|
|
|
Newsletter continues after sponsor message
|
|
|
| From the biggest names in their fields to experts on the most pressing topics of our time, NPR is breaking down the stories that matter through our in-depth interviews. Immerse yourself in these conversations on your favorite NPR platforms — including the NPR App and NPR.org. |
|
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has been spending his final year in office touring the U.S. and rallying voters for the midterm elections. Newsom, who hasn't ruled out a run for president in 2028, actively challenges Trump, often mocking the president’s aggressive style on social media. “I'm putting a mirror up to President Trump and I'm fighting fire with fire and I am punching a bully back in the mouth,” he tells NPR. Simultaneously, Newsom has also engaged major right-wing figures like Steve Bannon and Ben Shapiro, drawing criticism from his own party. The governor recently spoke with All Things Considered ahead of the release of his memoir, Young Man in a Hurry. He discussed how his struggles with dyslexia shaped his life, his strategy for dealing with Trump and how the Democratic Party should meet this political moment.
Read more about Newsom’s conversation with NPR’s Ailsa Chang or watch the interview. You can also check out the conversation on NPR’s YouTube page, Consider This and the NPR App. |
|
Oleksandr Gimanov / AFP via Getty Images |
|
| Four years ago, Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. NPR's Ukraine correspondent Joanna Kakissis and Russia correspondent Charles Maynes reflect on what it's been like reporting on the war and the toll it's taken on residents. |
|
We have documented Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine since the beginning: the awful human cost, the thousands of missing Ukrainian children, the exhausted front line towns, the way this war has changed modern warfare and geopolitics, as well as Ukrainian and Russian society. An invasion that the Kremlin — and many in the West — predicted would end with Ukrainian capitulation within days has now lasted four years, with enormous casualties on both sides, according to British and U.S. sources.
Ukrainians are exhausted. They have adjusted their lives to constant Russian drone and missile attacks, to the turmoil and grief of defending the country in a long war. Many flinch when praised as resilient, as if, they say, there is another choice. “We have paid too high a price to give up,” says Olha Chupikova, from the southern front-line city of Kherson. Her son, a soldier, was killed in action last year. Volodymyr Mykolayenko, a former Kherson mayor who came home last fall after years in Russian captivity, is skeptical that talks sponsored by the Trump administration will actually end the war. “We used to see America as a defender of democracy,” he says. “Now they chose [Russian President Vladimir] Putin as their friend.”
Whatever Trump’s diplomatic aim, it hasn’t been enough to convince Putin to stop his assault. Russians’ hope that Trump could deliver peace has faded as Putin rejected even the most generous terms on offer. Despite Kremlin claims to the contrary, Western sanctions are taking their toll on the economy. State repression used to be aimed squarely at the political opposition. Now, even the invasion's most ardent supporters have been targeted. Government restrictions now increasingly reach into the digital and cultural space — with bans on movies, music and social media affecting nearly everyone. Open criticism of the war was criminalized early on. Yet there’s a growing sense that amid a conflict with no end in sight, the state’s need for control, too, is endless. |
|
Dominic Lipinski/Getty Images/Getty Images Europe |
|
| | The British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards (BAFTAs) released an apology yesterday after the BBC aired a delayed broadcast of the ceremony that included a man with Tourette syndrome shouting a racial slur. |
|
|
|
| | Scientists discovered a new species of large, horned, fish-eating Spinosaurus dinosaur — the first in over a century. The dinosaur species dates back to the Jurassic period, over 140 million years ago. |
|
|
|
| | As the war in Ukraine enters its fifth year, NPR's Far-Flung Postcards brings you to Kyiv, where candles are the last option during wartime blackouts. |
|
|
|
Stream your local NPR station. |
|
| Visit NPR.org to find your local station stream. |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| | | |