Thursday, September 5, 2024

The NYT - Morning Briefing: Europe Edition September 5, 2024 SUPPORTED BY ROHDE & SCHWARZ Author Headshot By Natasha Frost - covering interference in the U.S. election and a public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire.

 

Morning Briefing: Europe Edition

September 5, 2024

Good morning. We’re covering interference in the U.S. election and a public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire.

Plus: The dangers of “last chance tourism.”

🇺🇸 U.S. ELECTION 2024

The presidential election is two months away. This is what we’re watching.

A man sitting at a desk in a TV studio with an image of Donald Trump on a wall of screens behind him.
An RT broadcast in Moscow in 2019. Misha Friedman/Getty Images

U.S. fights against Russian election interference

The U.S. has accused Russia of using its state media to influence the American presidential election and announced a broad effort to push back on the Kremlin’s plans to sway voters. The Kremlin’s campaign seems to favor Donald Trump over Vice President Kamala Harris, seeing him as more skeptical of continued U.S. aid to Ukraine, intelligence officials said.

The attorney general, Merrick Garland, yesterday announced the indictment of two Russian employees of RT, the state-owned broadcaster, and the takedown of a Russian malign influence campaign known as Doppelganger. RT used a company in Tennessee to spread thousands of pro-Kremlin videos on social media.

The U.S. is planning more sanctions, indictments and seizures of web domains that it says the Kremlin uses to spread propaganda and disinformation about Ukraine. But it’s not just Russia: Iran has become one of the top threats in the disinformation game, U.S. officials and experts say.

Here’s what else to know: TikTok said that it would add more content about media literacy and how elections work. It will also increase security requirements for verified accounts belonging to American politicians.

From the campaign:

Do you have questions about the election? Send them to us and we’ll find the answers.

Stay up-to-date: Live coverage | Poll tracker | “The Run-Up” podcast | On Politics newsletter

The blackened remains of Grenfell Tower, with a London Underground station in the foreground.
Grenfell Tower in 2017. Andrew Testa for The New York Times

A damning final report into the Grenfell Tower fire

Seven years after 72 died in a blaze at Grenfell Tower, a public housing building in West London, a public inquiry has blamed unscrupulous manufacturers, a cost-cutting local government and reckless deregulation for the disaster.

The 1,671-page final report painted a damning picture of a Conservative-run local council that approved the widespread use of cheap flammable cladding that suppliers knew should never have been used in a high-rise building.

Context: The disaster was Britain’s worst residential fire since World War II and has become emblematic of the hazards of deregulation and of the persistent social inequality in Britain’s capital.

Volodymyr Zelensky speaking in front of a blue and yellow backdrop.
President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. Sergei Chuzavkov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Zelensky plans a major government reshuffle

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine laid out plans for a significant reshuffling of his cabinet. Half a dozen senior officials offered their resignations yesterday, and a list of nine candidates for top cabinet positions was released last night.

Zelensky’s overhaul comes at a precarious moment in the war. Russian attacks across Ukraine have increased, killing dozens over the past week. And Ukrainian forces are still trying to maintain control of territory that they have seized in western Russia now that their incursion into the Kursk region has slowed.

Context: Zelensky’s announcement did not appear to signal fundamental shifts in domestic or foreign policy, but might suggest he’s planning for a “new phase of the war,” some analysts say. But some critics are worried that such changes could further concentrate power in Zelensky’s office, depending on who is named to fill the posts.

MORE TOP NEWS

People in white coveralls and masks pull people from a raft onto a rescue boat.
Guardia Costiera, via Reuters

War in Gaza

From the U.S.

SPORTS NEWS

MORNING READ

Rescue teams and two vehicles are scattered around a glacier after the partial collapse of an ice cave.
Stod2/Vilhelm Gunnarsson, via Associated Press

Climate change has popularized “last chance tourism,” in which adventurers head to glaciers and ice caves before a warming planet erases them forever. But such trips can be perilous.

Lives lived: Simon Verity, a British master stone carver who worked on the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Upper Manhattan and the shrine to Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral in England, died last month at 79.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

ARTS AND IDEAS

Alessandro Michele, whose black hair falls past his shoulders, walks on a red carpet and wears a pale pink jacket and gray trousers. Behind him are dozens of photographers taking pictures.
Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

The return of fashion month

Fashion month begins in New York this week, before moving on to London, Milan and Paris. But in a September crammed with attention-demanding events — the U.S. Open finals, the Harris-Trump debate, the Emmys — how can fashion month compete?

“By accessorizing with associated content,” Vanessa Friedman, our chief fashion critic, writes in this roundup. That means political tie-ins, shows and designers on the move and one big designer debut. In London, Fashion Week will celebrate its 40th birthday with a retrospective exhibition, a bash at 10 Downing Street and a finale blowout party.

Here’s what to know about what may break through the noise.

RECOMMENDATIONS

A short video shows rotating images of food dishes including meatballs, tacos and chicken with mushrooms.
The New York Times

Cook: Meal planning can be overwhelming. Here are 100 easy dinners for the months ahead.

Travel: Go “wild swimming” in these European cities.

Watch: “The Room Next Door,” Pedro Almodóvar’s first English-language feature, inspires talk of beauty, hope and more collaborations from its stars.

Read: Buenos Aires is a literary city. The author Samanta Schweblin provides a guide to her hometown in books.

Play the Spelling Bee. And here are today’s Mini Crossword and WordleYou can find all our puzzles here.

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Natasha

Reach Natasha and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

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