U.S. Leaves Cease-Fire Talks, as Starvation Grips Gaza

美国退出停火谈判,加沙地带陷入饥荒

WSJ What’s News

2025-07-25

16 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

A.M. Edition for July 25. The latest setback in the Trump administration’s drive to end the war between Israel and Hamas comes amid acute food shortages in Gaza, with the WSJ’s Feliz Solomon saying child hunger is rapidly increasing across the enclave. Plus, a new Wall Street Journal poll finds President Trump’s political standing has been buoyed by voters’ improving views of the economy. And LVMH chief Bernard Arnault is working friendships on both sides of the Atlantic in a bid to avert a trade war - and insulate his luxury empire. Azhar Sukri hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • New polling shows the economy is fueling President Trump's popularity.

  • Plus, Skydance's $8 billion merger with Paramount gets a regulatory green light.

  • and we report on the desperate plight of people in Gaza facing starvation.

  • I spoke to one woman who lives in a tent camp in Amawasi on the coast of Gaza,

  • and she told me that she only eats one small meal every day late at night before she goes to sleep.

  • It's Friday, July the 25th.

  • I'm Azhar Sukri for The Wall Street Journal.

  • Here is the AM edition of What's News,

  • the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.

  • A new Wall Street Journal poll finds President Trump's political standing remains strong and it's the economy keeping his numbers buoyant.

  • That's despite unpopularity with the GOP's big tax and spending law,

  • dissatisfaction with Trump's tariff plan and suspicion over the Jeffrey Epstein saga.

  • Aaron Zittner leads the Journal's polling coverage and explains how perceptions of the economy are helping Trump.

  • Views of the economy have brightened substantially.

  • In this poll, 47% of people rate the economy as excellent or good.

  • We haven't seen a number like that ever since we started this current polling program in 2021.

  • It's up by double digits from our last poll in April.

  • Fewer people are saying that inflation is causing them major strains.

  • More people are saying the economy is getting better than worse.

  • But again,