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miércoles, 1 de mayo de 2024

The Evening: Arizona repeals its abortion ban

Also, the Fed eyes a longer period of high rates.
The Evening

May 1, 2024

Good evening. Here's the latest at the end of Wednesday.

  • A vote to repeal Arizona's abortion ban
  • A wave of arrests on campuses
  • Plus, Paul Auster's legacy
A view from between rows of desks in a legislative chamber. Above, people sit in a raised visitors' gallery.
The law made abortion a central focus of Arizona's politics. Ash Ponders for The New York Times

Arizona voted to repeal its abortion ban

Arizona lawmakers today repealed an abortion ban that first became law in 1864, when Abraham Lincoln was president and a half-century before women won the right to vote.

The repeal narrowly passed the Republican-controlled State Senate with the support of all 14 Democratic senators and two Republicans. Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, is widely expected to sign it, after which abortion policy in the state would revert to a 2022 law that restricted the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

The 1864 law, which had remained on the books without enforcement for decades, burst into the middle of a heated national political debate three weeks ago when Arizona's Supreme Court ruled that it should be reinstated because Roe v. Wade had been overturned.

Democrats sought to use the ban to energize voters in Arizona, a battleground state. On the right, the issue created a rift between anti-abortion activists who wanted to keep the law in place and Republicans who worried about the potential backlash of a near-total ban with no exceptions for rape or incest.

In Florida, a ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy went into effect today, meaning most abortions are now outlawed across the entire Southeast. Here's a map of how far the ban puts residents of the region from the nearest clinic.

Several police California Highway Patrol officers in sand-colored uniforms stand with their backs to the viewers on the U.C.L.A. campus. Behind them, a sign on a lamppost reads:
California Highway Patrol officers at U.C.L.A., today. Philip Cheung for The New York Times

Colleges call in the police, but protests remain active

School was canceled today at U.C.L.A. after the Los Angeles police were called in overnight to respond after about 200 counterprotesters stormed a pro-Palestinian encampment and the two sides fought. Officials there asked the police to remain on campus through graduation. In Manhattan, the N.Y.P.D. arrested scores of protesters who had taken over a building at Columbia.

More than 1,600 protesters have been taken into custody over the last two weeks. Yet students at several universities remain in protest encampments and show no sign of backing down. Here's the latest.

Karl Russell/The New York Times

The Fed eyes a longer period of high rates

Federal Reserve officials announced today that they were leaving interest rates unchanged. It was their sixth consecutive meeting that has ended without a move in rates, suggesting that borrowing costs — for homes, cars, credit cards and more — will remain elevated.

Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, said in a news conference that a big reason for the pause was a concern that inflation would "take longer than previously expected" to reach the Fed's 2 percent target. But investors responded favorably to Powell's comment that officials still expect their next policy move to be a rate cut.

From left, a man in fatigues, a man dressed in all black, a man dressed in a suit and sunglasses, and a woman in a red pantsuit stand at a military checkpoint.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Israel today.  Pool photo by Evelyn Hockstein

Blinken urged Hamas to accept Israel's offer

After meetings today with Israeli leaders in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Hamas leaders could save Palestinian lives by accepting the cease-fire deal on the table: "The time is now."

The current offer, under which Hamas would free 33 hostages in exchange for a six-week cease-fire, includes a few concessions that Israel had long rejected, such as allowing some Palestinians to return to northern Gaza.

Will Hamas accept the deal? It's not clear. In the Morning newsletter, my colleague Julian Barnes explained why.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

A black-and-white close-up of Paul Auster standing to the left side of the frame looking straight at the camera, his face partly obscured behind a blurred reflection in the foreground. His hair is combed back, and he wears a dark sweater over an open-collared shirt.
Paul Auster in a photo from 2009.  Todd Heisler/The New York Times

Remembering Paul Auster

Paul Auster, who died last night at 77, was the patron saint of literary Brooklyn: With critically lauded works like "The New York Trilogy," he drew inspiration from his adopted borough and won worldwide acclaim.

In an appraisal, the author Lucy Sante compared Auster's work to a moving sidewalk. "It was more comfortable to ride than to hop off — so you could read him for hours, as his plots twisted and turned," she writes.

Here's a guide to Auster's best books.

An actor dressed in a sari raises a chandelier wrapped in cloth using ropes, while a cameraman captures the scene.
On the set of the new Netflix show "Heeramandi" in Mumbai. Atul Loke for The New York Times

India's master of nostalgia heads to Netflix

Sanjay Leela Bhansali is considered a master of the grand old style of Indian filmmaking. His movies are known for grandiosity and obsessive attention to light and detail.

His newest project, "Heeramandi," is an eight-episode musical drama for Netflix about a forbidden romance in pre-independence India. The format offers him far more time for storytelling than any movie would. But how do you translate big-budget, old-fashioned aesthetics for Indian viewers who are largely watching on tiny mobile screens?

Two hands in blue rubber gloves hold up a fake copy of a first edition of a Pushkin book. The book is held open and shows Cyrillic writing and a black-and-white image of a young Pushkin.
A fake first edition of a Pushkin book. Wojtek Radwanski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Jackfruit tacos on a red plate sit next to a small plate of toppings.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Cook: Make a great taco even better with jackfruit.

Watch: Stream these movies before they leave Netflix this month.

Read: If you want a novel that feels like a puzzle, check out Thomas Olde Heuvelt's "Oracle."

Listen: These five minutes will make you love jazz bass.

Style: Our fashion critic explains when and how to wear cargo pants.

Walk: A treadmill desk might actually be worth it.

Give: Wirecutter picked a new favorite flower delivery service.

Play: Here are today's Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all of our games here.

ONE LAST THING

A pizza in a slice oven, with crispy bubbles of cheese on top.
Lisa Corson for The New York Times

The future of New York pizza is electric

The classic New York City pizza slice has long been made in gas ovens. And some of the city's oldest pizzerias swear by wood- and coal-fired ones. But that could soon change: Gas isn't getting cheaper, and a new city ordinance could make wood ovens prohibitively expensive.

Luckily, some chefs have come to like electric ovens. They can cook hotter, faster and more consistently, and they retain heat better, speeding things up during the lunch rush. They're also mostly novice-proof, so owners have to worry less about training new employees.

Have a sizzling evening.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Matthew

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

Evening Briefing Newsletter Logo

Writer: Matthew Cullen

Editorial Director: Adam Pasick

Editors: Carole Landry, Whet Moser, Justin Porter, Jonathan Wolfe

Photo Editor: Brent Lewis

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