The Evening: Biden surveys Helene’s destruction

Also, Liz Cheney is campaigning tonight with Kamala Harris.
The Evening

October 3, 2024

Good evening. Here's the latest at the end of Thursday.

  • The aftermath of Helene
  • Harris and Cheney in Wisconsin
  • Plus, a look at the future of space food
Joe Biden walking with a group of people, with debris from the storm behind him.
President Biden surveyed the damage in Florida today. Eric Lee/The New York Times

Biden promised federal support for survivors of Helene

President Biden traveled today to Florida and Georgia, where he toured pockets of devastation caused by Hurricane Helene. He promised that the federal government would not abandon the communities that were damaged by one of the deadliest storms in American history.

Most of the 198 reported deaths — a figure that officials expect to rise — occurred far from Florida, where the storm first made landfall. Many of the hardest-hit areas were in and around western North Carolina, where residents were not prepared to evacuate.

The heavy toll of hurricanes far away from the coastline is not new. From 2013 to 2022, more than half of deaths attributed to tropical cyclones were caused by inland flooding. "Inland deaths are growing because there's too much focus on the coast," a former FEMA administrator said, adding that he expected more discussion about the use of mandatory evacuation orders in inland areas.

Several towns were left without food, water, phone service or gas. Supplies are now flowing into many of the most ravaged areas, but language barriers made it difficult for some Latino communities to find support.

Looking back: For years, North Carolina lawmakers have rejected building standards that experts now say could have prevented some damage.

Liz Cheney speaking into a microphone.
Liz Cheney in 2022. Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Cheney aims to help Harris appeal to conservatives

Kamala Harris is campaigning this evening alongside Liz Cheney, the most prominent Republican to cross party lines and endorse her. They are holding an event together in Ripon, Wis., the symbolic birthplace of the Republican Party.

Cheney agrees with Harris on very little politically, aside from their distaste for Donald Trump. Her appearance with the Democratic candidate in a battleground state is an attempt to appeal to Republican and independent voters who are repelled by Trump.

2024

On the campaign trail

The presidential election is 33 days away.

A large dust cloud over buildings on a hillside.
An Israeli airstrike on the town of Khiam, Lebanon, today. Carl Court/Getty Images

Israel expanded its evacuation orders in southern Lebanon

The Israeli military today urged the evacuation of more than 20 additional towns and villages in southern Lebanon, where its troops are fighting Hezbollah militants. The move appeared to be a sign that the ground invasion that Israeli forces began this week could be expanding.

The Israeli military said it had struck about 200 sites in Lebanon overnight. Lebanese health officials also said the death toll from an Israeli strike near the heart of Beirut had risen to at least nine people. Here's the latest.

In related news, oil prices jumped after Biden said he was discussing an Israeli strike on Iran's facilities.

Secret Service agents in black suits stand next to black presidential motorcade vehicles on an airport tarmac.
At least 1,400 of the Secret Service's 7,800 employees left in 2022 and 2023. Eric Lee/The New York Times

An exodus of agents left the Secret Service unprepared

The Secret Service knew that 2024 would be a big year. There would be presidential campaigns, political conventions and a NATO summit on top of the typical threats. But the agency wasn't ready: More agents left the service in 2022 and 2023 than at any point in decades.

We talked to dozens of former agents about the punishing hours, dilapidated facilities and lackluster leadership that prompted them to depart, leaving the agency unprepared to respond to an assassination attempt against Trump.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

A blue cocktail topped with sour gummy worms sits on a table in front of an advertisement for the drink, called the Sandworm Slayer.
An AMC novelty drink for "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice." Colin Clark for The New York Times

Can wacky cocktails save the movies?

Movie theaters have been struggling with declining attendance for decades. But this summer, AMC earned more from concessions on the weekend "Deadpool & Wolverine" was released than at any point since 2019, in large part because moviegoers were quick to buy a pair of superhero-themed cocktails.

Similar limited-edition drinks and popcorn buckets, as well as popcorn alternatives like Korean gochujang wings or chocolate-hazelnut-filled churros, have recently become ubiquitous at theaters looking to entice viewers who might otherwise have waited a few weeks to stream a film.

In theaters this weekend: The new sequel to the award-winning "Joker" is seriously un-fun.

A group of people in golf attire conversing on a putting green.
The Brooklyn Open at Marine Park. Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

A bartender, a firefighter and a Giuliani walk onto a fairway

The Brooklyn Open is by turns a golf competition and a block party. The event — at a city-owned course designed by one of America's pre-eminent golf architects — is open to everyone, and attracts golfers with backgrounds as varied as their swings.

We spent the day at the course to see what it's like to play in what one writer called a "very unusual golf tournament."

A long shot of Kensington Gardens, with a wildflower area in the foreground and a vast lawn bordered by leafy trees in the background.
Kensington Gardens in London. The Royal Parks

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Small sandwiches made with potato scones.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Cook: Want a better scone? Try adding potatoes.

Watch: In the documentary "Blink," parents take their kids on a world tour before they lose their sight.

Read: The writer Megan Kamalei Kakimoto recommended books that explain Hawaii.

Travel: Visiting a Disney park? We have a guide for avoiding the lines.

Soothe: Here's what to do if your eyes feel strained.

Move: Exercise can help improve many gut issues, like I.B.S.

Hunt: Which Brooklyn home would you buy with a budget of $800,000?

Play: Here are today's Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all of our games here.

ONE LAST THING

A close-up, top-down view of a triangular measuring tray containing a mess of dark gray dust and small rocks from an asteroid.
Erika Blumenfeld & Joseph Aebers/JSC/NASA

Future astronauts could turn to rocks when hungry

NASA is preparing for a future where astronauts travel to Mars and perhaps beyond. But the deeper the space travel, the more difficult it is to pack enough freeze-dried meals to sustain the crew. So a group of engineers came up with an alternative food source that they believe is better than trying to farm: space rocks.

The astronauts wouldn't chomp down on the asteroids. Instead, they would break the rocks down into their components and feed them to bacteria, resulting in a "biomass" with nutritional properties similar to Earth food.

Have an inventive evening.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Matthew

Sean Kawasaki-Culligan was our photo editor today.

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

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Writer: Matthew Cullen

Editorial Director: Adam Pasick

Editors: Carole Landry, Whet Moser, Justin Porter, Jonathan Wolfe

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