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Me too. I like when we get here. We made it busy news week. We've also now made it almost a year since
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supporters just like you who continue to stand with us. We know that a free press doesn't just happen rigorous reporting takes money and work and we the public have to protect it. So please join the community of people who power this work and make a donation today at donate.npr.org. Happy Friday. Let's get to the news. Let's get to the show. President Trump said he was releasing new evidence of widespread election fraud in his speech last night. But experts who reviewed the documents say
there's nothing new just to rehash of old false claims about the 2020 election Trump lost.
I mean, Argentina is that's laid off bottle and this is a first from NPR news.
The president also used his prime time address to push his election safety bill, which would require proof of citizenship to vote with Trump's approval numbers at their lowest and the midterms approaching. Why is he choosing now to push a bill that doesn't happen numbers in Congress? And severe flooding hit Texas's Hill Country last year floods their killed more than 130 people. This time new warning sirens and hard lessons may have saved lives.
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from NPR. One year after Congress eliminated federal funding for public media and PR remains committed to informing the public. But a free press doesn't just happen, it's something we must protect. Without federal funding, we're relying on your support now. Please make your gift today at donate.npr.org. This week on the NPR politics podcast. President Trump. It is the greatest threat to our country. It's trying to tie Democrats to communism. Including World War 2 or even 9/11.
Both he and his team feel this is resonating with his base. Why the White House is pushing communism as a new line of attack ahead of this year's midterms? Listen now on the NPR politics
“podcast. For days, President Trump and his team have teased a bombshell announcement on election”
integrity. Trump gave a prime time address on it last night. But election experts say the speech and the newly unclassified documents that came with it provided no new evidence of why it's spread fraud. Mostly it was a rehash of facts and claims about America's voting system that we're already known. NPR voting correspondent Miles Parks has been up all night going through those documents and he joins me now to talk through at high miles. Hey, good morning. Good morning.
Okay, so the president has been making false claims for almost six years now that the election he lost in 2020 was rigged. Last night he gave a speech about voting integrity. Was it more of the same? It was. I mean, he hit on a bunch of the themes that will sound really familiar to anyone who's heard the president over the last few years. The idea that voting machines can't be trusted. The idea that non-citizens are voting in mass and American elections shadowy schemes by foreign
governments to try to influence voting. That's sort of thing. But our team and NPR started looking through all of these documents at the White House published. It's not really clear what is actually new here that impacts our understanding of the security of America's elections. I talked with Adrian Fontez after the speech. He's Arizona's top voting official. He's a Democrat. Here's how he described it. I kind of felt a little bit cheated. I was expecting some kind of
delicious bombshell that we might be able to investigate. But instead, I got a rehash of the same grievance. Fontez was struck by how closely all these classified documents aligned with what was already public about the 2020 election. So tell us a little bit more like the details here. What's actually in these documents? So I mean, take the idea about America's voting systems being vulnerable to hacking for instance. The president said Americans were blatantly lied to about the security
of our election infrastructure. They're vulnerable referring to the machines and they're easily compromised. But the documents released really just layout concerns with voting equipment that we're already known. Like what? So in some places, it's just really old. Election administration is known to be chronically underfunded. And for the past 10 years, American ad adversaries have targeted. In some cases, that's looked like actually trying to break into registration systems. In other cases,
it's trying to influence American voters online. But there's no evidence anyone has ever
Changed votes.
at the advocacy group free speech for people. For years, she has worked to shine a light on some
“of the same problems that Trump is now focusing on. Two things can be true at the same time that”
we have ignored vulnerabilities in our voting systems for a long time. And there is no evidence that the election was rigged in 2020. And everything that has been put forth,
purporting to provide that evidence, always falls apart like a cheap suit.
You know, even with those vulnerabilities, the bottom line is that almost everyone in the United States votes on a paper ballot. And those paper ballots after the 2020 election were investigated and audited over and over again, and widespread fraud was never found. Now, another topic that came up a lot was China. The president said the country had amassed hundreds of millions of voter records and worked to undermine his election campaign in 2020. Is that true? It is. But it's also not
really news. You know, at the time in 2020, the intelligence community publicly said that China
“preferred Joe Biden as a candidate. Although there were some public disagreements on what the”
country was actually willing to do in terms of pushing that preference. And on the voter data,
this is actually a great example of something that sounds really scary, but actually didn't shock people who work in elections. A lot of voter-world data is already public and easily accessible. And it was publicly known that China has long been interested in accumulating information on American voters and candidates. David Becker of the Center for Election Innovation and Research says that that sort of activity just has no effect on actual votes. Having the voter data itself
doesn't allow you to change anything. I can have my kids class list, but that doesn't mean I can change the grades of everybody in the class. Still, the president's allies are using this as justification to push for big changes to the voting process. And experts, like Becker, expect to see more of that as the midterms get closer. And PR's Miles Parks, thank you for that reporting, Miles. Thank you. There are also the politics of President Trump's speech. The president continues to face
low approval. The war on Iran is ramping back up. And economic conditions are not really improving. Here to walk us through those politics is NPR Senior Political Correspondent Tamar, Keith Heitam. Good morning. Good morning. Why is the president renewing his claims that U.S. elections are not secure or that the system lacks integrity? President Trump has questioned the fairness of every election going back at least to 2016 in election he won. Now we're in another election year.
The courts have blocked his executive actions to change election administration. And he has tried every lever he can to push Congress to pass the Save America Act, which would, among other things, require proof of citizenship to vote. He even recently refused to sign a big popular bipartisan bill addressing the cost of housing in, quote, protest about the Save America Act. That didn't move the needle. So last night, he commanded the national airwaves in a way that
only a president can to once again push for it. Addressing this crisis of election security demands that Congress must pass the Save America Act. How easy is that to do unless you want to cheat? The only reason you wouldn't do it is you want to cheat. Okay, that's the president making that claim doing a call to action. How likely is that to affect the Save America Act's chances of passage? It doesn't have the vote. It needs to pass in the Senate. Yes, Republicans control that
chamber, but it can't get past a filibuster without democratic votes. And even if Republicans tried procedural moves to get around the filibuster, it doesn't look like there's enough
“Republican support to pass this either. And here's the thing, this is an election year, and there”
are a lot of Republicans on the ballot who would much rather focus on the issue voters repeatedly
say is most important to them, the cost of living. Did the president speak to those affordability
concerns? Very briefly, he went through sort of our greatest hits reel of the first 18 months back in office, no tax on tips, a blockbuster stock market. There was a brief mention of a recent inflation report that showed some improvement. He said very little about the war with Iran, which has driven up prices. And if you just step back here, it's remarkable. If you told me the president was going to give an address to the nation from the White House this week, a week where the
Iran ceasefire broke down and he has ordered nightly bombing raids on Iranian targets. The assumption would be that he needed to address this escalation, but that is not what he did. Wow, should we expect Trump to keep talking about this elections? Yes, I mean, he's still talking about 2020. The phrase he used in that clip we played, unless you want to cheat, is the president of the
United States laying the groundwork to say that the elections this fall where...
expected to take losses won't be fair. He talked a lot about vulnerabilities in the system,
“but didn't offer any proof that they'd been exploited. But it doesn't take finding a smoking gun”
to so doubts and potentially depress voter turnout, and that might be self-defeating. Trump needs voters who often sit out midterms, but show up for him to vote in big numbers for Republican members of Congress, not named Trump. And Pierre's Tamarquith, thank you so much for that reporting. You're welcome. At least two people have died and hundreds have been rescued in catastrophic flooding in Texas this week.
This is the second year in a row that Texas's Hill Country has flooded just over a year ago,
130 people died over the fourth of July weekend, including children and counselors from a summer camp. Chelsea Zoo is a reporter with member station KUT in Austin, and she joins me now. Good morning, Chelsea. Good morning. So tell us about what's been going on across the state.
“So the major flooding we've seen has been a culmination of several days of very heavy rain across”
large parts of Texas, especially the south central region. Some storms have been slow moving, dropping heavy rain in some of the same areas that have already seen a lot of rain in the days before, which has made flooding more likely. Some towns have seen as much as 20 inches of rain or more since the start of the week. The weather has also been unpredictable. There was even a tornado
that touched down in San Antonio on Wednesday. Here's what Chief Nim kid with the Texas Division
of Emergency Management had to say yesterday as the state prepared for another round of storms. The way that this weather pattern is setting up is difficult for the models at the meteorologist shoes to tell us exactly where it's going to fall and exactly how much is going to fall. Chelsea, there's been more rain this year than last year, but we have fortunately seen fewer deaths. What's different? It's hard to say for sure right now since we're still assessing the damage,
but a few different things could contribute to that. One is again that it's been a full week of rain for some of these places that has built up to this severe flooding. So people have been able to see this develop over days. I also think people across the state are more aware of the risks after the deadly floods last year. People might be paying more attention to severe weather alerts when they're sent out and things like shelter and place or evacuation orders. And after last
year, Texas lawmakers also made it a priority to pass flood safety measures. Some of which are already in effect. That includes new flood warning sirens in the region and updated emergency
“plans for summer camps. What are the people in flooded areas saying about their experiences?”
Many of my colleagues went out yesterday talking to people during the flooding and it was inevitable that last year's flooding was front and center in people's minds. Here's Claudio Castillo. He's sides he's lived in the whole country for most of his life. In the tape you can hear the Guadalupe River rushing in the background. It's like the desert. It hits you. It's pretty hard. Especially when you go right by it. You can't miss it. You know, something happened pretty bad there.
He's talking about the girl's summer camp where 25 campers and two counselors died in the flooding last year. He also mentioned that it feels like flooding has been happening more often, which is true at a broader level because of climate change, which scientists say has made record breaking rain much more likely in the US and has contributed to more frequent and severe flooding. That said, as we get to the end of the week, the National Weather Service is forecasting
that the heavy rain will start to move out of these flooded areas. So we may be transitioning from search and rescue to recovery over the next couple of days. Chelsea Zoo is a reporter with member station KUT in Austin. Thank you, Chelsea. Thank you.
And that's up first for Friday, July 17th. I'm Leila Faldin.
And I'm going to make Martinez. Today's episode of a first was edited by Ben Swazee, Megan Pratz, Akisha Squires, Mohammed Elbar DC, and Alice Wolfley was produced by Ziyat Buch, and Nia Dumas. Our director is Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Nisha Hynes. Our technical director is Carly Strange, and our executive producer is Jay Sheeler, joining us again on Monday.
Of all the protests in the summer of 2020, for a moment there, it was Utopia. One took a unique turn. This is the story of how violence came to occupy and anti-violence occupation in Seattle. Listen to we keep us safe, a new true crime series
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