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cover of episode Congress Budget Vote, Trump Speaks At DOJ, Federal Workers Reinstated

Congress Budget Vote, Trump Speaks At DOJ, Federal Workers Reinstated

2025/3/14
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Steve Inskeep和Leila Fadl:参议院民主党领袖最终支持共和党提出的政府拨款法案,避免政府关门。法案中增加了国防开支,削减了哥伦比亚特区的资金,并赋予总统更多自主权进行削减。民主党内部对此存在分歧,一些人认为这会削弱政府。 Deirdre Walsh:尽管民主党对共和党政府拨款法案不满,但足够多的民主党议员预计会与共和党人一起通过该法案,避免政府关门。民主党内部对此存在分歧,一些人反对该法案,认为它会削弱政府。 Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez:民主党对政府拨款法案感到愤怒和背叛,这种情绪不仅存在于进步派民主党人中,也存在于整个党派中。 Ryan Lucas:特朗普总统在司法部发表关于法律和秩序的演讲,这很不寻常,因为他对司法部采取了强硬立场,并解雇了被认为不够忠诚的职业官员。特朗普政府对司法部进行了清洗,解雇了参与特朗普不喜欢调查的检察官,同时对特朗普的盟友网开一面。 Chris Arnold:两位联邦法官下令恢复数千名被特朗普政府解雇的政府雇员的职位,认为这些解雇是非法的。政府辩称这些解雇是合法的,并已提出上诉,但法官认为政府的说法不可信。 Michelle Berkovich:大规模解雇导致政府机构人才流失严重,机构运作受到严重影响。

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The Senate Democratic leader now backs a Republican bill to fund the government. A shutdown would give Donald Trump and Elon Musk carte blanche to destroy vital government services. We hear his case for a bill he hates. I'm Steve Inskeep with Leila Fadl, and this is Up First from NPR News.

Past presidents kept some distance from the Justice Department to avoid the appearance of political interference. Today, President Trump delivers a speech there on what he says is law and order. What are his orders to federal agents and prosecutors? Two federal judges say the Trump administration may have broken the law when they dismiss thousands of federal employees. But will they permanently get their jobs back? You have a huge loss of institutional knowledge.

It's just decimated the government. Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day. This message comes from Sotva, the first company to sell luxury mattresses online without the hassle or expense of traditional mattress stores. So Sotva customers have always paid about 50% less than retail. Visit s-double-a-t-v-a-dot-com-slash-n-p-r-today where NPR listeners save an additional $200.

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Federal agencies run out of money at the end of today. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed a spending bill earlier this week that would keep the government open. It funds the government through the end of September with money mostly unchanged, except it raises defense spending and cuts money for the District of Columbia, among other things. It's written in a way that may give President Trump more leeway to make cuts of his own.

Republicans need the votes from Democrats to get the bill through the Senate, leaving Democrats with the choice to support this bill they hate or allow a government shutdown. NPR congressional correspondent Deirdre Walsh joins us now. Good morning. Good morning. Okay, so many Democrats had said they wouldn't vote yes on the spending bill to push back on these legally questionable government cuts. Is that still the case? Are they going to make good on that threat? Is there going to be a shutdown? No.

It does not look like we are heading towards a shutdown. Democrats are not happy with this bill at all. It was written without their input, but enough are expected to join with Republicans to pass it later today.

Since the House passed this bill largely along party lines on Tuesday, Senate Democrats have been debating and agonizing about what to do. Do they help Republicans avoid a shutdown or block the bill and trigger one? They say both options are terrible. Last night, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer argued a shutdown would be worse. A shutdown would give Donald Trump and Elon Musk carte blanche opportunities

to destroy vital government services at a significantly faster rate than they can right now. Okay, so you say it looks like there won't be a shutdown. So do you expect most or all Democrats to follow suit and back the bill now? No, most will vote against it, but we expect enough will join Republicans to get it through. Schumer declined to say how many, but his support does give undecided Democrats the cover to vote yes.

Republicans control the White House, the House and the Senate, but they have a 53 seat majority in the Senate and you need 60 to get around a filibuster. They are going to need about eight Democrats to join them later today because one of their own Republican Kentucky Senator Rand Paul is planning to vote no. OK, so just walk us through why the Democrats have been and still are so divided on what to do here.

Right. It has been a, you know, intense discussions. The Democratic base is really angry about how President Trump and Elon Musk have been slashing the federal government. They want Democrats on Capitol Hill to use this one moment where they actually have some leverage in the minority to fight back. But since Schumer said last night he will vote for this bill, we're already seeing some major blowback from other Democrats.

All three top House Democratic leaders put out a statement last night saying they remain strongly opposed to the bill. And New York Democratic Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez did not mince her words talking to NPR's Barbara Sprunt last night. I think there is a deep sense of outrage and betrayal. And this is not just about progressive Democrats. This is across the board, the entire party.

She also said moderates in the House Democrats who won in Trump districts voted no on this. And she said today House Democrats are still going to urge Democrats to block this bill. OK, so what are Republicans saying about when we should expect this vote?

You know, it's Congress, so they always wait until the last minute. So we expect the vote on this bill later this afternoon. That obviously gives Congress just hours before the deadline. Republicans were gearing up for a message war if Democrats blocked the bill to label this a Schumer shutdown. That's NPR's Deirdre Walsh. Thank you, Deirdre. Thank you. Thank you.

President Trump is expected to make a short trip down Pennsylvania Avenue today to visit the Justice Department. Yeah, he's going to deliver a speech, which the White House bills as being about law and order. Trump's visit comes at a turbulent time for the department, where Trump appointees have pushed out career officials.

At the department who they deem insufficiently loyal to the president. NPR justice correspondent Ryan Lucas joins us now with more. Good morning, Ryan. Good morning. Okay, so how unusual is it for a president to deliver a speech at the Justice Department?

It's a pretty rare thing. Biden never did it. Trump didn't do it in his first term. In fact, I could only find four occasions that it has happened since 2000. Twice, President Obama did it. The first time was a speech about changes his administration was making to surveillance programs. The other time was at a farewell ceremony for his first attorney general.

The other two instances were early in President George W. Bush's administration, one of them being a ceremony in 2001 to rename the department's headquarters after Robert F. Kennedy. So it is rare for a president to do this. Historically, presidents keep their distance from the Justice Department. There's been a norm for decades now, respected by both Republican and Democratic administrations, that the department should be independent and free from political interference.

But President Trump has made clear that he has a very different idea about the relationship between the president and the Justice Department. Yeah. So what do we expect to hear from the president in his speech? Well, we heard a bit of it at the top. The White House says Trump is going to talk about restoring law and order, about removing violent criminals from communities and ending what the White House says is the weaponization of justice against Americans for their political leanings.

And that last idea there is a central theme for Trump, his allies on the Hill, and for his new Justice Department leadership. Trump, of course, argues that he was unfairly targeted by federal prosecutors during the Biden administration. He has promised vengeance. The new Justice Department leadership talks a lot about ending the purported weaponization and politicization of the Justice Department in recent years.

But at the same time, they have taken punitive action against nonpolitical career prosecutors and officials who worked on investigations or issues that Trump doesn't like. Yeah, I mean, there's been quite the purge. Just recap some of the punitive actions we've seen.

Well, for one, the new department leadership has fired prosecutors who worked on the special counsel investigations into Trump, saying that those folks couldn't be trusted to implement the president's agenda. They have fired prosecutors who worked on the January 6th Capitol riot cases. They've demoted senior career prosecutors who worked cases involving Trump allies. The Justice Department frames this as ending weaponization, but critics say that these actions appear to be retaliation against folks who worked cases the president didn't like.

Now, at the same time, the department has cut breaks for Trump allies. Critics point to the Justice Department's decision to dismiss corruption charges against the New York City Mayor Eric Adams. Adams has pledged to cooperate with Trump's immigration enforcement. More than a half dozen veteran Justice Department prosecutors resigned in protest.

That includes the acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan who said there was no good faith basis to drop the Adams case. So with all of the things that have happened in the past few weeks, what sort of reception do you expect Trump to receive today?

It's a good question. You know, it's no secret, as we've said, that Trump has been extremely critical of the Justice Department over the years. So it's going to be interesting to see what he has to say, how he says it, as he lays out his vision for the department in the very building that he has been so critical of. I'm Pierre's Ryan Lucas. Thank you, Ryan. Thank you. Thank you.

Two federal judges ordered government agencies to reinstate thousands of workers who were recently fired by the Trump administration. The judges say the mass firings were conducted in a way that appears to be illegal.

All of the employees were on probationary status, meaning they were in their first year or two on the job for the most part. One ruling covers the departments of Veterans Affairs, Defense, Agriculture, Energy, Interior, and Treasury. A lot of federal departments. The other case was brought by Democratic State Attorneys General and covered even more agencies, but is just temporary.

We're joined now by NPR's Chris Arnold, who has been watching all of this. Hi, Chris. Hey, Layla. Okay, so two rulings. Let's start with this case out of San Francisco. What did the judge say yesterday? The judge said a lot, actually. This is a dramatic hearing. This is District Judge William Alsup.

And one thing he said is that these workers were lied to about why they were fired. He said, quote,

And the idea there is that firing workers for bad performance made it easier to fire them, but it wasn't true. Many workers got glowing reviews from supervisors. They'd been doing a good job. We've spoken with some of these workers. The judge called the mass firing a sham to get around statutory requirements. And he said that the administration exceeded its authority by having one

One office in the government directs so many other agencies to just summarily fire all these workers. OK, so some strong language there from the judge. What was the government's argument that these were legitimate firings?

Right. The government argued that agencies made their own decisions. The firings were proper. But the judge, again, said, quote, you know, I tend to doubt that you're telling me the truth at that point. The White House is unamused by all of this. White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt said in a statement, quote, a single judge is attempting to unconstitutionally seize the power of hiring and firing from the executive branch.

The administration has now appealed, but now it's not a single judge. Last night, this ruling came down in the second case. The judge sided with Democratic State Attorneys General. They put a 14-day stay in place on these mass firings. The government there had argued that the states didn't have standing and hadn't been harmed by the firings. Interestingly, though, we should say both judges said, look, we understand the government has a right to do a reduction in force, but it has to follow the law.

You know, Chris, this has been so chaotic for federal workers, and it's been an ongoing fight that's really impacting their lives. What are you hearing from them when you speak to them? I mean, one thing I've been struck by is that these are not all new hires. I mean, these are probationary workers, but a lot of them have been working in an agency for 10 years, say, and they're probationary because they just got a new job that they just got promoted. Right.

I talked to an employment attorney, Michelle Berkovich, about this. She's working on another effort to reinstate workers. I've looked at data from about 10,000 terminated employees. And what's very clear is that you have everyone from the director or deputy director to the student intern. So you have a huge loss of institutional knowledge. It's just decimated the government.

And the plaintiff's attorneys in the case say the firings have made Swiss cheese of some of these agencies. OK, so now the judges ordered these workers to be reinstated. Is that going to happen right away?

Well, the judge in the San Francisco case said immediately. Berkovich is saying, don't count on this. The government's been dragging its feet with some of these orders. She's telling workers, look, if you're looking for another job or trying some kind of appeal, just keep doing that. And Pierre's Chris Arnold. Thank you, Chris. Thanks, Layla. Thank you.

For your next listen, this weekend on The Sunday Story, Enes Baba is NPR's eyes and ears on the ground in Gaza. Since the start of the war, he has sent dispatches from hospitals, displacement camps, and bomb sites with little more than a cell phone. Wherever you put your eye...

To the horizon, it's the same. Destruction everywhere. Anas tells the Sunday story what it's like to live through this war as he covers it for NPR. That's the Sunday right here in the Up First podcast.

And that's a first for Friday, March 14th. I'm Leila Falded. And I'm Steve Inskeep. Up First comes your way on Saturdays. Ayesha Roscoe and Scott Simon have the news, which you will find wherever you get your podcasts. And today's episode of Up First was edited by Kelsey Snell, Anna Yukunanov, Ben Swayze, Alice Wolfley, and Mohamed Zanfardisi. It was produced by Ziad Butch, Nia Dumas, and Karim Karim.

Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Nisha Hynas. Our technical director is Carly Strange and our executive producer is Jay Shaler. Join us again on Monday. Support for NPR and the following message come from Bowlin Branch. Change your sleep with the softness of Bowlin Branch's 100% organic cotton sheets. Feel the difference with 15% off your first set of sheets at bowlinbranch.com with code NPR. Exclusions apply. See site for details.

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