From PBS News <[email protected]>
Subject 3 non-shutdown developments to watch
Date October 14, 2025 11:44 PM
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It’s Tuesday, the traditional day for elections and for our pause-and-consider newsletter on politics and policy. We think of it as a mini-magazine in your inbox.

AS THE SHUTDOWN ROLLS ON, 3 OTHER THINGS TO WATCH
By Lisa Desjardins, @LisaDNews ([link removed])
Correspondent

We are now on Day 14 of the government shutdown.

And it is unlikely to end this week. We have been covering both the shutdown ([link removed]) and the new mass layoffs ([link removed]) from President Donald Trump.

As we seek more clarity on both murky situations, we want to ensure that other major stories are not missed. Here are three things we are watching closely at this moment.

Prices

Inflation was one of Trump’s key campaign issues in 2024, when he promised to bring prices down on Day 1.

But the most recent Consumer Price Index report ([link removed]) , the most-cited measure of inflation, detailed key costs going up in August, showing food prices jumped 0.5 percent from the previous month, while gasoline sprung up 1.9 percent.

Americans are seeing real-world effects from this, including at least one grocery chain installing digital price tags ([link removed]) that it can raise (or lower) in seconds.

The Trump administration had initially planned to hold back on releasing any more inflation data (or any other economic data) during the shutdown.

But the September inflation figures, scheduled to be released Oct. 24, are critical. They set the cost-of-living adjustment for those receiving Social Security benefits. Afterward, as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics itself wrote, ([link removed]) “No other releases will be rescheduled or produced until the resumption of regular government services.”

That only adds to the attention and potential importance of this gauge of economic pain. And it adds to potential decisions ([link removed]) by the Federal Reserve on whether to decrease interest rates.

Tariffs

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Photo by Carlos Barria/Reuters

A subset of the prices discussion will be our close watch on the effects of the latest and ongoing Trump tariffs.

Stock markets in the United States and China have experienced whiplash in the past two days ([link removed]) , following Trump’s threat Friday to issue a “massive increase” in tariffs on Chinese products.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent calmed some nerves in America on Monday by saying the situation had “substantially de-escalated.” But markets still tumbled in Asia.

The threat of higher tariffs hovers even as actual, new tariffs went into place today ([link removed]) : with rates ranging from 10 to 50% on imported lumber and wood products and furniture.

This, as soybean and other farmers grow increasingly concerned ([link removed]) about Chinese retaliatory boycotts of their products.

After months of tariffs, this feels like the time to closely observe if effects rise more clearly to the surface.

Ukraine

Following Trump’s initial success in brokering an initial ceasefire and hostage deal between Israel and Hamas, we want to see how the president handles another complex conflict: Ukraine.

As a candidate, Trump promised to end that war ([link removed]) before taking office.

That did not happen. The war rolls on.

This Friday, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky returns to Washington. ([link removed]) We are watching to see if the president’s success last week in the Middle East increases his drive and ability to find a way out in Eastern Europe.
More on politics from our coverage:
* Watch: Israeli hostages freed and Palestinian detainees released after two years of brutal war. ([link removed])
* One Big Question: How did the Gaza peace deal come together? Two experienced Mideast negotiators weigh in. ([link removed])
* A Closer Look: Trump’s shutdown firings hollow out the special education office. ([link removed])
* Perspectives: How Trump’s trade war and China’s boycott of U.S. soybeans are affecting farmers in Minnesota. ([link removed])

THE NEWS HOUR IS TURNING 50. 1 VIEWER SHARES HER STORY

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A brief look at how PBS News Hour has evolved since its first broadcast in 1975. This video was originally made in 2015. Video by Justin Scuiletti/PBS News

By Joshua Barajas
Senior Editor, Digital

Before the daily presence of the internet, Annie Feighery’s window to the world outside her small, rural New Mexico town was the PBS News Hour.

Feighery’s high school civics teacher, Dave Berggren, assigned his students to watch the program, then known as The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, at home every Friday. He especially wanted the class to focus on the commentary section of that night’s program, which gave space to two different viewpoints on the week’s biggest news.

That “exposure to the outside world and seeing that understanding of our government and politics, it was a big influence on my life,” she said.

What’s known today as the News Hour debuted almost 50 years ago ([link removed]) as The Robert MacNeil Report. To mark our anniversary, which is fast approaching Oct. 20, PBS News is speaking with several longtime watchers of the program to learn how the show, and later its work online and across social media, has shaped their lives.

Feighery and a handful of other students were later selected for an annual trip to Washington, D.C., which further cemented her curiosity around politics and how government worked. The trip was a milestone. It happened during the first inauguration of former President Bill Clinton. She also flew and took the metro by herself for the first time.
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Annie Feighery (top row, right) and the group of students from her New Mexico high school chosen for a 1993 class trip to Washington, D.C. Photo by Dave Berggren via Facebook
“A lot of amazing things happened that came together to seal an interest in government as a big part of my life and it started with the broader understanding of just the News Hour,” said Feighery, now the head of an organization that works in international humanitarian aid.

To this day, she doesn’t miss the Friday segment. ([link removed])

WE’D LIKE TO HEAR FROM YOU!

Are you a longtime watcher, listener or fan of the PBS News Hour? As the show marks its 50th anniversary next week, we want to hear how the program has affected your life. Share your story here. ([link removed])

THIS WEEK’S TRIVIA QUESTION

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House Speaker Mike Johnson responded to questions Monday about the ongoing shutdown. Watch the clip in the player above.

By Joshua Barajas
Senior Editor, Digital

About two weeks into the government shutdown, House Speaker Mike Johnson signaled that the U.S. is “barreling toward” ([link removed]) one of the longest shutdowns in American history.

The longest shutdown — 35 days ([link removed]) — occurred during President Donald Trump’s first term. While Trump’s first administration holds the record for the lengthiest shutdown in history, another president had more total funding gaps under his watch.

Our question: Which president has overseen the most funding gaps and shutdowns?

Send your answers to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) or tweet using #PoliticsTrivia. The first correct answers will earn a shoutout next week.

Last week, we asked: Which group of workers went on strike in New York, leading to one of the largest walkouts of federal employees and a National Guard deployment?

The answer: Postal workers. ([link removed]) Starting in New York, postal workers fed up with working conditions and a lack of wage increases went on a nationwide strike in 1970. The collective action prompted President Richard Nixon to call on the National Guard and other military personnel to address the crisis, including having the troops sort the mail and deliver it in bulk. ([link removed])

Congratulations to our winners: Brenda Radford and George Aridas!

Thank you all for reading and watching. We’ll drop into your inbox next week.
PBS News depends on the support of individuals who believe in the importance of independent, balanced and in-depth reporting on the most important domestic and international issues of the day. Please consider making a tax-deductible contribution ([link removed]) to ensure our vital reporting continues to thrive. Thank you.

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