The Headlines - Deadly Heat Wave Grips Europe, and Congress Passes a Landmark Housing Bill
Episode Date: June 24, 2026Plus, why some tech companies are telling workers to cut back on A.I. Here’s what we’re covering: Europe Is Sweltering in an Extreme Heat Wave. Here’s the Latest., by Nazaneen Ghaffar Insurgen...cy Over Incumbency: 7 Takeaways From New York’s Primaries, by Maya King, Sally Goldenberg and Emma Goldberg Congress Clears Housing Bill, Cementing a Rare Bipartisan Feat, by Ronda Kaysen U.N. Report Says Israeli Killings of Gaza Children Post-Truce Amount to Genocide, by Nick Cumming-Bruce Tech Workers Maxed Out Their A.I. Use. Now They’re Trying to Minimize It., by Eli Tan Tune 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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Wednesday, June 24th. Here's what we're covering. A heat wave has gripped Europe, with high temperatures threatening to shatter records. Britain, France, and Spain are facing the most intense conditions, with temperatures soaring well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit, often in places that were not built for that. Many homes, schools, and businesses there were designed for the cooler climate of the past.
air conditioning is not standard. Some buildings were even designed to retain heat. But Europe is now
warming faster than any other continent. It has been very difficult out here in Paris for the past
couple of days. You see people holding portable fans, water sprayers clinging to areas with shade.
My colleague Segelin-Lestradek says that in France, the heat has driven some people out of their
homes. Because of the extreme temperatures, the mayor of Paris has decided to keep parks open
24-7. They usually close at night. So I went for a walk very early yesterday morning, and I could tell
people had to spend the night sleeping in the park. In the last few days, at least 40 people in France
have drowned, as crowds have poured into any swimming spot they can find. Officials say many of the
victims were young and swimming in unsupervised areas.
Across the continent, the current temperatures are being driven up by a heat dome, a kind of
high-pressure system that basically acts like a lid on a pot of boiling water.
Because of climate change, heat domes are becoming more common worldwide.
In Europe, they'd been trying to prepare for this.
Two decades ago, a summer heat wave caused a staggering 70,000 deaths.
In response, countries created early warning signs.
systems and organized more cooling shelters.
Paris even built a registry of elderly and vulnerable residents who get check-in calls when
temperatures rise.
This summer, experts say, will be a test of many of those systems.
One public health expert told the Times, quote,
We have adapted, but it is far from enough for what is coming.
In New York last night, a set of primaries for House seats delivered a resounding win for the left
wing of the Democratic Party, bolstering the political movement championed by New York City's
mayor, Zorn Mammani.
The old politics that got us to this crisis is not the politics that's going to get us
out of this crisis.
Mom Dani had called the congressional primaries a referendum on the direction of the Democratic
Party, and he endorsed a series of candidates who won last night, including two who
ousted Democratic incumbents.
The winning candidates share Mom Dani's progressive economic platform.
They'd also all been outspoken about ending American support for Israel, a sign of how many in the Democratic Party have grown increasingly critical of Israel and its government.
Overall, last night's results in New York show voters' hunger for insurgency over incumbency and their hopes for a political shakeup heading into the midterm elections this fall.
Meanwhile, one of the candidates who came up short last night in New York was Jack Schlossberg, the grandson of President.
John F. Kennedy. Before he announced his run for Congress, Schlossberg had made a name for himself
online as a combative, sometimes crude social media personality and provocateur, who cracked jokes
and went after his famous cousin, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Early polling had shown
Schlossberg with a path to victory, and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi even endorsed him. But Times
political correspondent Lisa Laird says that in the end, it was not enough. Schlaasberg was hampered by his
lack of experience in government or really politics at all. So I think his campaign here really just
shows how social media and a social media presence can get a candidate on the ticket and put
them in the running, but it can't necessarily win them the seat. You can find the full results
from last night's primaries in New York and other races around the country at nytimes.com.
On this vote, the yeas are 358. The nays are 32.
And without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table.
In Washington, Congress has passed a landmark bipartisan bill aimed at boosting the supply of U.S. homes
and tackling the country's housing crisis.
And President Trump is expected to sign it into law today.
For a long time, the high cost of housing had been seen mostly as a big city issue.
But during the pandemic, prices shot up around the country in places like Boise, Bozeman, and Kalamazoo,
partly due to a lack of inventory.
Today, experts say the U.S. has a shortage of up to 6 million homes,
and the new bill, which is the most significant piece of housing legislation in almost four decades,
will try and change that.
It's coming at the problem from a couple of angles.
It will loosen federal regulations, making it easier, faster, and cheaper to build,
and it gives grants to communities hoping to repair existing housing.
The bill is also designed to limit it.
the reach of large institutional landlords who've bought up hundreds of thousands of single-family homes.
Now, the number of homes those investors can own will be capped.
Overall, housing experts told the times that the measures could help boost the U.S. housing
supply and bring down prices, but that it will take time.
For one thing, it could be years before some construction projects actually break ground.
Plus, high interest rates are still keeping a lot of potential buyers.
out of the market.
Yesterday, the United Nations released a report
accusing Israeli security forces
of deliberately killing Palestinian children
in the months after Israel and Hamas
reached a ceasefire.
The report was compiled by an independent commission,
which concluded the killings were part of a strategy
to destroy the future of Palestinians in Gaza
and said that amounted to genocide.
The findings underscore the increasing alarm
from the UN and other humanitarian agencies
that the ceasefire in October
has failed to stop the violence.
UNICEF has said that one Palestinian child
has been killed on average every day
since the start of the truce,
calling the peace agreement a, quote,
cruel and deadly illusion.
Israeli officials dismissed the report
as a libelish sham
and accused the commission
of trying to single out
and vilify the country.
Israel's foreign ministry
also criticized it,
saying it ignored the deaths of Israeli children were killed by Hamas.
And finally, not too long ago, tech companies were pushing their employees to use AI as often as possible.
The idea was to cut down on busy work and boost productivity.
Some companies even posted big leaderboards showing which workers were using AI the most.
It led to the term token maxing.
tokens being essentially a unit of AI use.
But tokens cost money.
Companies like Anthropic and OpenAI
charge their corporate subscribers
for each token they use.
And now that the bills have come due,
the new word in Silicon Valley is token minning,
as in let's maybe cut back.
That's partly because the more advanced AI programs have become,
like with the rise of AI agents
that can work unsupervised for hours at a time,
writing entire software programs, the more tokens they use. As a result, software engineers can now
be burning through tens of thousands of dollars worth of tokens every month. Recently, Uber said
it had already blown through its entire projected AI spending budget for the year. Amazon and
meta have taken down their token-maxing leaderboards. The abrupt reversal, after just a few months,
underscores how much uncertainty there is about the best strategy for using AI tools,
since many companies still aren't seeing a clear return on their investments.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, how the relationship between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and President Trump is rupturing and what that could mean for the future of U.S. support for Israel.
You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
