Walker, Viewed as - The New York Times
Transcripción
Walker, Viewed as - The New York Times
CMYK Nxxx,2015-07-13,A,001,Bs-BK,E2_+ Late Edition Today, partly sunny, humid, high 85. Tonight, mostly cloudy, humid, low 71. Tomorrow, mostly cloudy, a few showers and a thunderstorm, high 81. Weather map, Page C8. VOL. CLXIV . . . No. 56,926 + $2.50 NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 13, 2015 © 2015 The New York Times EUROPE PRESSES GREECE TO AGREE TO NEW MEASURES Drug Kingpin Escapes Prison Through Tunnel Breakout of ‘El Chapo’ Embarrasses Mexico WORKING PAST DEADLINE A Temporary Euro Exit and a Debt Fund Are Considered By AZAM AHMED and RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD Shortly before 9 p.m. on Saturday, Joaquín Guzmán Loera, the Mexican drug kingpin whose capture last year had been trumpeted by his country’s government as a crucial victory in its bloody campaign against the narcotics trade, stepped into the shower in his cell in the most secure wing of the most secure prison in Mexico. He never came out. When guards later entered the cell, they discovered a 2-by-2-foot hole, through which Mr. Guzmán, known as El Chapo, or Shorty, had disappeared. The prison break humiliated the government of President Enrique Peña Nieto, which had proclaimed the arrest of Mr. Guzmán and leaders of other drug cartels as crucial achievements in restoring order and sovereignty to a country long beleaguered by the horrific violence associated with organized crime. The opening in the shower led to a mile-long tunnel leading to a construction site in the nearby neighborhood of Santa Juanita in Almoloya de Juárez, west of Mexico City. The tunnel was more than two feet wide and more than five feet high, tall enough for him to walk Joaquín standing upright, Guzmán and was burLoera rowed more than 30 feet underground. It had been equipped with lighting, ventilation and a motorcycle on rails that was probably used to transport digging material and cart the dirt out. A few days after Mr. Guzmán’s arrest in February of last year, Mr. Peña Nieto told the Univision television network that he would be asking his interior minister every day if Mr. Guzmán, who had broken out of a Mexican prison once before, in 2001, was being well guarded. “It’s the government’s responsibility to ensure that the escape that occurred a few years ago is never, ever repeated,” Mr. Peña Nieto said. Continued on Page A3 By ANDREW HIGGINS and JAMES KANTER MARCO UGARTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Federal police searched a drainage pipe Sunday outside the maximum security Altiplano prison in Almoloya de Juárez, Mexico. Walker, Viewed as ‘Authentic,’ Grieving Biden Focuses on Job Aims for ‘Smart’ in the ’16 Race He Has Now, Not the Next One By PETER BAKER By PATRICK HEALY After listening to Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin as he has traveled the country preparing his campaign for president, which officially begins on Monday, admiring voters most often describe him as “authentic,” “real” and “approachable,” Mr. Walker’s advisers say. Two words these voters do not use about him? “Smart” and “sophisticated.” “Scott is working on that,” said Ed Goeas, a veteran Republican pollster and a senior adviser to Mr. Walker. “Look, ‘approachable’ is worth its weight in gold in politics. ‘Smart’ is something voters look for in legislators who craft policy. But Scott is preparing hard to talk about every issue.” As Mr. Walker becomes the 15th prominent Republican to enter the 2016 race, the crucial question he must answer is whether he can cross the threshold of credibility so that someone entering a voting booth can imagine him as president, according to several leading Republicans and interviews with regular voters. While Mr. Walker is ahead in some opinion polls, including for Iowa’s first-in-the-nation caucuses, a series of early gaffes alarmed party leaders and donors and led Mr. Walker to begin several months of policy tutorials. The collective hope is that Mr. Walker can avoid what Mr. Goeas and other advisers describe as Sarah Palin’s problem — becoming a candidate who is initially popular among Republicans, like the 2008 vice-presidential nominee, but loses luster because of missteps as the campaign goes on. Mr. Walker is now emerging from his crash course with the aim of reassuring activists and contributors, who have given relatively modest amounts to his political operation so far. The goal is to no longer sow doubts with comments like comparing prounion protesters to Islamic State terrorists, refusing to answer a question about evolution, or sayContinued on Page A12 WASHINGTON — Hosting a rockfish and crab lunch for a visiting Vietnamese leader, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. seemed subdued as he talked of a painful history and a promising future between the United States and Vietnam. He ad-libbed some remarks, made a few mild jokes and stared straight ahead when his guest spoke. Six weeks after the death of his elder son, Mr. Biden has thrown himself back into his work, meeting with foreign leaders, giving speeches and even cheering on the women’s national soccer team in its victory over Japan in the World Cup. Unsurprisingly, in the shadow of tragedy, he is not his typically ebullient self. But by all accounts he is feeling his way forward and trying to figure out what comes next. Even without the heartbreak of loss, this was bound to be a crossroads moment for a vice president who has spent four decades in Washington only to find an uncertain path ahead. He has not ruled out running for president again, and some friends are MANUEL BALCE CENETA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. last week with Nguyen Phu Trong of Vietnam. nudging him to, even if the political math does not seem to favor it. But he has good days and bad days, his mind never far from his late son, Beau Biden, and his staff is not planning further than two weeks ahead. “This is not a guy who is going to go easily,” said former Senator Ted Kaufman, a longtime confidant appointed to fill Mr. Biden’s seat representing Delaware in the Senate after the 2008 election elevated him to the vice presidency. “Whatever he’s doing, he’s going to stay involved. He’s not Continued on Page A11 BRUSSELS — Haggling through the night into Monday morning over a deal to calm Greece’s debt crisis, European leaders demanded that Athens make new concessions and quickly adopt a host of economic policy changes as they worked to overcome deep divisions and avert a historic fracture in the Continent’s common currency. As testy talks dragged on past dawn without agreement, leaders of the 19 countries that use the euro struggled to draft a compromise that would assuage some of Greece’s concerns over tough German-set terms while assuring creditors that a new bailout worth tens of billions of euros would not be money wasted. The mood grew increasingly tense as it became clear that the leaders were weighing steps that Greece’s left-wing government, while desperate for a deal to pave the way for new funding, would find difficult to sell at home — just a week after Greek voters overwhelmingly rejected softer terms in a referendum. The new steps under review included a temporary Greek exit from the eurozone, and placing proceeds from the privatization of Greek assets worth up to 50 billion euros, about $55 billion, in a fund in Luxembourg to help pay down Greece’s huge debt. Similar options were first put forward in a policy paper prepared by the German Finance Ministry, and have since stirred anger from some Greek officials. Among some supporters of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and his left-wing Syriza party, the demands were portrayed as humiliating and a further effort to force him from office. But there were some signs of progress as another long meeting in Brussels dragged into Monday morning, according to two people with direct knowledge of the talks who spoke on the condition of anonymity while leaders parried Continued on Page A8 A Hip-Hop Musical on Hamilton Is Put to the Test on Broadway Growth in the ‘Gig Economy’ Fuels Work Force Anxieties By MICHAEL PAULSON The Broadway musical can seem as oldfangled as the founding fathers. But an audacious hiphop retelling of the life of the nation’s first Treasury secretary lands on Broadway on Monday poised to become the rarest of theatrical phenomena: not only a hit, but a turning point for the art form and a cultural conversation piece. The show, “Hamilton,” arrives with a powerful tailwind. It has already brought in $27.6 million, with just over 200,000 tickets sold in advance — huge numbers for Broadway, and among the biggest pre-opening totals in history. An Off Broadway production of the musical, based on Alexander Hamilton, which ran this year at the Public Theater, was a critical darling that sold out 119 performances, attracted a who’s who of cultural and political figures, and collected a trophy case of awards. And the show’s creator, a 35year-old New Yorker named LinManuel Miranda, has already won a Tony and a Grammy for an earlier show he had begun while still an undergraduate. By NOAM SCHEIBER SARA KRULWICH/THE NEW YORK TIMES Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator and star of “Hamilton,” in costume during a rehearsal break. Thus far “Hamilton” has been seen by relatively few people — a total of 34,132 seats were available over 15 weeks at the Public, fewer than at a typical Yankees home game, and there remain uncertainties about how it will be received by broader audiences over time. “The question we have to answer is: ‘Will the word of mouth be as good, or better, on Broadway? Will we measure up?’” said the show’s lead producer, Jeffrey Seller, who has won Tony Awards for the groundbreaking musicals “Rent” and “Avenue Q” and Mr. Miranda’s debut, “In the Heights.” The show’s appeal to in-theknow New Yorkers is clear; its challenge now is to broaden its appeal to tourists from around the nation and the globe who dominate the Broadway audience and are essential to the longevity Continued on Page A12 INTERNATIONAL NATIONAL A10-13 Parsing the Papal Tour Birth Control Policy’s Hurdles Latin Americans pored over Pope Francis’ trip, dissecting nuances of body language and the subtleties of what he said and did not say. News analysis. PAGE A4 The Obama administration’s insurance rule has survived several legal battles, but a suit by a group of Roman Catholic PAGE A10 nuns remains a challenge. BUSINESS B1-8 INTERNATIONAL A3-9 Iran Deal Nears, Diplomats Say Negotiators from Iran and six world powers were said to be down to a small number of remaining disputes before completing an agreement that would limit Tehran’s nuclear abilities for more than a decade in return for relief from PAGE A9 sanctions. When the California Labor Commissioner’s Office ruled last month that an Uber driver was an employee deserving of a variety of workplace protections — and was not, as the company maintained, an independent contractor — it highlighted the divided feelings many Americans have about what is increasingly being called the “gig economy.” On one hand, start-ups like Uber, which is appealing the decision, and Lyft make it possible to conjure up rides on a smartphone in a few seconds’ time. On the other, Uber — which directly employs fewer than 4,000 of the more than 160,000 people in the United States who depend on it for at least part of their livelihood — and similar companies pose a challenge to longstanding notions of what it means to hold a job. As it happens, though, Uber is not so much a labor-market innovation as the culmination of a generation-long trend. Even be- fore the founding of the company in 2009, the United States economy was rapidly becoming an Uber economy writ large, with tens of millions of Americans involved in some form of freelancing, contracting, temping or outsourcing. The decades-long shift to these A SHIFTING MIDDLE Contracting for a Living more flexible workplace arrangements, the venture capitalist Nick Hanauer and the labor leader David Rolf argue in the latest issue of Democracy Journal, is a “transformation that promises new efficiencies and greater flexibility for ‘employers’ and ‘employees’ alike, but which threatens to undermine the very foundation upon which middle-class America was built.” Along with other changes, like Continued on Page B8 OBITUARIES A16-17 Behind China’s Volatile Market NEW YORK A14-16, 20 Jon Vickers, Powerful Tenor SPORTSMONDAY D1-6 The dynamics of China’s stock market, as well as manipulation by the government, have fanned the tumult. PAGE B1 Dispatches From World War II The singer brought intensity and a colossal voice to portrayals of Wagner’s Tristan, Verdi’s Otello and Britten’s PePAGE A16 ter Grimes. He was 88. Djokovic Wins Wimbledon Comcast’s Web Alternative In a bid to stay relevant to a new generation of viewers, the cable company has plans for a streaming service. PAGE B1 A private’s near-daily letters to his wife are being digitally archived. PAGE A14 A New State Paleontologist Lisa Amati focuses on prehistoric New PAGE A14 Yorkers. The Working Life. EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 Charles M. Blow PAGE A19 Novak Djokovic beat Roger Federer to win his third Wimbledon title. PAGE D1 U(D54G1D)y+$!}!=!#!,