The Headlines - Blinken Renews Push for Middle East Truce, and U.S. Abortions Increase
Episode Date: October 23, 2024Plus, a radical approach to flooding in England. Tune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available ...to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. On Today’s Episode:Blinken Urges Netanyahu to Seek Truces in Gaza and Lebanon, by Michael Crowley, Aaron Boxerman, Hwaida Saad and Thomas FullerAbortions Have Increased, Even for Women in States With Rigid Bans, Study Says, by Claire Cain Miller and Margot Sanger-KatzU.S. Fears Russia Might Be Planning Post-Election Chaos, by Steven Lee Myers and Julian E. BarnesJudge Orders Giuliani to Forfeit Millions in Assets to Election Workers He Defamed, by Eileen SullivanFreshman Enrollment Appears to Decline for the First Time Since 2020, by Zach MontagueA Radical Approach to Flooding in England: Give Land Back to the Sea, by Rory Smith
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From The New York Times, it's The Headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Wednesday, October 23rd.
Here's what we're covering.
So I am on Secretary of State Blinken's plane right now,
and we're taxiing to depart from Tel Aviv to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Earlier this morning, as we were getting ready to leave our hotel in Tel Aviv to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Earlier this morning, as we were getting ready to leave our
hotel in Tel Aviv, air raid sirens sounded in the city and all the guests in the hotel,
including Secretary Blinken, were rushed down to shelters. As it happened, there were no
explosions in the area, but it reflected the tension that so much of Israel is feeling right now as its conflicts escalate throughout the region.
My colleague Michael Crowley is traveling with Blinken on his latest Middle East tour,
where Blinken is pushing Israel on a truce with Hezbollah in Lebanon and, once again, for a ceasefire in Gaza.
This is Secretary Blinken's 11th trip to the Middle East since October 7th.
And there's frustration among U.S. officials that these visits have not been as effective as they had hoped.
Among other things, the U.S. tried for many months to prevent the conflict in Lebanon from escalating into the wider war that it's now become.
And now, of course, we're just a couple of weeks away from the U.S. election. And I think there's a feeling that that limits America's leverage as Israel is able to wait out the election and see whether it might have another president to deal
with, potentially Donald Trump, who could be more forgiving toward Israel's military activities in A new report shows that abortions in the United States have increased since Roe v. Wade was overturned,
even in states with tight restrictions.
The study is the most comprehensive look at abortions since the ruling.
The data runs to the end of last year, and it
shows that in 10 of the 13 states with near-total bans, the number of women getting abortions went
up. Some traveled to clinics where the procedure is legal. Others ordered pills online from out-of-state
doctors. The bans have prevented some women who wanted abortions from getting them. Research suggests they're largely teenagers,
Black and Native American, and low-income.
But overall, the upward trend has surprised experts
who thought the restrictions would at the very least keep the numbers steady.
One possible explanation?
Shield laws.
Some states where the procedure is legal enacted those laws
to protect doctors who prescribe mail-order pills for patients out of state.
Other potential factors behind the increase?
A number of new abortion clinics have opened.
And with a lot more people talking publicly about the procedure, the stigma around it may have decreased. U.S. intelligence officials are putting out new warnings that Russia and Iran may be planning to stoke post-election chaos.
The officials say they don't think foreign countries will be able to affect the election outcome, but that they could try to cause unrest as the votes are counted. In a report issued yesterday, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
said that Russia may try to spark protests and even violence after Election Day,
especially if Donald Trump loses.
It's part of an effort to undermine democracy as a political system.
Iran is also considering stirring up and amplifying unrest, according to the report.
The intelligence officials say both countries are, quote, Iran is also considering stirring up an amplifying unrest, according to the report.
The intelligence officials say both countries are, quote, better prepared to exploit opportunities to exert influence this year,
after having studied the chaos surrounding the 2020 election.
Meanwhile, the fallout from the 2020 election continues for Rudy Giuliani.
On Tuesday, a federal judge ordered Trump's former personal lawyer to turn over most of his possessions and available cash to help pay off his penalty for defaming two Georgia election workers.
Giuliani falsely claimed that they cheated Trump out of votes and later admitted he was lying.
The two women sued after they faced a torrent of threats and racist abuse.
One of the workers told a jury last year, quote,
Giuliani just messed me up, you know?
Giuliani was ordered to pay them $148 million,
and they've been waiting nearly a year for that payment.
Now he has one week to give up his vintage Mercedes-Benz,
his apartment, jewelry, and 26 watches, even his TV. The cash from the sale will go to paying the
damages. His lawyers say they'll appeal the ruling. The financial penalty is not the only
consequence Giuliani is facing for his efforts to overturn the results of the election. He's been
stripped of his law licenses in New York and Washington, D.C., and he faces criminal trials in Arizona and Georgia
related to his efforts to keep Trump in office.
At American colleges and universities,
freshman enrollment appears to have dropped 5% from last year,
the biggest drop since 2020,
when the pandemic and remote learning upended higher education.
The drop comes after a year of problems, delays, and frustrations
with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid form, FAFSA.
The form was revamped under a mandate to make it simpler,
but the very buggy rollout delayed schools from being able to send out financial aid offers until well into the summer,
leaving many families struggling to determine how much college would cost.
On its own, the data doesn't establish a link between the dip in enrollment and the FAFSA problems,
but it does show there was a drop particularly at schools serving lower-income students.
The director of the research center that gathered the data said a lot of factors could be shaping
students' decisions not to go to college, including the recent Supreme Court ruling
ending affirmative action, anxiety over student debt, and a strong job market,
in addition to any FAFSA
frustrations. And he said there's little evidence to suggest high school students who put off
college will ever enroll. He said, quote, these students end up with jobs and sometimes families,
and they find it harder and harder as time goes on to think about entering college again. And finally, on a little piece of land curling out from the coast in
southwestern England, there is essentially a giant science experiment happening. The area used to be
low-lying farmland, constantly battling back the water. But over a decade ago, an environmental trust
and the British government got together to try something. They wanted to let it flood.
The idea was fairly controversial because rather than doing what Britain and countless countries
around the world have done for decades, which was investing in traditional flood defences like
seawalls, the plan was essentially surrender. That seemed to
be the logic behind the project, that you would give over the land to the water rather than trying
to protect it. Times reporter Rory Smith went out to the area where farmers were paid to give up
their acreage so the trust could turn it back into marshland. He says based on the results,
the project could offer a blueprint for how other coastal areas can adapt
as climate change brings more flooding. I went out earlier this year to see what the project
had become. It feels wild and windswept. There's lots of rivers and streams and rivulets.
There's a lot of mud. There's a lot of grass. But what's most impressive is not how it looks, it's what it does. It provides
a sanctuary and a haven for all sorts of wildlife, species of birds that hadn't been seen frequently
in that part of Britain for years and years because they hadn't had the appropriate environment in
which to thrive. It provides a natural flood defence. Last winter was a particularly rough
one for everyone in Britain,
but the village of Stia, right at the tip of the peninsula, didn't flood. That's because the water was absorbed by the marshland as it was designed to do. But the real success is the fact that there
is more marsh than there used to be. The land has grown vertically by several feet over the last 10
years, which is testament to the amount of carbon
captured by the marsh. That's the lesson that the people who designed and managed the scheme
take from the last 10 years. It can be more effective to surrender to nature,
to let the land be what it wants to be, than try to resist.
Those are the headlines.
Today on The Daily, a look at the dramatic gender divide that's formed among America's youngest voters.
That's next in the New York Times audio app, or you can listen wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Traci Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.