
so what do you expect in the coming days?
Well, one interesting thing we'll be looking out for is that the NPC may pass some legislation
that would support and protect private businesses.
And that's pretty interesting because the leadership here seems to have renewed its
interest in these companies as drivers of the economy and innovation, especially after
the Chinese company DeepSeek released an advanced AI model in January that shocked the world.
NPR's John Rooch with some insights from Beijing. Really appreciate it, John. You're welcome.
And that's up first for this Wednesday, March 5th. I'm Steve Inskeep.
And I'm Michelle Martin. There is an easy way to stay connected to news and podcasts from the NPR
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Today's Up First was edited by Roberta Rampton, Kevin Drew, Rylan Barton, Alice Wolffley,
and Mohammed El-Bardisi, who was produced by Ziad Bach, Nia Dumas, and Chris Thomas.
We get engineering support from Nisha Hines and our technical director is Stacey Abbott.
Join us again tomorrow.
I know it's almost baseball season. I should have described her fist pump as I said.