The Headlines - Harris Makes Her Case, and the New Covid Vaccine
Episode Date: August 23, 2024Plus, an aquarium bids farewell to a queer icon. 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:Harris Promises to Chart ‘New Way Forward’ as She Accepts Nomination, by Katie Rogers and Reid J. EpsteinVenezuela’s Supreme Court, Loyal to Maduro, Rules Him Election Winner, by Julie Turkewitz and Genevieve GlatskyNew Covid Shots Were Approved. But Who Will Get Them?, by Benjamin Mueller and Noah WeilandCanadian Government Orders Arbitration and End to Rail Freight Shutdown, by Ian AustenSphen, Penguin Whose Gay Love Story Earned Global Fame, Dies, by Isabella Kwai
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From The New York Times, it's The Headlines.
I'm Tracey Mumford.
Today's Friday, August 23rd.
Here's what we're covering.
Thank you all.
Okay, we gotta get to some business.
We gotta get to some business.
Kamala Harris formally accepted the Democratic nomination for president last night
in front of a packed house at the United Center in Chicago.
Just a month ago, she was best known as Joe Biden's vice president.
Now she's the candidate herself.
And her acceptance speech gave her the widest audience she's had yet
to introduce herself to the country.
So, America, the path that led me here in recent weeks was no doubt unexpected.
But I'm no stranger to unlikely journeys.
A lot of voters still don't know very much about her personal story, her personal journey,
what she's overcome, and that made up a big chunk of her speech.
Times reporter Nicholas Nehemas was in Chicago covering the convention.
He says Harris walked through her biography,
being raised by a single mother,
growing up in a working-class neighborhood in California,
and feeling called to become a prosecutor.
I fought against the cartels who traffic in guns and drugs and human beings,
who threaten the security of our border and the safety of our communities.
It was also clear that she was trying to hit back against some of the attacks
that Donald Trump and Republicans have made against her,
namely that she's weak on the border, that she's weak on crime.
So there was definitely a law and order theme to her remarks.
And let me say, I know there are people of various political views watching tonight,
and I want you to know, I promise to be a president for all Americans.
She made a lot of points about
taking care of our fellow citizens,
which is not something we often hear from Trump,
who tends to demonize groups of people
he perceives as others,
whether that's certain kinds of immigrants
or Democrats.
It's a very different message.
Donald Trump is an unserious man.
But the consequences,
but the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious.
I think that the other contrast she's really trying to draw with Trump is that her campaign represents the future, her campaign represents progress, and Trump represents going back to, I think one of the phrases she used was
chaos and calamity. But America, we are not going back. We are not going back. The vice president
gave this speech in the absolutely most friendly environment a Democrat could ever imagine.
The national convention full of rank and file party members.
How the people in the room reacted matters a lot less than how the viewers on TV watching will react,
especially those viewers who are undecided and live in the handful of
battleground states that will really decide this election. That's not something we can know
tonight, but I think over the next few weeks, we'll see if there's a polling bump. We'll see
if there's a lot of grassroots fundraising, and we'll start to see how successful a speech this was.
Meanwhile. and we'll start to see how successful a speech this was.
Meanwhile.
Hundreds of demonstrators were outside the convention hall last night while Harris was speaking to protest the war in Gaza.
U.S. support for Israel's military campaign
is the most divisive issue within the party right now.
Some had expected protests to
disrupt the convention, but the week passed without major clashes. In her speech, Harris
did address the war. Her messaging signaled she would pick up almost exactly where Biden left off,
a balancing act of supporting Israel while also calling out the toll the war has taken
on civilians in Gaza.
In Venezuela, the country's authoritarian leader,
Nicolas Maduro, has strengthened his grip on power after the country's Supreme Court, which is stacked with his allies,
ruled that he officially won last month's presidential election.
The ruling came despite overwhelming evidence that the opposition candidate won the most votes.
The court said its decision was supported by a tally from voting machines,
but the government has not released detailed results. The election had widespread irregularities
and was condemned internationally. Many Venezuelans took to the streets in protest after Maduro claimed he won. In response, the government unleashed an
intense crackdown, launching what it called Operation Knock Knock to round up people who
questioned the results. More than 2,000 people have been arrested in what human rights groups
say is a wave of repression the country hasn't seen in decades.
Maduro's victory in court means he's now set to be in office until 2031.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved new COVID vaccines that are expected to ship to pharmacies and doctor's offices in the next few days.
The updated vaccines are expected to be effective against several strains of the virus
that have been causing a recent surge in infections.
In the past few weeks, Americans have been hospitalized for COVID
at almost twice the rate as the same time last year.
While most people have acquired immunity against the virus from earlier infections or vaccinations,
older people and those who are immunocompromised are particularly at risk,
and experts say they should get the new vaccine as soon as possible.
Most Americans haven't been getting COVID boosters.
As of earlier this year, just one in five adults had gotten the latest vaccine.
Canadians must be assured that their government will not allow them to suffer when parties do not fill their responsibility to them at the bargaining table.
In Canada yesterday, just over 16 hours after a labor dispute
brought the country's freight trains to a near-total standstill,
the government stepped in.
The labor minister said rail companies must end their lockout of workers and that their dispute with the union representing their employees
has to be resolved in arbitration.
Trains are expected to start rolling again within days,
preventing a longer shutdown that had threatened to disrupt
billions of dollars in trade.
And finally... It was the love story that captured the world.
Sven and Magic, the two male Gen 2 penguins whose family made global headlines.
An aquarium in Sydney, Australia, announced that Sven,
a penguin famous for hatching eggs with his same-sex partner Magic, has died.
Sven and Magic's story began six years ago when they started bowing to each other.
That's penguin for flirting.
Then they started bringing each other pebbles, very romantic,
and eventually they sang to each other.
The timing felt symbolic for some people.
The penguins got together not long after Australia legalized gay marriage,
and debates over the law had stirred up religious and political tensions across the country.
The queer community embraced the penguins.
Images of Sven and Magic appeared in gay pride parades. Over the course of the penguins'
relationship, the birds' keepers gave Sven and Magic two eggs that heterosexual penguin couples
seemed to be neglecting. They took turns incubating them and keeping them warm,
successfully hatching chicks in 2018 and 2020. Their story echoes that of another male penguin
couple that became a symbol of equality,
Roy and Silo, who lived at the Central Park Zoo in Manhattan and hatched a chick named Tango,
inspiring the best-selling children's book, And Tango Makes Three.
The Sea Life Sydney Aquarium said the loss of Sven is heartbreaking for the staff,
for the penguin colony, and for Magic.
To help him mourn the loss, they took Magic to
see Sven after he died. Magic started singing. The aquarium says the rest of the colony joined in.
Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, the big takeaways from the Democratic National
Convention, from Times reporters who've been on the ground all week.
And for a deep dive into how Harris is landing as a candidate,
listen to The Run-Up.
You can catch both shows on the Times audio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
This show is made by Jessica Metzger,
Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford,
with help from Isabella Anderson and Jake Lucas.
Original theme by Dan Powell.
Special thanks to Larissa Anderson, Robert Jemison, Zoe Murphy, and Paula Schumann.
The headlines will be back on Monday.