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The Brian Lehrer Show

The Brian Lehrer Show

2,256 episodes — Page 16 of 46

Ep 173530 Issues in 30 Days: Abortion in New Jersey

New Jersey is generally viewed as a state with some of the strongest abortion protections, but Republican gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli has some plans that could change that. Terrence McDonald, editor at the New Jersey Monitor, talks about the parts of both candidates' platforms that could change or strengthen abortion protections in the state.

Oct 16, 202517 min

Ep 1739Sen. Kim on Gateway Defunding

Andy Kim, U.S. Senator (D NJ), weighs in on the Trump announcement that the Gateway tunnel project is "terminated."

Oct 16, 202516 min

Ep 173110-Question Quiz: Where Am I?

Listeners hear a description of a place in the tri-state area and try to guess where it is.

Oct 15, 202510 min

Ep 1730City Politics: Debate Preview

Elizabeth Kim, Gothamist and WNYC reporter, talks about the latest news from the mayoral campaign as Election Day is just weeks away.

Oct 15, 202512 min

Ep 1733Pets in the City: 'The Dogist' Talks Dogs

Throughout this membership drive we are talking about the animals we love and care for in our homes -- our pets. Today, Elias Weiss Friedman, aka @TheDogist on Instagram, author of This Dog Will Change Your Life (Ballantine, 2025) and host of a new YouTube talk show talks about the dogs he's met and why he thinks they make us better humans.

Oct 15, 20255 min

Ep 173230 Issues in 30 Days: Moving Local NYC Elections to Presidential Election Years

Brigid Bergin, Gothamist and WNYC senior political correspondent, talks about the proposal that NYC voters will see on this year's ballot that would move local elections to take place during presidential election years.

Oct 15, 202518 min

Ep 1729Wednesday Morning Politics: Trump's Diplomatic Success and More

David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker and the host of The New Yorker Radio Hour, talks about the latest national political news, and previews this year's New Yorker festival.

Oct 15, 202524 min

Ep 1719Coffee Prices Up and Up

Listeners share whether they're seeing higher coffee prices due to tariffs yet and if that's changing their caffeine habits.

Oct 14, 20257 min

Ep 1728Tentative Hope for Gaza and Israel

Graeme Wood, staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of The Way of the Strangers: Encounters With the Islamic State, offers analysis of the current ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, and why one Palestinian philosopher told him he feels a "paradoxical optimism" that the current peace will hold.

Oct 14, 202534 min

Ep 1727The Latest on The Firings at the CDC

On Saturday, the Trump administration rescinded the layoffs of hundreds of scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who were mistakenly fired the day before. Apoorva Mandavilli, science and global health reporter at The New York Times, explains what happened and who remains at the CDC.

Oct 14, 202524 min

Ep 172630 Issues in 30 Days: Rikers Island

Elizabeth Glazer, founder of the journal Vital City and former director of the New York City Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice, talks about the challenges the next mayor will face regarding Rikers Island, and what each says about the current plan to close Rikers in favor of borough-based jails.

Oct 14, 202542 min

Ep 1725What Comes Next for Israel and Gaza?

Fred Kaplan, Slate's War Stories columnist and the author of many nonfiction books and his latest, a novel, A Capital Calamity (MIniver Press, 2024), offers analysis on what comes next for Israel and Gaza as Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners were released, and the ceasefire deal takes effect.

Oct 13, 202515 min

Ep 1722Trump DOJ Indicts NY AG

Elie Honig, senior legal analyst at CNN, New York Magazine columnist, former state and federal prosecutor and author of several books, including When You Come at the King: Inside DOJ’s Pursuit of the President, From Nixon to Trump (Harper, 2025) offers legal analysis of the Trump DOJ case against New York Attorney General Tish James.

Oct 13, 202521 min

Ep 1723Indigenous Peoples' Story

Julian Brave NoiseCat, writer, filmmaker and student of Salish art and history and the author of We Survived the Night (Knopf, 2025) talks about his new book, the story of North American indigenous people through his reporting and his own story, all in the style of a traditional "coyote story."

Oct 13, 202519 min

Ep 172130 Issues in 30 Days: Education Culture Wars

Andrew Zwicker, New Jersey State Senator (D, District 16), and Dawn Fantasia, New Jersey Assembly Member (R, District 24), debate the hot-button issues in education and how they are playing out in the governor's race, including parents' rights, book bans and more.

Oct 13, 202550 min

Ep 1724Brian Lehrer Weekend: Schools & the Mayor's Race; Nobel Prize; Rails to Trails

Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them.30 Issues in 30 Days: New York City Schools (First) | Who is María Corina Machado, Nobel Peace Price Winner? (Starts at 1:12) | From Railroad to Rail-Trail (Starts at 1:50)If you don't subscribe to the Brian Lehrer Show on iTunes, you can do that here.

Oct 11, 20252h 0m

Ep 172030 Issues in 30 Days: Fighting Anti-Semitism and Anti-Muslim Bias

Daisy Khan, founder and executive director of the Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality (WISE) and the author of 30 Rights of Muslim Women: A Trusted Guide (Monkfish Book Publishing Company, 2024) , and Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, discuss how to fight both anti-Semitism and Islamophobia at a time of polarization over the Mideast in the context of concrete policy proposals from the New York City mayoral candidates, Andrew Cuomo, Zohran Mamdani and Curtis Sliwa.

Oct 10, 202552 min

Ep 1718Who is María Corina Machado, Nobel Peace Price Winner?

Gideon Rose, adjunct senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), the former editor of Foreign Affairs and author of How Wars End (Simon & Schuster, 2010), talks about María Corina Machado, who was announced as the winner of this year's Nobel Peace Prize, and related news of the day.

Oct 10, 202537 min

Ep 1717Grandparenting as Paid Labor?

Marina Lopes, author of Please Yell at My Kids (GCP/Balance, 2025), talks about her story in The Atlantic suggesting American parents look at the way childcare works in Singapore where grandparents are frequently primary caregivers and get paid for the work.

Oct 10, 202518 min

Ep 171530 Issues in 30 Days: Criminal Justice Reform

Michael Tannousis, assemblymember representing District 64, including southern Brooklyn and the east shore of Staten Island" and Insha Rahman, vice president of advocacy and partnerships at the Vera Institute of Justice and the director of Vera Action, cover what each New York City mayoral hopeful is proposing when it comes to criminal justice reform, including the 2019 bail reform law signed by then-Governor Andrew Cuomo, plus Zohran Mamdani's and Curtis Sliwa's policy proposals.

Oct 9, 202527 min

Ep 1716Do You Need an AI 'Friend?'

Ryan Kailath, WNYC/Gothamist arts and culture reporter, talks about his reporting on the AI company called Friend, and their ads, which have been defaced throughout the subway system.

Oct 9, 202511 min

Ep 1714Thursday Morning Politics: Cease-Fire Deal; Government Shutdown Continues

Jonathan Lemire, co-host of "Morning Joe" on MSNBC, contributing writer at The Atlantic and author of the book, The Big Lie: Election Chaos, Political Opportunism, and the State of American Politics After 2020 (Flatiron Books, 2022) talks about what he calls the "project 2025 shutdown" and more national political news.

Oct 9, 202521 min

Ep 1713New Jersey Gubernatorial Debate Recap

Nancy Solomon, host of the “Ask Governor Murphy” monthly call-in show, recaps the final governor's debate between Democrat Mikie Sherrill and Republican Jack Ciattarelli.

Oct 9, 202547 min

Ep 1712The Best Places to Bike Outside the City

After yesterday's conversation on the show about rail trails, listeners call in to share their favorite places to bike outside the city, whether a rail or other kind of trail, parks, roads, or neighborhoods that are friendly to bikers.

Oct 8, 20256 min

Ep 1709National Politics with Senator Booker: Trump's National Guard, AG Bondi's Testimony and More

U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D, NJ), talks about the ongoing shutdown, the Trump administration sending the National Guard to Oregon, Attorney General Pam Bondi's contentious Senate hearing and the funding cuts to the Gateway Tunnel.

Oct 8, 202529 min

Ep 171130 Issues in 30 Days: E-Bike Safety & Regulation

Nicole Gelinas, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a contributing editor of City Journal, a columnist at the New York Post and the author of the book, Movement: New York's Long War to Take Back Its Streets from the Car (Fordham Univ Press, 2024), and Ligia Guallpa, executive director of Worker's Justice Project and co-founder of Los Deliveristas Unidos, cover what each New York City mayoral hopeful is proposing to regulate delivery apps and e-bike/scooter/moped licensing.

Oct 8, 202531 min

Ep 1710City Politics: State of the Race; New Voters

WNYC and Gothamist reporter Elizabeth Kim and Brigid Bergin, WNYC and Gothamist senior political correspondent, talk about the latest news in the mayoral campaign, plus, Brigid shares her reporting on the many new voters who went to the polls in the June primary.

Oct 8, 202543 min

Ep 170630 Issues in 30 Days: New York City Schools

Alex Zimmerman, reporter at Chalkbeat New York, talks about his breadth of reporting on the New York City mayoral candidates' proposals regarding the New York City public school system, including Zohran Mamdani's proposal to end mayoral control of the city’s schools and Andrew Cuomo's proposal to replace the city’s lowest-performing schools with charters or other models.

Oct 7, 20251h 10m

Ep 1707From Railroad to Rail-Trail

Peter Harnik, co-founder of the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy and the Center for City Park Excellence at the Trust for Public Land and executive producer of the documentary From Rails to Trails, talks about his work spearheading the movement to convert abandoned railbeds into multi-use trails, 26,000 miles so far, and the new documentary about it.

Oct 7, 202511 min

Ep 1708The Nobel Prize for Understanding Autoimmune Disease

The Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine was awarded to three scientists for their work in immunology. Daniel Griffin, MD, PhD, Chief of Infectious Disease for Island Infectious Diseases, the largest physician-owned Infectious Disease Specialist Group on Long Island, an infectious disease specialist and clinical instructor of medicine at Columbia University and president of Parasites Without Borders and co-host of the podcast "This Week in Virology", explains their breakthrough and what it means for future treatments for autoimmune diseases, cancer, and more.

Oct 7, 202529 min

Ep 170330 Issues in 30 Days: NYC Government's Impact on the Middle East

In this installment of our election year series, a look into what the candidates -- especially former Governor Andrew Cuomo and Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani -- might do as mayor to influence the Israeli-Palestinian conflict one way or another. Jim Walden, a former federal prosecutor who ran as an independent in the NYC mayor's race, first explains his support for Cuomo, who signed an executive order as governor barring the state from doing business with any organization that participated in the BDS movement. Then, Jeremy Cohan, sociologist and NYC-DSA leader and spokesperson, breaks down Mamdani's Not On Our Dime Act, intended to punish organizations that aid Israeli West Bank settlers.

Oct 6, 202556 min

Ep 1702The Children Who've Died Waiting for USAID Medications

Meg Kelly, senior reporter for The Washington Post's Visual Forensics team, discusses her team's reporting on the Trump administration's USAID funding pause, which resulted in the deaths of children from curable diseases around the world.

Oct 6, 202531 min

Ep 1704Your Family's 'Secret Language' Part Two

A Washington Post article explained how most families have a secret language that only they understand, or a "familect" as some linguists call it. Listeners call in to share the words in their family that only they use, which are often conjured in the minds of small children and then used for years down the road.

Oct 6, 20256 min

Ep 1705President Trump's National Guard Plans

Kyle Cheney, senior legal affairs reporter for Politico, talks about President Trump's attempts to send National Guard troops into Portland and Chicago, how states are reacting and why a federal judge keeps blocking the plan for Portland.

Oct 6, 202515 min

Ep 1701Brian Lehrer Weekend: Princeton President; Involuntary Hospitalization; Seasons

Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them.Christopher Eisgruber, president of Princeton University, talks about issues of free speech (First) | A 30 Issues in 30 Days debate about involuntary hospitalization of New Yorkers with severe and untreated mental illnesses (Starts at 29:48) | Your favored (and least favored) seasons (Starts at 1:17:46)If you don't subscribe to the Brian Lehrer Show on iTunes, you can do that here.

Oct 4, 20251h 26m

Ep 1699Celebrating NYC's Forests

Sophia Wohl , deputy director of stewardship, environment and planning at NYC Parks Department, talks about Saturday's celebrations of City of Forest Day with events around town, plus offers guidance for caring for the trees and forests near you.=> City of Forest Day events

Oct 3, 202514 min

Ep 1700The Trump Admin and LGBTQ New Yorkers

Giulia Heyward, WNYC and Gothamist reporter, talks about how New York officials are dealing with the Trump administration's attempts to roll back legal protections for the LGBTQ community.

Oct 3, 202522 min

Ep 169830 Issues in 30 Days: New Jersey Transit

Larry Higgs, commuting and transport reporter at NJ Advance Media, talks about the state of NJ Transit and where the candidates stand on tolls, construction of new transit projects, congestion pricing and more.

Oct 3, 202530 min

Ep 1697As Goes New Jersey?

Russell Berman, a staff writer at The Atlantic, talks about the New Jersey governor's race and its national bellwether status, plus the latest shutdown news."The Blue State That’s Now a Bellwether" (The Atlantic, Sept 29, 2025)

Oct 3, 202542 min

Ep 1695Why More Young People are Getting Early-Onset Cancers

More young people under the age of 50 are getting diagnosed with early-onset cancers and researchers are trying to figure out why. Nina Agrawal, health reporter for The New York Times, explains what they have found so far, and what is still unknown.

Oct 2, 202525 min

Ep 1697Thursday Morning Politics: Government Shutdown Day 2

Politico congressional reporter Nicholas Wu talks about the latest on the federal shutdown and other national political news.

Oct 2, 202541 min

Ep 1696Your Optimal Morning Routine

Inspired by an article in The Atlantic that shares recommendations for a "happy start to the day," listeners call in to share their morning routines, and explain why it helps them get going; plus Michael Hill, WNYC's Morning Edition host, shares his ultra-early routine.

Oct 2, 202512 min

Ep 169430 Issues in 30 Days: Taxation in New Jersey

John Reitmeyer, budget and finance writer at NJ Spotlight News, talks about taxation in New Jersey and where the candidates stand on property taxes, the mansion tax, taxing millionaires, and more.

Oct 2, 202530 min

Ep 1691Call Your Senator: Sen. Andy Kim on the Shutdown and More

U.S. Senator Andy Kim (D NJ) talks about the government shutdown, U.S. military leadership, and more.

Oct 1, 202541 min

Ep 1693City Politics and 30 Issues in 30 Days: Racial Inequality

Rev. Al Sharpton, civil rights leader, host of MSNBC’s PoliticsNation, founder and president of the National Action Network (NAN) and the author of Righteous Troublemakers (Hanover Square Press, 2022), discusses the remaining mayoral candidates after Mayor Adams' withdrawal from the race and the issues of racial justice and inequality. Then, Gothamist and WNYC reporter Elizabeth Kim and Christina Greer, associate professor of political science at Fordham University, co-host of the podcast FAQNYC and the author of How to Build a Democracy (Cambridge University Press, 2024), talk about the latest news in the mayoral campaign after Mayor Adams's big announcement that he'd be dropping out, plus they discuss what the remaining candidates might do for racial justice.

Oct 1, 202537 min

Ep 1692Princeton President Talks Campus Speech and Politics

Christopher Eisgruber, president of Princeton University and the author of Terms of Respect: How Colleges Get Free Speech Right (Hachette, 2025), talks about issues of free speech and campus politics at Princeton, and the university's relationship with the Trump administration.

Oct 1, 202529 min

Ep 1689Covering Climate for a Spanish-Language Audience

Vanessa Hauc, anchor and director of Noticias Telemundo’s environmental investigative unit, Planeta Tierra, and one of three winners of the Covering Climate Now Journalist of the Year award, talks about her award and her reporting on the climate crisis, focused on solutions that are already happening around the world, plus how the Latino community is one of the most vulnerable to the crisis here and abroad.

Sep 30, 202524 min

Ep 1690The U.N. Talks Artificial Intelligence

Vilas Dhar, president of the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation and member of the UN Secretary-General’s Advisory Body on AI, talks about the two new institutions created by the United Nations to study and discuss the risks and opportunities of artificial intelligence, and his goals for governing this emerging technology so that it serves the public good.

Sep 30, 202523 min

Ep 1682Which Casinos Will Win Support?

Nick Garber, politics reporter at Crain's New York Business, shares the latest on the competing downstate casino proposals, just after Steve Cohen's Willets Point casino proposal wins approval from its community advisory committee, leaving four proposed casinos to vie for up to three state licenses to be awarded by the state by December 1.

Sep 30, 202512 min

Ep 168830 Issues in 30 Days: Involuntary Hospitalization of Mentally Ill New Yorkers

Brian Stettin, senior advisor on severe mental illness for the Office of the New York City Mayor, and Michael F. Hogan, PhD, consultant at Hogan Health Solutions and New York State Commissioner of Mental Health from 2007-2012, debate whether the city and state's policy of involuntarily hospitalizing New Yorkers displaying signs of severe mental illness is humane and effective ahead of the November mayoral election.

Sep 30, 202547 min