WSJ What’s News - Congress Stares Down a Pre-Election Spending Fight
Episode Date: September 9, 2024A.M. Edition for Sep. 9. Lawmakers come back from summer recess and prepare to tackle a deadline to keep the government funded so they can head back on the campaign trail. The WSJ’s Siobhan Hughes p...reviews what’s likely to be a supercharged few weeks. Plus, Apple prepares to unveil its iPhone 16 lineup, hoping new artificial intelligence features boost sales. And fresh data out of China raises the specter of deflation. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The DOJ's antitrust case against Google's ad tech practices goes to trial.
Plus, Apple prepares to unveil new AI-equipped iPhones.
And Congress stares down a deadline to fund the government with election differences looming large.
Lawmakers universally want to get out of Washington and get back on the campaign trail.
But don't forget that the Capitol becomes a venue essentially for the campaign trail.
And so you should expect to see the whole bailiwick of supercharged issues that get
discussed around the country concentrated under that big white Capitol dome.
It's Monday, September 9th.
I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
And here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
The Justice Department's blockbuster antitrust case against Google kicks off today.
In what is the second monopoly case Google faces in less than a year, the DOJ will try
to prove that the tech giant has an unlawful grip on the market for software used to buy and sell digital ads.
Google says its success is due to a long record of innovation and has criticized the DOJ as
being out of touch with market realities.
The trial in Northern Virginia is expected to last four weeks and comes a month after
a federal judge in Washington, D.C.
ruled that Google was using illegal tactics to preserve its dominance in search.
Back-to-back blows against the company could crimp its revenue at a time it's pouring
money into A.I.
Meanwhile, Apple is holding its annual fall product launch today where it is expected
to unveil its newest generation
of iPhones.
The iPhone 16 lineup will be the first to incorporate Apple's new AI technology called
Apple Intelligence, something the company hopes will revive sales momentum for its flagship
product.
However, journal tech columnist Dan Gallagher told our tech news briefing podcast that so
far Wall Street is keeping its expectations in check. On device AI has not yet proven
to be a huge reason to sell hardware but part of what complicates it here is
because when they launch these new phones and they typically go on sale in
later September Apple intelligence which is their AI tool isn't going to be
available yet that doesn't launch until October and not all the capabilities they've been showing off or launching with it. So you're
going to have kind of a limited AI capability early in this particular iPhone cycle. So I think
it's actually going to take time and Wall Street's estimates indicate that. Boeing has agreed to
increase wages by 25% for its largest union in a four-year
pact aimed at preventing a looming strike that would add to the plane maker's manufacturing
challenges.
Union leaders yesterday, who had sought a 40 percent pay rise over the same period,
recommended voting in favor of the deal.
However, the union's 33,000 members could still opt to reject it this week.
And if two-thirds vote to strike, workers could walk out at midnight on Friday.
We are exclusively reporting that Elon Musk's AI startup, XAI, has discussed a deal where it
would get some Tesla revenue in exchange for giving the carmaker access to its technology and resources.
Under a proposed arrangement, as described to investors, Tesla would license the startup's
AI models in order to help power its driver assistant software and share some of that
revenue with XAI.
XAI would also help to develop other features for Tesla, including a voice assistant inside
its cars, as well as
software to power its humanoid robot Optimus. After our story published on wsj.com, Musk replied on
X to a user's summary of the piece by saying, quote, haven't read the article, but the above
is not accurate, end quote, and adding that there was no need to license anything from XAI.
end quote, and adding that there was no need to license anything from XAI. Let's turn to the Chinese economy now.
After fresh inflation readings today came in below expectations, and Beijing announced
that it was reducing the number of industries off limits to foreign investors.
I asked journal Asia economics reporter Jason Douglas what that tells us
about the situation in the world's second largest economy.
So consumer prices in China rose 0.6 percent, which isn't very much. And in fact, when
you look under the hood, if you like, the picture is a lot bleaker. So the rise in inflation
is mostly caused by some bad weather, which affected agricultural production and pushed
up the price of some vegetables. And then you look at things like core inflation, that's sunk to a multi-year low, right?
Producer prices, the prices the companies charge, fell again.
They've been falling for almost two years now.
So the overall picture is there's still a lot of anxiety about deflation in China.
These measures of inflation are still bumping around zero and they don't appear to be getting
any higher.
And I think this is the kind of thing that started to cause a bit of, you know, a bit
of worry in Beijing.
And Jason remind us why that is.
For one thing, it's very difficult to get out of whenever prices start to fall and people
kind of expect prices to keep falling.
And that causes them in many cases to slow down spending and the anticipation of getting
a better deal tomorrow.
The other big problem is debt.
So if you have debts and you have deflation, the real value of your debts gets bigger. And so people then tend to allocate
more of their income to servicing these debts. Falling prices also implies things like falling
wages. So it's a very difficult economic problem and one that central bankers try very hard
to avoid.
Might that then help us understand this weekend announcement from Beijing that it's removing
some restrictions on the manufacturing sector as well as allowing for foreign investment in the Chinese health
sector, an attempt maybe to revive some growth?
That's the goal. I think the more immediate goal is to revive foreign direct investment,
which has been terrible for the last few quarters for sure. New companies setting up operations
in China, people moving into China, which was a force that propelled its economy for decades, has basically completely stopped. So removing these restrictions is
welcome as a good thing, and it may well encourage more companies to look at China's investment
destination. It is, though, an open question about whether or not it would work, given
the gloom around China's economy and the gloom around important things like China's
relationship with the United States and the West.
That was Journal Asia economics reporter Jason Douglas.
Turning to markets now, Chinese appliance giant Maidea says it's taking orders from
investors for an initial public offering that could be Hong Kong's biggest this year.
Maidea, which was the world's largest appliance company by sales last year, plans
to raise up to $3.5 billion. And later today we'll get earnings from cloud software company
Oracle, whose shares are up about 14% so far this year.
Coming up with a government shutdown looming and the election right around the corner,
lawmakers are getting ready for a tense few weeks. We've got that story and more after the break. insurance should be too. Whether you're a shop owner, a pet groomer, a contractor, or
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Syria has accused Israel of launching missile strikes that killed 16 people as tensions
rise between the two countries amid an Israeli campaign to disrupt Iranian arm shipments
to Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Iran-backed Syrian regime said the strikes hit multiple areas last night, wounding 36
people and damaging residential buildings.
There was no immediate comment on the strikes from the Israeli military, which has carried
out hundreds of strikes on targets within Syria in recent years, though it rarely acknowledges
them.
Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez, who the U.S. says won the July presidential
election against Nicolas Madurouro has fled the country.
The 75-year-old retired diplomat arrived in Spain yesterday and plans to seek political
asylum there.
As Maduro's regime continues to crack down on the opposition after asserting he won the
election without making ballot data public.
Experts say Gonzalez's exit is a major setback for the country's
democratic opposition movement.
And summer recess is over for lawmakers in D.C. that is. Members of the House and Senate
are back in session today for a short, around two week long stretch before they head back
home to campaign for re-election. And while that's a short stretch of work, it's one that Journal Congressional reporter
Siobhan Hughes, who joins us now out and about on the streets of Washington, D.C., is here
to explain, actually has a lot riding on it.
Siobhan, the big priority for lawmakers is going to be funding the government, because
without new legislation, the government is set to partially shut down on October 1st.
We are seeing some movement now though.
So Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson on Friday unveiled a continuing resolution
that would fund the government through March and he paired this with legislation called the SAVE Act.
Tell us about that.
Sure, yeah.
So it would require proof of citizenship, a passport, a birth certificate, even some types of real ID driver's licenses
would qualify in order to register to vote.
And it would also require states to weed out
non-citizens from voting rolls.
This passed in July, but it flew a bit under the radar
because it was in the aftermath of President Biden's debate
performance.
And so much attention was focused
on what was going to happen at
the top of the Democratic ticket that this issue really snuck in. And it's only now that
Congress is going to have a chance to focus on this in ways that are deeply meaningful
in a lot of Republican races across the country.
Nat. Got it. Is this a bill that is likely to get bipartisan support?
Jennifer. Democrats really generally don't like this bill, but I will say when the bill passed
in July, five Democrats did join Republicans to support it. Five Democrats in very tough
races and another 10 Democrats refrained altogether from voting on the bill, including some names
that I noticed were also some swing state Democrats. And so there is a possibility that the government shuts down over this issue, or at least that Congress is forced to stay in town in October when they'd really rather be out on the campaign trail. But again, we are in an uncertain situation.
That desire you mentioned to get back out on the campaign trail in what we should notice a very supercharged partisan environment ahead of the election. That could
add some uncertainty to what happens in Congress now.
Absolutely unmistakably. Don't forget that the Capitol becomes a venue essentially for
the campaign trail. And so you should expect to see the whole bailiwick of supercharged
issues that get discussed around the country concentrated under that big white Capitol
dome things like Project 2025, the Republican-backed
plan to overhaul the executive branch of the government. You would expect to see that come
up. You would expect to see Republicans bring up the issue of impeachment and the credibility
of Joe Biden. All of this into a potentially lethal and supercharged stew right before
Congress heads out for those final weeks of
campaigning ahead of the election day. I've been speaking to Journal Congressional reporter
Siobhan Hughes. Siobhan, thanks so much. Thank you. And that's it for What's News for Monday
morning. Today's show was produced by Kate Bulevent and Daniel Bach with supervising producer Christina
Rocca and I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal. We will be back tonight with a new show. Until then, thanks for
listening.