by trump threats and aid imperiled ......2020/12/24  · office as a loser. he spends his days...

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U(D54G1D)y+\!$!&!$!z The ups and downs of fashion in 2020, when everyone’s life (and wardrobe) was turned all around. PAGE D4 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 If Style Were a Stock Market Amar’e Stoudemire has joined the Nets’ staff in a reunion with his Phoenix Suns colleagues Steve Nash and Mike D’An- toni. It seems weird to him, too. PAGE B8 SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-9 Just Don’t Call Him Coach Despite problems in shelters, the rates of infection among homeless popula- tions are lower than feared. PAGE A5 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-9 Isolation Buffers the Homeless A huge production plant in Siberia is expected to reshape the market for a gas that’s essential to industry. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 Russia’s Big Plans for Helium In Italy, intergenerational households can usually look forward to the holiday season. Not this year. PAGE A10 INTERNATIONAL A10-13 ‘No Christmas for Us’ The center-left tried three times to oust Benjamin Netanyahu. Now his former allies are giving it a try. PAGE A12 Israeli Election, Take 4 The queer Liberian-American designer Telfar Clemens wants to smash the old fashion system to bits. PAGE D2 Telfar’s Very Good Year The Hebrew Home in the Bronx started vaccinating its residents, and delivered a dose of optimism, too. PAGE A9 Some Hope in a Syringe George Clooney’s new film is on Netflix, but he says Hollywood will be fine. He’s not so sure about Washington. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 A Star in ‘The Midnight Sky’ Dolly Parton, Mariah Carey and Carrie Underwood offer sparkly, heartfelt specials on streaming services. PAGE C1 Diva-Driven Holiday Cheer Revelations about cheating, and the academy’s reaction, have prompted a debate about integrity and what it means to be a cadet. PAGE A14 NATIONAL A14-17 Scandal Shakes West Point Ross Douthat PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 NICOLE CRAINE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES At Atlanta’s airport on Wednesday. Americans have taken to the skies in large numbers, including more than three million last week- end, despite rising coronavirus infections and official advice for people to postpone travel and simply stay home for the holidays. Masks On, Bags Packed AWKA, Nigeria — In the small family portrait gallery hanging above the television in the cozy home of the Iloanya family, only two framed photographs remain that include the youngest son, Chi- jioke. He disappeared eight years ago. His parents, Hope and Em- manuel, last saw him in handcuffs in a police station run by the feared unit known as SARS — the Special Anti-Robbery Squad. They have been searching for him ever since, along the way en- countering an industry of mer- chants peddling hope: lawyers, human rights groups and the churches and pastors who asked for the photographs of Chijioke, promising to pray over them and help bring him back. “They give you a prophecy that he will come back,” said Hope, a devout woman of 53, staring at the gaps on her salmon-pink wall. “Whatever they tell you to do, you do it.” The Iloanyas are just one of many families in Nigeria whose children have disappeared in po- lice custody. For years, police offi- cers in the West African nation have tortured, killed and extorted young people, accusing them of being criminals, according to Hope Dries Up as Young Nigerians Disappear in Police Custody By RUTH MACLEAN and BEN EZEAMALU Con Artists Descend on Families Seeking Help Continued on Page A12 DADO GALDIERI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES The pandemic crushed spirits, but people like this Brazilian teacher, right, responded. Page A11. Finally, a Safe Hug President Trump doled out clemency to a new group of loy- alists on Wednesday, wiping away convictions and sentences as he aggressively employed his power to override courts, juries and prosecutors to apply his own standard of justice for his allies. One recipient of a pardon was a family member, Charles Kushner, the father of his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Two others who were pardoned declined to cooperate with prosecutors in connection with the special counsel’s Russia investigation: Paul Manafort, his 2016 campaign chairman, and Roger J. Stone Jr., his longtime in- formal adviser and friend. They were the most prominent names in a batch of 26 pardons and three commutations dis- closed by the White House after Mr. Trump left for his private club in Palm Beach, Fla., for the holi- day. Also on the list released on Wednesday was Margaret Hunt- er, the estranged wife of former Representative Duncan D. Hunt- er, Republican of California. Both of them had pleaded guilty to charges of misusing campaign funds for personal expenses. Mr. Hunter was pardoned by Mr. Trump on Tuesday, as part of a first pre-Christmas wave of grants of clemency to 20 convicts, more than half of whom did not meet the Justice Department guidelines for consideration of pardons or commutations. They included a former Blackwater guard sentenced to life in prison for his role in the killing of 17 Iraqi civilians in 2007. President Adds More Loyalists To Pardon List By MAGGIE HABERMAN and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT Continued on Page A15 BAGHDAD, Iraq — Haider Ah- med Rabia was stuck in traffic in Baghdad 13 years ago when guards with the American securi- ty contractor Blackwater opened fire with machine guns and grenade launchers, killing or wounding at least 31 Iraqi civil- ians. He still carries some of those bullets in his legs. In 2014, he was one of the sur- vivors and family members who flew to the United States to testify in the trial of four of those Black- water guards, told that the evi- dence of his injury and his account of that deadly day could help bring justice. “I went to America and saw the killers walking free, wearing suits,” he said in an interview in Baghdad on Wednesday. “I said, ‘Tomorrow I will return to my country, but will these killers face justice?’ ” “Today,” he added, “they proved to me it was just theater.” He was speaking of President Trump’s pardon this week of those four former Blackwater security contractors, who were convicted in 2014 in what a U.S. court deter- mined were unprovoked shoot- ings in Nisour Square. The killings cast a harsh spot- light on how heavily armed Amer- ican security contractors were acting with impunity after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, angering Iraqi of- ficials whose own investigation also found no evidence to support Blackwater’s claims that the con- voy had come under fire first. It was the first time that many Americans began coming to grips with the growing role that Black- water — founded by Erik D. Bullets Ravaged Iraqis. Pardons Renew the Pain. By FALIH HASSAN and JANE ARRAF Cries of Injustice After Trump’s Decision on Blackwater Guards Continued on Page A15 With the fate of a federal aid package suddenly thrown into doubt by President Trump, eco- nomic data on Wednesday showed why the help is so desper- ately needed. Personal income fell in Novem- ber for the second straight month, the Commerce Department said Wednesday, and consumer spend- ing declined for the first time since April, as waning government aid and a worsening pandemic contin- ued to take a toll on the U.S. econ- omy. Separate data from the Labor Department showed that applica- tions for unemployment benefits remained high last week and have risen since early November. Taken together, the reports are the latest evidence that the once- promising economic recovery is sputtering. “We know that things are going to get worse,” said Daniel Zhao, senior economist with the career site Glassdoor. “The question is how much worse.” The answer depends heavily on two factors: the path of the pan- demic, and the willingness of the federal government to provide help. Congress, after months of de- lays, acted on Monday, passing a $900 billion economic relief pack- age that would provide aid to the unemployed, small businesses and most households. Most ur- gently, it would prevent millions from losing jobless benefits at the end of this week. But on Tuesday evening, Mr. Trump demanded sweeping changes in the bill, throwing into doubt whether he would sign it. Mr. Trump’s criticism of the re- lief effort, which he called a “dis- grace,” was that it was not gener- ous enough: He called on Con- gress to provide $2,000 a person in direct payments to households, rather than the $600 included in the bill. Spending Drops As Income Falls, Spurring Alarm By BEN CASSELMAN Continued on Page A6 With four weeks left in Presi- dent Trump’s term, he is at per- haps his most unleashed — and, as events of the past few days have demonstrated, at the most unpredictable point in his presi- dency. He remains the most powerful person in the world, yet he is focused on the one area in which he is powerless to get what he wants: a way to avoid leaving office as a loser. He spends his days flailing for any hope, if not of actually re- versing the outcome of the elec- tion then at least of building a coherent case that he was robbed of a second term. When he has emerged from his relative isolation in recent days, it has been to suggest out of the blue that he would try to blow up the bipartisan stimulus package, driving a wedge through his party in the process, and to grant clemency to a raft of allies and supporters, mostly outside the normal Justice Department process. On Wednesday, he ve- toed a defense bill backed by most of his party. He has otherwise sequestered A Lame Duck On the Loose And on a Tear By MAGGIE HABERMAN and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT WHITE HOUSE MEMO President Trump’s term has less than four weeks to go. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A16 WASHINGTON — President Trump’s denunciation of the $900 billion coronavirus relief deal drove a wedge through the Repub- lican Party on Wednesday, draw- ing harsh criticism from House Republicans and threatening the delivery of unemployment checks, a reprieve on evictions and direct payments to struggling Americans. His four-minute video on Tues- day night demanding significant changes to the bill and larger di- rect stimulus checks also compli- cated his party’s push to hold the Senate with victories in two runoff races in Georgia next month. The Republican candidates he pledged to support went from campaign- ing on their triumphant votes for the relief bill to facing questions on Mr. Trump’s view that the measure was a “disgrace.” Their Democratic rivals ap- peared to turn a liability into a po- litical advantage 13 days before the election on Jan. 5, agreeing with the president’s demand for $2,000 direct payment checks and calling for Republicans to accede to his wish. Speaker Nancy Pelosi and top Democrats prepared to move forward on Thursday with new legislation that would pro- vide the $2,000 checks, daring Re- publicans to break with the presi- dent and block passage of the bill in the House. But the effect on struggling Americans was perhaps the most profound: With no deal signed by the president, some unemploy- ment programs are set to run out this week, and several other criti- cal provisions are to end this month. The uncertainty that Mr. Trump injected into the process came at a perilous moment for the economy, as consumer spending and personal incomes resumed their slides. “Does the president realize that unemployment benefits expire the day after Christmas?” an ex- asperated Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia and one of the key negotiators of the pack- age, wrote on Twitter. It is not clear whether Mr. Trump, who is furious at congres- sional Republicans who have ac- knowledged his defeat, would ac- tually veto the package. But given how late it is in the 116th Congress, REPUBLICANS SPLIT AND AID IMPERILED BY TRUMP THREATS Demands for Changes to Relief Bill Ripple From Capitol Hill to Georgia This article is by Luke Broadwa- ter, Emily Cochrane, Astead W. Herndon and Maggie Haberman. Continued on Page A6 SHOWDOWN President Trump’s veto of the military spending bill sets up a cliffhanger. PAGE A16 Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 58,917 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 2020 An antitrust inquiry is part of a push- back by Beijing against Jack Ma, Chi- na’s richest man. PAGE B4 China Investigates Alibaba Today, cloudy, windy, warm, rain late, high 57. Tonight, windy, heavy rain, cloudy, low 54. Tomorrow, some heavy rain, cloudy, windy, high 56. Weather map appears on Page A20. $3.00

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  • C M Y K Nxxx,2020-12-24,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

    U(D54G1D)y+\!$!&!$!z

    The ups and downs of fashion in 2020,when everyone’s life (and wardrobe)was turned all around. PAGE D4

    THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

    If Style Were a Stock MarketAmar’e Stoudemire has joined the Nets’staff in a reunion with his Phoenix Sunscolleagues Steve Nash and Mike D’An-toni. It seems weird to him, too. PAGE B8

    SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-9

    Just Don’t Call Him CoachDespite problems in shelters, the ratesof infection among homeless popula-tions are lower than feared. PAGE A5

    TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-9

    Isolation Buffers the Homeless

    A huge production plant in Siberia isexpected to reshape the market for agas that’s essential to industry. PAGE B1

    BUSINESS B1-7

    Russia’s Big Plans for HeliumIn Italy, intergenerational householdscan usually look forward to the holidayseason. Not this year. PAGE A10

    INTERNATIONAL A10-13

    ‘No Christmas for Us’

    The center-left tried three times to oustBenjamin Netanyahu. Now his formerallies are giving it a try. PAGE A12

    Israeli Election, Take 4

    The queer Liberian-American designerTelfar Clemens wants to smash the oldfashion system to bits. PAGE D2

    Telfar’s Very Good YearThe Hebrew Home in the Bronx startedvaccinating its residents, and delivereda dose of optimism, too. PAGE A9

    Some Hope in a Syringe

    George Clooney’s new film is on Netflix,but he says Hollywood will be fine. He’snot so sure about Washington. PAGE C1

    ARTS C1-6

    A Star in ‘The Midnight Sky’

    Dolly Parton, Mariah Carey and CarrieUnderwood offer sparkly, heartfeltspecials on streaming services. PAGE C1

    Diva-Driven Holiday CheerRevelations about cheating, and theacademy’s reaction, have prompted adebate about integrity and what itmeans to be a cadet. PAGE A14

    NATIONAL A14-17

    Scandal Shakes West Point Ross Douthat PAGE A19EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19

    NICOLE CRAINE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    At Atlanta’s airport on Wednesday. Americans have taken to the skies in large numbers, including more than three million last week-end, despite rising coronavirus infections and official advice for people to postpone travel and simply stay home for the holidays.

    Masks On, Bags Packed

    AWKA, Nigeria — In the smallfamily portrait gallery hangingabove the television in the cozyhome of the Iloanya family, onlytwo framed photographs remainthat include the youngest son, Chi-jioke.

    He disappeared eight years

    ago. His parents, Hope and Em-manuel, last saw him in handcuffsin a police station run by thefeared unit known as SARS — theSpecial Anti-Robbery Squad.

    They have been searching forhim ever since, along the way en-countering an industry of mer-chants peddling hope: lawyers,human rights groups and thechurches and pastors who askedfor the photographs of Chijioke,

    promising to pray over them andhelp bring him back.

    “They give you a prophecy thathe will come back,” said Hope, adevout woman of 53, staring at the

    gaps on her salmon-pink wall.“Whatever they tell you to do, youdo it.”

    The Iloanyas are just one ofmany families in Nigeria whosechildren have disappeared in po-lice custody. For years, police offi-cers in the West African nationhave tortured, killed and extortedyoung people, accusing them ofbeing criminals, according to

    Hope Dries Up as Young Nigerians Disappear in Police CustodyBy RUTH MACLEANand BEN EZEAMALU

    Con Artists Descend onFamilies Seeking Help

    Continued on Page A12

    DADO GALDIERI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    The pandemic crushed spirits, but people like this Brazilian teacher, right, responded. Page A11.Finally, a Safe Hug

    President Trump doled outclemency to a new group of loy-alists on Wednesday, wiping awayconvictions and sentences as heaggressively employed his powerto override courts, juries andprosecutors to apply his ownstandard of justice for his allies.

    One recipient of a pardon was afamily member, Charles Kushner,the father of his son-in-law, JaredKushner. Two others who werepardoned declined to cooperatewith prosecutors in connectionwith the special counsel’s Russiainvestigation: Paul Manafort, his2016 campaign chairman, andRoger J. Stone Jr., his longtime in-formal adviser and friend.

    They were the most prominentnames in a batch of 26 pardonsand three commutations dis-closed by the White House afterMr. Trump left for his private clubin Palm Beach, Fla., for the holi-day.

    Also on the list released onWednesday was Margaret Hunt-er, the estranged wife of formerRepresentative Duncan D. Hunt-er, Republican of California. Bothof them had pleaded guilty tocharges of misusing campaignfunds for personal expenses.

    Mr. Hunter was pardoned byMr. Trump on Tuesday, as part of afirst pre-Christmas wave ofgrants of clemency to 20 convicts,more than half of whom did notmeet the Justice Departmentguidelines for consideration ofpardons or commutations. Theyincluded a former Blackwaterguard sentenced to life in prisonfor his role in the killing of 17 Iraqicivilians in 2007.

    President AddsMore LoyalistsTo Pardon List

    By MAGGIE HABERMANand MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

    Continued on Page A15

    BAGHDAD, Iraq — Haider Ah-med Rabia was stuck in traffic inBaghdad 13 years ago whenguards with the American securi-ty contractor Blackwater openedfire with machine guns andgrenade launchers, killing orwounding at least 31 Iraqi civil-ians. He still carries some of thosebullets in his legs.

    In 2014, he was one of the sur-vivors and family members whoflew to the United States to testifyin the trial of four of those Black-water guards, told that the evi-dence of his injury and his accountof that deadly day could help bring

    justice.“I went to America and saw the

    killers walking free, wearingsuits,” he said in an interview inBaghdad on Wednesday. “I said,‘Tomorrow I will return to mycountry, but will these killers facejustice?’”

    “Today,” he added, “they provedto me it was just theater.”

    He was speaking of President

    Trump’s pardon this week of thosefour former Blackwater securitycontractors, who were convictedin 2014 in what a U.S. court deter-mined were unprovoked shoot-ings in Nisour Square.

    The killings cast a harsh spot-light on how heavily armed Amer-ican security contractors wereacting with impunity after the U.S.invasion of Iraq, angering Iraqi of-ficials whose own investigationalso found no evidence to supportBlackwater’s claims that the con-voy had come under fire first.

    It was the first time that manyAmericans began coming to gripswith the growing role that Black-water — founded by Erik D.

    Bullets Ravaged Iraqis. Pardons Renew the Pain.By FALIH HASSANand JANE ARRAF

    Cries of Injustice AfterTrump’s Decision onBlackwater Guards

    Continued on Page A15

    With the fate of a federal aidpackage suddenly thrown intodoubt by President Trump, eco-nomic data on Wednesdayshowed why the help is so desper-ately needed.

    Personal income fell in Novem-ber for the second straight month,the Commerce Department saidWednesday, and consumer spend-ing declined for the first time sinceApril, as waning government aidand a worsening pandemic contin-ued to take a toll on the U.S. econ-omy.

    Separate data from the LaborDepartment showed that applica-tions for unemployment benefitsremained high last week and haverisen since early November.

    Taken together, the reports arethe latest evidence that the once-promising economic recovery issputtering.

    “We know that things are goingto get worse,” said Daniel Zhao,senior economist with the careersite Glassdoor. “The question ishow much worse.”

    The answer depends heavily ontwo factors: the path of the pan-demic, and the willingness of thefederal government to providehelp.

    Congress, after months of de-lays, acted on Monday, passing a$900 billion economic relief pack-age that would provide aid to theunemployed, small businessesand most households. Most ur-gently, it would prevent millionsfrom losing jobless benefits at theend of this week.

    But on Tuesday evening, Mr.Trump demanded sweepingchanges in the bill, throwing intodoubt whether he would sign it.

    Mr. Trump’s criticism of the re-lief effort, which he called a “dis-grace,” was that it was not gener-ous enough: He called on Con-gress to provide $2,000 a person indirect payments to households,rather than the $600 included inthe bill.

    Spending DropsAs Income Falls,Spurring Alarm

    By BEN CASSELMAN

    Continued on Page A6

    With four weeks left in Presi-dent Trump’s term, he is at per-haps his most unleashed — and,as events of the past few dayshave demonstrated, at the mostunpredictable point in his presi-dency.

    He remains the most powerfulperson in the world, yet he isfocused on the one area in whichhe is powerless to get what hewants: a way to avoid leavingoffice as a loser.

    He spends his days flailing forany hope, if not of actually re-versing the outcome of the elec-tion then at least of building acoherent case that he was robbedof a second term.

    When he has emerged from hisrelative isolation in recent days,it has been to suggest out of theblue that he would try to blow upthe bipartisan stimulus package,driving a wedge through hisparty in the process, and to grantclemency to a raft of allies andsupporters, mostly outside thenormal Justice Departmentprocess. On Wednesday, he ve-toed a defense bill backed bymost of his party.

    He has otherwise sequestered

    A Lame DuckOn the LooseAnd on a Tear

    By MAGGIE HABERMANand MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

    WHITE HOUSE MEMO

    President Trump’s term hasless than four weeks to go.

    DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Continued on Page A16

    WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump’s denunciation of the $900billion coronavirus relief dealdrove a wedge through the Repub-lican Party on Wednesday, draw-ing harsh criticism from HouseRepublicans and threatening thedelivery of unemploymentchecks, a reprieve on evictionsand direct payments to strugglingAmericans.

    His four-minute video on Tues-day night demanding significantchanges to the bill and larger di-rect stimulus checks also compli-cated his party’s push to hold theSenate with victories in two runoffraces in Georgia next month. TheRepublican candidates he pledgedto support went from campaign-ing on their triumphant votes forthe relief bill to facing questionson Mr. Trump’s view that themeasure was a “disgrace.”

    Their Democratic rivals ap-peared to turn a liability into a po-litical advantage 13 days beforethe election on Jan. 5, agreeingwith the president’s demand for$2,000 direct payment checks andcalling for Republicans to accedeto his wish. Speaker Nancy Pelosiand top Democrats prepared tomove forward on Thursday with

    new legislation that would pro-vide the $2,000 checks, daring Re-publicans to break with the presi-dent and block passage of the billin the House.

    But the effect on strugglingAmericans was perhaps the mostprofound: With no deal signed bythe president, some unemploy-ment programs are set to run outthis week, and several other criti-cal provisions are to end thismonth. The uncertainty that Mr.Trump injected into the processcame at a perilous moment for theeconomy, as consumer spendingand personal incomes resumedtheir slides.

    “Does the president realize thatunemployment benefits expirethe day after Christmas?” an ex-asperated Senator Mark Warner,Democrat of Virginia and one ofthe key negotiators of the pack-age, wrote on Twitter.

    It is not clear whether Mr.Trump, who is furious at congres-sional Republicans who have ac-knowledged his defeat, would ac-tually veto the package. But givenhow late it is in the 116th Congress,

    REPUBLICANS SPLITAND AID IMPERILEDBY TRUMP THREATS

    Demands for Changes to Relief Bill RippleFrom Capitol Hill to Georgia

    This article is by Luke Broadwa-ter, Emily Cochrane, Astead W.Herndon and Maggie Haberman.

    Continued on Page A6

    SHOWDOWN President Trump’sveto of the military spending billsets up a cliffhanger. PAGE A16

    Late Edition

    VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 58,917 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 2020

    An antitrust inquiry is part of a push-back by Beijing against Jack Ma, Chi-na’s richest man. PAGE B4

    China Investigates Alibaba

    Today, cloudy, windy, warm, rainlate, high 57. Tonight, windy, heavyrain, cloudy, low 54. Tomorrow, someheavy rain, cloudy, windy, high 56.Weather map appears on Page A20.

    $3.00