g.o.p. health bill declines to back another senatorsep 26, 2017  · washington last-ditcha attempt...

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U(D54G1D)y+&!z!$!#!_ Despite the Kurds’ celebrations, the vote may cost them politically, with Iraq, Iran and Turkey all opposed. PAGE A7 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Kurdish Vote for Independence Right-wing populists are complicating Chancellor Angela Merkel’s agenda, and the European Union’s. PAGE A9 Far Right’s Clout in Europe The Supreme Court canceled a hearing on President Trump’s travel ban after a new measure was announced. PAGE A12 NATIONAL A10-20 Turning Point for Travel Ban Fewer Americans are marrying over all, and whether they do so, research shows, is more tied to socioeconomic status than ever before. PAGE A15 Marriage and Your Paycheck The Yankees’ Aaron Judge, who also has 203 strikeouts, embodies modern baseball, Tyler Kepner writes. PAGE B9 SPORTSTUESDAY B9-14 50th Homer Sets Rookie Mark WASHINGTON — A last-ditch attempt by President Trump and Senate Republicans to dismantle the Affordable Care Act appeared to collapse on Monday as a pivotal senator announced her firm oppo- sition to the latest repeal plan, vir- tually ensuring that Republicans would not have the votes they need for passage. The announcement by the sena- tor, Susan Collins of Maine, effec- tively dooms what had been a long-shot effort by Republicans in the Senate to make one more attempt at re- pealing the health law after failing in dra- matic fashion in July. The demise of the latest repeal push means that Republicans are now all but certain to conclude Mr. Trump’s first year in office without fulfill- ing one of their central promises, which the president and lawmak- ers had hoped to deliver on quickly after Mr. Trump took of- fice. For seven years, Republicans have said they would repeal Presi- dent Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievement and re- place it with a new health care sys- tem more palatable to conserva- tives. But they were never able to formulate a replacement that was both politically and substantively viable. Ms. Collins, one of three Repub- lican senators who opposed the last repeal attempt in July, de- scribed the latest plan as “deeply flawed.” She expressed concerns about cuts to Medicaid as well as the rolling back of protections for people with pre-existing medical conditions. ANOTHER SENATOR DECLINES TO BACK G.O.P. HEALTH BILL FAILURE ALL BUT CERTAIN Collins Says Latest Plan Is ‘Deeply Flawed’ — Deadline Looms By THOMAS KAPLAN and ROBERT PEAR Susan Collins Continued on Page A16 He lost his seat in Congress, his audacious bid to resurrect his ca- reer as mayor of New York City, and his high-profile marriage. And he undermined Hillary Clin- ton’s shot at the presidency in the closing days of the tumultuous 2016 campaign. On Monday, Anthony D. Weiner, sobbing as the judge spoke, learned the final, personal cost of his seemingly uncontrollable hab- it of exchanging lewd texts and pictures with women and girls: 21 months in prison. Mr. Weiner, a Democrat, was the essence of the brash politician fueled by relentless work and un- bridled swagger. Until now, he was the beneficiary of multiple second chances, amid earnest vows that he had learned his les- son. But this time, there would be no second chance for Mr. Weiner, who pleaded guilty in May to one count of transferring obscene ma- terial to a minor, and had faced up to 10 years in prison. His texting habit fueled his long and tortuous downfall. But it was his most recent exchanges with a 15-year-old girl that were the most personally ruinous: his wife filed for divorce, he pleaded guilty and now faces imprisonment. Before the sentence was pro- nounced, Mr. Weiner, 53, did not so much ask for leniency as try to make a case that he had accepted full responsibility for his crime, and that he was a changed man. “I acted not only unlawfully but immorally, and if I had done the right thing, I would not be stand- ing before you today,” he said, cry- ing as he addressed the judge. “The prosecutors are skeptical that I have truly changed and I don’t blame them,” he said. “I re- peatedly acted in an obviously de- structive way when I was caught.” Reports of the federal investiga- tion that led to Mr. Weiner’s being charged in the case first became public after the 15-year-old vic- tim’s story was told in a DailyMail- .com exposé in September 2016. It was during that investigation that the F.B.I. discovered on Mr. Weiner’s laptop a trove of emails Weiner, Teary and Chastened, Is to Serve 21 Months for Lewd Texts By BENJAMIN WEISER Anthony D. Weiner leaving Federal District Court in Manhattan after his sentencing on Monday. DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES Continued on Page A22 BEIRUT, Lebanon — Although Syria’s bloody six-year war is far from over, one result is already be- coming clear: President Bashar al-Assad looks as though he is here to stay. On the battlefield, no one re- mains who is willing and able to topple him. The rebel forces are waning, and President Trump has canceled the C.I.A. program that provided them with arms and sup- port. The Islamic State, with its own agenda to rule Syria as a ca- liphate, is being routed from its strongholds. Regional powers, foreign offi- cials and Syrians themselves are increasingly operating as if he will rule for years to come, albeit over a greatly reduced country. His al- lies have begun to trumpet what they see as their impending vic- tory, and his government is talk- ing about rebuilding a shattered country, hosting an international trade fair last month and signing a deal with Iran to rebuild its power grid. Even some longtime rebel sup- porters have grown war-weary and started to embrace the inev- itable. Since the government re- claimed control of the mountain town of Madaya after a prolonged siege, life there has improved for those who remained. The snipers left, electricity returned, food ap- peared in markets. Cafes re- opened and people starting going out. “We are sick of the war,” a teacher there said via instant message, speaking on the condi- tion of anonymity so as not to be targeted for her past opposition to the government. “We want to live peacefully and safe, and we can’t do that un- less we are with the regime.” These devel- opments do not suggest that Mr. Assad has an easy road ahead. He re- mains a pariah in much of the world, presiding over a blasted, divided land. If he emerges victorious, he is likely to be left with a weak state that is be- holden to foreign powers and lacks the resources to rebuild. But his endurance has serious ramifications for the country and for the Middle East, affecting the prospects of Syria’s future stabil- ity, of refugees to return home and of the Syrian government to tap international funds to rebuild its destroyed cities. It is also a grim, late act in the Arab Spring uprisings that broke out in 2011. While protests and armed insurrections removed from power the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, Mr. As- sad has remained, despite wield- ing tremendous violence against his people. Mr. Assad himself has acknowl- edged the toll of the war, but ar- gued that it has purified the state by eliminating threats to the na- tion and uniting Syrians around a shared project. “We lost the best of our youth and our infrastructure,” he told a conference in Damascus, Syria’s As Syrian War Drags On, Assad’s Grip Tightens By BEN HUBBARD Bashar al-Assad Continued on Page A8 WASHINGTON — At least six of President Trump’s closest ad- visers occasionally used private email addresses to discuss White House matters, current and for- mer officials said on Monday. The disclosures came a day af- ter news surfaced that Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in- law and adviser, used a private email account to send or receive about 100 work-related emails during the administration’s first seven months. But Mr. Kushner was not alone. Stephen K. Ban- non, the former chief White House strategist, and Reince Priebus, the former chief of staff, also occa- sionally used private email ad- dresses. Other advisers, including Gary D. Cohn and Stephen Miller, sent or received at least a few emails on personal accounts, offi- cials said. Ivanka Trump, the president’s elder daughter, who is married to Mr. Kushner, used a private ac- count when she acted as an un- paid adviser early in the adminis- tration, Newsweek reported Mon- day. Administration officials ac- knowledged that she also occasionally did so when she for- mally became a White House ad- viser. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to dis- cuss the matter with reporters. Officials are supposed to use government emails for their offi- cial duties so their conversations are available to the public and those conducting oversight. But it is not illegal for White House offi- cials to use private email accounts as long as they forward work-re- lated messages to their work ac- counts so they can be preserved. During the 2016 presidential race, Mr. Trump repeatedly harped on Hillary Clinton’s use of a private account as secretary of state, making it a centerpiece of his campaign and using it to paint her as untrustworthy. “We must not let her take her criminal scheme into the Oval Office,” Mr. Trump said last year. His cam- paign rallies often boiled over 6 Trump Aides Handled Work On Own Email Criticism Over the Use of Private Accounts By MATT APUZZO and MAGGIE HABERMAN Continued on Page A19 Praying mantises, ninjas of the insect world, are stalking birds. PAGE D1 SCIENCE D1-6 Mantises, on the Prey Thelma Golden prepares for a new profile for the Studio Museum. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 In Harlem, a Vision for the Arts A former dot-com entrepreneur, who is to go on trial in New York, says he has already undergone an ordeal in a Co- lombian prison. DealBook. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-8 An Entrepreneur’s Ordeal In a largely out-of-focus season in Milan, Italian designers seem confused about their roles in the greater fashion ecosystem, Vanessa Friedman writes. FASHION B16 Wondering if Milan Matters Michelle Goldberg PAGE A27 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 Unseasonably warm temperatures brought crowds to New York and New Jersey beaches over the weekend, but the surf became risky in spots. PAGE A21 NEW YORK A21-25 No Day at the Beach LANDOVER, Md. — It was undeniably a monumental Sun- day for the National Football League. There were teams that were no-shows for the national an- them, and others that linked arms with owners. Play- ers knelt and sat during the an- them, and some raised their fists. But something was conspicu- ously missing from Sunday’s stage: a real discussion about the issues Colin Kaepernick wanted to highlight when he started the movement. He knelt during the anthem last season to protest social injustice and police brutal- ity, and since then he has been a pariah no team wants to sign. President Trump, in picking a fight with the league, reframed the issue as a lack of respect for the country and the flag, which may make it even harder for athletes to extend their one-day revolt into a political dialogue. On Monday, Mr. Trump again addressed the N.F.L. on Twitter, asserting a “tremendous back- lash” against the league and its players for “disrespect of our country.” It was his 15th tweet in three days about athletes re- specting the flag or the anthem. Many players who might want to speak out further are in a vulnerable position now. Their N.F.L. Players Knelt for Justice, But They Need a Lasting Stand JULIET MACUR SPORTS OF THE TIMES Continued on Page A20 POLITICS AS INTRUSION Some in Pittsburgh wish to focus on action between the sidelines. PAGE B9 A FLEETING UNITY N.F.L. team owners seem unlikely to continue joining players’ protests. PAGE B9 North Korea threatened on Monday to shoot down American warplanes even if they were not in the country’s airspace, stating that President Trump’s comments suggesting he would eradicate North Korea and its leaders were “a declaration of war.” The warning, made by Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho of North Ko- rea in New York after a week of United Nations General Assembly meetings, escalated the invective- laced exchanges with Mr. Trump and appeared to further preclude the possibility of a diplomatic exit from the biggest foreign crisis the administration has faced. Administration officials denied that the United States had de- clared war on the isolated, nucle- ar-armed country of 25 million people, with Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, calling such a sugges- tion “absurd.” She also said that “it’s never ap- propriate to shoot down another country’s aircraft when it’s over international waters” and that the North Koreans Issue a Threat To U.S. Planes By RICK GLADSTONE and DAVID E. SANGER Continued on Page A6 VICTOR J. BLUE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Waiting for water in Juncos, P.R. The governor said Monday that the island was on the brink of a “humanitarian crisis.” Page A14. In Puerto Rico, a Blunt Plea for Help Late Edition VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,732 + © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2017 Today, partly sunny, not as warm, humid, high 83. Tonight, mostly cloudy, humid, mild, low 70. Tomor- row, partly sunny, humid, high 82. Weather map appears on Page B10. $2.50

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Page 1: G.O.P. HEALTH BILL DECLINES TO BACK ANOTHER SENATORSep 26, 2017  · WASHINGTON last-ditchA attempt by President Trump and Senate Republicans to dismantle the Affordable Care Act appeared

C M Y K Nxxx,2017-09-26,A,001,Bs-4C,E2_+

U(D54G1D)y+&!z!$!#!_

Despite the Kurds’ celebrations, thevote may cost them politically, with Iraq,Iran and Turkey all opposed. PAGE A7

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Kurdish Vote for Independence

Right-wing populists are complicatingChancellor Angela Merkel’s agenda,and the European Union’s. PAGE A9

Far Right’s Clout in Europe

The Supreme Court canceled a hearingon President Trump’s travel ban after anew measure was announced. PAGE A12

NATIONAL A10-20

Turning Point for Travel Ban

Fewer Americans are marrying overall, and whether they do so, researchshows, is more tied to socioeconomicstatus than ever before. PAGE A15

Marriage and Your Paycheck

The Yankees’ Aaron Judge, who alsohas 203 strikeouts, embodies modernbaseball, Tyler Kepner writes. PAGE B9

SPORTSTUESDAY B9-14

50th Homer Sets Rookie Mark

WASHINGTON — A last-ditchattempt by President Trump andSenate Republicans to dismantlethe Affordable Care Act appearedto collapse on Monday as a pivotalsenator announced her firm oppo-sition to the latest repeal plan, vir-tually ensuring that Republicanswould not have the votes theyneed for passage.

The announcement by the sena-tor, Susan Collins of Maine, effec-tively dooms what had been along-shot effortby Republicansin the Senate tomake one moreattempt at re-pealing thehealth law afterfailing in dra-matic fashionin July.

The demiseof the latest repeal push meansthat Republicans are now all butcertain to conclude Mr. Trump’sfirst year in office without fulfill-ing one of their central promises,which the president and lawmak-ers had hoped to deliver onquickly after Mr. Trump took of-fice.

For seven years, Republicanshave said they would repeal Presi-dent Barack Obama’s signaturedomestic achievement and re-place it with a new health care sys-tem more palatable to conserva-tives. But they were never able toformulate a replacement that wasboth politically and substantivelyviable.

Ms. Collins, one of three Repub-lican senators who opposed thelast repeal attempt in July, de-scribed the latest plan as “deeplyflawed.” She expressed concernsabout cuts to Medicaid as well asthe rolling back of protections forpeople with pre-existing medicalconditions.

ANOTHER SENATORDECLINES TO BACKG.O.P. HEALTH BILL

FAILURE ALL BUT CERTAIN

Collins Says Latest PlanIs ‘Deeply Flawed’ —

Deadline Looms

By THOMAS KAPLANand ROBERT PEAR

Susan Collins

Continued on Page A16

He lost his seat in Congress, hisaudacious bid to resurrect his ca-reer as mayor of New York City,and his high-profile marriage.And he undermined Hillary Clin-ton’s shot at the presidency in theclosing days of the tumultuous2016 campaign.

On Monday, Anthony D. Weiner,sobbing as the judge spoke,learned the final, personal cost ofhis seemingly uncontrollable hab-it of exchanging lewd texts andpictures with women and girls: 21months in prison.

Mr. Weiner, a Democrat, wasthe essence of the brash politicianfueled by relentless work and un-bridled swagger. Until now, hewas the beneficiary of multiplesecond chances, amid earnestvows that he had learned his les-son.

But this time, there would be nosecond chance for Mr. Weiner,who pleaded guilty in May to onecount of transferring obscene ma-terial to a minor, and had faced upto 10 years in prison.

His texting habit fueled his longand tortuous downfall. But it washis most recent exchanges with a15-year-old girl that were the mostpersonally ruinous: his wife filedfor divorce, he pleaded guilty andnow faces imprisonment.

Before the sentence was pro-nounced, Mr. Weiner, 53, did not so

much ask for leniency as try tomake a case that he had acceptedfull responsibility for his crime,and that he was a changed man.

“I acted not only unlawfully butimmorally, and if I had done theright thing, I would not be stand-ing before you today,” he said, cry-

ing as he addressed the judge.“The prosecutors are skeptical

that I have truly changed and Idon’t blame them,” he said. “I re-peatedly acted in an obviously de-structive way when I was caught.”

Reports of the federal investiga-tion that led to Mr. Weiner’s being

charged in the case first becamepublic after the 15-year-old vic-tim’s story was told in a DailyMail-.com exposé in September 2016.

It was during that investigationthat the F.B.I. discovered on Mr.Weiner’s laptop a trove of emails

Weiner, Teary and Chastened, Is to Serve 21 Months for Lewd TextsBy BENJAMIN WEISER

Anthony D. Weiner leaving Federal District Court in Manhattan after his sentencing on Monday.DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES

Continued on Page A22

BEIRUT, Lebanon — AlthoughSyria’s bloody six-year war is farfrom over, one result is already be-coming clear: President Basharal-Assad looks as though he ishere to stay.

On the battlefield, no one re-mains who is willing and able totopple him. The rebel forces arewaning, and President Trump hascanceled the C.I.A. program thatprovided them with arms and sup-port. The Islamic State, with itsown agenda to rule Syria as a ca-liphate, is being routed from itsstrongholds.

Regional powers, foreign offi-cials and Syrians themselves areincreasingly operating as if he willrule for years to come, albeit overa greatly reduced country. His al-lies have begun to trumpet whatthey see as their impending vic-tory, and his government is talk-ing about rebuilding a shatteredcountry, hosting an internationaltrade fair last month and signing adeal with Iran to rebuild its powergrid.

Even some longtime rebel sup-porters have grown war-wearyand started to embrace the inev-itable.

Since the government re-claimed control of the mountaintown of Madaya after a prolongedsiege, life there has improved for

those who remained. The snipersleft, electricity returned, food ap-peared in markets. Cafes re-opened and people starting goingout.

“We are sick of the war,” ateacher there said via instantmessage, speaking on the condi-tion of anonymity so as not to betargeted for her past opposition tothe government. “We want to live

peacefully andsafe, and wecan’t do that un-less we are withthe regime.”

These devel-opments do notsuggest thatMr. Assad hasan easy roadahead. He re-mains a pariah

in much of the world, presidingover a blasted, divided land. If heemerges victorious, he is likely tobe left with a weak state that is be-holden to foreign powers and

lacks the resources to rebuild.But his endurance has serious

ramifications for the country andfor the Middle East, affecting theprospects of Syria’s future stabil-ity, of refugees to return home andof the Syrian government to tapinternational funds to rebuild itsdestroyed cities.

It is also a grim, late act in theArab Spring uprisings that brokeout in 2011. While protests andarmed insurrections removedfrom power the leaders of Tunisia,Egypt, Libya and Yemen, Mr. As-sad has remained, despite wield-ing tremendous violence againsthis people.

Mr. Assad himself has acknowl-edged the toll of the war, but ar-gued that it has purified the stateby eliminating threats to the na-tion and uniting Syrians around ashared project.

“We lost the best of our youthand our infrastructure,” he told aconference in Damascus, Syria’s

As Syrian War Drags On, Assad’s Grip TightensBy BEN HUBBARD

Bashar al-Assad

Continued on Page A8

WASHINGTON — At least sixof President Trump’s closest ad-visers occasionally used privateemail addresses to discuss WhiteHouse matters, current and for-mer officials said on Monday.

The disclosures came a day af-ter news surfaced that JaredKushner, the president’s son-in-law and adviser, used a privateemail account to send or receiveabout 100 work-related emailsduring the administration’s firstseven months. But Mr. Kushnerwas not alone. Stephen K. Ban-non, the former chief White Housestrategist, and Reince Priebus,the former chief of staff, also occa-sionally used private email ad-dresses. Other advisers, includingGary D. Cohn and Stephen Miller,sent or received at least a fewemails on personal accounts, offi-cials said.

Ivanka Trump, the president’selder daughter, who is married toMr. Kushner, used a private ac-count when she acted as an un-paid adviser early in the adminis-tration, Newsweek reported Mon-day. Administration officials ac-knowledged that she alsooccasionally did so when she for-mally became a White House ad-viser. The officials spoke on thecondition of anonymity becausethey were not authorized to dis-cuss the matter with reporters.

Officials are supposed to usegovernment emails for their offi-cial duties so their conversationsare available to the public andthose conducting oversight. But itis not illegal for White House offi-cials to use private email accountsas long as they forward work-re-lated messages to their work ac-counts so they can be preserved.

During the 2016 presidentialrace, Mr. Trump repeatedlyharped on Hillary Clinton’s use ofa private account as secretary ofstate, making it a centerpiece ofhis campaign and using it to painther as untrustworthy. “We mustnot let her take her criminalscheme into the Oval Office,” Mr.Trump said last year. His cam-paign rallies often boiled over

6 Trump AidesHandled WorkOn Own Email

Criticism Over the Useof Private Accounts

By MATT APUZZOand MAGGIE HABERMAN

Continued on Page A19

Praying mantises, ninjas of the insectworld, are stalking birds. PAGE D1

SCIENCE D1-6

Mantises, on the Prey

Thelma Golden prepares for a newprofile for the Studio Museum. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

In Harlem, a Vision for the Arts

A former dot-com entrepreneur, who isto go on trial in New York, says he hasalready undergone an ordeal in a Co-lombian prison. DealBook. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-8

An Entrepreneur’s Ordeal

In a largely out-of-focus season inMilan, Italian designers seem confusedabout their roles in the greater fashionecosystem, Vanessa Friedman writes.

FASHION B16

Wondering if Milan Matters

Michelle Goldberg PAGE A27

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27

Unseasonably warm temperaturesbrought crowds to New York and NewJersey beaches over the weekend, butthe surf became risky in spots. PAGE A21

NEW YORK A21-25

No Day at the Beach

LANDOVER, Md. — It wasundeniably a monumental Sun-day for the National FootballLeague. There were teams that

were no-shows forthe national an-them, and othersthat linked armswith owners. Play-ers knelt and satduring the an-

them, and some raised their fists.But something was conspicu-

ously missing from Sunday’sstage: a real discussion about theissues Colin Kaepernick wanted

to highlight when he started themovement. He knelt during theanthem last season to protestsocial injustice and police brutal-ity, and since then he has been apariah no team wants to sign.

President Trump, in picking afight with the league, reframedthe issue as a lack of respect forthe country and the flag, whichmay make it even harder forathletes to extend their one-dayrevolt into a political dialogue.On Monday, Mr. Trump againaddressed the N.F.L. on Twitter,asserting a “tremendous back-lash” against the league and itsplayers for “disrespect of ourcountry.” It was his 15th tweet inthree days about athletes re-specting the flag or the anthem.

Many players who might wantto speak out further are in avulnerable position now. Their

N.F.L. Players Knelt for Justice, But They Need a Lasting Stand

JULIETMACURSPORTS

OF THE TIMES

Continued on Page A20

POLITICS AS INTRUSION Some inPittsburgh wish to focus on actionbetween the sidelines. PAGE B9

A FLEETING UNITY N.F.L. teamowners seem unlikely to continuejoining players’ protests. PAGE B9

North Korea threatened onMonday to shoot down Americanwarplanes even if they were not inthe country’s airspace, statingthat President Trump’s commentssuggesting he would eradicateNorth Korea and its leaders were“a declaration of war.”

The warning, made by ForeignMinister Ri Yong-ho of North Ko-rea in New York after a week ofUnited Nations General Assemblymeetings, escalated the invective-laced exchanges with Mr. Trumpand appeared to further precludethe possibility of a diplomatic exitfrom the biggest foreign crisis theadministration has faced.

Administration officials deniedthat the United States had de-clared war on the isolated, nucle-ar-armed country of 25 millionpeople, with Sarah HuckabeeSanders, the White House presssecretary, calling such a sugges-tion “absurd.”

She also said that “it’s never ap-propriate to shoot down anothercountry’s aircraft when it’s overinternational waters” and that the

North KoreansIssue a ThreatTo U.S. Planes

By RICK GLADSTONEand DAVID E. SANGER

Continued on Page A6

VICTOR J. BLUE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Waiting for water in Juncos, P.R. The governor said Monday that the island was on the brink of a “humanitarian crisis.” Page A14.In Puerto Rico, a Blunt Plea for Help

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,732 + © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2017

Today, partly sunny, not as warm,humid, high 83. Tonight, mostlycloudy, humid, mild, low 70. Tomor-row, partly sunny, humid, high 82.Weather map appears on Page B10.

$2.50