WSJ What’s News - Harris Clarifies Immigration, Fracking Stances
Episode Date: August 30, 2024A.M. Edition for Aug. 30. Kamala Harris says her “values have not changed” on key issues as she sits down for the first major television interview of their 2024 campaign. Plus, Donald Trump gives ...mixed signals on an abortion ballot measure in Florida. And, as demand for fully electric vehicles proves softer than carmakers had hoped, plug-in hybrids start to gain ground. The WSJ’s Christopher Otts explains what’s behind their newfound popularity. 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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to register in Canada.
Kamala Harris talks immigration and climate change in the first major TV interview of
her campaign.
Plus Donald Trump sends mixed signals about his stance on abortion. And with many consumers not ready to make the jump to electric cars,
automakers downshift to plug-in hybrids.
The federal standards for emissions are also getting more stringent.
Plug-in hybrids are one way for automakers to get the credits that they
need to meet these standards.
It's Friday, August 30th.
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.
Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate,
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz,
gave their first major television interview
of their 2024 campaign yesterday.
Harris didn't lay out significant new details
on how she'd govern if elected president,
but she did answer questions from CNN's Dana Bash
about some key policy areas where her position has shifted,
like a ban on fracking that she supported
during her 2019 presidential bid
before reversing her stance
the following year.
And was there some policy or scientific data that you saw that you said, oh, OK, I get
it now?
What I have seen is that we can grow and we can increase a thriving clean energy economy
without banning fracking.
Harris also told CNN's Bash that she now believes
in taking a firmer line on illegal border crossings
than she did in the 2019 race.
There was a debate you raised your hand when asked
whether or not the border should be decriminalized.
Do you still believe that?
I believe there should be consequence.
We have laws that have to be followed and enforced
that address and deal with people who cross our border illegally.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump has suggested that he would support a ballot measure to roll
back a six-week abortion ban in Florida, saying the ban is too restrictive and doesn't give
women enough time to access the procedure. Hours later, though, Trump's campaign tried
to walk back those comments, which drew outrage
among anti-abortion activists, with a spokeswoman saying that the Republican presidential nominee
quote has not yet said how he will vote on the ballot initiative.
It was Trump's latest attempt to try to find a middle ground on an issue seen as a political
liability for Republicans.
Trump also said yesterday that if he won a second term, his administration would provide
federal financial support for in-vitro fertilization treatments or force insurance companies to
cover them.
Before the week's up, let's touch now on a few stories from around the world worth
keeping an eye on.
The Israeli military has killed more than a dozen people
in an operation that began Tuesday in the West Bank
and is meant to target newer and younger militant groups
that have emerged in recent years.
Middle East correspondent Jared Malson told me
that while Israel has described its operation as targeted,
the deteriorating situation in the West Bank
is adding new demands for its already stretched armed forces.
It has been descending into a certain amount of turmoil. You have attacks by Israeli settlers
on Palestinians. You have the rise of these new militant groups in the northern West Bank
especially. And now you have the Israeli military launching airstrikes using drones and helicopters
and also sending
ground troops into three different places in the West Bank.
Strategically for Israel, the concern is that if you get drawn into yet another front in
this war, you are demanding more of the Israeli army, which is largely made up of reservists
who have already been fighting one of the longest wars they've fought in decades.
On the public health front, a number of state and local health authorities in the U.S. are
tracking a mosquito-borne disease called Eastern Equine Encephalitis, or EEE.
The disease is rare.
The worst year for it was 2019, when 38 cases were reported.
But given its severity,
Journal Health reporter Brianna Abbott told us that the detection of cases this year across
five states — Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Vermont, and Wisconsin — has raised some alarm.
First, it causes fever, chills, aches, that sort of thing. But it also causes more serious
neurological symptoms that can lead to death. The fatality rate, if you get it, is around 30%.
And earlier this week, New Hampshire reported
a death of a man from the condition.
Health authorities are taking action,
including starting to spray to sort of prevent
some of those mosquito populations.
And you can go on health department websites
and see if it's sort of appeared in your area.
If you're going outside, especially between dusk and dawn, it's important to wear
bug spray, wear long sleeves, get rid of standing pools of water in your yard and
as much as possible avoid any sort of bug bite.
And in South Korea, the country's constitutional court has sided with
dozens of children who sued the government over inadequate climate
change policies, ruling
that the lack of quantitative emissions targets in the coming decades placed excessive burden
on future generations.
South Korea's Environment Ministry said it respects the ruling and has pledged to revise
its relevant policies by a March 2026 deadline.
And moving markets today, inflation in the Eurozone fell sharply in August.
At 2.2 percent, it's now only a shade above the European Central Bank's target, opening
the door for another interest rate cut.
Meanwhile, U.S. personal income and consumer spending data for July are due out at 8.30
a.m.
Eastern, along with the Fed's preferred inflation measure, the PCE
price index, which is expected to show that inflation ticked up slightly last month.
And shares in Dell Technologies are up off-hours after the server maker beat expectations in
its latest results.
That's as sales in its servers and networking unit jumped 80% thanks to a surge in demand
for AI-oriented servers.
Coming up, Autos reporter Chris Otz will join me to discuss the sudden popularity of plug-in
hybrids as weak EV demand creates trouble for carmakers trying to green up their fleets.
That's after the break.
RPC has helped millions of young Canadians turn their most-likelies into most-definitelys,
making their ideas happen with scholarships, internships, and skill development, plus resources
for artists and athletes.
Learn more at rbc.com slash support youth. Last week, we reported that Ford was scrapping plans for an electric SUV and instead shifting
its focus to offering hybrid versions of its popular Ford Explorer and Ford Expedition
SUVs.
But far from an isolated move, Journal Auto's reporter Chris Otz finds that plug-in hybrids
are now being embraced by a number
of carmakers, as the industry's road to electrification seemingly comes to a fork.
And Chris joins me now from our Detroit bureau. Chris, before we go any further talking about
these plug-in hybrids, we should note these are different from maybe the Toyota Prius sort of
hybrids people might be familiar with, where basically a battery is supplementing the gas engine
and capturing some energy from braking and things like that, right?
Yeah, it's important to define these terms. The plug-in hybrid is an entirely different thing.
This is a car that is like an electric vehicle and a gas car under one hood. So the car plugs in, the battery gets a charge that allows it to have electric range of in
the neighborhood of 20 to 50 miles of all electric driving, just like an EV, before
a gas engine then kicks in and is able to provide longer range.
I mean, just what you said there, the fact that these vehicles are sort of two cars in one,
doesn't that inherently make them more expensive and perhaps less attractive for that reason?
This is why many players in the industry assumed, frankly, that plug-in hybrids would be sort of left
in the dustbin of history as the automakers moved to full EVs, right? Because it is inherently inefficient to have two
ways of powering the vehicle. And that is an issue whether consumers will pay the additional cost of
having that battery in the car. Do they value the savings on gasoline? Do they use the vehicle
in a way that allows them to capture that savings and
justify the additional cost?
Well, so far anyways, though, it looks like sales for plug-in hybrid cars are growing
rapidly, whereas there's a chart in your store that suggests that the trend for EVs
is kind of pointing in a different direction.
What is driving that shift?
EVs are still growing.
At the same time, many consumers are really not ready to make the whole lifestyle jump that is required to have a fully electric vehicle.
The nightmare scenario of running out of charge, of not being able to find a place to charge it, those things really weigh on consumers' choices. And many people who are buying these plug-in hybrids are not so interested in alternative
power trains, but what's happening is that auto companies have standards that they have
to meet.
California has more stringent standards than the national.
There's about a dozen states who follow California's lead, and just the federal standards for emissions are also
getting more stringent. Plug-in hybrids are one way for automakers to get the credits that they
need to meet these standards. If you look at the best-selling plug-in hybrids right now, the top two
are Jeeps. Jeeps are not a customer base that is known for really valuing fuel economy and efficiency.
And what we're seeing is that Stellantis, the parent company of Jeep, Chrysler, and
Ram is offering heavy incentives.
And then there's federal incentives on top of that, up to $7,500 per transaction.
And what you've got is a situation where consumers are not often having
to carry any additional cost to get one of these plug-in hybrids. So the dealer says, hey, this car
with a battery that saves you gas is cheaper than the regular gas one that you were interested in.
And the consumer says, well, why not? I guess that would explain why demand for these vehicles,
these plug-in hybrids is showing
up as much as it is.
But I do have to ask finally where this leaves these car makers.
If the EVs are still the future eventually, couldn't this be an expensive detour for
many of them in the meantime?
The automakers are looking at it like there's only so much you can do if the consumer isn't
ready to make the leap.
There may be some subsidizing that's going on here to get consumers into an alternative
powertrain vehicle, but in the grand scheme of things, that may be the most cost-effective
trade-off for the automakers to make until consumers are ready to adopt EVs more fully.
I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal autos reporter Chris Otz in Detroit. until consumers are ready to adopt EVs more fully.
I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal
Autos reporter Chris Otz in Detroit.
Chris, thank you so much.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
And finally, it is the unfortunate side effect
of a holiday weekend having to sift through
a crowded inbox on a Tuesday morning.
Well, columnist Elizabeth Bernstein
has been looking at whether a more honest, out-of-office message could help to make the
inevitable return to work less overwhelming.
People are starting to be much more blunt and push back in their out-of-office messages.
Basically, they're saying, I'm not here and I won't be replying when I return.
The people I spoke with said it works great for them.
It helps them prioritize their inbox.
It's helping them focus on their real work
because they're not buried in their emails.
The thing though is that these people tend to be
in positions where they can do this,
either running their companies
or they're working for themselves
or they're at the top of their field
and so pushing back a little at everybody else
is not as problematic as
it may be if you're a desk warrior or have a boss you have to worry about or have clients
that you think might not like this.
And that's it for What's News for Friday 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 brand new show. Otherwise, have a great long weekend.
Thanks for listening and give my inbox a rest for a few days, would you? Bye-bye.