Sunday, October 31, 2021

Your Weekend Briefing

Glasgow, Election Day, Halloween

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We're covering the global climate summit, a preview of Election Day and Halloween.

Demonstrators marched through Glasgow to highlight the climate crisis.Andrew Testa for The New York Times

1. Leaders are gathering in Glasgow for a climate summit, and the challenges they face are huge.

The outcome of COP26 will determine, to a large extent, how the world's seven billion people will survive on a hotter planet and whether far worse levels of warming can be averted.

Fundamental differences divide the leaders. Many poor countries hard hit by climate disasters are holding out for the money promised, but not yet delivered, by the industrialized nations that fueled the crisis. Here's what to expect.

"That we are now so perilously close to the edge for a number of countries is perhaps the tragedy of our times," said Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados.

President Biden and other leaders are arriving in Glasgow after a G20 summit in Rome, where they agreed on a new corporate minimum tax, the world's most aggressive attempt yet to stop companies from sheltering profits in so-called tax havens. But when it came to preventing future pandemics, health experts and activists said that rich nations were still not doing enough to help poor countries survive the current one.

There were long lines for early voting in Virginia's general and special elections.Kenny Holston for The New York Times

2. Local and statewide elections are being held around the country on Tuesday.

These elections will determine the governors of Virginia and New Jersey and the mayors and other leaders of New York City, Atlanta, Minneapolis and other places. They will also decide the fate of ballot measures on election rules, local taxes and other issues. Here are some of the Election Day basics.

Among the races to watch:

  • The tight governor's race in Virginia has become a proving ground for each party's electoral strategy: Republicans hope to hit on a recipe for renewal, while Democrats worry that a loss could force them to defend seats in blue states next year.
  • In New York City's race for mayor, Eric Adams, the Democratic front-runner, faces off against his main challenger, Curtis Sliwa, a Republican. Here are their plans for the city
  • In Boston, Michelle Wu and Annissa Essaibi George, both Democrats, are battling to become mayor.
A traffic stop in Anchorage, Alaska.Ruth Fremson/The New York Times

3. Over the past five years, police officers have killed more than 400 drivers or passengers who were not wielding a gun or a knife, or who weren't under pursuit for a violent crime — a rate of more than one a week, a Times investigation found.

Many were stopped for common traffic offenses: a broken taillight, running a red light or swerving across double yellow lines. Relative to the population, Black drivers were overrepresented among those killed.

Traffic stops — which can be driven by the demand for revenue to fund towns — are the most common interactions between police officers and the public. The police consider them among the most dangerous things they do.

Officers have been charged in 32 cases, and nearly two dozen are pending. Only five officers have been convicted of crimes for the killing of motorists. But The Times found that evidence often contradicted the officers' accounts. A visual investigation rolled back the footage capturing 120 fatal traffic stops and found that in dozens of incidents, officers made tactical mistakes that put them in positions of danger.

Erin Gauch of Middletown, R.I., has doubts about her 9-year-old son, David, getting vaccinated.Katherine Taylor for The New York Times

4. Children ages 5 to 11 could start receiving Covid-19 vaccines as soon as Wednesday. Reluctant parents, even those who got the shot, could be an obstacle.

In announcing its authorization of a lower-dose shot made by Pfizer for the age group, the F.D.A. said that trial data showed the shot was safe and prompted strong immune responses in children. The most common side effects were fatigue, fever and headache. But some parents are reluctant to consent, questioning whether a brand-new vaccine is worth it when most coronavirus cases in youngsters are mild.

In an Opinion essay, Dr. Lee Savio Beers, the president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, explains why children should be vaccinated against Covid.

Security guards stand at the entrance to the film set for "Rust," outside of Santa Fe, N.M.Anne Lebreton/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

5. A reconstruction of the events leading up to the fatal shooting on the set of an Alec Baldwin film revealed a cascading series of mistakes.

During a scene for the movie, "Rust," Baldwin reached across his chest, drew a revolver from a shoulder holster and moved it toward the camera, when it went off, killing the cinematographer. The crew had been assured the gun was "cold," meaning it held no live ammunition.

Days before the fatal shooting, at least two accidental gun discharges on set had put crew members on edge. Law enforcement officials in New Mexico are now trying to determine whether negligence on the set rose to the level of a crime — and how the live round got inside the revolver.

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Over a year after the Port of Beirut explosion, much of the area still lies in ruins.Diego Ibarra Sánchez for The New York Times

6. Saudi Arabia and three other Gulf countries pulled their ambassadors from Beirut, after Lebanon's information minister made comments about the war in Yemen.

The minister, George Kordahi, called the war a Saudi and Emirati "aggression" in a recent television interview. Saudi Arabia's military campaign to oust Iran-backed Houthi rebels from Yemen has been widely condemned by the West, but its Arab neighbors have avoided antagonizing the kingdom.

The move emphasized how crisis-plagued Lebanon is vulnerable to the whims of its powerful neighbors.

Halloween classics never go out of style, or out of stock.Jutharat Pinyodoonyachet for The New York Times

7. If you had trouble buying a Halloween costume, blame the global supply chain. Problems with stock mean fewer Ted Lassos and Kim Kardashians.

While classic costumes like ghosts, witches and Marilyn Monroes are easier to come by, topical trick-or-treating is harder than ever. The supply chain is not well equipped to handle trends, especially when a show or image becomes unexpectedly popular overnight.

In the spirit of Halloween, we spoke to the Adams family (this one is for real) about making indie horror movies at their rustic home in upstate New York. Our critic also looked at how the vampire myth evolved, and why bloodsucking monsters are avatars for our cultural anxieties.

And if your child is celebrating Halloween this weekend, don't stress about too much candy.

Pan de muerto comes covered in sugar and sesame seeds at La Migaja Mexican Bakery in Miami.Alfonso Duran for The New York Times

8. To feed the dead, you first need pan de muerto.

Our Food reporter visited bakeries in Miami that are preparing for Día de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead, by baking the traditional sweet bread, which is similar in texture to challah and sprinkled with sugar or sesame seeds. The bread is placed on altars to remember family members during the Mexican celebration on Nov. 1-2. Here's how to make your own.

As the days get cooler, all David Tanis wants is a fire in the hearth and a simmering pot of stew. So he created this menu of braised lamb, carrot salad and a molasses ginger cake. We also have these 11 vegetarian casseroles to keep you toasty.

Is it a surfer or a seal?Laura Ryan et al.

9. What do baby sharks, asexual condors and white strawberries have in common? Our Science desk has them all covered.

Alexander Palace contains artifacts from the rule of Russia's last czar.Mary Gelman for The New York Times

10. And finally, kick back and enjoy some great journalism.

The restored palace of Russia's last czar. Going back to eat in Midtown Manhattan. A conversation with the humorist David Sedaris. All these and more await you in The Weekender.

Our editors also suggest Alicia Keys's hypnotic love jam along with 12 more new songs, as well as "Doctor Who" on the BBC and these eight new books.

Did you follow the news this week? Test your knowledge. And here's the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Have a festive week.

Shaminder Dulai compiled photos for this briefing.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Eastern.

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Friday, October 29, 2021

The Morning: Biden’s framework, Halloween movies, America’s billionaires

The process was messy. The substance would change lives.

Good morning. Don't confuse legislative sausage-making with substantive impact.

President Biden and Nancy Pelosi at the Capitol yesterday.Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times

Ugly and yet 'huge'

The legislative process is rarely pretty. It highlights political divisions and can feel disconnected from people's lives. When a big bill is making its way through Congress, voters are often turned off.

The central piece of President Biden's agenda has followed the pattern. It has caused squabbles among Democrats, and the plan has already shrunk nearly by half, disappointing progressives, amusing Republicans and providing grist for critical media coverage.

Eventually, though, the process behind a bill's passage tends to fade into history. What matters far more is a bill's substance. And if Congress passes anything resembling the legislative framework that Biden announced yesterday, it will be highly consequential.

That was the main message I heard from policy experts yesterday when I asked them to assess the framework. Compared with Biden's original proposal, it looks paltry. Compared with the status quo, it looks like a big deal.

"This is not going to solve every problem, but it is going to change people's lives," Megan Curran of Columbia University's Center on Poverty and Social Policy told me.

The bill would sharply cut child poverty; reduce child-care and health care expenses by thousands of dollars a year for many families; enroll more children in pre-K; provide more people with health insurance; finance the building of one million affordable housing units; and slow climate change by reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.

"Because they started big, there's a tendency to say, 'Oh, it's disappointing' — but it's huge," said Jane Waldfogel, a longtime scholar of children and families. "If you had told us a year ago that there was going to be a bill this fall that would have an extension of the child tax credit, big funding for child care, pre-K, health care, et cetera, I would have said, 'In your dreams.'"

There are a few important caveats:

  • One, major provisions did fall out of the bill, including paid leave, drug-price reductions and several tax increases on the wealthy. "No one got everything they wanted, including me," Biden said yesterday, before leaving on a trip to Rome.
  • Two, the political impact may be modest, especially in the short term. Democrats remain underdogs to keep congressional control next year.
  • Three — most importantly — a framework is not the same thing as a law, as my colleague Carl Hulse notes. Some members of Congress are still trying to make changes, and Democrats will have to remain almost completely unified to pass a bill.

Below is a breakdown of the biggest pieces of the $1.8 trillion, 10-year plan, assuming it passes in something like its current form.

Climate

Biden has vowed to cut greenhouse-gas emissions 50 percent by the end of this decade, relative to 2005 levels. Many scientists consider that to be a good target, one that would let the U.S. do its part to prevent the planet from warming more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (or 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit).

Biden's original legislative proposal would have come very close to achieving that goal, Coral Davenport, a Times reporter, says. But Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia opposed a provision to retire coal and natural-gas plants. The remaining climate package — mostly tax credits to reduce pollution — will likely get the country about halfway to Biden's goal. (Here is Coral's full analysis.)

"The package is really strong," Nat Keohane, president of the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, told me. "We're going to need more."

For Biden to achieve the rest of his emissions goal, his administration would need to regulate pollution more aggressively, and states would need to pass their own clean-energy bills.

A preschool in Greensboro, N.C.Travis Dove for The New York Times

Education and child care

Today, slightly more than half of pre-school-age children attend a program; the Biden framework would aim to make preschool universally available. It would also increase the maximum Pell grant — the largest college financial-aid program — by $550. And it would cap the amount of money that families spend on child care at 7 percent of their income; today, the average for families that have young children and pay for care is about 13 percent.

"The investments in preschool and child care have the potential to reshape American education," Erica Greenberg of the Urban Institute told me. One unknown, her colleague Matthew Chingos said, is whether the bill will manage to lift the quality of the education programs it funds. In both pre-K and higher education, many schools are excellent — and many others perform poorly.

Another question: Will a future Congress extend the bill's child tax credit — which is worth up to $3,600 per child per year and crucial to the projected reduction of child poverty? To hold down the bill's cost, the Democrats' framework allows the expanded credit to expire next year. They are hoping that the provision proves too popular for Republicans to block in the future.

Health care and more

The framework sets out to fix two problems with Obamacare — by expanding Medicaid in the 12 states that have not already done so, and by reducing the cost of private health insurance for middle- and lower-income people who buy it on the Obamacare exchanges.

Jason Furman, an economist and former adviser to Barack Obama, cited these improvements in a Twitter thread pointing out the benefits of passing legislation that is flawed but "much better than nothing." Future policymakers can build off the successes of earlier legislation and also fix its problems — which is a reason to celebrate Biden's framework, he suggested.

The framework would also add hearing coverage to Medicare, expand in-home care for older adults and disabled Americans, and raise wages for home health care workers.

Taxing the rich

The bill would not add to the deficit, White House officials claim, because of tax increases on corporations and the affluent — although the most ambitious tax increases on the wealthy did not survive the negotiations.

The framework does include a minimum tax on corporations, to prevent them from using so many deductions and loopholes that they pay little tax. It also raises income taxes on the very affluent, with a 5 percent surcharge on household income above $10 million and another 3 percent on income above $25 million.

For more: Eric Levitz of New York Magazine criticizes the cutting of popular provisions from the plan, like drug-price reductions.

THE LATEST NEWS

The Virus
Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Outbreak.info
Politics
Other Big Stories
"Over time, I hope we're seen as a metaverse company," Mark Zuckerberg said.Facebook
Opinions

"Deeply conservative and a purposeful tactician": Emily Bazelon on Amy Coney Barrett's strategy to move the Supreme Court rightward.

To solve our supply chain crisis, make more products in America, Senator Josh Hawley writes.

"We can make real progress by summoning the political will," Nick Kristof writes in his farewell Times column.

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MORNING READS

Employers say there's a new boldness in the way Gen Z dictates taste.Jeff Hinchee

Generational friction: It's the millennials vs. Gen Z at work.

Modern Love: How 23andMe unraveled a family secret.

World Series: Braves fans are joyously defiant — against the Astros, the M.L.B. and most everyone else.

Advice from Wirecutter: Here's where to put your wet sponges.

Lives Lived: The psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's work on the benefits of intense focus — a mental state he called "flow" — led to a global best seller and new ideas about the path to happiness. He died at 87.

ARTS AND IDEAS

The Village Halloween Parade in New York City.Kirsten Luce for The New York Times

A Halloween movie guide

In theaters: "Last Night in Soho," which explores the darker side of 1960s London, is a "sumptuous and surprising horror movie," Jeannette Catsoulis writes. In "Antlers," a wendigo — a man-eating creature from Algonquin folklore — terrorizes a small town. Or for something weird, there's "Lamb," an Icelandic film about a childless couple who adopt a creature.

Watch at home: "What We Do in the Shadows" is a mockumentary comedy film about ancient vampire housemates coping with modern life. For a scarier take on the faux-documentary, try the Thai film "The Medium," about a film crew in search of a female shaman. (Here are more streaming options.)

Family-friendly: "ParaNorman" is a "cuddly-creepy film" about a precocious boy, his ghostly friends and a looming zombie apocalypse, Erik Piepenburg writes.

And if you're in New York, here's a guide to Halloween festivities. — Sanam Yar, a Morning writer

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
David Malosh for The New York Times

This winter squash and wild mushroom curry is comfort food.

Where to Go

The Three Capes area in Oregon offers rugged scenery and hidden beaches.

What to Read

Memoirs from Ai Weiwei, Huma Abedin and Will Smith are among new books to look forward to in November.

Late Night

The hosts talked about Biden's bill.

Take the News Quiz

Did you keep up with the headlines this week?

Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was movably. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Run away (four letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you Monday. — David

P.S. Jia Lynn Yang, editor of The Times's National desk, talked about what she values in journalism.

"The Daily" is about Biden's spending bill. "The Ezra Klein Show" focuses on the future of the right.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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