WSJ What’s News - WSJ Reporter Evan Gershkovich Is Free
Episode Date: August 1, 2024P.M. Edition for Aug. 1. Russia freed the wrongly-convicted journalist as part of the biggest and most complex East-West prisoner swap since the Cold War. WSJ’s Paul Beckett and White House reporter... Catherine Lucey talk about what went into the sweeping deal. Plus, food companies have been raising prices for years. WSJ food reporter Jesse Newman says American consumers may be reaching their limits. Pierre Bienaimé 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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After more than a year behind bars in Russia, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich is
free. The release comes as part of an extensive prisoner swap.
This deal was a very long time coming,
was very complicated, and the president made clear
that he had personally worked on it very hard.
Plus, food companies have been raising prices for years,
but have their customers reached their limits.
It's Thursday, August 1st.
I'm Pierre Bienamé for The Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories that moved the world today.
Evan Gershkovich is free.
Russia released the wrongly convicted Wall Street Journal reporter
as part of the biggest and most complex East-West prisoner swap since the Cold War.
Gershkovich and more than a dozen others jailed by the Kremlin,
including former Marine Paul Whelan, journalist Alsu Kormasheva, and Vladimir Karamorza,
a British-Russian dissident and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist,
were exchanged for Russians held in the US and Europe,
including Russian assassin Vadim Krasikov, who was convicted of murder in Germany.
Gershkovich and other Americans were handed over to U.S. authorities at an airport in
Ankara, Turkey, and were set to board a plane to the U.S.
Russia had kept the 32-year-old behind bars for more than a year on a false allegation
of espionage.
It sentenced him in a hurried and secret three-day trial to 16 years in a high-security penal
colony.
Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Emma Tucker said the moment Gershkovich walked free from
a Russian plane was a great joy for the reporter and his family, and that the publication has
set in place a plan to ensure he is properly supported once he returns to the U.S.
The journal's publisher, Almar Latour, joined Tucker in a joint statement to, quote,
condemn in the strongest terms Vladimir Putin's regime in Russia, which orchestrated Evan's
491-day wrongful imprisonment based on sham accusations and a fake trial as part of an
all-out assault on the free press and truth, end quote.
Joining me now is The Wall Street Journal's Paul Beckett, who was highly involved in advocating
for Evans' release.
Paul, this was a sweeping deal, 24 prisoners across at least six countries, months of negotiations.
How did it come together?
We don't know all the details.
We started to become more optimistic a few weeks ago when it seemed that the negotiations
had gotten serious.
We'd seen a few false starts over the last 60 months,
and obviously, because it was so complex,
it needed a lot of other governments.
So in addition to the US,
who we're very grateful to, obviously,
for making this happen, Germany was key.
And then you also saw Slovenia, Poland, and Norway all help.
This must be quite a relief for Evan's parents and family.
It's been a great honor for us to get to know Evan's family over the last 60 months, and
you can see where he gets his great reporting chops from when you see the extraordinary
efforts they went to and the role they played in helping secure their son and brother's
release.
It's just a wonderful, wonderful thought to think that in a few hours
from now from us talking, Evan will be reunited with them.
And Paul, may I ask how you're feeling also?
Yeah, jubilant, exhausted, yeah, smiles of joy and tears of relief all at the same time.
This morning, our editor-in-chief, Emma Tucker, she spoke to staff and she mentioned how remarkable
it was that journalists came together the way they did across news organizations.
Yeah, it was across the journal, obviously, but we were just so heartened by the response
we got from colleagues elsewhere in the media, in organizations that protect the press, in
other governments, in institutions that support the free press and
from Wall Street Journal listeners, readers, and the public at large.
I mean, really, we're a big platform, but the publicity that surrounded the case, which
I think was crucial to its resolution, was really thanks to the support that we got from
outside the journal, and that was massively heartening.
We're extremely grateful.
What's next for Evan and his family?
Yeah, well, for the first time in 16 months, he gets the chance to make decisions about
his own life.
So that will be entirely up to him, and we will be right there with him, but we want
him to reconnect with the family, reconnect with the free world, and then he
can decide what's in his own future.
And the fact he makes that decision is one of the great points of today.
And it is a happy day, but of course, there are still Americans left behind in Russian
prisons.
What can we expect next?
Well, we obviously feel for them very strongly.
We have a sense of what they're going through
and I hope very much the US can find a way to get them out.
I think the key to all of this is really to take away the incentive that Russia and others
have for pursuing this detestable practice.
So I think the US and allies you'll see over the next year or many years try to figure
out how to stop this happening in the first place.
That was Paul Beckett.
Paul, thank you for your time and for your work in this effort, which was so important
to everyone here at the Journal.
Thank you.
Thanks to everybody who helped get it done.
President Biden spoke from the White House accompanied by the families of Gershkovich
and the others.
Now their brutal ordeal is over, and they're free.
Moments ago, the families and I were able to speak to them on the telephone from the
Oval Office.
They're out of Russia.
Earlier today, they were flown to Turkey, and soon they'll be wheels up on their way
home to see their families.
This is an incredible relief for all the family members gathered here.
It's a relief to the friends and colleagues all across the country
who've been praying for this day for a long time.
Catherine Lucey covers the White House for the Wall Street Journal.
Catherine, the Biden administration must be pleased with how today has gone.
Yes, this is a real celebratory White House today.
This deal was a very long time coming, was very complicated, and the president made clear
that he had personally worked on it very hard.
And so I think you heard a lot of relief from Biden and his top officials today that they
were able to pull this off.
How did the US leverage its diplomatic relationships to make this deal happen?
The president addressed the deal this afternoon from the White House.
And one of the things he really stressed was his appreciation for the US allies who worked
in this deal.
He specifically spoke about the German chancellor.
Obviously, the Russian hitman who was serving a sentence in Germany became a key piece of
this deal.
But Biden also thanked the other countries who were involved as well and really stressed
that this is why alliances matter.
This is why allies matter.
Also interesting to note that Biden called the Prime Minister of Slovenia, one of the
countries involved in this.
Slovenia contributed two convicted Russian spies to this swap.
He called them on July 21st, about an hour before he notified the nation that he was
dropping out of the presidential race.
So he has really been working on this extensively, including during a very intense political
moment for him.
The White House also stressed that Vice President Kamala Harris, who is the expected Democratic
nominee in the presidential race, also played a role in the negotiations to secure this
deal.
She met with the German Chancellor and the Slovenian Prime Minister back in February
when she was at a conference.
And officials described those conversations as critical to securing the terms of this
deal.
That was Wall Street Journal reporter Catherine Lucey.
Former President Donald Trump, who once predicted Evan Gershkovich would not be freed under
President Biden, questioned the terms of the prisoner swap in a post on Truth Social, asking
for the details of it to be released.
Coming up, after years of rising food prices, have consumers reached their limits?
That's after the break.
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In corporate news, Intel plans to lay off around 15,000 employees this year and pause
dividend payments in the fourth quarter as part of a sweeping cost-saving drive. The company's chief executive laid out the plan
to reduce costs by more than $10 billion next year as the chipmaker reported second quarter sales of
$12.8 billion, down 1% and below analysts' forecasts. Amazon's sales rose in the last quarter,
benefiting from its cloud computing unit,
which showed steady growth and propelled the company to strong earnings.
Total sales rose by 10% from a year earlier to $148 billion.
Amazon's profit was $13.5 billion.
Its sales were in line with analyst expectations, while its profit was higher than predicted.
And Apple's iPhone revenue fell for a second consecutive quarter, a sign of soft demand
in its core business as the company prepares to release new AI features in the fall.
iPhone sales declined nearly 1% from the prior year to about $39.3 billion, and overall Apple
revenue increased about 5% to $85.8 billion. Both figures beat Wall Street expectations.
In the U.S. stock markets today, major indexes reversed an early climb
after a key gauge of manufacturing activity fell deeper into contraction territory,
and the Census Bureau said construction spending declined in June for the second straight month,
surprising economists who had expected a climb back toward April's record level.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 500 points, the Nasdaq Composite ended 2.3
percent lower, and the S&P 500 underwent its largest intraday swing since November 2022
and ended down 1.4 percent.
Food companies are working to protect some of the biggest profits they've earned in
years, while also giving a break to consumers fed up with high prices.
In the past couple years, Americans have spent more on food than they have in three decades.
A Wall Street Journal analysis of company filings shows that in the last fiscal year,
the 10 biggest restaurant chains in the U.S. each posted a profit that met or surpassed 2019 levels.
And last year, according to the Commerce Department, food companies' quarterly profits hit records.
Jessi Newman covers food for The Wall Street Journal, and she joins me now.
Jessi, we've seen a lot of earnings reports recently.
What kind of picture do they paint about food companies? Food companies are definitely continuing to report that consumers are still really fed
up with high food prices and the companies as a result are really zeroing in on value
and they're just really trying to focus on delivering value to consumers in different
ways. For months now, consumers, they've just hit their limits. So they have been buying less,
they have been shifting to less expensive store brands, products like Chips Ahoy have
really been losing market share. And so the food manufacturers, they've seen their sales
decline and because people are just resisting the higher prices.
And the same is true at restaurants. You know restaurants have been reporting a
decline in their same store sales. Many of them have been reporting much weaker
foot traffic as people decide it's just too expensive for them to eat out.
What are the companies doing about it?
Companies have been up until now saying that they've raised their prices to
offset their own higher costs. But now they're saying that they've raised their prices to offset their own higher costs.
But now they're saying that they are going to start to lower some of these prices for
consumers through things like deals and promotions. They're also rolling out new products to try
to bring people in through innovation. So companies, you know, we had modelies this
week talk about how they've got these new special edition Star Wars themed Oreos that they're coming out with. And Kraft
Heinz talked about their new super Mario Brothers shaped mac and cheese. And so you've got Burger
King and McDonald's that are offering these limited time $5 deals that they're hoping
will bring people back into their stores.
Recently, food companies have benefited from declines in some of the costs related to labor,
ingredients, and transportation.
Will these savings pass on to consumers?
Well, the lower costs that food companies are facing is helping them maintain their
profitability.
They have booked profits that are well above pre-pandemic levels, and for food manufacturers,
their gross margins, either they're near or at pre-pandemic levels and for food manufacturers, their gross margins, either they're near
or at pre-pandemic levels.
And the same is true with restaurants.
Many of them have seen really strong profit margins.
And they're saying that affords them the opportunity
to now reduce prices through promotions and discounts.
And that gives them a little bit of wiggle room
to make these investments in their brands.
Many of the company's reporting said that consumer behavior in the current quarter seems to be not that different from that in the previous one.
What can we expect going forward?
So I think you're gonna see a lot of food companies trying a lot of different things to
bring customers back into their restaurants, to bring consumers back to their brands,
consumers who may have defected to cheaper brands,
you're gonna see a lot more, a lot of discounts,
you're gonna see a lot of featured displays,
you're gonna see more new products,
and just all sorts of deals from restaurants
as they really try to get consumers to keep
or return to their food.
And I think the big question is what impact that's going to have on profitability.
So as we talked about, food companies have seen some of their best profitability in years.
And the question is, can they offer consumers lower prices while still protecting their
bottom line?
That was Wall Street Journal food reporter Jesse Newman.
And finally, from heat waves to flooding rains, there's been a lot of extreme weather this summer.
How have you been affected by extreme weather?
And what questions do you have about what companies are doing to counter those effects?
Send a voice memo to wnpod at wsj.com
or leave a voicemail with your name and location at 212-416-4328.
We might use it on the show.
And that's what's news for this Thursday afternoon.
Today's show was produced by Anthony Bansi with supervising producer Michael Kosmides.
I'm Pierre Biennime for the Wall Street Journal.
We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.