1
VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,379 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2019 U(D54G1D)y+?!_!,!#!; DALLAS — Only hours after the United States Supreme Court said it could do nothing to stop partisan gerrymandering of the nation’s political maps, Eric H. Holder Jr. had a message for his fellow Democrats in downtown Dallas. “Texas is a place where we have to win,” Mr. Holder, who served as attorney general during Barack Obama’s presidency, said last week. “This is doable. This is pos- sible.” Mr. Holder was not talking about the 2020 presidential elec- tion. He was not talking about a congressional race. He was talk- ing about the nine seats Demo- crats would need to flip to wrest control of the Texas House of Rep- resentatives and gain a voice in the redistricting process. While much of the country’s at- tention is focused on presidential politics, the gerrymandering rul- ing last week instantly raised the stakes for the nation’s state legis- lative races, which are often over- looked by voters, but can shape the course of policy from abortion rights to education. Yet this cycle of legislative elec- tions carries added significance: In most states, the political party that wins control of the legislature gains the power to draw once-a- decade maps setting district boundaries for state and congres- sional elections after a new cen- sus count. Acutely aware of that prize, which offers a chance to tilt politi- cal power further in one party’s fa- vor, Republicans and Democrats are starting campaigns early, knocking on doors and rallying donors with the pitch that a tiny statehouse election in suburban Dallas or coastal Virginia could have national reverberations. “We’re going to make sure we do everything we can to influence the elections because the future of the party for the next 10 years de- pends on it,” said Austin J. Cham- bers, president of the Republican State Leadership Committee, which focuses on electing Repub- RULING HEATS UP BID FOR CONTROL OF ELECTION MAPS BATTLING AT STATE LEVEL New Intensity for 2020 After Court’s Finding on Gerrymanders By MITCH SMITH and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS Continued on Page A10 BRUSSELS — NATO military officials are exploring whether to upgrade their defenses to make them capable of shooting down newly deployed Russian interme- diate-range nuclear missiles after a landmark arms treaty dissolves next month, according to three European officials. Any change to the stated mis- sion of NATO’s current missile de- fense system — aimed at threats from outside the region, like Iran — would probably divide the alli- ance’s member countries and en- rage Russia, which has long said it views NATO’s missile defense site in Romania and one under con- struction in Poland as a threat to its nuclear arsenal and a source of instability in Europe. “It would be a point of no return with the Russians,” said Jim Townsend, a former Pentagon of- ficial and expert on the alliance. “It would be a real escalation.” The United States announced in February its intention to with- draw from the 31-year-old Inter- mediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, signed in 1987 in the wan- ing years of the Cold War, citing Moscow’s years of violations, a step the NATO alliance supported. The treaty, which prohibits mis- siles with a range of 310 to 3,420 miles from Europe, will be termi- nated on Aug. 2 unless Moscow and Washington come to agree- ment to revive it in the next few weeks. NATO ambassadors will make one last attempt to push Russia to withdraw its new cruise missiles and revive the treaty on Friday in Brussels. Discussions about new missile defense measures are at their ear- liest stages, officials cautioned. NATO’s chief spokeswoman, Oana Lungescu, denied that any studies of the feasibility of up- grading the ballistic missile de- fenses were underway. She said the alliance had repeatedly made clear that the existing ballistic missile defense system “is neither Missile Defense May Get Assist From Alliance NATO Risks Inflaming Tensions With Russia By JULIAN E. BARNES Continued on Page A8 WASHINGTON — In a made- for-television Independence Day production starring America’s military weaponry, President Trump on Thursday used the Lin- coln Memorial as the backdrop for a tribute to the country’s armed forces and a call for unity that has been largely absent during his di- visive presidency. Flanked by Bradley armored vehicles and M1A2 tanks in front of the statue of Abraham Lincoln, Mr. Trump paid homage to the five branches of the military as a chorus sang each service hymn and he cued the arrival of fighter jets, helicopters and other mili- tary aircraft as they roared over- head. Speaking to a rain-soaked audi- ence filled with troops decked out in “Make America Great Again” and “Trump 2020” paraphernalia, the president finally presided over the grand military display that he has wanted since witness- ing the Bastille Day parade in Paris two years ago. In a 45-minute speech delivered behind rain-streaked bulletproof glass, the president singled out a long list of Americans for their contributions to science, medi- cine, politics and the arts, and spun a history that praised every- thing from the civil rights move- ment to space exploration and praised everyone from the suf- fragists to Harriet Tubman to Chuck Yeager. But he spent most of his time recounting the progres- sion of the armed forces, ending his remarks as the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” blared through huge speakers and the Blue An- gels soared overhead. “As long as we stay true to our cause — as long as we remember our great history — as long as we never, ever stop fighting for a bet- ter future — then there will be nothing that America cannot do,” Mr. Trump declared to chants of “U.S.A., U.S.A.” “God bless you, God bless the military, and God bless America. Happy Fourth of July.” Even before he spoke, the presi- dent’s appearance on the National Mall drew fierce criticism from Democrats and some members of the military, who accused the president of using the military troops and equipment for his own Flyovers and Flags, as the President Plays M.C. By MICHAEL D. SHEAR The Blue Angels soared over the Lincoln Memorial on Thursday during the “Salute to America” celebration in Washington. GABRIELLA DEMCZUK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A Fourth of July Event of Battle Hymns and History Lessons Continued on Page A13 Recycling is struggling in much of the United States, and compa- nies like Coca-Cola say they are committed to fixing it. The beverage industry helps pay for pizza parties celebrating top elementary school recyclers and lends money to companies that process used plastic. Coca- Cola and Pepsi, along with Dow, the plastics producer, support nonprofit groups like Keep Amer- ica Beautiful, which organize events like litter cleanups. A re- cent video funded partly by Keep America Beautiful featured mod- els dancing through a recycling fa- cility in Brooklyn, which one ad- vertising writer said makes “recy- cling sexy.” By 2030, Coca-Cola wants all of its packaging to be made from at least 50 percent re- cycled content. But one approach to recycling that many of these companies do not support has proved to actually work: container deposit laws, more commonly known as bottle bills, which cost them lots of money. In the 10 states where con- sumers can collect a few cents when they return an empty bottle or can, recycling rates for those containers are often significantly higher. In some cases, they are more than twice as high as in states without such deposits. For decades, beverage compa- nies, retailers and many of the nonprofit groups they control have fought to kill bottle bill pro- posals across the country — with great success. Since 1987, only one state, Hawaii, has passed a bottle bill. This year, such measures have been proposed in at least eight states. Nearly all have been rejected or failed to gain traction. The result? Recycling in much of the country still depends almost entirely on the good will of con- sumers to place their used con- tainers in a bin for pickup. The process is convenient, but means millions of bottles and cans head straight to a dump instead. The financial reason for such opposition is clear. If the other 40 states were to adopt expansive bottle bills, it could ultimately cost the industries billions more. The beverage industry says the bills function like a tax and allow gov- ernments to collect millions in un- claimed deposits. Beverage dis- tributors, in many cases, also pay a handling fee for the processing of empty containers. “I am confident that the indus- try’s true rationale for opposing deposit laws is that they cost them money and they don’t want the ex- Beverage Giants Embrace Recycling, as Long as It Isn’t Too Costly By MICHAEL CORKERY The beverage industry has long fought a push for container deposit laws, also known as bottle bills. CHANG W. LEE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A14 In the run-up to the 2020 cen- sus, the government has em- braced technology as never be- fore, hoping to halt the ballooning cost of the decennial head count. For the first time, households will have the option of responding on- line, and field workers going door to door will be equipped with smartphones to log the informa- tion they collect. To make it all work, the Census Bureau needed more computing power and digital storage space, so it turned to cloud technology provided by Amazon Web Serv- ices. What the bureau didn’t realize — until an audit last year — was that there was an unsecured door to sensitive data left open. Access credentials for an account with virtually unlimited privileges had been lost, potentially allowing a hacker to view, alter or delete in- formation collected during recent field tests. The Census Bureau says that it Census at Risk From Glitches And Attackers By CHRIS HAMBY Continued on Page A11 Iranian hard-liners have long mocked their foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, as the make-believe American, after a character in a comic Iranian mov- ie who puts on an accent, ward- robe and lifestyle to live out a fan- tasy of American life. A resident of the United States on and off for nearly 30 years, Mr. Zarif was the Iranian most closely associated with the negotiation of the 2015 deal that limited Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for relief from sweeping economic sanctions. To ordinary Iranians and re- formists, that made him a hero. To hard-liners, though, he was a dupe, seduced by the West into a deal that the Americans would never live up to. Now, with the nuclear deal on the brink of collapse, with the Trump administration reimposing crushing sanctions on Iran, and with Tehran threatening to restart elements of its nuclear program, Mr. Zarif is coming under renewed fire not only from hard-liners in Tehran but also from Washington. White House officials say that President Trump has requested sanctions specifically against the Iranian foreign minister, stirring debate in both countries about the administration’s intentions. Hawks like Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and John R. Bolton, Target of Both Sides in Standoff With Iran: Its Main Negotiator By FARNAZ FASSIHI and DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK Mohammad Javad Zarif KAZUHIRO NOGI/A.F.P. — GETTY IMAGES Continued on Page A7 Russia’s president met with Francis at the Vatican amid an ideological divide in the West over migration. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 Putin and Pope Meet Again Edith Espinal, like others shielded from deportation by houses of worship, faces civil fines. Her bill is $497,777. PAGE A9 NATIONAL A9-14 $799-a-Day Pressure Tactic A show at the Met explores our contin- ued fascination with the celestial body, from the first time Galileo trained his telescope on it to the present. PAGE C11 WEEKEND C1-20 Over the Moon Ten L.G.B.T.Q. readers reflect on who they are and how they found them- selves in a city that offered them ac- ceptance and community. PAGE A15 NEW YORK A15-19 How Identity Shapes Lives The second-round Wimbledon duel between Nick Kyrgios and Rafael Nadal offered not only a contrast in styles, but also an edge seldom seen in the modern men’s game. On Tennis. PAGE B5 SPORTSFRIDAY B5-9 Nadal Is Tested, and Advances Military and civilian leaders sought to end unrest that began in December and led to the president’s ouster. PAGE A4 Power-Sharing Deal in Sudan In Queens, Melinda Katz pulled ahead of Tiffany Cabán by 20 votes, bringing on an automatic recount. PAGE A19 District Attorney Nail-Biter A $250 million campus and expanded political coverage are signs of a Spanish- language network on the rise. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-4 Telemundo Makes a Move A 6.4-magnitude quake and dozens of aftershocks hit a remote area between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. PAGE A10 Southern California Rattled The Women’s World Cup has set records for TV audiences worldwide, but the growth has magnified chal- lenges for those who started chronicling the sport before its breakout. PAGE B5 Women’s Soccer Hits It Big David Brooks PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 CELEBRATION DIVIDED A scene of two distinct versions of America on the National Mall. PAGE A13 Late Edition Today, sunshine, afternoon and evening showers or thunderstorms, humid, high 86. Tonight, cloudy, low 75. Tomorrow, heavy thunderstorm, high 87. Weather map, Page A22 $3.00

OF ELECTION MAPS BID FOR CONTROL Missile Defense RULING ... · The treaty, which prohibits mis-siles with a range of 310 to 3,420 miles from Europe, will be termi-nated on Aug. 2

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Page 1: OF ELECTION MAPS BID FOR CONTROL Missile Defense RULING ... · The treaty, which prohibits mis-siles with a range of 310 to 3,420 miles from Europe, will be termi-nated on Aug. 2

VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,379 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2019

C M Y K Nxxx,2019-07-05,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+?!_!,!#!;

DALLAS — Only hours afterthe United States Supreme Courtsaid it could do nothing to stoppartisan gerrymandering of thenation’s political maps, Eric H.Holder Jr. had a message for hisfellow Democrats in downtownDallas.

“Texas is a place where we haveto win,” Mr. Holder, who served asattorney general during BarackObama’s presidency, said lastweek. “This is doable. This is pos-sible.”

Mr. Holder was not talkingabout the 2020 presidential elec-tion. He was not talking about acongressional race. He was talk-ing about the nine seats Demo-crats would need to flip to wrestcontrol of the Texas House of Rep-resentatives and gain a voice inthe redistricting process.

While much of the country’s at-tention is focused on presidentialpolitics, the gerrymandering rul-ing last week instantly raised thestakes for the nation’s state legis-lative races, which are often over-looked by voters, but can shapethe course of policy from abortionrights to education.

Yet this cycle of legislative elec-tions carries added significance:In most states, the political partythat wins control of the legislaturegains the power to draw once-a-decade maps setting districtboundaries for state and congres-sional elections after a new cen-sus count.

Acutely aware of that prize,which offers a chance to tilt politi-cal power further in one party’s fa-vor, Republicans and Democratsare starting campaigns early,knocking on doors and rallyingdonors with the pitch that a tinystatehouse election in suburbanDallas or coastal Virginia couldhave national reverberations.

“We’re going to make sure wedo everything we can to influencethe elections because the future ofthe party for the next 10 years de-pends on it,” said Austin J. Cham-bers, president of the RepublicanState Leadership Committee,which focuses on electing Repub-

RULING HEATS UPBID FOR CONTROLOF ELECTION MAPS

BATTLING AT STATE LEVEL

New Intensity for 2020After Court’s Finding

on Gerrymanders

By MITCH SMITHand TIMOTHY WILLIAMS

Continued on Page A10

BRUSSELS — NATO militaryofficials are exploring whether toupgrade their defenses to makethem capable of shooting downnewly deployed Russian interme-diate-range nuclear missiles aftera landmark arms treaty dissolvesnext month, according to threeEuropean officials.

Any change to the stated mis-sion of NATO’s current missile de-fense system — aimed at threatsfrom outside the region, like Iran— would probably divide the alli-ance’s member countries and en-rage Russia, which has long said itviews NATO’s missile defense sitein Romania and one under con-struction in Poland as a threat toits nuclear arsenal and a source ofinstability in Europe.

“It would be a point of no returnwith the Russians,” said JimTownsend, a former Pentagon of-ficial and expert on the alliance.“It would be a real escalation.”

The United States announced inFebruary its intention to with-draw from the 31-year-old Inter-mediate-Range Nuclear ForcesTreaty, signed in 1987 in the wan-ing years of the Cold War, citingMoscow’s years of violations, astep the NATO alliance supported.

The treaty, which prohibits mis-siles with a range of 310 to 3,420miles from Europe, will be termi-nated on Aug. 2 unless Moscowand Washington come to agree-ment to revive it in the next fewweeks.

NATO ambassadors will makeone last attempt to push Russia towithdraw its new cruise missilesand revive the treaty on Friday inBrussels.

Discussions about new missiledefense measures are at their ear-liest stages, officials cautioned.NATO’s chief spokeswoman,Oana Lungescu, denied that anystudies of the feasibility of up-grading the ballistic missile de-fenses were underway. She saidthe alliance had repeatedly madeclear that the existing ballisticmissile defense system “is neither

Missile DefenseMay Get Assist

From Alliance

NATO Risks InflamingTensions With Russia

By JULIAN E. BARNES

Continued on Page A8

WASHINGTON — In a made-for-television Independence Dayproduction starring America’smilitary weaponry, PresidentTrump on Thursday used the Lin-coln Memorial as the backdrop fora tribute to the country’s armedforces and a call for unity that hasbeen largely absent during his di-visive presidency.

Flanked by Bradley armoredvehicles and M1A2 tanks in frontof the statue of Abraham Lincoln,Mr. Trump paid homage to the fivebranches of the military as achorus sang each service hymnand he cued the arrival of fighterjets, helicopters and other mili-tary aircraft as they roared over-head.

Speaking to a rain-soaked audi-ence filled with troops decked outin “Make America Great Again”and “Trump 2020” paraphernalia,the president finally presided

over the grand military displaythat he has wanted since witness-ing the Bastille Day parade inParis two years ago.

In a 45-minute speech deliveredbehind rain-streaked bulletproofglass, the president singled out along list of Americans for theircontributions to science, medi-cine, politics and the arts, andspun a history that praised every-thing from the civil rights move-ment to space exploration andpraised everyone from the suf-fragists to Harriet Tubman toChuck Yeager. But he spent mostof his time recounting the progres-sion of the armed forces, endinghis remarks as the “Battle Hymn

of the Republic” blared throughhuge speakers and the Blue An-gels soared overhead.

“As long as we stay true to ourcause — as long as we rememberour great history — as long as wenever, ever stop fighting for a bet-ter future — then there will benothing that America cannot do,”Mr. Trump declared to chants of“U.S.A., U.S.A.” “God bless you,God bless the military, and Godbless America. Happy Fourth ofJuly.”

Even before he spoke, the presi-dent’s appearance on the NationalMall drew fierce criticism fromDemocrats and some members ofthe military, who accused thepresident of using the militarytroops and equipment for his own

Flyovers and Flags, as the President Plays M.C.By MICHAEL D. SHEAR

The Blue Angels soared over the Lincoln Memorial on Thursday during the “Salute to America” celebration in Washington.GABRIELLA DEMCZUK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

A Fourth of July Eventof Battle Hymns and

History Lessons

Continued on Page A13

Recycling is struggling in muchof the United States, and compa-nies like Coca-Cola say they arecommitted to fixing it.

The beverage industry helpspay for pizza parties celebratingtop elementary school recyclersand lends money to companiesthat process used plastic. Coca-Cola and Pepsi, along with Dow,the plastics producer, supportnonprofit groups like Keep Amer-ica Beautiful, which organizeevents like litter cleanups. A re-cent video funded partly by KeepAmerica Beautiful featured mod-els dancing through a recycling fa-cility in Brooklyn, which one ad-vertising writer said makes “recy-cling sexy.” By 2030, Coca-Colawants all of its packaging to bemade from at least 50 percent re-cycled content.

But one approach to recyclingthat many of these companies donot support has proved to actuallywork: container deposit laws,more commonly known as bottlebills, which cost them lots ofmoney.

In the 10 states where con-sumers can collect a few centswhen they return an empty bottleor can, recycling rates for thosecontainers are often significantlyhigher. In some cases, they aremore than twice as high as instates without such deposits.

For decades, beverage compa-nies, retailers and many of thenonprofit groups they control

have fought to kill bottle bill pro-posals across the country — withgreat success. Since 1987, only onestate, Hawaii, has passed a bottlebill. This year, such measureshave been proposed in at leasteight states. Nearly all have beenrejected or failed to gain traction.

The result? Recycling in muchof the country still depends almostentirely on the good will of con-

sumers to place their used con-tainers in a bin for pickup. Theprocess is convenient, but meansmillions of bottles and cans headstraight to a dump instead.

The financial reason for suchopposition is clear. If the other 40states were to adopt expansivebottle bills, it could ultimately costthe industries billions more. Thebeverage industry says the bills

function like a tax and allow gov-ernments to collect millions in un-claimed deposits. Beverage dis-tributors, in many cases, also paya handling fee for the processingof empty containers.

“I am confident that the indus-try’s true rationale for opposingdeposit laws is that they cost themmoney and they don’t want the ex-

Beverage Giants Embrace Recycling, as Long as It Isn’t Too CostlyBy MICHAEL CORKERY

The beverage industry has long fought a push for container deposit laws, also known as bottle bills.CHANG W. LEE/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A14

In the run-up to the 2020 cen-sus, the government has em-braced technology as never be-fore, hoping to halt the ballooningcost of the decennial head count.For the first time, households willhave the option of responding on-line, and field workers going doorto door will be equipped withsmartphones to log the informa-tion they collect.

To make it all work, the CensusBureau needed more computingpower and digital storage space,so it turned to cloud technologyprovided by Amazon Web Serv-ices.

What the bureau didn’t realize— until an audit last year — wasthat there was an unsecured doorto sensitive data left open. Accesscredentials for an account withvirtually unlimited privileges hadbeen lost, potentially allowing ahacker to view, alter or delete in-formation collected during recentfield tests.

The Census Bureau says that it

Census at RiskFrom GlitchesAnd Attackers

By CHRIS HAMBY

Continued on Page A11

Iranian hard-liners have longmocked their foreign minister,Mohammad Javad Zarif, as themake-believe American, after acharacter in a comic Iranian mov-ie who puts on an accent, ward-robe and lifestyle to live out a fan-tasy of American life.

A resident of the United Stateson and off for nearly 30 years, Mr.Zarif was the Iranian most closelyassociated with the negotiation ofthe 2015 deal that limited Iran’snuclear program in exchange forrelief from sweeping economicsanctions.

To ordinary Iranians and re-formists, that made him a hero. Tohard-liners, though, he was adupe, seduced by the West into adeal that the Americans wouldnever live up to.

Now, with the nuclear deal onthe brink of collapse, with theTrump administration reimposingcrushing sanctions on Iran, andwith Tehran threatening to restart

elements of its nuclear program,Mr. Zarif is coming under renewedfire not only from hard-liners inTehran but also from Washington.White House officials say thatPresident Trump has requestedsanctions specifically against theIranian foreign minister, stirringdebate in both countries about theadministration’s intentions.

Hawks like Secretary of StateMike Pompeo and John R. Bolton,

Target of Both Sides in StandoffWith Iran: Its Main Negotiator

By FARNAZ FASSIHIand DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

Mohammad Javad ZarifKAZUHIRO NOGI/A.F.P. — GETTY IMAGES

Continued on Page A7

Russia’s president met with Francis atthe Vatican amid an ideological dividein the West over migration. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

Putin and Pope Meet AgainEdith Espinal, like others shielded fromdeportation by houses of worship, facescivil fines. Her bill is $497,777. PAGE A9

NATIONAL A9-14

$799-a-Day Pressure TacticA show at the Met explores our contin-ued fascination with the celestial body,from the first time Galileo trained histelescope on it to the present. PAGE C11

WEEKEND C1-20

Over the Moon

Ten L.G.B.T.Q. readers reflect on whothey are and how they found them-selves in a city that offered them ac-ceptance and community. PAGE A15

NEW YORK A15-19

How Identity Shapes LivesThe second-round Wimbledon duelbetween Nick Kyrgios and Rafael Nadaloffered not only a contrast in styles, butalso an edge seldom seen in the modernmen’s game. On Tennis. PAGE B5

SPORTSFRIDAY B5-9

Nadal Is Tested, and Advances

Military and civilian leaders sought toend unrest that began in December andled to the president’s ouster. PAGE A4

Power-Sharing Deal in Sudan

In Queens, Melinda Katz pulled aheadof Tiffany Cabán by 20 votes, bringingon an automatic recount. PAGE A19

District Attorney Nail-Biter

A $250 million campus and expandedpolitical coverage are signs of a Spanish-language network on the rise. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-4

Telemundo Makes a MoveA 6.4-magnitude quake and dozens ofaftershocks hit a remote area betweenLos Angeles and Las Vegas. PAGE A10

Southern California Rattled

The Women’s World Cup has setrecords for TV audiences worldwide,but the growth has magnified chal-lenges for those who started chroniclingthe sport before its breakout. PAGE B5

Women’s Soccer Hits It Big

David Brooks PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

CELEBRATION DIVIDED A scene oftwo distinct versions of Americaon the National Mall. PAGE A13

Late EditionToday, sunshine, afternoon andevening showers or thunderstorms,humid, high 86. Tonight, cloudy, low75. Tomorrow, heavy thunderstorm,high 87. Weather map, Page A22

$3.00