(upbeat music)
- A new take on an old problem. The issue in question is public corruption
and the response from the second Trump administration
is worth a look. I'm Ay Sharaskov. And I'm Elisina Advourney and this is up first from NPR News. - NPR has new reporting on how President Trump
and his DOJ approach misdeeds by public officials. And we've got Justice Correspondent Ryan Lucas for you today on the podcast. Also, a controversial Florida detention center may be shutting its doors.
- And how NATO's members' states are feeling about and reacting to the current moment. So stay with us.
βWe have the news you need to start your weekend.β
(upbeat music) This message comes from TED Talks Daily, a podcast with a new idea every day to spark your curiosity. Here about all inspiring innovations and perspectives in new conversations and talks from the TED 2026 stage.
Find TED Talks Daily wherever you listen.
- First up today, a rocky moment for a key alliance.
- In the 10 weeks since the start of the war in Iran, the geopolitical cost are growing, along with the enormous economic fallout as the conflict inflames a fight between President Trump and NATO allies.
- Bringing relations to what many experts say is a low point in NATO's 77-year history. NPR Scott Newman joins us now with the latest and how we got here. Good morning Scott.
- Good morning Alyssa. - Okay, so remind us how this dispute between President Trump and NATO started.
β- To start with NATO criticized the White Houseβ
for not consulting them before planning strikes on Iran, then Trump himself rebuked NATO for not backing the U.S. war effort. Now, Spain has refused to let the U.S. use bases on its soil, while the UK and Germany say they won't join
the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports. German chancellor Friedrich Merz went even further, suggesting that Iran had humiliated Washington in peace talks. - And how is Trump responded? - Well, he wasn't happy.
Soon after all of this, the Pentagon said it was with drawing 5,000 American troops from Germany, and a plan to supply the country with U.S. made Tomahawk missiles might be showed. Despite all that, the UK and Germany have continued
to share intelligence and allow the U.S. to use bases on their territory for operations over the Persian Gulf. - Okay, Scott, let's step back a bit.
This isn't the first run-in between President Trump
and the rest of NATO. Catch us up. - Yeah, not at all. In Trump's first term, he repeatedly criticized NATO members for not pulling their own weight when it comes to defense spending.
And he suggested that future U.S. helped to allies could depend on them, quote, "paying their bills." He also floated the idea of buying Greenland. Now, fast forward. By his second term, the Greenland talk
had turned into threats of seizing it by force. Despite Greenland belonging to NATO, member Denmark. He also spoke openly about annexing another ally, Canada. Here's former NATO ambassador, Evo Dalder.
- Old cathals in Europe and in Canada realized that something fundamental has broken. - Now, Trump is again threatening to withdraw from NATO while tensions grow over U.S. policy in the state of Hormuz. - Okay, so something fundamental has broken.
βWhat does all this mean for the future of the alliance?β
- Well, no one I talk to thinks Trump will follow through on his threats to exit NATO altogether. In any case, that would require approval by Congress, but allies increasingly view the U.S. as an unreliable partner. And NATO is actively planning for a future
where the U.S. takes a back seat, and countries like Germany step up to take the lead. - Is that just all talk or is there actually more to it? - Well, Germany hasn't fact committed to a significant increase in its own troop levels,
with a view to taking a larger role in NATO, but a bigger problem is that Europe and Canada don't have the same capacity as the U.S. to conduct long-range precision strikes. We're talking about big transport planes, bombers,
and cruise missiles, and their navies don't come close to the U.S. either. Balkan Devlin is a senior fellow at Canada's McDonald L'OriΓ© Institute. He says it could take as long as 10 years
for the rest of the alliance to acquire those capabilities. And that says Devlin would leave a potential vulnerability gap that Russia, which is now in its fifth year of an expansionist war in Ukraine, could exploit. - The concern is that the German administration
will not provide that time to do an order in a transition to more European leadership. - Devlin and others say the result of the loss of trust in the U.S. is ironically creating exactly the kind of NATO Trump seems to want,
One led by Europe, not the U.
- Hmm.
- That's NPR's Scott Newman, thank you.
- Thanks, Alyssa. (upbeat music) - The immigration detention center in the Everglades called Alligator Alcatraz may be closing earlier than expected. - Florida Governor Ron DeSantis confirmed reporting
by the New York Times that Florida officials are in talks with the Trump administration over the future of the facility. Megan Bowman of member station WUSF in Tampa has been covering the detention center
and is with us now. Hi, Megan. - Hi. - So remind us of the unique nature of this detention center. - Right, so it opened last summer in July
in the middle of the Everglades. This swampy marshland in South Florida that has a lot of Alligators.
βThat's how state officials came up with the name.β
It's at a small training airport and DeSantis took control of the facility using emergency power so it could be built in eight days. Plus everything had to be trucked in, like water, generators, even tents for housing.
So now it's a tent city on the runway. All sewage and trash gets trucked out and it's in the middle of nowhere. Which was the idea behind it that if people escaped, they'd run into Alligators
in other wildlife. And ever since it opened, there've been complaints about inhumane conditions of detainees and environmental concerns of the facility operating in a very sensitive ecosystem.
- Okay, so I understand that the state of Florida is running the facility and then paying for all of it, at least for now. - Well, kind of, yeah, since they built this facility from scratch and there was no existing infrastructure,
βit cost a lot of money and it continues to drain the state.β
But public records show the state prepared this cost breakdown when they applied for a grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The understanding was the state would be reimbursed and that the center would run
at least through June of 2027. So they show a cost Florida about $750,000 a day to operate. The New York Times reports that number is actually a little closer to a million dollars a day. So including a one-time cost to build it,
the state's total yearly cost was nearly $1.4 billion. So far, it's been the state covering that expense, not the federal government. They did get a letter to get reimbursed by the feds, but no money has arrived yet.
So what is Governor Ron DeSantis saying about that money and the future of the detention center?
- Well, the governor has always said
that the state will get reimbursed. DeSantis says he talked to FEMA about it the other day and that it will happen soon.
βHe's always said he was just helping DHSβ
and ICE get enough detention beds temporarily for their immigration enforcement. Now he says if DHS can handle the detainees, he is happy to close alligator alcatraz. - It was always designed to be a temporary facility.
It is made a major impact. And if we shut the lights out on it tomorrow, we will be able to say it served as purpose because it was responsible for helping with almost 22,000 illegal aliens.
- Now ICE data shows out of nearly 1,400 male detainees there now. 900 have no criminal record. So what's next for the detention center? Who we're gonna see if things are really going to wind down early, I should note that nationwide ICE and DHS efforts
to expand immigration detention has faced tough and often bipartisan backlash. But lawsuits over environmental concerns and the treatment of detainees are still working their way through its courts.
There's also a public petition to close the facility. It has more than 53,000 signatures. - That's Megan Bowman of member station WUSF in Tampa. Thanks for your reporting. Thank you.
(upbeat music)
- And finally, today on the podcast,
a new approach to public corruption. Since it's returned to office, President Trump has parted more than a dozen former elected officials and their associates convicted or charged with corruption offenses. - MPR Justice Correspondent Ryan Lucas has new reporting
on accountability and the second Trump administration and he joins us now. Ryan, thanks for being with us. - Thanks for having me. - So tell us about how you approached this idea
of Trump's take on public corruption. - Right, and public corruption is obviously a big topic. There are a lot of different aspects to it. So I decided to focus on two things. One of them is presidential parties.
I went through all of President Trump's party and since he returned to office a little more than a year ago.
What I found is that he has pardoned
at least 15 former elected officials
βand their co-conspirators who are either convictedβ
of corruption or charged with corruption crimes. And the one that really stuck out to me was a former Las Vegas Councilwoman Michelle Fury. She was convicted of pocketing $70,000 in donations meant to build memorials
to police officers who were killed in the line of duty. And instead, she spent that money on herself for things like cosmetic surgery, rent, her daughter's wedding. Trump pardoned her weeks before she was going to be sentenced. She is a Republican and in total more than half of the parties
that I looked at were given to Republicans or Trump supporters. - Is this sort of thing unusual with parties? - Look, the President's pardon power is a core power. It's rooted in the Constitution. But I talked to Dan Greenberg about Trump's pardon's.
Greenberg is a legal fellow at the libertarian Kato Institute.
And he said every president makes mistakes
in the pardon process from time to time. He'd liken such mistakes to a hailstone out of a clear blue sky. But with Trump's pardon, he says, this is more of a hailstone.
- There's just a pile of pardons
βthat I think appear to any reasonable personβ
to be not just highly questionable, but just obviously disturbing. - Now, I asked the White House about these pardon for corruption offenses. A White House spokeswoman defended Trump's pardon.
She said some of them were for people who were victims of what she called President Biden's weaponized justice system. - So, partens are just one piece of the puzzle. You also looked at changes at the Justice Department.
What did you find there? - Right, the other piece that I looked at is a special unit at the Justice Department called the Public Integrity Section. It was created after watergate to investigate
and prosecute public corruption and election crimes. And for 50 years, that is what it did. It brought cases against elected officials, corrupt police officers, but it has been gutted under this administration.
The section had 35 to 40 attorneys when Trump returned to office last January.
βNow it has just two full-time attorneys.β
The section had 175 to 200 investigations in charged cases on its hands when Trump returned to office. That number has now dropped to around 20. So, a huge decrease. I did reach out to the Justice Department
for comment on this. It did not respond. - What's the practical effect of gutting this corruption fighting unit? - Well, it's interesting, but current and former officials,
I spoke with, say, it's really smaller states in rural areas that are gonna be hit the hardest by this. And the reason for that is public corruption cases are resource and time intensive, big city U.S. attorney offices, have enough resources to do them on their own,
but a lot of places don't. And it's those places that the public integrity section would often step in with resources and expertise to do cases and hold corrupt state and local officials to account. One example is a case against a small town,
Pennsylvania police officer who was convicted of bribery and other crimes, including using his position to obtain sex from two women and exchange for favors and prosecutions. And it's cases like these people say
that are likely to slip through the cracks without the public integrity section. - Putting these two things together, the partis and the changes at DOJ that you just spelled out, what does it tell us about the administration's approach
to public corruption? - Well, legal experts, current and former officials that I spoke with, say, the message from the administration appears to be that it is indifferent at best to tackling the problem of public corruption.
And looking down the road in the longer term, the concern is that if corruption is allowed to go unchecked, that has a corrosive effect. It eats away at government, at public trusting government, and you can end up with a sort of broken system
where public officials routinely serve themselves first
in the public second. - That's in PR Justice Correspondent Ryan Lucas. Ryan, thank you so much. - Thank you. (upbeat music)
- And that is up first for Saturday, May 9th, 2026. I'm Alyson Adborny, and I'm Ayy Sharasko, Michael Radcliffe, producer-days podcast with Help From Danny Hansel. Our editor was Ed McNulty, along with Jacob Finston, Melissa Gray, Marine Powell, Susanna Kapoludo, and Krishna Dev, Calamore.
- Here in the studio is our director, Alina Torek, and our technical director, David Greenberg, who has engineering support from Jason, Simon Lasso, Janssen, and Nisha Heines. - Shannon Rhodes is our senior supervising editor,
our Executive Producer, is Evie Stone, Jim Kane, is our Deputy Managing Editor. - Tomorrow on the Sunday Story, going at alone as a mom from the get-go. - Thanks for listening, and for supporting
your local NPR station. And if you need to find yours, go to stations.npr.org.
- This message comes from Ted Talks Daily,
a podcast with a new idea every day to spark your curiosity.
βHere about all inspiring innovations and perspectivesβ
in new conversations and talks from the Ted 2026 stage.
Find Ted Talks Daily wherever you listen.


