NewsCut

What’s on MPR News – 3/22/19

No posts today. Road trip for an interview for a future post.

March 22, 2019

(Subject to change as events dictate. This page is updated throughout the day.)

9 a.m. - 1A with Joshua Johnson

Domestic news roundup. For months, speculation has brewed over the release date of special counsel Robert Mueller's report into the 2016 election. It could be any day now. Questions about the nature of the release - whether the report will be made public, or if it will be released at all - have lingered since January, when then-acting attorney general Matthew Whitaker told reporters that the investigation is wrapping up. Will the public see the report? If so, when? And what might we learn about the 2016 election?

The Seattle Times is reporting that the FBI has joined the U.S. Department of Transportation in a criminal investigation into the certification of Boeing's 737 MAX 8. The investigation initially began after Lion Air Flight 610 crashed in Indonesia in October, and has widened with the issuing of subpoenas in the wake of the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

Finally, a federal judge has ruled that the U.S. Department of Interior "did not sufficiently consider climate change" when allowing oil and gas companies to lease federal land in Wyoming. How might the ruling affect the relationship between the Trump administration and the fossil fuel industry?

Guests: Jackie Kucinich, Washington bureau chief, The Daily Beast; Evan McMorris-Santoro, correspondent, Vice News Tonight on HBO; Danielle Kurtzleben, politics reporter, NPR.

10 a.m.- 1A with Joshua Johnson

A week after a mass shooting at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, the government there agreed to ban semi-automatic guns. The ban includes all the weapons and parts used in the attack last Friday. In announcing the decision, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said, "It's about all of us. It's in the national interest. And it's about safety."

In other news from around the world, a devastating cyclone hit Mozambique, leaving tens of thousands of people in need of fresh water and rescue.

Prime Minister Theresa May asked the European Union for a short extension during the ongoing boondoggle over Brexit.

And President Donald Trump said that the United States could get tougher on Venezuela in the midst of the country's political crisis. How could Trump's foreign policy affect leadership in Venezuela?

Guests: Michael Goldfarb, host of the First Rough Draft of History Podcast; Courtney Kube, national security and military reporter, NBC News; Franco Ordonez, White House correspondent, McClatchy, focusing on immigration and foreign affairs.

11 a.m. - MPR News with Angela Davis

On Friday, Gov. Walz is expected to announce an adjusted budget proposal. How is the legislative session going?

Guests: Brian Bakst, Briana Bierschbach, MPR political reporters.

12 p.m. - The Takeaway

After all the drama in 2016, the Democratic National Committee has reformed the nomination process. New rules. Same game. Will it make a difference?

1 p.m. - Science Friday

The deserts and hills are all abloom out west. Why are superblooms such a rare sight? Plus: how scientists measure this winter’s snowpack, using laser-shooting planes. And moving to renewable energy in New Mexico.

2 p.m. - BBC NewsHour

North Korea withdraws from liaison office meant to improve relations with the South, 47 people now known to have died in yesterday’s explosion in China, and Japan hires more than 700 disabled people to meet government quotas.

3 p.m. - All Things Considered

The week in politics; New Zealand one week later; the evolution of the Boeing 737; South by Southwest: what it means to be an independent artist; an Iowa town was ordered to reduce a levee. Then it flooded.

6:00 p.m. - Marketplace

In 1989, President Bush used a televised address to tell the nation that crack cocaine was America’s most serious problem. Marketplace has the story behind the president’s address, and what it says about the war on drugs and its legacy.

6:30 p.m. - The Daily

How New Zealand banned assault rifles in six days. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand promised to change the country’s gun laws after a mass shooting in Christchurch left 50 people dead. Less than a week later, she did it.

Guest: Jamie Tarabay, a New York Times correspondent based in Australia who has been reporting in New Zealand.

7 p.m. - The World

Still coping with the Hiroshima bomb in Japan. Before a Japanese woman was born, her father got radiation sickness from the Hiroshima atomic bomb. She fears that she could still get sick because of it too, and she's suing the Japanese government for help. But it's an uphill battle. Because science doesn't support her claim.

8 p.m. - Fresh Air

A replay of Terry Gross' 2008 interview with poet and essayist W.S. Merwin, who died last Friday at 91. Merwin was the United States poet laureate from 2010 to 2011; he won two Pulitzer Prizes, one in 1971 for ‘The Carrier of Ladders’ and another in 2009 for ‘The Shadow of Sirius’. He also won a National Book Award. The themes of his work are memory and mortality. William Stanley Merwin was known in the 1960s as an anti-war poet. Later on he became an environmental activist, and worked to restore the rainforests of Hawaii, where he lived.

8:30 p.m. - A replay of a 1993 interview with Dick Dale, the guitarist known for creating the surf sound of the '60s. He died on Saturday at the age of 81. He influenced the Beach Boys, the Cure, Eddie Van Halen, Jimi Hendrix and many others. Dale was known as the ‘King of Surf Guitar”.