The Headlines - Early Votes Pour In, and a U.S. Warning to Israel Over Gaza
Episode Date: October 16, 2024Plus, the new hot item on wedding registries. 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:Trump Brags About His Math Skills and Economic Plans. Experts Say Both Are Shaky, by Alan Rappeport and Ana SwansonFive Takeaways From Kamala Harris’s Interview With Charlamagne Tha God, by Nicholas Nehamas and Zolan Kanno-YoungsU.S. Warns Israel of Military Aid Cut if Gazans Don’t Get More Supplies, by Michael Crowley, Patrick Kingsley, Ronen Bergman and Michael LevensonWhere a Million Desperate People Are Finding Shelter in Lebanon, by Alissa J. RubinNearly 100 People Are Still Missing in North Carolina After Hurricane Helene, by Emily CochraneThe Latest Hot Item on Wedding Registries? A New House, by Matt Yan
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From The New York Times, it's The Headlines.
I'm Tracey Mumford.
Today is Wednesday, October 16th.
Here's what we're covering.
Early voting has now officially begun in most states,
and the votes are pouring in.
At least 5 million people have already cast their ballots,
whether in person or by mail.
That's roughly 3% of registered voters in an election that could come down to the thinnest of margins.
In Georgia, the polls opened yesterday, and the battleground state saw a record number of voters before the day was even half over.
With just three weeks to go until Election Day, both candidates are now narrowing in on specific groups they hope will move the needle.
Donald Trump was in Chicago yesterday making his pitch to business leaders in an interview with the editor-in-chief of Bloomberg News.
If you add up all the promises you've made and your plans would add $7.5 trillion to the debt, that's more than twice the total for Vice President Harris.
Trump was pressed about the cost of his economic plans,
which budget watchers think could explode the country's already ballooning debt.
Why should they trust you with that?
Because we're about growth. She's got no growth whatsoever. And we're all about growth. We're
going to bring companies back to our country. You look at
even today... Meanwhile, Kamala Harris gave an interview yesterday with the radio host
Charlemagne Tha God in Detroit, a key city in another battleground state.
Listen, I feel very strongly I need to earn every vote, which is why I'm here having this
candid conversation with you and your listeners. Harris spent the hour often focusing her answers
on the concerns of Black Americans.
What is true is that I am running to be president for everybody,
but I am clear-eyed about the history
and the disparities that exist for specific communities,
and I'm not going to shy away from that.
Both candidates will continue their targeted appeals today,
and they'll both be on Fox.
Trump, with a town hall focused on women's issues.
And Harris, sitting for an interview that's likely to reach a more conservative audience than her other appearances.
As her campaign tries to peel off Republican voters. The Biden administration is warning Israel that it will cut off military aid to the country
if Israel doesn't do more to get humanitarian supplies into Gaza.
According to the State Department, supplies recently dropped to the lowest level they've
been at since the war began. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken
issued the warning in a private letter on Sunday
to two Israeli officials. In it, they said Israel has 30 days to increase the flow of goods.
Otherwise, the letter said, Israel would be in violation of a U.S. law that prevents the
government from giving military aid to any country that's blocking humanitarian supplies
the U.S. has provided. This isn't the first time that the Biden administration has warned Israel
that it risks potentially triggering a cutoff of American military aid
if humanitarian supplies into Gaza don't increase.
Michael Crowley covers the State Department for The Times.
There was a similar warning back in April,
and Biden officials felt that that warning actually did have a positive effect,
that the Israelis paid attention and began to allow substantially more aid into Gaza.
But the key from the U.S. perspective was that that aid had to be sustained.
It couldn't be a one-time thing.
So it's not clear yet how Israel might respond to this warning.
I talked to one longtime Middle East expert, Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East peace negotiator,
and he was very skeptical that anything would significantly change.
Miller's prediction was that Israel will basically do as little as it can in terms of allowing more aid into Gaza to prevent some kind of dramatic response from the Biden administration,
like restrictions on weapons transfers or even a complete cutoff of military aid.
And that the Biden administration really doesn't want to take steps like that.
And so that it will probably accept what small amount Israel is willing to do,
continuing what has basically been a pattern for the past year.
As Israel faces new pressure in Gaza,
it's continuing to carry out attacks in Lebanon, targeting what it says are Hezbollah sites.
Times correspondent Alyssa Rubin says the signs of war in Lebanon are now everywhere.
We get up some mornings and the sky has that kind of haziness that if you've spent time in war zones comes after there has been a lot of bombing.
What is really striking to me here is the constant presence of drones. The evening I came,
I wanted to go around the corner and buy some extra water. And there was this buzzing, and I had never heard it quite so close. And I've come to realize, oh, that's a drone right,
almost it sounds like, over me. And now I'm getting used to it. But you're very aware.
Is that drone watching you? Is that drone potentially going to fire in your vicinity?
Alyssa says the violence has caused havoc across the country. Nearly a million people
have fled their homes, sometimes waiting until the last minute, reluctant to leave. One was a family
I met up in Tripoli, and they really delayed because the father had just finished building
their house himself. He was a carpenter, and he didn't want to leave this place he built and was just waiting to paint. But they
had two university-aged children, and they had an autistic son of nine who was terrified by the
bombing. And eventually, they did leave. And all the father kept saying is, we just want a normal life. And that is a phrase you hear over and over.
In North Carolina, nearly 100 people are still missing more than two weeks after flooding from Hurricane Helene washed away homes and roads in the western part of the state.
The death toll from the storm is over 90 there.
At a press conference, Governor Roy Cooper said crews are still working to clear roads
and to restore power and water to places like Asheville.
And our response to this disaster is strong.
However, there's still a persistent and dangerous flow of misinformation
about recovery efforts in
western North Carolina. The governor also called out the wild rumors that have led to threats
against federal emergency management workers. FEMA temporarily stopped sending some of its
workers door-to-door to offer help because of the threats. If you're participating in spreading this
stuff, stop it. Whatever your aim is, the people you are really hurting are those in western North Carolina who need help.
And finally, the things that go on a wedding registry are always changing with the times.
People used to ask for a full set of china or
like a jello mold. Now maybe they ask for a Roomba. But one request is becoming more popular than
ever. Couples are asking their guests to help pay for a house. According to The Knot, an online
wedding resource, the number of couples asking for donations for a down payment has jumped by
more than half since 2018. That can raise eyebrows among some who feel like asking for cash is
improper etiquette. But attitudes are changing, and couples are facing a crushing housing market
where homeownership has become increasingly inaccessible. According to Zola, another wedding
website, housing is not the only big-ticket item brides and grooms are putting on the registry now.
Honeymoon funds have become common, and they also found couples asking for donations towards paying off student loans or for fertility treatments.
Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, a look at the race in Montana that could end up deciding who will control the Senate.
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.