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Mediators leave Egypt without a deal in the latest US broker talks to end the war in Gaza. Is a deal still possible?

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Talks took place as Israel exchanged heavy fire with Hezbollah across the Israel-Lebanon border.

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I'm Leila Falded. That's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News.

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The presidential race has changed a lot in recent weeks. Kamala Harris has closed the gap in many swing states, but will it be enough to win? With just over two months left in the presidential race, we bring you the latest NPR poll on where things stand.

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The US ambassador to India is accused of lying under oath to protect an advisor from allegations of sexual and racist harassment.

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I want to say unequivocally that I never witnessed, nor was it brought to my attention the behavior that's been alleged.

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Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day.

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Hey, I'm Robert Smith from Planet Money, and this summer We are bringing you the entire history of the world, at least the economics part. It's Planet Money Summer School. Every week we'll invite in a brilliant professor and play classic episodes about the birth of money, banks, and finance. There will be rogues and revolutionary stories, and a lot of panics. Summer School, every Wednesday till Labor Day on the Planet Money podcast from NPR. They're all over the internet and bumping out of people's cars. They're the songs of the summer, and this year includes the domination of Charlie XCX and Brat Summer.

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She's really tapping into this moment where we are all chronically online, but also chronically outside.

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We are talking about the songs of the summer and why they're so catchy and inescapable. Listen to the pop culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.

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Wilderness is changing.

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More wildfires, more people, more cell service.

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The How Wild podcast hits the trail to explore the history of wilderness, how it's changing, and what that says about us as humans.

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Listen now to the How Wild podcast from KALW, part of the NPR Network. Fears of a wider regional conflict in the Middle East were heightened yesterday when Hezbollah and Israel exchanged some of the fiercest fires since the beginning of the war in Gaza.

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All of this while high-level talks in Cairo wrapped up yesterday. Officials were hoping to inch Hamas and Israel closer to a ceasefire deal, but that seems still very elusive.

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Npr's Hadil Al-Shalchi joins us from the city of Haifa in Northern Israel. What happened with the ceasefire talks?

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Well, at least we definitely know that no deal was reached, and it's unknown how much progress was made. Israel and Hamas said it's allegations left Cairo late yesterday. Israel did not comment about the talks at all. Hamas said it was present, but it didn't participate in the talks and said it was later briefed by Qatar and Egyptian mediators. Hamas also reiterated what it's been saying the past few weeks. It wants Israel to accept a deal that was agreed upon last month, which Hamas says Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu keeps making changes to. Npr's Gaza producer Enes Baba, he talked to some Palestinians there about what they thought of these drawn-out talks, and many voiced frustration and just want the end of the war. Here's 29-year-old Ahmad Hallis, who said he's being forced to evacuate one more time by the Israeli military from central Gaza.

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..

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Helez says he doesn't have an ounce of hope. He thinks the war will drag on for at least another year, and he doesn't even follow the news of the talks anymore.

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Yeah, wow. Another year, possibly, he says. Well, now, while these officials were meeting, Israel and Hezbollah attacked each other in a pretty serious way yesterday.

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That's right. Hezbollah and Iran have been keeping the region on edge this month. They both promised to avenge the Israeli killings of a top Hezbollah leader in Beirut and Hamas's leader in Tehran, And of course, a retaliation could potentially lead to a wider regional conflict. So when the Israeli military said it had launched a major attack in Southern Lebanon yesterday, many in Israel believe that it was the beginning of that wider war. Israel called it a preemptive attack because it says it got intelligence that Hezbollah was going to strike first. Hezbollah responded with its own set of rockets and drones. But then by late morning, Hezbollah said it had finished its operations for the day, and Israel de-escalated as well.

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And then let's not forget that while all All these sides are talking and also exchanging fire, Israeli strikes on Gaza continue. So what do we know about what's continuing to happen there?

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Well, exactly. Just yesterday, Gaza health official said that Israeli military strikes killed 71 Palestinians. They've also put the death toll, of course, now at over 40,000 Palestinians killed since the beginning of the war. The UN says Israeli evacuation orders have now displaced 90 % of the 2.1 million Palestinians living in Gaza since October. Those humanitarian humanitarian zones that Palestine finds some relative shelter are shrinking. But those zones are also been struck by the Israeli military killing hundreds of Palestinians. And the humanitarian crisis, of course, is getting worse. The first case of polio was discovered in a 10-month-old baby two weeks ago. The UN has called for a mini ceasefire to give medical workers a chance to vaccinate hundreds of children, and we're still waiting to hear if that will happen.

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Mpr Isadeel Al-Shalchi, thank you very much.

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You're welcome.

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All right, the political conventions are over, and now the sprint to the finish of this presidential election is on.

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So where do things stand and what should we look out for in the coming 70 days? Npr has a new swing state map out this morning that shows a significantly changed race since President Biden dropped out and his vice President, Kamala Harris, took his spot.

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Npr senior political editor and correspondent, Domenico Montanaro, joins us now to tell us more. Domenico, you've got this new analysis out this morning. So tell us how things have changed going from Joe Biden to Kamala Harris over the past month.

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I mean, it's a very close race, but Harris has now taken a narrow, within the margin of error lead in the blue-wall states of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. If that holds, that would put her right at the 270 electoral votes she needs to win. She's also closed the gap completely in the Sun Belt states of Arizona, Nevada, and North Carolina. Trump is holding on to a slight lead, very slight lead in Georgia. Again, very close within the margin of error. And Harris will be in Georgia with her running mate, Tim Walsh this week.

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And Biden won all those states in 2020, but a change of just what, 4,000 votes, and just three states could have given Trump the win. So for all the momentum that Kamala Harris seemingly has, she's not quite even where Joe Biden was in 2020.

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Yeah. I mean, in our map, we have all seven of those very close states as toss-ups, given how close they are. But we've seen considerable movements since President Biden stepped aside. Before Harris got in, Trump was leading Biden in all seven. But now we've seen a 4-6 point shift in Harris's favor on average. That's pretty significant in our hyper-polarized political environment. It's all part of this continued enthusiasm we've seen for Harris, including her campaign announcing over the weekend that they'd raised half a billion dollars in just five weeks, a record in presidential politics. They'll certainly have whatever money they need, but certainly no guarantees at all for her.

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The most recent political development, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Suspending his campaign in most states on Friday, then endorsing Donald Trump. Will that make any difference?

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Maybe. I mean, looking at the polls before RFK Jr. Got out, Trump stood to gain about a point or two with him out of the race. Whether that's actually going to be the case now that he's officially out is another story. On paper, maybe, but the actual effect isn't quite clear. I've heard from some Republican strategists who worry that bringing RFK on the team is It's a pretty big risk, too, because it's doubling down on quote, extreme. And Trump really didn't do anything at his convention or since to try to reach out to the middle. His team doesn't really believe he has to, though. They think that there are enough voters who have not turned out in the past to agree with Trump's message who are going to show up this November for him.

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So, Domenico, let's boil this all down because polls can be every once in a while, wrong. And it's happened to Democrats in the past. So is what we're seeing from Kamala Harris real or is it still a honeymoon effect? What do you make of all that?

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Well, we've seen Democratic posters try to warn Democratic activists and others not to get complacent like they did in 2016, they feel, for example, when polls overestimated Hillary Clinton. We're seeing some hangover from that for sure, and Democratic professionals biting their nails, which might be the status. The polls have improved, but the bottom line is we don't know who will show up to vote. And these polls are estimates, snapshots in time, not meant to be predictive. Consistently, though, they tell us that the race is extremely close, which is what we've been expecting all along.

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Npr senior political editor and correspondent, Domenico Montanaro. Thanks a lot. You're welcome. What happens when political ambition collides with harassment allegations in the #MeToo era?

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That's the subject of a new NPR investigation that digs into a scandal connected to the former mayor of Los Angeles and current US ambassador to India. Eric Garsetti has been accused of lying under oath to cover up harassment allegations against one of his friends and top advisors. He's denied those allegations.

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To get the facts, NPR's Tom Driesbach obtained the full unredacted testimony from the case, including never before seen deposition videos. Tom, this has been alongside Eric Garsetty's story since 2020. What can you tell us about these harassment allegations and how they relate to him.

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Sure. One of Garcetti's closest friends, most trusted advisors, before he became ambassador, was a man named Rick Jacobs. They knew each other for almost two decades. He served as Garcetti's Deputy Chief of Staff at LA City Hall. Jacobs helped him raise millions of dollars for his campaigns for mayor. They had multiple nonprofits they worked on. They worked closely on a possible presidential run in 2020. But for years, people who knew and worked with Rick Jacobs had serious concerns about his behavior.

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What were the concerns?

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Well, let me I will say up front that Jacobs has denied all wrongdoing and did not answer any of our questions. He actually hung up the phone when I called him. But people who worked with Jacobs at LA City Hall testified that he touched them with forceable kisses on the lips, massages, hugs without their consent, and made crude sexual comments, sometimes racist comments, and overall created a hostile work environment. Multiple people testified that these concerns were a regular topic of office gossip for years. I also talked to six employees of the Courage campaign, a liberal group that Jacobs led before joining LA City Hall, and they echoed these same issues going back to the mid 2000s.

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Rick Jacobs was boss at the time was the mayor, Eric Garsetti. What did Garsetti know?

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Well, Garsetti has denied ever seeing any inappropriate behavior by Jacobs at any time.

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I want to say unequivocally that I never witnessed, nor was it brought to my attention, the behavior that's been alleged.

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I also want to assure you, if it had been, I would have immediately taken action to stop that.

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However, the allegations started coming to light in 2020 when an LAPD officer sued the city saying that Jacobs had harassed him for years, and he alleged that Garcetti witnessed this behavior and did nothing. The lawsuit turned up a lot of important evidence, including a photo. In this photo, Jacobs is posing next to Garcetti and some lobbyists while at the US Conference of Mayors, and Jacobs posed by placing his hand in front of the crotch of one of those lobbyists. Garcetti said he was the other way, didn't see it happen. But Naomi Seligman is a former communications director for Garcetti. She told me the photo suggests a pattern of behavior.

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Rick felt so comfortable displaying that behavior in front of Eric Garcetti that he put his hand over a man's penis in a photo with Eric Garcetti inches from him.

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Seligman thinks Garcetti lied under oath. Another former Garcetti communications director, Susie Emerling, told me the same thing. Another eyewitness testified under oath that Garcetti told him, I can't believe we got through Rick's time at City Hall without a lawsuit.

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So how have Eric Garcetti and the White House, he is the ambassador to India, how have they responded?

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Well, Garcetti declined an interview request, but did say in an email that he fully stands by his testimony, the White House has completely stood by Garcetti. But after the White House got Garcetti confirmed, the city of LA paid $1.8 million to resolve that lawsuit from the LAPD officer without admitting wrongdoing. And that allowed us to take a fresh look at all this evidence.

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That's NPR's Tom Driesbach. You can listen to his two-part investigation on NPR's Consider This podcast. Tom, thanks.

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Thank you.

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This morning, we're also following reports by French Media that the CEO of the private messaging service, Telegram, has been arrested and detained in France. Pavel Duroff, a Russian-born French citizen, is accused of failing to restrict the criminal use of his platform, including drug trafficking, the promotion of terrorism and fraud. Telegram is used by nearly 1 billion people worldwide. Researchers say it's lack of moderation Ration has spread disinformation and racist rhetoric, but Duroff supporters say he is a free speech hero. For more on this story, tune in to Morning Edition or visit npr. Org. That's Up First for Monday, August 26th. I'm A. Martinez.

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And I'm Leila Faldil. Your next listen is Consider This from NPR. We hear it Up First give you the three big stories of the day. Our Consider This colleagues take a different approach. They dive into a single news story and what it means to you in just 15 minutes. Listen now on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Barry Harteman, Cary Khan, Anna Yucananoff, Jan Johnson, and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by Zet Bunch. Mia Dumas and Nina Pravinsky. We got engineering support from Phil Edfers, and our technical director is Stacey Abbott. Join us again tomorrow. Want to hear this podcast without sponsor breaks? Amazon Prime members can listen to Up First sponsor-free through Amazon Music. Or you can also support NPR's vital journalism and get Up First Plus at plus. Npr. Org. That's plus. Npr.

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Org. Okay, so tell me if this sounds like you.

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On the Ted Radio Hour, MIT psychologist Sherry Turkel.

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Her latest research into the intimate relationships people are having with chatbots. Technologies that say, I care about you. I love you. I'm here for you. Take care of me.

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The pros and cons intimacy.

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That's on the Ted Radio Hour from NPR.