Up First from NPR - Winter In Gaza, Black Friday Shopping, Third Party Politics
Episode Date: November 29, 2024Aid groups warn lives will be lost in Gaza as winter settles in and people lack protection against harsh elements and seasonal illnesses. It's Black Friday and retailers are expecting a record-breakin...g number of shoppers. And, third party presidential candidates got fewer votes in 2024 than in recent years. 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 Didrik Schanche, Emily Kopp, Megan Pratz, Lisa Thomson and Mohamad ElBardicy. It was produced by Adam Bearne, Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Lilly Quiroz. We get engineering support from Ted Mebane. Our technical director is Carleigh Strange. And our Executive Producer is Erika Aguilar. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Eight groups warn lives will be lost in Gaza as winter settles in and people don't have
protection against harsh elements and seasonal illnesses.
Too little aid is coming in and of that aid a fraction is really distributed.
I'm Rob Schmitz and this is Up First from NPR News.
It's Black Friday.
As more people say they're tightening their budgets, this is expected
to be a record-breaking holiday shopping season. So what's motivating people to spend and who
are they actually shopping for? And support for third parties declined in this year's
election.
I personally did not feel a lot of support from the National Party. I felt like there
was a lot of antagonism.
What's next for people who want options beyond the two-party system? Stay with us. We'll
give you the news you need to start your day.
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Israel and Lebanon agreed on a ceasefire this week to pause more than a year of fighting.
But in Gaza, Israeli airstrikes continue to pound the territory, where more than 40,000
people have been killed, most of them women and children, according to the health ministry there.
And now people in Gaza have this to contend with. Winter has arrived and most
families don't have a home or shelter. Joining us to discuss the latest in Gaza
is NPR's international correspondent, Eya Batraoui, who's based in Dubai.
Hi Eya. Hi Rob. So Eya, temperatures dropped into the 40s Fahrenheit at night in Gaza
this week and it began to rain. How are people surviving? Well Rob, many people are hardly
surviving and aid groups warn that this winter will claim even more lives from things like malnutrition,
hypothermia, flu, and other less visible consequences of this war. Now NPR's producer Anas Baba met with families in Gaza who are on the very edge of survival.
He went to a strip of coastline called Moessi after a night of rain, and he found families
covered in seawater.
The few things that they owned, some clothes, pots and pans, were buried in the sand by
lashing wind and rain.
Now for months, thousands of families were forced to live here right at the edge of the
Mediterranean Sea because most of Gaza is under Israeli military evacuation order,
leaving just this stretch of coast all that's left.
That sounds terrible.
What do people have to protect themselves with?
Well, not very much.
Families were able to survive the grueling summer in flimsy tents, but winter is proving impossible
Nidal Abdul Qatati's tent was made out of used flower bags and some wooden sticks and he tried to cover with extra
Tarping to prepare for winter but then this happened
So he tells Anas that his children erupted into screams around 2 in the morning. Waves had crashed into their tent, pulling their blankets and things out to sea.
And he says his kids were being swallowed by the sea and being pulled by the tide too.
And his three-year-old daughter was crying all through the night after he pulled her
ashore.
And with no idea where they can go next, he says, where are our human rights?
So Aya, why is it that people don't have proper shelter when aid groups have had months to prepare for winter?
Well, I asked aid workers this question and here was the answer. Too little aid is coming in and of that aid a fraction is
really distributed.
So that's Jan Egeland. He's the secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council. Now
this is the main group in Gaza in charge of shelters and tents.
He was in Gaza this month and he says that the destruction from airstrikes has left the
entire territory in ruins. Now Israel's military says it is facilitating a humanitarian response
to prepare for winter in Gaza, that it has allowed tons of aid in, but Eglin says at
the rate Israel is allowing in tents and other aid, it will take at least two years to get
the supplies in needed just to cover people for this winter. And Rob Eglin says of the few hundred tents they have
been able to get into Gaza, many are damaged by the time they arrive or they
end up stolen by armed gangs that have sprung up near Gaza's border with Israel.
And these looters attacked a food aid convoy of around a hundred UN trucks last
week taking everything. This just sounds like a completely dismal situation.
What else do you know about the attack on the aid truck
that you just mentioned?
So this was the biggest looting of UN aid anywhere in the world.
And armed gangs are taking advantage of the chaos
right now in Gaza to attack these trucks.
And what that's done is it's driven up prices at the same
time that bakeries are shutting down
because they don't have flour.
People are selling their clothes, their winter jackets and shoes to buy
food, and the World Food Program, which runs these bakeries, also had to suspend
giving out parcels. And all this is happening while tents, flour, and blankets
are sitting in warehouses and on trucks just outside Gaza.
That's NPR's Aya Batraoui. Aya, thank you so much for bringing this to us.
Thanks, Rob.
We are officially in the busiest shopping season of the year.
It is Black Friday, which can mean joy or chaos for shoppers and financial pressure
and chaos for retailers.
What's in store for our budgets and the US economy?
NPR's Alina Seljuk is here to tell us. Alina, good morning.
Hello, hello.
So let's start with the big picture. How are shoppers feeling about the economy and holiday spending this year?
Well, people are not feeling great about prices, but they are shopping, they are spending.
We are likely in for another record holiday shopping season.
Already, so far just this month, online shoppers alone have spent almost 10% more this year
compared to last year.
That seems like a lot.
It's a lot.
And that's just as of Wednesday, according to Adobe Analytics, which tracks online transactions.
So is that because the prices are higher?
So I mean, we're spending more, but we're buying less.
I think that's part of it.
But there is more to the story.
For this Black Friday weekend, retailers are also expecting huge turnout,
a record number of people shopping.
And of those people, there's a growing group saying they plan to spend more
this year than they did last year, which, you know, how do you get more people
shopping when more people say they're tightening their budgets? And the answer is deals. When people feel financially
squeezed, to have several days known for discounts is a big draw. So deals, are these deals expected
to be really good this year? You know, that's the perennial question. And the answer is always,
it depends. Deals are not good enough for a lot of shoppers I talk to who say prices are too high
to begin with and any discount is simply not enough. But then you have this weird calendar
thing. Thanksgiving this year is quite late in November, so there are actually five fewer
shopping days till Christmas. Which means less time for retailers to sell you what they want to sell
you, which has some experts predicting maybe rolling sales that stores might drop prices just to clear
those shelves.
So what are people actually buying, Alina?
What are the most popular things this year?
You know, it's a lot of classics this year.
Top toys are expected to include Legos, Hot Wheels, Barbies, slime kits for adults, Dyson
hair devices, fitness trackers, gaming
consoles and pickleball paddles, which is a new classic.
And one thing came up in a survey by Circana, it's a market research firm.
They found almost two thirds of shoppers saying that higher costs of food and bills, like
insurance especially, it has people changing how they shop.
People are maybe buying fewer gifts, cheaper gifts, or buying off-brand stuff.
And there's another curious element.
There's one category that shifts depending on economic vibes.
Okay, what is that?
And that is whether or not you are buying presents for yourself.
It's like that famous Parks and Rec scene.
Three words for you. Treat yo self. Clothes. Treat yourself. Fragrances. Treat yourself. Massages.
Treat yourself. So there's this annual survey done by Deloitte that actually found people plan to buy
more gifts for themselves this year compared to last year. The sum on average is about $44 more.
And the reasons could be all kinds. This could be folks who are
more well-off, so maybe they're not really budgeting, or it could be, you know, that
oldest Black Friday trick in the book, which is I got to get it because it's on sale.
Merry Christmas to me. That is NPR's Alina Selyuk. Alina, thank you.
Thank you.
President-elect Donald Trump has run for president in the past three elections, and in 2024, third-party presidential candidates got fewer votes than at any other point in the Trump
era of presidential politics.
This is despite widespread dissatisfaction with Republican and Democratic nominees for much of the campaign cycle. NPR's Stephen Fowler has
been covering third parties this year for us and he reports Donald Trump
himself is actually a big reason for that decline. Good morning Stephen. Good
morning. So Trump won the popular vote but did not clear 50%. How many votes did
third-party campaigns earn in this election cycle?
So not that many, relatively speaking, Rob. Out of about 154 million ballots cast,
less than 2% went to someone not named Donald Trump or Kamala Harris. Green
Party nominee Jill Stein did the best with just about 800,000 votes. Then came
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who actually removed his name from most every competitive
swing state ballot, literally told people, do not vote for me. But he earned slightly
fewer votes than that. The Libertarian Party nominee Chase Oliver earned just about 640,000
votes, which is notable considering the Libertarian Party is the third largest political party
and usually the most common alternative.
Wow. So that's a sharp decline since 2016 when the Libertarian Party earned 3% of the
vote.
What happened there?
Well, none of this is actually surprising when you look under the hood at how Robert
F. Kennedy Jr. and the Libertarian Party apparatus both shifted to support Trump and oppose Democrats
the closer we got to the election.
At the Libertarian Party convention this summer, both RFK and Trump spoke.
They tried to court the party's endorsement and favor.
The party instead nominated Chase Oliver, a gay anti-war activist, more on the progressive
end at the Libertarian spectrum.
When I talked to Oliver earlier this month, he said Kennedy's decision to leave the race
also took a lot of interest in third-party candidates along with him
Plus he had to deal with his own party's politics that took a hard right turn towards Trump
I personally did not feel a lot of support from the National Party
I felt like there was a lot of antagonism particularly because a lot of wanted to throw in our votes for Trump
Because he made a lot of promises to libertarians and one one of those promises, Rob, was to put a libertarian in his cabinet.
I mean, so far, there are no libertarians
in Trump's next cabinet,
but there is Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,
who's been tapped to lead
the Department of Health and Human Services.
Is his appointment a victory for voters
interested in third-party options moving forward?
Well, some of the libertarians call it a win,
though RFK is not a libertarian.
Beyond Kennedy though, Chase Oliver says Trump's picks show his
compatriots have been bamboozled.
I'm going to say right now, based on his foreign policy picks and cabinet picks
so far, not paying out for the libertarians, especially in terms of foreign policy.
We are an anti-war, anti-interventionist party.
The reality is Trump picking RFK Jr. is a mark of loyalty for Kennedy dropping out of the race and endorsing him.
It's also an acknowledgement of the sizable overlap and the shared ideology between Trump's
base and R.F.K.'s base around health, but in some ways it does validate the idea that
it is possible to exist outside of the two-party system, have your voice be heard, and gain concessions
from whoever ultimately ends up being in power.
That is NPR's Stephen Fowler in Atlanta.
Stephen, thank you.
Thank you.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Diedrich Skanky,
Emily Kopp, Megan Pratz, Lisa Thompson, and Mohammed El-Bardisi.
It was produced by Ziad Bach, Nia Dumas, and Liliki Ross.
Our executive producer is Erica Aguilar.
We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent,
and our technical director is Nisha Hines.
Join us again tomorrow.