he groped aide to speed agenda over allegation …

1
U(D54G1D)y+&![!\!$!# MINNEAPOLIS — Days after a police officer murdered George Floyd, protesters gathered out- side Mayor Jacob Frey’s home de- manding that the Minneapolis Po- lice Department be abolished. The mayor said no. The crowd re- sponded with jeers of “Shame!” On Tuesday, nearly a year and a half since Mr. Floyd’s death thrust Minneapolis into the center of a fervent debate over how to pre- vent police abuse, voters in the city will have a choice: Should the Minneapolis Police Department be replaced with a Department of Public Safety? And should Mr. Frey, who led the city when Mr. Floyd was killed and parts of Min- neapolis burned, keep his job? Minneapolis became a symbol of all that was wrong with Ameri- can policing, and voters now have the option to move further than any other large city in rethinking what law enforcement should look like. But in a place still reeling from the murder of Mr. Floyd and the unrest that followed, residents are deeply divided over what to do next, revealing just how hard it is to change policing even when most everyone agrees there is a problem. “We’re now known worldwide as the city that murdered George Floyd and then followed that up by tear-gassing folks who were mourning,” said Sheila Nezhad, who decided to run for mayor af- ter working as a street medic dur- ing the demonstrations, and who supports the proposal to replace Minneapolis Voters Hold Future Of Police Dept. in Their Hands By MITCH SMITH and TIM ARANGO Continued on Page A11 ATLANTA The Atlanta Braves are making their first World Series appearance since 1999 because of star players at several positions, an underrated pitching staff and shrewd mid- summer moves by the front office. Inside the clubhouse, though, players also point to a secret weapon. It doesn’t field, throw or hit, but it has delivered over and over again. Atlanta’s game- changer in 2021? A soft-serve ice cream machine. “When they brought that into the clubhouse, it was like magic,” infielder Johan Camargo said. Added the star reliever Tyler Matzek, “It’s just something that we kind of rallied around.” The story of how a frozen treat invigorated a team that was tread- ing water early in the season be- gins in Boston in late May. Atlanta was visiting Fenway Park when, during a 9-5 loss to the Red Sox, the team endured a rain delay that lasted nearly three hours. “We didn’t restart the game un- til midnight,” Matzek said. “There was nobody in the stands. It was absolutely pouring. We were like, ‘Oh, well, there’s nothing to do, so let’s eat ice cream.’” The pantry in the visitor’s club- house at Fenway has a soft-serve ice cream machine. For reliever Josh Tomlin, it brought back memories of trips to Dairy Queen with his father when he was grow- ing up in Texas. A Team in the World Series Found a Secret Sauce. It’s Sugary. By JAMES WAGNER An Ice Cream Machine Helps Propel Atlanta Continued on Page A13 JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES As New York City workers demonstrated, agencies braced for a possible labor shortage. Page A14. Protesting the Vaccine Mandate Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo was charged on Thursday with groping a female aide’s breast in- side the Executive Mansion “for the purposes of degrading and gratifying his sexual desires,” ac- cording to a criminal complaint filed in Albany City Court. The misdemeanor complaint was based on the account of one of the dozen or so women whose ac- cusations of sexual harassment against Mr. Cuomo formed the ba- sis of a state attorney general’s re- port that eventually led to his res- ignation in August. For Mr. Cuomo, the complaint was a serious and potentially dev- astating development, as he con- tinues to fight the allegations and attempts to discredit the report. It also served as a stunning chapter in the political demise of a man who dominated state politics for a decade, seemed on a glide path to a fourth term and, less than a year ago, was hailed as a national hero of the coronavirus pandemic. Now Mr. Cuomo, who has spent time living on Long Island since his resignation, will be required to appear in court in Albany on Nov. 17 to be arraigned on a charge of forcible touching. The criminal complaint centers on an alleged interaction between Mr. Cuomo and a female aide in the governor’s residence in Al- bany on Dec. 7, 2020. The aide, Brittany Commisso, had previ- ously accused Mr. Cuomo of grop- ing her breast while they were alone in the mansion late last year. The charge against Mr. Cuomo caught many in the state capital by surprise, including David Soares, the district attorney in Al- bany, who said in a statement that, “like the rest of the public, we were surprised to learn” about the complaint filed by the county’s sheriff, Craig Apple. In such inves- tigations, prosecutors and local police departments typically work as partners in initiating the crimi- nal process. In a statement, Mr. Cuomo’s personal lawyer, Rita Glavin, said the governor had “never as- saulted anyone” and described Mr. Apple’s motives as “patently improper.” She criticized Mr. Ap- ple for not communicating with the district attorney and accused him of effectively pronouncing the governor guilty at a news confer- ence earlier this year before an in- vestigation by his office had con- cluded. “This is not professional law en- forcement,” she said. “This is poli- tics.” Mr. Apple’s office did not re- spond to several requests for com- ment on Thursday, and news of the criminal complaint was public for several hours before the sher- iff released a statement confirm- CUOMO CHARGED OVER ALLEGATION HE GROPED AIDE COURT APPEARANCE SET Ex-Governor Is Accused of Forcible Touching, a Misdemeanor By LUIS FERRÉ-SADURNÍ and JONAH E. BROMWICH Continued on Page A12 WASHINGTON — President Biden on Thursday unveiled his outline for a $1.85 trillion social safety net and environmental bill, imploring Democrats to put aside their differences and embrace a plan to provide universal prekindergarten, generous sup- port for child care costs and the largest investment ever to combat climate change. But his appeal for Democrats to unite and hand him a long-delayed victory on his domestic agenda fell flat, as liberals demanded as- surances that the package would survive before they would agree to an immediate vote on a sepa- rate $1 trillion infrastructure bill. That left Mr. Biden empty-handed as he departed for Europe, where he had hoped to point to progress on both measures as proof that American democracy still works. By Thursday evening, with Mr. Biden heading for Rome aboard Air Force One, the House Progres- sive Caucus had slammed the door shut on prospects of a quick win. “Members of our caucus will not vote for the infrastructure bill without the Build Back Better Act,” the group said in a joint statement, using the name of the president’s social policy and cli- mate bill. It would provide preschool for more than six million 3- and 4- year-olds, child care and health care subsidies, monthly payments for families with children and $555 billion for programs to wean Americans from fossil fuels. The day’s drama at the Capitol at once fleshed out the details of legislation that Speaker Nancy PRESIDENT OFFERS COMPROMISE PLAN TO SPEED AGENDA Democrats Balk as Biden Pleads for Quick Action By JONATHAN WEISMAN and EMILY COCHRANE Representative Pramila Jaya- pal, Democrat of Washington. STEFANI REYNOLDS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A15 WASHINGTON — President Biden was blunt. Democrats had to rally behind his $1.85 trillion economic and environmental spending bill, he told them on Thurs- day, because noth- ing less than his presidency was at stake. “I don’t think it’s hyperbole,” he said as he unveiled a revised proposal and pleaded with Dem- ocratic lawmakers to support it during a last-minute morning meeting at the Capitol, hours before he left for a six-day trip to Europe to meet with world lead- ers. “The House and Senate major- ities and my presidency will be determined by what happens in the next week,” Mr. Biden told the lawmakers during the hour- long session, according to a person who was at the meeting. The president’s proposals, while about half as costly as his original plan, still amount to a transformative agenda that would touch the lives of millions of Americans and serve as the core of his party’s argument to stay in power through the 2022 midterm elections and the 2024 presidential contest. And even as party members have engaged in a fierce, ideolog- ical debate among themselves, the monthslong negotiation has thrown into stark relief the differ- ences between Democrats and Republicans, almost all of whom have refused to back spending on child care, climate change, pre- school, expanded Medicare serv- President’s Gamble Comes With Grim Warning By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and JIM TANKERSLEY WASHINGTON — Climate has emerged as the single largest cat- egory in President Biden’s new framework for a huge spending bill, placing global warming at the center of his party’s domestic agenda in a way that was hard to imagine just a few years ago. As the bill was pared down from $3.5 trillion to $1.85 trillion, paid family leave, free community col- lege, lower prescription drugs for seniors and other Democratic pri- orities were dropped — casualties of negotiations between progres- sives and moderates in the party. But $555 billion in climate pro- grams remained. It was unclear on Thursday if all Democrats will support the pack- age, which will be necessary if it is to pass without Republican sup- port in a closely divided Congress. Progressive Democrats in the House and two pivotal moderates in the Senate, Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, did not explic- itly endorse the president’s frame- work. But Mr. Biden expressed confidence that a deal was in sight. If enacted, it would be the larg- est action ever taken by the United States to address climate change. And it would enshrine cli- mate action in law, making it hard- er to be reversed by a future presi- dent. In remarks Thursday, Mr. Biden called it “the most significant in- vestment to deal with the climate crisis that ever happened, beyond any other advanced nation in the world.” The centerpiece of the climate spending is $300 billion in tax in- centives for producers and pur- chasers of wind, solar and nuclear power, inducements intended to speed up a transition away from oil, gas and coal. Buyers of electric vehicles would also benefit, re- ceiving up to $12,500 in tax credits — depending on what portion of the vehicle parts were made in America. The rest would be distributed among a mix of programs, includ- ing money to construct charging stations for electric vehicles and update the electric grid to make it more conducive to transmitting wind and solar power, and money to promote climate-friendly farm- ing and forestry programs. The plan would still fall short of the ambitious pledge Mr. Biden Climate Projects Are Top Priorities in Spending Bill By CORAL DAVENPORT President Biden with Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, who insisted on protecting climate plans. SARAHBETH MANEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A16 Continued on Page A17 NEWS ANALYSIS Our critics invite you to come along on three walks through the neighborhood, visiting galleries along the way. Above, a popup gallery, Zugzwang. PAGE C1 WEEKEND ARTS C1-18 The Art of TriBeCa The country is racing to expand coal mining despite risks to the economy, environment and miner safety. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 China’s Quest for Electricity Brescia, Italy, a city devastated by the virus, has adopted “Winged Victory” as the emblem of its recovery. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 Strength Symbolized in Statue The commissioner said Native Ameri- cans in the Atlanta area were “wholly supportive” of the war cries and toma- hawk chops. But it depends on whom you ask. Sports of The Times. PAGE B8 SPORTS B7-9 Baseball’s Blind Spot Kyle Rittenhouse will stand trial for the shootings of three men — two of whom died — in the aftermath of demonstra- tions in the Wisconsin city. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A10-19 Kenosha Shooter on Trial Start-ups are betting that the pandemic has spawned a new kind of worker, one who wants an office space closer to home, without the commute. PAGE A13 Co-Working in the Suburbs The government has staked its political legitimacy on controlling the virus better than other countries. PAGE A6 China Sticks With ‘Zero Covid’ The Supreme Court lifted a stay im- posed by a federal appeals court in a challenge to Oklahoma’s lethal injection protocols. PAGE A12 Two Executions to Proceed The embattled social network said the change was part of a bet on a digital frontier called the metaverse. PAGE B1 Facebook Renames Itself ‘Meta’ The N.F.L. commissioner’s $128 million in compensation for the last two fiscal years, bolstered by bonuses for labor and media deals, was disclosed to team owners in a private meeting. PAGE B9 Roger Goodell’s Big Payday David Brooks PAGE A20 OPINION A20-21 Late Edition VOL. CLXXI .... No. 59,226 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2021 Today, cloudy with an increasing wind, rain by nightfall, high 57. To- night, rain, some heavy, windy, low 53. Tomorrow, cloudy, periodic rain, high 62. Weather map, Page B12. $3.00

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Page 1: HE GROPED AIDE TO SPEED AGENDA OVER ALLEGATION …

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-10-29,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+&![!\!$!#

MINNEAPOLIS — Days after apolice officer murdered GeorgeFloyd, protesters gathered out-side Mayor Jacob Frey’s home de-manding that the Minneapolis Po-lice Department be abolished. Themayor said no. The crowd re-sponded with jeers of “Shame!”

On Tuesday, nearly a year and ahalf since Mr. Floyd’s death thrustMinneapolis into the center of afervent debate over how to pre-vent police abuse, voters in thecity will have a choice: Should theMinneapolis Police Departmentbe replaced with a Department ofPublic Safety? And should Mr.Frey, who led the city when Mr.Floyd was killed and parts of Min-neapolis burned, keep his job?

Minneapolis became a symbolof all that was wrong with Ameri-

can policing, and voters now havethe option to move further thanany other large city in rethinkingwhat law enforcement should looklike. But in a place still reelingfrom the murder of Mr. Floyd andthe unrest that followed, residentsare deeply divided over what to donext, revealing just how hard it isto change policing even whenmost everyone agrees there is aproblem.

“We’re now known worldwideas the city that murdered GeorgeFloyd and then followed that up bytear-gassing folks who weremourning,” said Sheila Nezhad,who decided to run for mayor af-ter working as a street medic dur-ing the demonstrations, and whosupports the proposal to replace

Minneapolis Voters Hold FutureOf Police Dept. in Their Hands

By MITCH SMITH and TIM ARANGO

Continued on Page A11

ATLANTA — The AtlantaBraves are making their firstWorld Series appearance since1999 because of star players atseveral positions, an underratedpitching staff and shrewd mid-summer moves by the front office.

Inside the clubhouse, though,players also point to a secretweapon. It doesn’t field, throw or

hit, but it has delivered over andover again. Atlanta’s game-changer in 2021? A soft-serve icecream machine.

“When they brought that intothe clubhouse, it was like magic,”infielder Johan Camargo said.Added the star reliever TylerMatzek, “It’s just something thatwe kind of rallied around.”

The story of how a frozen treatinvigorated a team that was tread-ing water early in the season be-

gins in Boston in late May. Atlantawas visiting Fenway Park when,during a 9-5 loss to the Red Sox,the team endured a rain delay thatlasted nearly three hours.

“We didn’t restart the game un-

til midnight,” Matzek said. “Therewas nobody in the stands. It wasabsolutely pouring. We were like,‘Oh, well, there’s nothing to do, solet’s eat ice cream.’”

The pantry in the visitor’s club-house at Fenway has a soft-serveice cream machine. For relieverJosh Tomlin, it brought backmemories of trips to Dairy Queenwith his father when he was grow-ing up in Texas.

A Team in the World Series Found a Secret Sauce. It’s Sugary.By JAMES WAGNER An Ice Cream Machine

Helps Propel Atlanta

Continued on Page A13

JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES

As New York City workers demonstrated, agencies braced for a possible labor shortage. Page A14.Protesting the Vaccine Mandate

Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomowas charged on Thursday withgroping a female aide’s breast in-side the Executive Mansion “forthe purposes of degrading andgratifying his sexual desires,” ac-cording to a criminal complaintfiled in Albany City Court.

The misdemeanor complaintwas based on the account of one ofthe dozen or so women whose ac-cusations of sexual harassmentagainst Mr. Cuomo formed the ba-sis of a state attorney general’s re-port that eventually led to his res-ignation in August.

For Mr. Cuomo, the complaintwas a serious and potentially dev-astating development, as he con-tinues to fight the allegations andattempts to discredit the report. Italso served as a stunning chapterin the political demise of a manwho dominated state politics for adecade, seemed on a glide path toa fourth term and, less than a yearago, was hailed as a national heroof the coronavirus pandemic.

Now Mr. Cuomo, who has spenttime living on Long Island sincehis resignation, will be required toappear in court in Albany on Nov.17 to be arraigned on a charge offorcible touching.

The criminal complaint centerson an alleged interaction betweenMr. Cuomo and a female aide inthe governor’s residence in Al-bany on Dec. 7, 2020. The aide,Brittany Commisso, had previ-ously accused Mr. Cuomo of grop-ing her breast while they werealone in the mansion late last year.

The charge against Mr. Cuomocaught many in the state capitalby surprise, including DavidSoares, the district attorney in Al-bany, who said in a statement that,“like the rest of the public, wewere surprised to learn” about thecomplaint filed by the county’ssheriff, Craig Apple. In such inves-tigations, prosecutors and localpolice departments typically workas partners in initiating the crimi-nal process.

In a statement, Mr. Cuomo’spersonal lawyer, Rita Glavin, saidthe governor had “never as-saulted anyone” and describedMr. Apple’s motives as “patentlyimproper.” She criticized Mr. Ap-ple for not communicating withthe district attorney and accusedhim of effectively pronouncing thegovernor guilty at a news confer-ence earlier this year before an in-vestigation by his office had con-cluded.

“This is not professional law en-forcement,” she said. “This is poli-tics.”

Mr. Apple’s office did not re-spond to several requests for com-ment on Thursday, and news ofthe criminal complaint was publicfor several hours before the sher-iff released a statement confirm-

CUOMO CHARGEDOVER ALLEGATION

HE GROPED AIDE

COURT APPEARANCE SET

Ex-Governor Is Accusedof Forcible Touching,

a Misdemeanor

By LUIS FERRÉ-SADURNÍand JONAH E. BROMWICH

Continued on Page A12

WASHINGTON — PresidentBiden on Thursday unveiled hisoutline for a $1.85 trillion socialsafety net and environmental bill,imploring Democrats to put asidetheir differences and embrace aplan to provide universalprekindergarten, generous sup-port for child care costs and thelargest investment ever to combatclimate change.

But his appeal for Democrats tounite and hand him a long-delayedvictory on his domestic agendafell flat, as liberals demanded as-surances that the package wouldsurvive before they would agreeto an immediate vote on a sepa-rate $1 trillion infrastructure bill.That left Mr. Biden empty-handedas he departed for Europe, wherehe had hoped to point to progresson both measures as proof thatAmerican democracy still works.

By Thursday evening, with Mr.Biden heading for Rome aboard

Air Force One, the House Progres-sive Caucus had slammed thedoor shut on prospects of a quickwin.

“Members of our caucus willnot vote for the infrastructure billwithout the Build Back BetterAct,” the group said in a jointstatement, using the name of thepresident’s social policy and cli-mate bill.

It would provide preschool formore than six million 3- and 4-year-olds, child care and healthcare subsidies, monthly paymentsfor families with children and $555billion for programs to weanAmericans from fossil fuels.

The day’s drama at the Capitolat once fleshed out the details oflegislation that Speaker Nancy

PRESIDENT OFFERSCOMPROMISE PLAN

TO SPEED AGENDADemocrats Balk as

Biden Pleads forQuick Action

By JONATHAN WEISMANand EMILY COCHRANE

Representative Pramila Jaya-pal, Democrat of Washington.

STEFANI REYNOLDS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A15

WASHINGTON — PresidentBiden was blunt. Democrats hadto rally behind his $1.85 trillioneconomic and environmental

spending bill, hetold them on Thurs-day, because noth-ing less than his

presidency was at stake.“I don’t think it’s hyperbole,”

he said as he unveiled a revisedproposal and pleaded with Dem-ocratic lawmakers to support it

during a last-minute morningmeeting at the Capitol, hoursbefore he left for a six-day trip toEurope to meet with world lead-ers.

“The House and Senate major-ities and my presidency will bedetermined by what happens inthe next week,” Mr. Biden toldthe lawmakers during the hour-long session, according to aperson who was at the meeting.

The president’s proposals,while about half as costly as hisoriginal plan, still amount to atransformative agenda thatwould touch the lives of millions

of Americans and serve as thecore of his party’s argument tostay in power through the 2022midterm elections and the 2024presidential contest.

And even as party membershave engaged in a fierce, ideolog-ical debate among themselves,the monthslong negotiation hasthrown into stark relief the differ-ences between Democrats andRepublicans, almost all of whomhave refused to back spending onchild care, climate change, pre-school, expanded Medicare serv-

President’s Gamble Comes With Grim WarningBy MICHAEL D. SHEARand JIM TANKERSLEY

WASHINGTON — Climate hasemerged as the single largest cat-egory in President Biden’s newframework for a huge spendingbill, placing global warming at thecenter of his party’s domesticagenda in a way that was hard toimagine just a few years ago.

As the bill was pared down from$3.5 trillion to $1.85 trillion, paidfamily leave, free community col-lege, lower prescription drugs forseniors and other Democratic pri-orities were dropped — casualtiesof negotiations between progres-sives and moderates in the party.But $555 billion in climate pro-grams remained.

It was unclear on Thursday if allDemocrats will support the pack-age, which will be necessary if it isto pass without Republican sup-port in a closely divided Congress.Progressive Democrats in theHouse and two pivotal moderatesin the Senate, Joe Manchin III ofWest Virginia and KyrstenSinema of Arizona, did not explic-itly endorse the president’s frame-work. But Mr. Biden expressedconfidence that a deal was insight.

If enacted, it would be the larg-est action ever taken by theUnited States to address climatechange. And it would enshrine cli-mate action in law, making it hard-er to be reversed by a future presi-dent.

In remarks Thursday, Mr. Bidencalled it “the most significant in-vestment to deal with the climatecrisis that ever happened, beyondany other advanced nation in theworld.”

The centerpiece of the climatespending is $300 billion in tax in-centives for producers and pur-chasers of wind, solar and nuclearpower, inducements intended tospeed up a transition away fromoil, gas and coal. Buyers of electricvehicles would also benefit, re-ceiving up to $12,500 in tax credits— depending on what portion ofthe vehicle parts were made inAmerica.

The rest would be distributedamong a mix of programs, includ-ing money to construct chargingstations for electric vehicles andupdate the electric grid to make itmore conducive to transmittingwind and solar power, and moneyto promote climate-friendly farm-ing and forestry programs.

The plan would still fall short ofthe ambitious pledge Mr. Biden

Climate Projects AreTop Priorities in

Spending Bill

By CORAL DAVENPORT

President Biden with Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, who insisted on protecting climate plans.SARAHBETH MANEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A16

Continued on Page A17

NEWSANALYSIS

Our critics invite you to come along onthree walks through the neighborhood,visiting galleries along the way. Above,a popup gallery, Zugzwang. PAGE C1

WEEKEND ARTS C1-18

The Art of TriBeCaThe country is racing to expand coalmining despite risks to the economy,environment and miner safety. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

China’s Quest for ElectricityBrescia, Italy, a city devastated by thevirus, has adopted “Winged Victory”as the emblem of its recovery. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

Strength Symbolized in Statue

The commissioner said Native Ameri-cans in the Atlanta area were “whollysupportive” of the war cries and toma-hawk chops. But it depends on whomyou ask. Sports of The Times. PAGE B8

SPORTS B7-9

Baseball’s Blind SpotKyle Rittenhouse will stand trial for theshootings of three men — two of whomdied — in the aftermath of demonstra-tions in the Wisconsin city. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A10-19

Kenosha Shooter on Trial

Start-ups are betting that the pandemichas spawned a new kind of worker, onewho wants an office space closer tohome, without the commute. PAGE A13

Co-Working in the Suburbs

The government has staked its politicallegitimacy on controlling the virusbetter than other countries. PAGE A6

China Sticks With ‘Zero Covid’ The Supreme Court lifted a stay im-posed by a federal appeals court in achallenge to Oklahoma’s lethal injectionprotocols. PAGE A12

Two Executions to Proceed

The embattled social network said thechange was part of a bet on a digitalfrontier called the metaverse. PAGE B1

Facebook Renames Itself ‘Meta’

The N.F.L. commissioner’s $128 millionin compensation for the last two fiscalyears, bolstered by bonuses for laborand media deals, was disclosed to teamowners in a private meeting. PAGE B9

Roger Goodell’s Big Payday

David Brooks PAGE A20

OPINION A20-21

Late Edition

VOL. CLXXI . . . . No. 59,226 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2021

Today, cloudy with an increasingwind, rain by nightfall, high 57. To-night, rain, some heavy, windy, low53. Tomorrow, cloudy, periodic rain,high 62. Weather map, Page B12.

$3.00