The Headlines - A Breakthrough Government Shutdown Vote, and New Tax Cuts for the Ultrarich

Episode Date: November 10, 2025

Plus, a house-size spider web. Here’s what we’re covering:Senate Moves Toward Ending Shutdown After Democratic Defectors Relent by Catie Edmondson and Michael GoldAirport Disruptions May Get Wors...e This Week by Niraj ChokshiHow the Trump Administration Is Giving Even More Tax Breaks to the Wealthy by Jesse DruckerTwo Top BBC Leaders Quit Over Editing of Trump Documentary by Stephen CastleAs Aquifers Dry Up, Tehran Rations Water and Calls for Rain Prayers by Sanam Mahoozi and Erika SolomonStinking, Spongy, Dark, Huge: A Spider Web Unlike Any Seen Before by Adeel HassanTune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From the New York Times is the headlines. I'm Will Jarvis in for Tracy Mumford. Today's Monday, November 10th. Here's what we're covering. It's our responsibility to work not only here amongst ourselves, but across the aisle, to solve these problems for the Americans, make their lives a little bit easier. And that's what we have done tonight. There was a breakthrough on Capitol Hill last night,
Starting point is 00:00:28 as a group of Democratic senators joined Republicans in a vote that marked the first step towards ending the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. The vote came after weeks of deadlock among lawmakers, as Democrats held out for an extension of health care subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. But yesterday, eight moderate Democrats split off and voted to reopen the government without any guarantee
Starting point is 00:00:51 that the subsidies will be extended. We were faced with a strategy that wasn't working to achieve the goal we wanted with regard to the ACA, but it was at the same time creating hardship and difficulty for millions of people across this country. They said they made that compromise because the fallout from the shutdown, now at 40 days and counting, was getting too painful for Americans. Hundreds of thousands of government workers have gone without pay, and millions of people are at risk of losing federal food assistance. The new deal would fund the government through January and reverse the layoffs of federal employees
Starting point is 00:01:26 made by the Trump administration during the shutdown. Now, the measure needs to be formally debated and passed by the Senate and House and signed by President Trump, meaning that it could still take a while for the government to actually reopen. At the same time, the decision by the handful of Democrats to vote with the GOP
Starting point is 00:01:45 has provoked fierce backlash in their own ranks. Democrats must fight because millions of families will lose health care coverage. We must fight because a senior citizen cannot afford to pay $2,000. $25,000 a year just for health insurance, we must fight to keep millions from financial ruin. Senator Chuck Schumer blasted the move, echoing anger from many other Democrats that some of their colleagues had given up on the party's central demands around health care.
Starting point is 00:02:13 As part of the agreement, the top Senate Republican, John Thune, has promised to allow a vote next month on health care subsidies, but many Democrats have been saying that once the government is reopened, they'll have lost their only leverage on the issue. Meanwhile, with the shutdown not over yet, the problem is that as I try to reduce the pressure by lowering flights, I have more controllers that keep not coming to work. And so the pressure goes back up again. Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy says that disruptions to air travel are only expected
Starting point is 00:02:46 to get worse. Over the weekend, thousands of flights were canceled after federal officials limited air traffic at the country's busiest airports amid a shortage of air traffic controllers who have gone unpaid for weeks. For example, Duffy told CNN that at one point on Saturday, 18 out of 22 controllers in Atlanta didn't show up for work. Overall, the airport restrictions led Delta Airlines to cancel roughly 15% of its scheduled flights yesterday, and American and United each canceled about 10%. The government has indicated that by Friday it will limit air traffic even more, which could cause the number of cancellations and delays to surge even higher just ahead of Thanksgiving travel.
Starting point is 00:03:34 The Times has been looking into a series of new moves by the Trump administration that give hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks to some of the country's most profitable companies and wealthiest investors. In the past few months, officials at the Treasury Department and the IRS have been quietly tweaking tax regulations and rolling. back their enforcement. In particular, they've taken aim at a law passed by Congress in 2022 that was designed to make sure that big corporations paid at least some federal income tax. It's a little weedsy, but basically it meant companies had to pay taxes on profits they reported to their investors rather than the often much smaller amounts they reported to the government
Starting point is 00:04:14 after making deductions. The law had been projected to raise more than $200 billion for the federal government, but now a number of companies are seeing their tax bills shrink. One natural gas giant, for example, has said it expects to get a refund of almost $400 million for taxes it previously paid because of the 2022 law. The Trump administration's rollback is expected to add significantly to the federal deficit. While the Treasury Department and the IRS have some leeway in deciding how to implement tax law, several tax experts told the times that the administration appears to be exceeding its legal authority, since Congress has the ultimate say over taxation. A Treasury spokesman said the new regulations were meant to replace the Biden administration's, quote,
Starting point is 00:04:59 compliance maize that would have buried taxpayers in red tape. He did not address questions about whether the Treasury was exceeding its authority. In the UK yesterday. I can use to bring you about the BBC. The BBC chairman has announced that both the Director General, Tim DeM. and the new CEO, Deborah Tennis, are to resign. Two top executives at the BBC resigned abruptly after the broadcaster came under fire for a misleading edit of a speech made by President Trump and other allegations of bias.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Yeah, that's right, really significant news that's just come to us in the last few minutes. The controversy stemmed from a BBC documentary about January 6th that was released last year. In the film, parts of Trump's speech before the Capitol riot were cut together, and a leaked BBC memo argued that the clips were juxtaposed to make it seem like Trump explicitly encouraged the attack. The memo, written by a former journalist who had been serving as an independent advisor to the BBC, also critiqued other areas of coverage, saying the network avoided stories that raised, quote, difficult questions about transgender rights and that the broadcaster platformed a journalist who made anti-Semitic comments. In announcing her resignation, the chief executive of BBC News wrote that,
Starting point is 00:06:17 mistakes had been made, but she insisted that allegations of institutional bias were false. Amid the turmoil, one BBC radio host wrote on social media that while the memo raises genuine concerns about editorial standards, quote, there is also a political campaign by people who want to destroy the organization. President Trump and White House press secretary Caroline Levitt both celebrated the resignations, with Trump calling the leaders corrupt and dishonest. Officials in Iran are sounding the alarm about a water crisis that's been escalating for months. The country is facing its worst drought in more than half a century. The summer was dry and extremely hot, and so far this fall, some parts of the country have gotten no rainfall at all.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Now, authorities say the main dams serving Tehran, the capital city of 10 million people, are down to just 5% capacity, and Iran's president has warned that if the drought goes on, the city might have to be evacuated before the end of the year. It's one of several extreme measures that Iranian officials have been considering, including relocating Tehran hundreds of miles south to the Persian Gulf. Earlier this year, they also made a failed attempt at so-called cloud seeding, where particles are sprayed into existing clouds to try and encourage rainfall. Beyond the ongoing droughts and the growing impacts of climate change and rising temperatures, studies point to a wide range of reasons for Iran's water problems, including decades of mismanagement, illegal well drilling, and unsustainable
Starting point is 00:07:58 agriculture. The crisis has gotten so dire that some Iranians have been promoting dramatic conspiracy theories that other countries in the region have been diverting and stealing Iran's clouds. A top Iranian water official has tried to tamp down those claims, but he said, quote, since human knowledge is constantly advancing, we cannot rule. rule out every possibility. And finally, if you're scared of spiders, this would probably be the time to stop listening for today. Researchers writing in the peer-reviewed journal Subterranean Biology have recently published new findings about what is apparently the world's largest spider web.
Starting point is 00:08:39 It's hanging in a long, narrow passage in a cave on the border between Albania and Greece, and it's the size of a small house, about 1,100 square feet of thickly woven spongy white netting. The cave is a perfect spider habitat, apparently, 80 degrees year-round, teeming with tiny midges, i.e. lunch that get caught up in the silky web, and filled with foul-smelling hydrogen sulfide gas that's toxic enough to keep other animals out. In total, more than 100,000 spiders live there. But the scale of the whole thing was actually less surprising to the scientists than which spiders were part of the megacolony. They found two different spider species that are usually mortal enemies living there together, weaving side by side. One researcher told the times that their best hypothesis for the truce has to do with their pitch black home, saying, quote,
Starting point is 00:09:32 they do not see each other, so they do not attack. Those are the headlines. I'm Will Jarvis. The show will be back. tomorrow.

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