Polls Find Harris-Trump Deadlock, and Device Attacks Spread Fear in Lebanon

民意调查发现哈里斯与特朗普陷入僵局,设备攻击在黎巴嫩传播恐惧

The Headlines

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2024-09-19

7 分钟
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Plus, legal problems for MrBeast’s reality show.
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  • Hi, I'm Josh Hayner and I'm a staff photographer at the New York Times covering climate change.

  • For years, we've sort of imagined this picture of a polar bear floating on a piece of ice.

  • Those have been the images associated with climate change.

  • My challenge is to find stories that show you how climate change is affecting our world right now.

  • If you want to support the kind of journalism that we're working on here on the climate and environment desk at the New York Times, please subscribe on our website or our app.

  • From the New York Times, it's the headlines.

  • I'm Amelia Nierenberg.

  • Today's Thursday, September 19.

  • Here's what we're covering.

  • Polling from the Times and its partners is giving a new snapshot of the election.

  • In the days after the presidential debate, Kamala Harris overwhelmingly impressed likely voters.

  • Almost 70% of them said she did well at last week's debate, compared to just 40% who said the same for Donald Trump.

  • The polls from the Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and Siena College showed that Harris even got a positive review from the majority of one of Trumps most loyal white voters without a college degree.

  • But when it comes to who Americans say theyll vote for, the debate didnt seem to move the needle.

  • Despite surging enthusiasm among Democrats, Harris does not have a decisive edge.

  • The race is still a toss up, 47% to 47%, and the polling indicates Harris might have missed an opportunity to address voters concerns that they don't know enough about her.

  • The share of voters who said they still want to learn more about Harris is nearly the same now as it was before the debate.

  • A no endorsement, I think, sends a message to both parties that if they truly want to support working people, they have to reevaluate it and understand that nothing is given, it is earned.

  • The Teamsters union, which represents more than 1.3 million truck drivers, freight haulers and other workers, has announced that it will not back a presidential candidate this year.

  • The president of the international brotherhood of Teamsters, Sean O'Brien, said that, quote, neither major candidate was able to make serious commitments to our union to ensure the interests of working people.