The Headlines - How Hurricane Melissa Got So Intense, and a ‘Plan’ for a Third Trump Term
Episode Date: October 28, 2025Plus, the longest-ever World Series game. Here’s what we’re covering:Jamaica Warns Hurricane Melissa Will Bring Catastrophic Winds and Rain by Jovan Johnson, Camille Williams, Judson Jones, Nazan...een Ghaffar, Yan Zhuang and Livia Albeck-RipkaIt’s Unconstitutional, but Trump Keeps Musing About a Third Term by Jess BidgoodTop Federal Workers’ Union Breaks With Democrats on Shutdown by Chris CameronIn Florida, Obamacare Price Hikes Pose an Outsized Threat by Patricia MazzeiRussia Aims Drone Attacks at Civilians, a War Crime, U.N. Inquiry Says by Andrew E. Kramer3 Takeaways From the Blue Jays-Dodgers World Series Game 3 by Fabian Ardaya, Mitch Bannon and Tyler KepnerTune 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.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Tuesday, October 28th.
Here's what we're covering.
Hurricane Melissa is on track to hit Jamaica this morning,
with the potential for catastrophic damage.
It's the strongest storm in the Atlantic Ocean this year,
and the National Hurricane Center is warning that its wind,
of up to 170 miles per hour could cause, quote, total structural failure and cut off power in
communications.
Forecasters are also predicting rain measured not in inches but in feet, up to three feet of it
in some places.
Across the island, officials are concerned that not enough people have followed evacuation
orders.
As of last night, only 1,700 people had gone to shelters.
I was hoping to get some bread, but the shelves are.
empty? Many residents were scrambling to gather supplies and board up their homes and storefronts.
Along the coast, where resorts line the shore, the times spoke with some tourists who didn't
make it off the island before airports closed. But the winds, if you look on the top, you can see it
blowing. People have shut themselves into their hotel rooms and upended the beds to barricade the
windows and protect themselves from shattering glass. In just the last few days, Hurricane Melissa
grew rapidly into a Category 5 storm.
An experts say the unusually high temperature of the Caribbean Sea,
which is 2.5 degrees warmer than usual right now,
is one of the factors driving the storm's intensity.
The storm is also moving slowly.
An expert in atmospheric science told the times
that tropical storms typically move across the Caribbean
at an average speed of 10 to 12 miles per hour.
But in recent days, Melissa stalled to one mile per hour.
hour. At that crawl, it will likely linger over Jamaica for much of today, bringing more rain
and higher winds for longer, with the potential for more damage. After crossing Jamaica, it's
expected to hit Cuba. For live updates on the storm and its trajectory, go to NYTimes.com.
Yesterday, while continuing his tour of Asia, President Trump returned to an idea that he's
floated before, of running for a third term in office.
I would love to do it.
I have my best numbers ever.
It's very terrible. I have my best numbers.
Speaking with reporters on Air Force One, Trump said he would love to run again.
Am I not ruling it out?
You'll have to tell me all I can tell you.
That would be a blatant violation of the Constitution.
The 22nd Amendment bars anyone from being elected president more than twice.
But Trump and some of his allies have repeatedly mused about it.
This spring, he said he was, quote, not joking about the idea.
Recently, there were hats on his desk in the Oval Office that said, Trump, 2028.
And in the past week, his former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, doubled down on it.
Well, he's going to get a third term.
So Trump 28, Trump is going to be president of 28, and people just ought to get accommodated with that.
Speaking on a podcast from the economist, Bannon suggested that he's working with others on a plan to circumvent the 22nd Amendment.
There's many different alternatives.
At the appropriate time, we'll lay out what the plan is.
But there's a plan, and President Trump will be the president in 28.
In a remarkable shift yesterday, the largest union representing federal workers broke from Democrats
and urged all lawmakers to pass a spending bill to reopen the government as soon as possible.
All year, the union had worked to oppose Republican.
policies, particularly President Trump's efforts to slash the federal workforce. And before the shutdown,
the union's leadership backed Democrats' plan to hold out on a funding vote until Republicans agreed
to extend health care subsidies for more than 23 million Americans. But as the shutdown nears
the one-month mark and hundreds of thousands of federal workers go unpaid, the president of the union
now says the priority is getting the government reopened. And that policy debates in Congress,
should happen, quote, without punishing the people who keep our nation running. Meanwhile,
So a reminder from my Republican colleagues, the majority of people who rely on the premium tax credits
are in red states. And the states where those families will see premiums jump the most,
again, all red states. Democratic lawmakers are underscoring the stakes of the health care subsidy issue
at the center of the shutdown debate as the deadlock on Capitol Hill continues. These are your
voters, and you are not listening to them. Instead, what is the Republican response? Silence.
What is the Republican solution? Wait. The subsidies lower the cost of health insurance
that people can get through marketplaces set up by Obamacare. And nearly 60 percent of people
with that type of insurance live in Republican congressional districts. If Congress doesn't vote
to extend the subsidies, which run out at the end of this year, the state that will see the biggest
impact is Florida, where there are a lot of low-wage service workers who don't get health care
through work, and a lot of early retirees who aren't eligible yet for Medicare.
For example, someone in their early 60s in the state who earns about $65,000 a year
could see their premiums jump from a few hundred dollars a month to $1,000 or more.
And according to some estimates, about 1.5 million people in Florida could drop their plans
because of the soaring costs.
A U.N. Human Rights Commission has concluded that Russia's been carrying out war crimes and crimes against humanity in southern Ukraine by intentionally targeting and killing civilians with drones.
For more than a year, in the city of Haresone, Russian operators have used drones to drop hand grenades on civilians when they're out on the sidewalk or working in their backyard gardens.
It's happened so often the city has set up miles of.
of netting over its streets to try and block the drones. Some of the attacks have hit ambulances
or the drones have hovered over burning buildings, waiting to drop grenades on firefighters
as they arrive. Russia has denied targeting civilians, but Russian military units often release
videos of the attacks, with footage captured from the drone's eye view. They get posted online
to groups affiliated with the Russian army, and UN investigators looked at more than 500 such
videos. The report concluded that because the drones were equipped with live-streaming cameras,
that left, quote, no doubt about the knowledge and intent of the perpetrators. It concluded
the attacks were part of a coordinated effort to terrorize residents and drive them out. Russia took
control of Herzogne early in the war, but Ukraine later reclaimed the city in a counter-offensive.
Since then, the front line has been right on the city's edge.
And finally.
1150 in Los Angeles.
Thomas has a fly ball to center field.
Varsho's going back before the catch strikes me.
Danny Freeman has ended it.
Game three of the World Series dragged late, late into the night last night,
tying the record for the longest game in World Series history
at 18 innings.
The matchup between the Toronto Blue Jays and the L.A. Dodgers lasted almost seven hours
for an exhilarating and exhausting night for fans in the stands and at home.
It ended, finally, with a walk-off home run that gave the Dodgers a 2-1 lead in the series.
While it was definitely a haul, the marathon-length game is still short of the MLB record for longest game time-wise.
That goes to a 1984 game between the Chicago White Sox and the Milwaukee Brewers.
It stretched for over eight hours and had to be played over two days.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, a lot of firefighters who battle wildfires are contracted through private companies.
A look at how lax, rules, and regulatory loopholes have left many of them sick and indebted.
debt. You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
