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Republicans joined Democrats in the House to pass a resolution to limit the president's war powers. >> More Republicans are pushing back on President Trump over the war in Iran and his anti-weaponization fund is Congress reasserting its power.
>> I'm Steve Inskeep with Leyla Favill and this is up first from NPR News.
[MUSIC] >> The president says he cursed at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and called him crazy in a call that may have helped to stop more plans strikes on Beirut. >> At some point, as it be, we are going to step in. >> Israel's war in Lebanon is complicating talks with Iran.
Now there's a new ceasefire, will it actually stop the attacks? >> And Ukrainian drone struck St. Petersburg as Russia was kicking off President Putin's economic forum. What does the gathering reveal about how Russia sees the world and its war?
“Stay with us, we'll give you the news you need to start your day.”
[MUSIC] >> New shows, new music, new movies, keeping up with pop culture sometimes feels like a full-time job. Thankfully, over at pop culture happy-hour, it's literally our job. We break down what's actually worth watching, listening to and pretending you already knew about. So the next time someone says, did you see that?
You can say, yeah, obviously, follow NPR's pop culture happy-hour wherever you get your podcasts. President Trump says he's going to nominate acting attorney general Todd Blanch to take on the role permanently. >> Blanch is Trump's former personal lawyer. He's been at the Justice Department since early in the administration. So he's been on hand for the President's efforts to undermine court rulings and turn the department into a weapon for his retribution campaign.
Blanch also oversaw the Justice Department's creation of a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claimed to have been wrongfully targeted by the government.
A fund that just made even many Republicans. >> Joining us now is NPR congressional reporter Sam Greenglass, good morning, Sam. >> Hey, Leela. >> So Blanch testified before Congress this week that the fund is dead. Is that enough for some senators?
>> Well, Senator Majority Leader John Thunes spent the last 24 hours telling his Republican colleagues that it should be enough. And that they should feel confident moving forward today with a vote on billions of dollars for immigration enforcement, which had been stalled by pushback over this fund. But that did not satisfy some of these Republican senators like John Cornon of Texas.
“He said the only way to ensure the fund is dead is for Congress to put a stake through it.”
And, you know, not long after the Senate voted to proceed to debate yesterday. President Trump was asked whether this fund was actually dead. >> It's, I'd have to ask the lawyers, I don't know. I know one thing, the weaponization. Are you talking about the weaponization fund?
>> Yeah, was your decision. >> The weaponization fund, as far as I'm concerned, was a beautiful thing. >> We've already seen two amendments by Republicans to try and block this fund for good, though, even if they do attract enough votes to pass it as unclear if Senate rules will.
Al them in this unrelated $70 billion measure to fund ice and border patrol for three years.
So this dispute over money to potentially compensate people who storm the capital on January 6, may impair a one of Trump's top priorities funding immigration enforcement. >> Okay, this seems to be another example of Trump undercutting Republicans in Congress, and then in turn, his own agenda. >> Oh, totally, but Republicans like retiring Senator Tom Tillis of North Carolina say what Trump
is doing is self-sabotage. Tillis who's also raised concerns about blanches, statements on January 6. Call out Trump's pick for acting director of national intelligence, Bill Pulti, Wednesday on CNBC. >> My God, you put forth this restitution fund when we're trying to get Homeland Security fund it for three years, and you think that's going to go well in the same week.
You put it in Sydney area, attack dog, like Pulti out on the agenda while we're trying to get 702 authorized, and he would be one of the major users of it. It's like whoever these people are in the White House need to get the hell out of the White House. Tillis is referring to an expiring section of the foreign intelligence surveillance act or Pfizer, the White House, top of Republicans and Democrats want to renew it, but now some
Democrats say they won't unless Trump drops Pulti. Some Senate Republicans are also concerned about Pulti, asked about his qualifications and intelligence shared Tom Cotton only said, "I have no observations on the matter."
“>> Are you seeing other places where Republicans are frustrated with the president?”
>> Yeah, another example this week was over in the House, where four Republicans joined with Democrats to pass a war power's resolution to try to force Trump to pull back forces from the conflict with Iran. The still is to pass the Senate and Trump can veto it, so practically it doesn't mean much, but this is still a significant review.
You know, Trump has shown he's happy to vanquish Republicans, he deems insufficiently loyal, so you've got more lawmakers questioning whether trying to be loyal is actually worth it,
That's making for a really unpredictable time in Congress.
>> And Pierre Sam, Greenglass, thank you, Sam. >> You're welcome. [MUSIC]
>> Israel and Lebanon agreed to renew a ceasefire that had really never taken hold.
>> Their diplomats worked out new terms while meeting in Washington. President Trump also spoke the other day with his Rayleigh leader Benjamin Netanyahu and has said that he called Netanyahu crazy for his plan to expand the tax in Lebanon. >> For more, we're joined by NPR's Greg Myri in Tel Aviv, Hi, Greg. >> Hi, Leila.
“>> So what exactly have Israel in Lebanon agreed to this time?”
>> Yeah, the Israeli and Lebanese government delegations met if the state department and agreed to try again on a ceasefire after the last one just collapsed. Now, this is significant if it works, but lots of reasons to be skeptical and we're already seeing some evidence of that. Obviously, it would be good for Israel and Lebanon, and it would also remove a key obstacle
to a possible agreement in the Iran war.
Iran is the big banker of the militant group, Hezbollah, and it said it would stop the indirect negotiations with the U.S., if Israel keeps waging this military operation in Lebanon. It says there must be ceasefires in both countries. >> So this agreement holds some promise, but with lots of caveats. >> What are the caveats?
>> Yeah, the Israeli and Lebanese governments reach this agreement. Hezbollah was not part of the talks.
“Hezbollah is supposed to halt the tax, and its forces are supposed to leave southern Lebanon”
under the deal. Now, Israel's defense minister, Israel cats has already said that for now, Israel will remain on Lebanese territory and continue its operational activity on the ground. Also, the Lebanese media is reporting news-raily attacks today, and a hisbollah official speaking to NPR on condition of anonymity, because he's not authorized to speak publicly,
said the group has informed Lebanon's president that it won't agree to the ceasefire unless Israeli forces leave southern Lebanon.
>> Yeah, and the last ceasefire really never took hold.
The South has been hit hard with dozens of villages of flood and so many dead, so I'll have to see how this plays out on the ground right now has the focus shifted to diplomacy compared to just a few days ago. >> Yeah, it has, at least for the moment, I mean, at the beginning of the week, the Israeli military operation was expanding rapidly, Netanyahu also said he'd ordered the Air Force
to bomb his bolus strongholds in the capital Beirut, and this is when Iran stepped in and said it would stop negotiations with the U.S., and Trump really seems to want a deal with Iran, so this grabbed his attention and he then got on the phone and had a heated call with Netanyahu, Trump reportedly used an expletive and called Netanyahu crazy. Trump was asked about this yesterday in the New York Post-Pod Force one podcast with Miranda
Divine. >> I did. I would say, angry, I was a little bit perturbed at his constantly fighting with Lebanon. You know, at some point as it may be, we're going to stop, we're going to stop it. >> So for his part, Netanyahu told CNBC that he and Trump have differences, but, quote, we
can a disagree in the morning and by the afternoon, we have common action. >> And what's going on with the ceasefire in Iran? It seems increasingly shaky. >> Yeah, Iran unleashed a large salvo yesterday, and the main target was Kuwait, including the country's airport. Video shows a drone slamming into the main passenger terminal, part
of a wider attack that killed one person and injured more than 60. Kuwait says Iran fired more than a dozen missiles and more than a dozen drones. Now, the U.S. has hit a number of Iranian targets over the past week, but yesterday was one of the most intense exchanges of fire since that ceasefire took effect almost two months ago.
>> Then, PR's Greg Myri, thank you, Greg. >> Sure thing, Lila. >> Russia's political and business elite are gathered in that country's former Imperial capital St. Petersburg for a marquee economic forum this week. >> Yeah, the event is considered a pet project of Russian president Vladimir Putin.
Normally, at an economic forum, you would hear prominent speakers droning on. Instead, the city was attacked on Wednesday by Ukrainian drones.
“>> And PR's Charles Mayns is at the event in St. Petersburg, high-charls?”
>> Hi, Lila. >> So did these drone attacks disrupt the event? >> Well, you know, they happened just hours before the start of this St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, and while the drones didn't disrupt the proceedings, they certainly cast a shadow, a literal one, other plumes of smoke, lingering over the city's skyline as people
arrive. It's certainly not the welcome that President Putin had hoped for.
This is really his conference to promote Russia's economic might, and the cou...
sure investment bet, despite Western sanctions.
“Yet these attacks are a reminder, Ukraine can still strike inside Russia, including in and”
around major cities like St. Petersburg, even days before Putin is due to address the forum. >> Well, let's talk about what the forum is going to do. I mean, it has a bit of everything, business, geopolitics. Tell us about it. >> Yeah, very much so, you know, and much of it really promoting a Kremlin worldview.
There's a lot of talk of conservative values, of multi-polarity. This is the idea that the world is moving away from a US-led global order to one where countries like Russia, China and the global south have more power.
And Russia's clash with the West of Ukraine is never far from view.
There are these elaborate stands promoting military hardware, or newly occupied territories of Ukraine that the Kremlin claims are now part of Russia proper. One session I attended yesterday looked at the long-term threats to Russia, where several
“panelists, I think you can safely describe as Russian nationalist argued that you never”
mind Ukraine, Russia needs to prepare for an existential war with the West. That includes Alexander Dugin, a political philosopher, I had a chance to meet with. You might consider him something like a Steve Bannon-type figure in the Russian political scene. Let's listen.
>> Now, Russia is a way, can you to confirm the pretension of the West to be universal, to be hegemonic, the unique power in the world, it was all them as we have. >> And where is the US figure in all this? I mean, particularly given President Trump's attempts to mediate negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.
“>> Yeah, you know, it's interesting a year ago there was so much enthusiasm here that Trump”
would end the war in Russia's terms and deliver Ukraine. You don't really hear that much anymore. Yet the Trump administration is present in a way. I was just watching Rodney Cook, who's overseeing Trump's White House Ballroom Project, and currently heads the US Commission of Fine Arts, take part in a cultural roundtable
where he talked about his deep affinity for Russia. And he's certainly not the only American to do so. Among all these official delegations from about 130 countries, you also find an American far-right influencers, for example, I just ran into the video blogger, Candace Owens, you also see representatives from Europe's far-right, including Germany's AFD party.
>> Yeah, all of this suggesting that Russia's making conservative alliances that go far beyond the politics of the current moment. >> Charles Mains, in St. Petersburg, thank you, Charles. >> Thanks, Leyla. [MUSIC]
>> And that's up first for Thursday, June 4th.
I'm Leyla Faldin. >> And I'm Steven Skip. Today's up first was edited by Kelsey Snell, Tina Crya, Tara Niel, Miguel Nesias, Muhammad Elper D.C. and John Stoleness. It was produced by Ziyat Bucenia Demos, our director is Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from David Greenberg and our technical director is Carly Strange, our deputy executive producer is Kelly Dickens. Join us tomorrow. [MUSIC] [BLANK_AUDIO]

