The Headlines - U.S. Shutdown Begins, and Trump Tells Military to Use U.S. Cities as ‘Training Grounds’
Episode Date: October 1, 2025Plus, Italian grandmothers’ secret weapon. Here’s what we’re covering:Shutdown Enters First Full Day With No Hint Either Side Will Give by Catie EdmondsonHow the Shutdown Is Affecting Federal S...ervices and Workers by Elena Shao and Lazaro GamioTrump and Hegseth Recount Familiar Partisan Complaints to Top Military Leaders by Helene Cooper, Eric Schmitt and Shawn McCreeshWhite House Pulls Pick to Lead Labor Data Agency by Tony Romm, Ben Casselman and Lydia DePillisTrump Announces Deal With Pfizer to Sell Drugs to Medicaid at European Prices by Rebecca Robbins and Margot Sanger-KatzJudge Rules Trump Unlawfully Targeted Noncitizens Over Pro-Palestinian Speech by Zach MontagueThe Book That Taught Nonna to Cook Is Coming to America by Kim SeversonTune in every weekend 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 Wednesday, October 1st.
Here's what we're covering.
Well, Mr. President, it looks like we're going to have a shutdown.
At 12.01 a.m., the U.S. government shut down after the Senate deadlocked over spending.
Democrats, as we know, are part.
pushing us towards a government shutdown.
Four million people are about to lose coverage.
And our Republican colleagues want to do nothing about it.
Lawmakers spent the last hours before the deadline in back-to-back votes.
We only have 53 Republicans.
Each party put forward their own measure to keep funding flowing.
We need seven Democrats to join with us.
And each party blocked the others.
Democrats say they're holding out for a deal that will extend health
care subsidies that are about to expire. Without that, four million people are projected to lose coverage
starting next year, and insurance costs will go up for another 20 million. Republicans have accused
the Democrats of holding government funding hostage. With no resolution in sight, the U.S. has now
entered its first federal shutdown since 2019. Back then, parts of the government closed for just over a
month in a dispute between Democrats and President Trump over his demands to fund a border wall.
So when you shut it down, you have to do layoffs. So we'd be laying off a lot of people that
are going to be very affected. And the Democrats, they're going to be Democrats.
Yesterday, Trump told reporters, a lot of good can come from shutdowns, saying it gave the White
House an opportunity to lay off federal workers who are Democrats and cut programs Democrats'
support. The White House budget director has already told agencies to execute their plans for an
orderly shutdown. Hundreds of thousands of federal employees have been furloughed. That includes
89% of the Environmental Protection Agency, 87% of the education department, 62% of the state
department. Still, there are many key services that will continue pretty much uninterrupted
if they're considered mandatory or are funded through another mechanism. The post office, for example,
will keep delivering mail. Social Security benefits will keep going out. For now, flights are not
expected to be affected, even though some FAA employees are furloughed, and there's still access to
national parks, though all of that could change the longer the shutdown goes on. Some federal
law enforcement officers, active duty troops, and air traffic controllers have been deemed essential,
so many will work without pay until funding is restored. For a more complete list of what will be
affected and how, go to n.Yatimes.com. The Senate is expected to return to the capital today to vote again.
In many ways, this speech is about fixing decades of decay.
Foolish and reckless political leaders set the wrong compass heading, and we lost our way.
We became the woke department, but not anymore.
Hundreds of the country's top generals and admirals were brought to Quantico, Virginia yesterday for an address from Defense Secretary Pete Hegeseth and President Trump.
The highly unusual meeting, which was only called last week, had set off rumors in the military.
Officers had wondered if it was going to be about mass firings, a declaration of war on Venezuela, or a loyalty pledge to the president.
It ended up being a campaign-style event where both Hegeseth and Trump criticized the state of the military.
and ticked through culture war talking points.
No more identity months, DEI offices, dudes in dresses, no more climate change worship.
As I've said before, and we'll say again, we are done with that shit.
Heggseth lectured the group on fitness, grooming, and a, quote, war-fighting mentality.
And without presenting any evidence, he said past leadership had lowered military standards.
standards to meet arbitrary racial and gender quotas.
Hegss said fixing that was a top priority, claiming the U.S. military had lost the ability to win wars.
President Trump, meanwhile, gave a rambling and sometimes incoherent speech that returned to one of his frequent themes, crime in U.S. cities.
What they've done to San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, they're very unsafe places, and we're going to straighten them out one by one.
And this is going to be a major part for some of the people in this room.
That's a war, too. It's a war from within.
Trump said he told Hegeseth the military should use U.S. cities as training grounds.
In all, it was a highly politicized speech to a group of apolitical military commanders.
Trump's comments were met with expressionless faces.
Senior leadership at the Pentagon had warned the officers in attendance not to react or cheer in keeping with military norms.
Some former military officers criticize the event.
One retired Army Major General called out the cost of gathering the military leaders
to hear Hegeseth, quote, brag about how many pull-ups he can do
and have Donald Trump's sleepwalk through a list of partisan gripes.
Now, three more updates on the Trump administration.
The big winner of this deal clearly will be the American pace.
is no doubt about it. They are the ones that will see significant impact in their ability to buy
medicines. The CEO of the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer joined President Trump at the White House
yesterday to announce it had agreed to lower the prices it charges state Medicaid programs
for many of the medications it sells. The company also said it will price new drugs released
in the U.S. at levels comparable to what it charges countries in the EU. The announcement marked
a step forward toward Trump's goal of equalizing prescription drug prices between the U.S.
and other wealthy nations, where brand-named drugs are on average three times cheaper.
Senior administration officials said they'd reached similar agreements with other drug manufacturers,
but did not name them.
Also, the White House withdrew its nomination for the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
E.J. Antony. President Trump fired the previous economist who held the spot after,
after claiming the data was rigged when the agency's reports showed weaker hiring numbers.
Trump then tapped Antony, a conservative economist at the Heritage Foundation, as her replacement.
But economists and other experts from across the political spectrum
raised concerns about Antony's lack of experience and his history of distorting statistics
to support political arguments.
Last night, the White House confirmed it was withdrawing Anthony's nomination,
but offered no reason for the sudden change.
And a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration violated the First Amendment by using the threat of deportation to systematically silence foreign students in the U.S. who protested in support of Palestinians.
The lawyers who brought the suit argued that the government detaining Mahmoud Khalil, Ramesa Azturk, and others had ushered in panic on American college campuses with a chilling effect on academia.
In a scathing 161-page opinion, the judge called out the administration's attempts to, quote,
strike fear into student protesters and criticized ICE agents who detained some of the students
for wearing masks, which he said was a tactic to terrorize Americans into quiescence.
Despite the finding, the judge did not immediately block the government from attempting further deportations.
He said he would weigh in more after another hearing at a later date.
In response to the ruling, a State Department spokesman repeated claims that it had initiated deportations against people who were committing anti-American acts or inciting violence and said, we will continue to revoke the visas of those who put the safety of our citizens at risk.
In California this week, Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law some of the most comprehensive rules in the country for companies who are developing.
artificial intelligence. The new law requires large tech firms to report what safety protocols
they use in building their products and to publicly disclose the greatest risks posed by their
technologies. The bill also strengthens whistleblower protections for employees who warn about
potential dangers of AI. A previous version of the legislation had required companies to build in
a kill switch that would stop the technology, but that was stripped out after a fierce lobbying campaign
from the tech industry. Around the country, AI regulations are gaining momentum. This year alone,
38 states passed or enacted their own rules. Major companies like Meta, OpenAI, and Google
have tried to block that, saying the patchwork of state regulations puts too much of a burden on them.
Last month, several Silicon Valley giants pledged up to $200 million to two new super PACs,
designed to help elect politicians friendly to AI
and force out those they consider not supportive enough of the technology.
And finally, for a century,
Italian cooks have had a go-to secret weapon in the kitchen.
It's a cookbook packed with more than 2,000 recipes titled
The Talisman of Happiness.
Basically, if you think about how many American kitchens have a copy of joy of cooking in there, same thing.
People still remember their grandma's copies that got used so much they're held together with rubber bands.
But until now, the masterwork had never been available in English, other than a watered-down, abridged version from 1950.
The cookbook editor who finally made it happen told the times,
it took years of irrational behavior, and I guess what you might call pure mania.
It involved tracking down the great nephew of the original author, Adaboni.
He gave his blessing, saying he grew up eating those dishes
and remembered seeing his great aunt hunched over a typewriter working on the recipes.
He said, quote, it wasn't so much a legacy that she wanted,
but the love that was expressed by cooking for your family.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the daily, more on the government shutdown, including an interview with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
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.
