Up First from NPR

San Diego Mosque Shooting, Primaries Test Trump Influence, Trump IRS Suit

14 min
May 19, 202612 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode covers three major stories: a shooting at San Diego's largest mosque that killed three people and is being investigated as a hate crime, primary elections in six states testing President Trump's influence within the Republican Party, and Trump's decision to drop his IRS lawsuit and create an anti-weaponization fund potentially benefiting January 6th defendants.

Insights
  • Trump's political retribution strategy is proving effective in Republican primaries, with record spending ($33M) against opponents like Thomas Massey, deterring other Republicans from challenging the president
  • The anti-weaponization fund represents an unprecedented use of executive power where a president sued his own administration then abandoned the case to redirect $1.8B in taxpayer funds with minimal oversight
  • Hate crimes against places of worship are becoming a pattern of concern in American communities, with both mosques and synagogues targeted in recent years
  • Primary electorates dominated by Trump-aligned voters may nominate candidates too extreme to win general elections, creating strategic challenges for Republicans in competitive Senate races
  • Congressional appropriations authority is being circumvented through executive settlement agreements that bypass judicial review and legislative oversight
Trends
Weaponization of primary elections through coordinated spending by aligned groups to enforce party loyaltyErosion of checks and balances through executive settlement agreements that bypass traditional judicial and legislative oversightIncreasing polarization of Republican primary electorates around Trump loyalty rather than policy positionsPattern of hate crimes targeting religious institutions across different faithsUse of AI-generated content in political advertising to attack opponentsExpansion of third-party settlement funds as mechanism for executive branch spending without appropriations processGrowing concern among watchdog groups about government accountability and transparency in fund distribution
Companies
United Democracy Project
Pro-Israel lobby group affiliated with AIPAC spending tens of millions on ads against Thomas Massey in Kentucky primary
AIPAC
Pro-Israel lobby with affiliated United Democracy Project running opposition ads against Thomas Massey
People
Juliana Kim
Covered the San Diego mosque shooting from the scene and interviewed community members about the attack
Domenico Montanaro
Analyzed primary election results and Trump's influence on Republican races across six states
Kerry Johnson
Reported on Trump's IRS lawsuit settlement and the creation of the anti-weaponization fund
Scott Wall
Led investigation into mosque shooting and provided details about suspects, victims, and hate crime designation
Tahaa Hussain
Spoke at press conference about the shooting and called for tolerance as the community mourns
Thomas Massey
Kentucky Republican facing primary challenge due to disagreements with Trump, featured in campaign ads
Donald Trump
Central figure in primary elections, endorsed candidates, and settled IRS lawsuit with anti-weaponization fund
Todd Blanche
Overseeing the anti-weaponization fund and appointed to manage board that will distribute taxpayer money
Matt Plattkin
Represented nearly 100 Democrats in Congress attempting to intervene in Trump's IRS case
Donald Sherman
Criticized the anti-weaponization fund as one of the most corrupt acts in American history
Rupa Padacharya
Worked on settlement issues at DOJ and criticized Trump administration's abuse of taxpayer dollars
Monasar Barbak
Community member waiting to reunite with nine-year-old nephew after mosque shooting evacuation
Steve Inskie
Conducted bonus episode interview with UFC president Dana White about fighter health and immigration
Dana White
Featured in bonus Newsmakers episode discussing UFC fighter health, immigration, and White House fight
Quotes
"It's always in your head that it's going to happen someday. You know, when I asked him what he meant by that, he said he felt that places of worship have been increasingly under attack."
Monasar BarbakEarly in episode
"This is something that we have never expected to take place. But at the same time, the religious intolerance and the hate, unfortunately, that exists in our nation is unprecedented."
Imam Tahaa HussainMid-episode
"There's no sense in trying to avoid it. Let's just talk about the elephant in the room. I agree with President Trump a whole lot more than I disagree with him."
Thomas MasseyPrimary election segment
"If it is okay for a president to sue himself and then come up with a huge amount of money that he's going to pay for totally unrelated things, then there is no longer a point to Congress playing a role in the appropriations process."
Matt PlattkinIRS lawsuit segment
"This is reimbursing people that were horribly treated, horribly treated. It's anti-weaponization. They've been weaponized."
Donald TrumpIRS settlement segment
Full Transcript
San Diego authorities are investigating a shooting at the city's largest mosque. Three people were killed and two teenage suspects were found dead in a car. Police are investigating the attack as a hate crime one of the suspects' mothers called police hours before. I'm Leila Falde, that's Amartinez and this is Up First from NPR News. Primaries in six states today are testing President Trump's grip on the Republican Party. Kentucky Trump's allies are spending tens of millions to defeat Thomas Massey for opposing the president and Massey's ads are highlighting where he and the president align. President Trump dropped his lawsuit against his own IRS over the leak of his tax returns instead he's creating what he calls an anti-weaponization fund that could award taxpayer money to January 6th defendants. Stay with us, we've got the news you need to start your day. This message comes from WISE, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart, get WISE. Download the WISE app today or visit WISE.com. Tease and seize, apply. 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. San Diego police are investigating what may have motivated two teenagers to shoot a mosque and kill three people there. The attack is being investigated as a hate crime and police say the two suspects later shot themselves. NPR's Juliana Kim is covering this from San Diego. Juliana, how did this start yesterday? So the San Diego police department received reports of an active shooter at the Islamic Center of San Diego shortly before noon. The center is the largest mosque in the county and runs a school. San Diego police chief Scott Wall said yesterday that officers upon arrival saw three people dead in front of the center. A nearby landscaper was also shot at but not struck and no children at the center were injured. Wall said around the same time police received calls about gunshots at a second location, their officers found two people inside a vehicle, both of whom were dead from self-inflicted gunshot wounds. Wall believes the pair were responsible for the shooting at the center. And what do we know about them and also the victims? So authorities have yet to release the identities of the shooters, but we do know that they were two males 17 and 18 years old. Police chief Wall said officers got a call earlier that morning from a mother whose son had ran away. She told authorities that she believed her son was suicidal and that her car and weapons were missing. Wall said officers were sent to locations that they believed might be threatened, but there was no specific threat made to the Islamic Center. The motive has yet to be determined, but Wall said authorities are investigating this as a hate crime. He added that, quote, there was definitely hate rhetoric involved, end quote, though he didn't explain further. In terms of the victims, authorities have also not yet released names to the public, but Wall did mention that one of the victims was a security guard at the center. Yeah, kids were evacuated from the school inside the mosque and then brought to a nearby church and Juliana, you were there. Tell us what you saw. Yeah, I mean, I saw a lot of families waiting hours to reunite with their children and head home. Monasar Barbak was waiting for his nine-year-old nephew. He told me he was shocked by what happened at the same time. He's always been worried about the possibility of an attack like this. It's always in your head that it's going to happen someday. You know, when I asked him what he meant by that, he said he felt that places of worship have been increasingly under attack. A synagogue was attacked not long ago, too, so it doesn't matter what faith, any attack on anybody is not acceptable yet. In 2019, there was a shooting at a synagogue in a San Diego suburb. One person was killed and three people were injured. What about reactions from San Diego's Muslim community? What are you hearing? Yeah, the Islamic center of San Diego's Imam Tahaa Hussain spoke briefly at a press conference yesterday and he said... This is something that we have never expected to take place. But at the same time, the religious intolerance and the hate, unfortunately, that exists in our nation is unprecedented. He ended his remarks by asking the public to practice tolerance as his community mourns. That's NPR's Juliana Kim joining us from San Diego. Thank you very much. Thank you. There are primaries in six states today. The results in those elections will give us more understanding of President Trump's continued influence from the Oval Office, even when he's not on the ballot. NPR's senior political editor and correspondent, Domenico Montanaro, is here to talk us through all of it. So, Domenico, what races in particular are you watching today? Well, I mean, as you said, there's six states that are voting from Pennsylvania to the South in Kentucky, Alabama and Georgia to out West in Oregon and Idaho. We're really heading into the heat of primary season here. The race I've got my closest eye on tonight is in Kentucky, a congressional race where Republican Thomas Massey is in a fight for his political life because of his high-profile disagreements with President Trump, especially in including wanting those Epstein files released. Okay, so where does the president fit in here? Yeah, I mean, Trump has been a huge theme here. I mean, Trump has been so upset with Massey that he endorsed a primary opponent, Ed Galerine, who served in the Navy as a SEAL officer. Trump said all he needed was a, quote, warm body in this race and got one, he said, with a, quote, big, beautiful brain. Massey has tried to address that and still wrap his arms around Trump like in this ad. So there's no sense in trying to avoid it. Let's just talk about the elephant in the room. I agree with President Trump a whole lot more than I disagree with him. So he said he was trying to address the elephant in the room, but I thought it was notable that he never actually addresses the elephant in the room and those criticisms of Trump in that ad, just what they agree on, like immigration policy, defending the Second Amendment. But all of that could be a tough sell to MAGA fans and opponents of Massey have been running tens of millions of dollars in opposition to him like this one. Thomas Massey's new ad, the elephant is fake and so is Massey's claim of supporting President Trump. And that's referring to the use of AI in Massey's ad. The ad is from the United Democracy Project or UDP, which is affiliated with APAC, that's the pro-Israel lobby. And they see Massey as not being pro-Israel enough and they've put them in ads next to pictures of Democrats like Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar and New York representative Alexander Ocasio-Cortez. And you mentioned the ads that have been running. You mentioned tens of millions of dollars. That sounds like a lot of money for a primary election. It really is. I mean, in fact, according to our ad tracking partner, Ad Impact, this race has seen the most money ever spent on TV ads for a house primary, $33 million. So much of it is from groups trying to defeat Massey. So a lot of money being spent on Trump's retribution campaign and there's hundreds of millions more where that came from. So some of it used again successfully over the weekend in Louisiana when incumbent Republican Senator Bill Cassidy went down in the primary there after Trump backed the challenger. And this is why so few Republicans put their necks out to oppose the president. Is that dynamic playing out in other places? Yeah, it's a key thing in a lot of primaries, especially in places with very conservative primary electorates. Tonight we'll also be watching results for Senate primaries in Alabama and Georgia, where Republicans are trying to out-mag at each other. Georgia is going to be particularly important to watch because this is a really important Senate race with Democrat John Ossoff as the incumbent. Republicans would love to flip the seat, but the Republican primary electorate in Georgia, which is very conservative, is different than the general election one. Trump and Trump-like candidates have shown great strength in primaries when parties tend to turn out their most loyal supporters, but they have a harder time in general elections. So Republicans have to be careful here not to come across as too extreme if they want to be able to pick up this seat in November. And this is going to be one of the most closely watched Senate races this fall, as is next week's runoff in Texas when the primary will be decided there, too. All right, that's MPR's Domenico Montanaro. Thanks a lot, Domenico. You're welcome. President Trump often turns to the courts. He'll sue over policy disagreements with states, unflattering news coverage, or even business disputes. This week, he walked away from a case he filed. It was against his own government over the leak of his personal tax returns. Instead of continuing the case, he's setting up a nearly $1.8 billion fund that could award taxpayer money to January 6th defendants. MPR's Kerry Johnson has been following the case. So Kerry Trump saw lawsuit against the government he leads was, I guess, the word I'm looking for, maybe unusual to say the least. So it sounds like this settlement is also unusual, too. Very much so, no one could come up with an example of a president taking his own administration to court until this year. Trump had sued the IRS for $10 billion after a contractor leaked his tax returns to the press back in 2019. But a judge in the case started asking some tough questions about the president being on both sides of this dispute. And this week, as a deadline loomed for Trump's lawyers to respond, they abandoned the case. The Justice Department says Trump's going to get an apology but no direct financial payment. Instead, they're creating an anti-weaponization fund, $1.776 billion, to compensate people who have been targeted by the Biden administration. Trump talked about this fund with reporters yesterday. This is reimbursing people that were horribly treated, horribly treated. It's anti-weaponization. They've been weaponized. They've been, in some cases, imprisoned wrongly. So Kerry, if the president is on both sides of this case and he says it's over, is anyone going to be able to object to it? Nearly 100 Democrats in Congress tried. They filed court papers asking to intervene in this Florida IRS case. Matt Plattkin is their lawyer. If it is okay for a president to sue himself and then come up with a huge amount of money that he's going to pay for totally unrelated things, then there is no longer a point to Congress playing a role in the appropriations process. The Constitution says Congress appropriates money, Congress passes laws. The president must execute those laws. Last night, the federal judge in charge of this case closed the door on it. Since the Trump administration moved to drop it and DOJ did not file any settlement terms with her to review, then after she dismissed the case, DOJ posted the terms of the settlement agreement online. Donald Sherman of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington says this is one of the single most corrupt acts in American history. So the new anti-weaponization fund, who is eligible to apply? The acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, will appoint members of a board to oversee this fund and Trump will be able to fire them without cause. Blanche, of course, is a former personal lawyer to Trump. He said in a statement, the machinery of government should never be weaponized against any American and DOJ wants to right past wrongs. This fund is going to be created from a pool of taxpayer money. It's not clear the government will have to disclose who receives that money. And watchdogs say they're really worried that people who storm the Capitol on January 6, 2021 are now going to be in line for compensation. DOJ says this fund is going to finish its work in December, 2028. That's shortly before Trump has scheduled to leave the White House. One more thing, any precedent for this enormous fund? The Trump administration says President Obama did it eight years ago to compensate farmers who suffered racial discrimination over many decades. But people who worked at the DOJ say there are some big differences. A judge signed off on that settlement and this settlement is three times bigger and the judge here did not weigh in. Rupa Padacharya worked on these issues at DOJ. She told me Trump officials had moved to abolish these kinds of third-party settlements only to embrace them now. And she says this is an abuse of taxpayer dollars. Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, is due on Capitol Hill today for testimony about the budget. And that may give us a hint about how Republican lawmakers will react. That's NPR's Kerry Johnson. Kerry, thanks. Thank you. Before we go, you might have noticed a bonus episode drop in your up first feed yesterday. Check it out if you have not listened to it yet. Our co-host Steve Inskie spoke to Dana White, the president and CEO of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. You know, when you get punched in the head, it's not good for you. And everybody going into this knows it's not. You can hear them talk about the health of UFC fighters, immigration and the upcoming fight at the White House. The conversation was part of NPR's video podcast, Newsmakers. You can watch it as well. Find it on NPR's YouTube channel. And that's a first for Tuesday, May 19th. I'm Leila Faudil. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Miguel Macias, Natalie Escobar, Dana Farrington, Krishnadoff Calamer, Mohamed El-Bardisi, John Stolnes and Adam Beirn. It was produced by Ziad Bach and Nia Dumas. Our director is Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Nisha Heinis. Our technical director is Carly Strange and our supervising senior producer is Vince Pearson. Join us again tomorrow.