The Headlines - Eric Adams Is Indicted, and Florida Braces for Hurricane Helene
Episode Date: September 26, 2024Plus, the “snackification” of the American diet. Tune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — availa...ble 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:Eric Adams Is Indicted After Federal Corruption Investigation, by William K. Rashbaum, Dana Rubinstein, Michael Rothfeld, Edward Wong and Chelsia Rose MarciusTracking Hurricane Helene, by Matthew Bloch, William B. Davis, Madison Dong, Judson Jones, John Keefe and Bea MalskyU.S. and Allies Propose Cease-Fire Between Israel and Hezbollah, by Michael D. Shear, Edward Wong and Farnaz FassihiHarris’s Economic Pitch: Capitalism for the Middle Class, by Jim TankersleyWith Few Wins to Highlight, House Republicans Head Home to Chase Votes, by Annie KarniRestaurant Portions Are About to Get Smaller. Are Americans Ready?, by Kim Severson
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From The New York Times, it's The Headlines. I'm Michael Simon Johnson. Today's Thursday,
September 26th. Here's what we're covering.
My fellow New Yorkers, it is now my belief that the federal government intends to charge
me with crimes. If so, these charges will be entirely false based on lies.
The Times has learned that New York City Mayor Eric Adams has been indicted as part of a federal
corruption investigation. As of early this morning, the indictment has not been made public,
and it's unclear what exactly Adams is charged with, but investigators have been focused in part on whether he and his campaign conspired with the Turkish government to get illegal foreign
donations. For months, leaks and rumors have been aimed at me in an attempt to undermine my
credibility and paint me as guilty. Even before he was indicted, Adams released a defiant video
statement, preemptively denying any allegations.
I will fight these injustices with every ounce of my strength and my spirit.
If I'm charged, I know I am innocent.
This is the mayor of America's largest city, and he is the first mayor of modern New York to be indicted on criminal charges.
It's an historic event.
Times reporter Dana Rubenstein is part of the team
that broke the news of the indictment.
So this is the culmination of an investigation
that has looked into all sorts of things,
including potentially illegal donations
to his campaigns from foreign donors,
as well as the possibility that he tried to influence the city to approve
a new high-rise Turkish consulate in Mattel, Manhattan, despite safety concerns. It's also
looked into the possibility that he received free airline upgrades on Turkish Airlines,
and it's one of four investigations that are looking at him and the people in his orbit.
Federal prosecutors are expected to announce details and the people in his orbit. Federal prosecutors are
expected to announce details of the indictment later today. It's not yet clear when Adams will
surrender to authorities. In the meantime, a number of state senators, city council members,
and other local politicians have already called for him to step down. The indictment comes as
the city government has been engulfed in a chaotic series of scandals
and resignations that have stretched beyond the case involving Turkey. In just the past few weeks,
the city's police commissioner and the mayor's legal advisor have both resigned,
and two former fire chiefs have been arrested on bribery charges.
Unfortunately, we've got a lot of information to pass on to you with this update,
and some of it is increasingly dire for the people in the path of this storm.
Almost every county in Florida is now under a state of emergency
as Hurricane Helene plows through the Gulf of Mexico.
The giant storm is currently a Category 1,
but it's expected to strengthen and could reach Category 4 by the time it makes landfall this evening south of Tallahassee.
Now, I've been here for 25 years. We don't normally forecast surge values this big, so this is pretty significant.
Officials at the National Hurricane Center are warning residents to prepare for up to 18 feet of storm surge, along with damaging winds. After Helene comes ashore,
it's forecast to push north through Georgia and Alabama up to the Carolinas, bringing heavy rain
to the entire region in the coming days. You can follow live coverage of the storm at NYTimes.com
or on the New York Times app. The American economy is the most powerful force for innovation and wealth creation in human history.
In Pittsburgh yesterday, Kamala Harris gave a major economic policy speech in an effort to win over voters who are worried about the economy, but who aren't sure about what a Harris administration would do to help. I believe an active partnership between government and the private sector
is one of the most effective ways to fully unlock economic opportunity.
The point of Vice President Harris's speech on Wednesday was less about giving us new details and new ideas about what she's for on economic policy,
and more about telling us what she's not, which is a socialist.
Jim Tankersley covers economic policy for The Times.
He says that while Harris did touch on some tangible proposals, like tax breaks for startups and a plan to incentivize contractors to build more housing,
she was also playing a bit of defense.
Polls show that Donald Trump's attacks on her economic beliefs,
including calling her a socialist and a communist, have raised doubts in some voters' minds.
Look, I'm a capitalist. I believe in free and fair markets.
She went out of her way to say, I'm a capitalist,
which is something she
said before, but took on extra importance in this speech when Harris went on to talk about,
in very technical terms, all of the ways that she sees the government being this force of
pragmatic experimentation to help business to invest more, to do good things in the economy.
She needs to convince voters that she's a safe choice,
that she can manage the economy well.
And in particular, she needs to persuade voters
who are skeptical of government,
who are just not sure that it has all the answers
to their economic problems,
but want to see it used more effectively
to bring down costs and make their lives better.
Meanwhile, many members of Congress have left Washington and are back home for the final weeks of their own campaigns.
Last night, Congress passed its last bill before the election,
a budget extension that keeps the government funded through mid-December,
narrowly avoiding a shutdown that was just days away.
This term, the GOP-led House, with its slim majority,
struggled to get almost any significant legislation passed, and House Republicans
didn't follow through on some campaign promises, like impeaching President Biden.
So I was speaking to Republican members about what accomplishments they're going to point to
in the coming weeks when they go home to their districts, and a lot of them don't really know
what to say. Annie Carney covers Congress for The Times.
I talked to Maria Salazar. She's a vulnerable Republican from Florida yesterday.
And she told me to wait for her as she went into the chamber to vote and told me she would like to
have a conversation with me about what should be a pretty easy question for a lawmaker. The question
I asked her was, what is your message to voters about what Republicans have achieved over the past two years? I mean, that's not a gotcha.
And then she came out and hustled into her car and said, I really have to go to a fundraiser.
I don't have time to give this my full attention, but we will get back to you with a fulsome
response. And she made her aid to get my cell phone number and promised that they were really
going to give me something and no one ever got in touch. Annie says the question to watch is
whether voters in Florida and beyond care about how dysfunctional Congress has been recently,
but that in a polarized moment in American politics, it's likely that many people will simply stick with their party.
And finally, we may be living through the beginning of the end of the Super Size Me era.
A survey out this year from the National Restaurant Association shows that 75% of Americans say they want smaller portions,
and a number of restaurants are listening.
Subway recently introduced a snack-focused menu, including little $3 wraps.
Some Burger Kings are now selling eight chicken nuggets instead of 10-piece orders.
And a group of researchers at Georgetown University
want to reduce portion sizes at major chains like Panda Express and Chick-fil-A.
Food prices are the main reason consumers and restaurants want to shrink portions. There's
also the issue of food waste. As much as 40% of food served at restaurants never gets eaten.
Eating trends have also changed. Adults say they now eat about half their meals a day in the form
of snacks, what experts have creatively labeled snackification. And millions of Americans are
now taking weight loss drugs
like Ozempic and Wagovi that suppress their appetites.
Those are the headlines.
Today on The Daily,
why one of the largest psychiatric hospital chains in the U.S.
is holding patients against their will.
That's next in the New York Times audio app
or listen wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Michael Simon-Johnson. We'll be back tomorrow.