Morning Wire - Dock Worker Strike Begins & Hurricane Helene’s Aftermath | 10.1.24
Episode Date: October 1, 2024The longshoremen officially hit the picket lines, southeast communities grapple with flooding following Hurricane Helene, & JD Vance and Tim Walz take the debates stage tonight. Get the facts first wi...th Morning Wire. Balance of Nature: Get 35% off Your Order + FREE Fiber & Spice Supplements. Use promo code WIRE at checkout: https://www.balanceofnature.com/ Jeremy’s Razors: Get the Precision 5 from Jeremy's Razors at https://www.jeremysrazors.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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45,000 longshoremen officially go on strike, hitting picket lines from Boston to Texas.
Who's going to win here in the long run?
You're better off sitting down and let's get a contract and let's move on with this world.
How long before the strike leads to empty shelves and higher costs of goods?
I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Editor-in-Chief John Bickley.
It's Tuesday, October 1st, and this is Morning Wire.
Americans across the southeast deal with the aftermath of her and
Hurricane Helene as President Trump visits the devastation firsthand.
We're here today to stand in complete solidarity with the people of Georgia
and with all of those suffering in the terrible aftermath of Hurricane Helene.
How is the federal government responded?
And J.D. Vance and Tim Walls face off on the debate stage tonight.
What do we expect from the VP candidates?
Thanks for waking up with Morning Wire.
Stay tuned. We have the news you need to know.
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WIRE. Tens of thousands of dock workers walked off the job on the East Coast this morning in a massive
strike poised to throw the supply chain into chaos. Daily Wire investigative reporter, Marada Lorty,
is here with the details. So Marade, we've been reporting the strike was coming and now it's here.
Hi, Georgia. Yes, this morning at midnight, about 45,000 union workers with the International
Longshoremen's Association went on strike. Workers abandoned their jobs at 36 major ports along the
East and Gulf coasts, including major shipping areas like the Port Authority in New Jersey,
Baltimore, and Houston.
Negotiations between the union and port ownership broke down over the summer, and the two sides
are still at an impasse.
The union is demanding higher wages and is against port automation.
On Monday, the dock worker union reaffirmed that it planned to strike and said port ownership
continues to block a fair and decent contract.
The union said ocean carriers enjoy rich billion dollar profits, while dock workers are crippled
by inflation due to unfair wage package.
I talked to a disgruntled union member at the Philadelphia dock worker local yesterday, and I asked where they'd be picketing.
He told me, unfortunately, the only time anyone wants to know where we work is when we're on strike.
We haven't been on strike in 50 years.
One long, shorman tried to explain how massive the impact will be.
We're talking about 20 million containers a year.
That's 55,000 containers a day that will not enter this country or leave this country.
How will this strike affect Americans and the economy in general?
So this is a huge strike that chokes off nearly half of all U.S. imports and will cost the economy billions of dollars a day.
Depending on how long the strike lasts, Americans could see shortages and delays past the election and into the holiday season.
Bananas, coffee, cocoa, pharmaceuticals, clothing, furniture, vehicles, and even Christmas decorations are among the products that will be affected.
As far as American exports, beef, poultry, pork, eggs, and cotton will be impacted as well.
According to industry insiders, even a one-day strike would snarl supply chains for six days.
A longer strike would take weeks or months to recover from.
If we do see shortages, we are also likely to see price spikes, which is the last thing American families need right now.
Right.
Now, what's the Biden administration saying about all of this?
So as we've reported, the Biden administration can step in and stop big strikes like this that threaten national security or help.
But Biden says he's not going to do that.
Earlier this month, the National Retail Federation, which represents 177 trade groups,
sent a letter to the president, warning a strike would devastate the economy and urging him to step in and broker a deal.
On Monday, Biden's Commerce Secretary, Gina Raimondo, admitted the strike was not her priority.
Here she is on CNBC.
Where have you been kind of focused and hearing on what would happen if the strike goes, let's say, longer than a week?
Again, I have not been very focused on that.
Okay, so not too much concern from the administration there.
Of course, this strike could throw a wrench into the election.
How would it affect voters?
Well, problems with the economy usually hurt the party in charge.
Kamala Harris has struggled to win over voters with her economic message.
And we should note, too, Trump has more working class support than any Republican presidential candidate in decades.
Harris is still winning the union vote, but by a slim margin compared to
Democratic candidates in the past.
Back in the 90s, Bill Clinton won the union vote by 30 points.
Kamala's currently only up nine points.
When it comes to trade school grads, Trump is actually leading that vote by 31 points.
By contrast, Bill Clinton won trade school grads by seven points.
So overall, a huge rightward shift among traditional blue-collar workers.
Well, the last thing we need right now is more inflation, so hopefully they can reach a deal
quickly.
Mairee, thanks for reporting.
Thanks, Georgia.
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Hurricane Helene has devastated the southeast, killing more than 120 people in Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Virginia.
Here to discuss is Daily Wire reporter Amanda Presto Gama. Hey Amanda. So this was an absolutely devastating storm, and the fallout has been massive. What do we know about the effects so far?
Well, as we've reported, the storm hit Florida as a category four with 140 mile per hour winds on Thursday, breaking records for storm.
surge along the Gulf Coast. Here's one Cedar Key residents surveying the devastation.
However bad we imagined it would be when we were fighting this thing in the darkness,
it's so much worse than the daylight. This recovery will be measured in years and years,
not months. It's unbelievable. The storm continued to dissipate as it moved up through Georgia
on its eventual 800-mile path, but it caused historic flooding and left entire communities
underwater and millions without power and sometimes without cell service.
Damage estimates have reached up to $160 billion.
And despite the already high death toll, unfortunately, there are continued recovery operations
underway in numerous states, and that number is expected to significantly climb.
Yeah.
Now, North Carolina was hit particularly hard.
What do we know about the damage and recovery efforts there?
Right.
Officials in the area have said they suffered biblical level flooding with comparisons to hurricane,
Katrina. Parts of western North Carolina took on 30 inches of rain. Towns like Lake Lour and
Chimney Rock were effectively washed away. Dron footage shows Biltmore Village, the commercial area near
the Biltmore Mansion, completely underwater. In Buncombe County, where the city of
Asheville is located, at least 35 people have been confirmed dead. The county manager says they're in
desperate need of drinking water, and what they've received so far is just not nearly enough. As of yesterday,
the county is still largely without power and struggling with communications.
The local sheriff said that there are at least 600 missing persons reports.
Additionally, Asheville residents are having to line up for hours just to try to get gasoline for their cars or food from a grocery store.
Here's one resident speaking to ABC 13.
This lady here, she came in a line and she only had like $2 to get her gas and she just wants to get home.
I mean, she cut in front of everybody, but you got to understand that, but you don't know what her circumstances are.
So I gave her 85 cents to go with what she had.
Maybe that'll help get her enough to get home.
The latest numbers indicate that at least 46 people have been killed in North Carolina,
and that ranges in age from just four years old to 75.
Just absolutely tragic.
What sort of response have we seen from the federal government from Biden and Harris so far?
Well, Biden was at his home in Delaware over the weekend, but he made it back to the White House on Monday to give a press conference on federal relief efforts.
He said federal agencies have deployed 3,600 officials to assist in recovery efforts, and he told survivors he'd be there with them as long as it takes.
But he hasn't gotten there just yet.
He plans to visit some of the affected areas in North Carolina on Wednesday or Thursday.
He said going now would be a distraction to relief efforts due to his motorcade and other security measures.
And Harris, she held a rally in Las Vegas over the weekend and departed on Monday morning to Washington for a briefing from FEMA.
She said at the rally on Sunday that she and Biden will provide whatever help local leaders need in the coming days and weeks.
As for former President Trump, he actually visited on Monday the heart hit area of Valdosta, Georgia, where he was briefed on the devastation and handed out relief supplies.
Trump met with volunteers and he thanked first responders for their efforts.
he also spoke about the need to restore communications as quickly as possible.
Trump said he and Elon Musk are working on just that.
We want to get Starlink hooked up because they have no communication whatsoever.
In Elon, Elon will always come through.
We know that. And so we're working on that.
So many devastated communities, let's hope more help is coming quickly.
Amanda, thank you so much for reporting.
You're welcome, John.
The highly anticipated vice presidential debate will take place tonight with J.D.
and Tim Walls, squaring off in New York City.
Here to set the scene for us is Daily Wire Senior Editor Cabot Phillips,
Say Cabot. So what can we expect to see from each candidate this evening?
Yeah, it's interesting. The two men are obviously very different,
but do have one big thing in common. They were each picked to appeal to voters in
working class communities, particularly in Rust Belt states like Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, and Michigan. So in many ways, this debate will center on which candidate best
appeals to those voters tonight. We'll start with Jady Vance.
who, despite being 20 years younger, does seem to have the experience advantage.
While Walls has yet to make a single solo appearance on network TV, Vance has sat down for dozens
of national interviews, and they are typically combative.
In his words, he loves a good debate.
From what we're hearing out of his camp, Vance's goal is to convince voters that Walls is a far-left liberal.
He wants to refute this folksy sort of all-shucks depiction of Walls in the media and argue that he
may talk like a moderate, but he is no moderate.
And how do we expect him to do that?
So Vance has signaled that he is going to hone in on Walls' voting record in Congress,
and more importantly, his tenure as governor of Minnesota.
Expect to hear plenty about his failure to respond to the BLM riots for several days,
allowing Minneapolis to burn in 2020,
and laws he signed making Minnesota a so-called refuge state
to allow minors from other states to receive transgender medical treatments.
Minnesota has also seen a mass exodus of residence under his tenure,
as violent crime and the cost of living have just exploded in recent years, that'll likely come up as well.
And don't be surprised if his handling of COVID is also discussed by Vance.
As Governor Walls enacted some of the strictest lockdowns in the country, and it's interesting.
When I went to Minnesota to talk with residents about him, that specific topic, COVID, came up over and over.
For example, here's a businessman named Greg Urban, whose bar was forced to close permanently during the pandemic.
Tim Walls set up a snitch line to where if you saw a car,
COVID violation, you could call in and he would dispatch his COVID police that he had set up.
And there's instances where Tim Wals put people in jail for as much as 90 days for violating one of
his orders. I mean, he wasn't messing around with this. He wanted this state locked down so tight
and he would use his jails to do that. And also here's some of what I heard from Minnesota voters
during a focus group that we conducted. He despises small business, does nothing to help small business,
tax and regulate. As governor, when Minneapolis was burning down, he failed to call out the
Minnesota National Guard because he didn't want to offend Black Lives Matter. And as a result of that,
he failed the basic test of a president or a governor, which is protecting the public safety.
And one more thing that'll be interesting to watch for, Will Vance bring up the stolen
valor accusations against Walsh? Remember, the governor has repeatedly made misleading and at times
downright false claims about his military service, including claims that he carried a weapon of war
in war, despite never having served in combat. Vance is himself a combat veteran and has attacked
Walls on that topic in the past. We'll see if he brings it up tonight in person. So there could be
some fireworks. Yeah, indeed. And what about on the other side? What are we hearing from Walls about this
debate? Well, for his part, Walls has been setting a very low bar for himself while sort of hyping up
Vance saying that his legal background gives him an advance.
For example, here he is on MSNBC when asked about his own debate prep.
Look, he's a Yale law guy.
I'm public school teacher.
So we know where he's at on that.
And look, when Wallace was interviewing with the Harris campaign, he reportedly told the VP
that he was a, quote, bad debater.
And according to a CNN report this week, he is, quote, fighting nerves and worried about
letting Harris down.
But in all likelihood, that is all a bit of political maneuvering.
If you tell people, you won't do well, even an average performance seems like a victory.
On the trail, Wallace has sought to paint Vance as an elite who abandoned his working class Middle America roots rather than a true American success story.
So expect to hear that same attack this evening.
And of course, it is a safe bet that most of his time will not actually be focused on Vance, Harris, or even himself, but on Donald Trump.
Yeah, no debate about that. Kevin, thanks for reporting.
Anytime.
Thanks for waking up with us.
We'll be back later this afternoon with more news you need to know.
