cover of episode Biden Sidelined as Israel Plans Retaliatory Iran Strike

Biden Sidelined as Israel Plans Retaliatory Iran Strike

2024/10/4
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The September U.S. jobs report exceeded expectations, with 254,000 jobs added, significantly higher than predicted. This broad-based growth, seen across sectors like leisure, hospitality, education, and healthcare, paints a more robust labor market picture than recent months. The strong report influences market expectations for the Fed's next interest rate decision.
  • 254,000 jobs added in September, exceeding the 150,000 forecast.
  • Unemployment rate dropped to 4.1%.
  • Broad-based job growth across various sectors.
  • Market expectations shift towards a smaller interest rate cut by the Fed.

Shownotes Transcript

Today's U.S. jobs report blew past expectations. What's next for the Fed?

And how President Biden became a spectator in Israel's war against Hamas and Hezbollah. Where traditionally Netanyahu hasn't cared

too much about what the U.S. thinks. Now he really, really does not care because he sees Biden as a lame duck president. Plus, a first look at Nevada's none of the above voters. It's Friday, October 4th. I'm Tracy Hunt for The Wall Street Journal. This is the p.m. edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move the world today.

Today's jobs report blew past expectations. The U.S. Labor Department reported that employers added 254,000 jobs last month. That was significantly more than the 150,000 economists expected and marked the largest monthly increase since March.

The unemployment rate also ticked down to 4.1%. Joining us now to discuss what all this will mean for the economy is Wall Street Journal economics reporter Harriet Torrey. Harriet, what accounts for these numbers being better than we expected? The strength was really broad-based. We saw a lot of hiring in

leisure and hospitality, so for instance in bars and restaurants. But we also saw a lot of hiring in sectors of the economy that are slightly less susceptible to the swings of the ups and downs of the economy, like for instance education and healthcare, government. They all added a lot of workers in September. And the report was reassuring in a lot of ways, in other ways too, because the past couple of jobs reports over the summer were pretty weak looking and that did spook markets.

So overall, we're looking at a much more solid labor market situation over the past few months than initially thought. On Monday following last month's half a percentage point interest rate cut, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said officials weren't in a hurry to cut rates. What does this jobs report tell the Fed about further cuts in the next meeting?

The Fed hasn't committed to what it's going to do in its next meeting in November, but it has sort of hinted that it's unlikely to cut rates by 50 basis points again and that 25 is probably going to be more likely. And after the release of the report on Friday, the payrolls report, market participants who place bets on the future Fed rates through

Futures contracts, 95% as of right now, expect that there'll only be a quarter point cut as opposed to yesterday when it was about two thirds, thought that that was more likely. So how sustainable is this? What should we expect for October's report? Well, October's report is probably going to be pretty messy because of various things that are going on like strikes. We've had a strike at Boeing. And then, of course, there was recently a port strike in

There was a hurricane. So potentially October could be very different looking. And some economists are saying that September is likely to be the last quote unquote clean report that we see before the next Fed meeting and, of course, before the election as well. Harriet Torrey is an economics reporter for The Wall Street Journal.

The solid jobs report led the major U.S. stock indexes to rise. The Nasdaq composite rose 1.2 percent, while the Dow and the S&P 500 added about 0.8 and 0.9, respectively. All three eked out slight weekly gains.

For our multi-part series, Chasing the Vote, Wall Street Journal political reporter Jimmy VL Kine visited Nevada ahead of the presidential election. What he found was that many voters wished the presidential ballot came with the option, none of the above. And you can see this attitude reflected in the voter registration stats. Nevada has more nonpartisan voters than voters registered as either Republicans or Democrats.

And as our colleague Elizabeth Fendell told Jimmy, all of this makes Nevada very unpredictable. Nevada is a state that you never quite know what it's going to do. The polls aren't accurate.

It's a very transient state. So every four years, it's almost like you have a whole new electorate. And Jimmy's now here with us. So you talked to a lot of voters who weren't enthused about any of the candidates. How do you see this unpredictability playing out in the presidential election? I really found that particularly when the choice was between President Biden and former President Trump, there were many people who were just not feeling it.

After Harris took over on the top of the ticket and after Kennedy dropped out and endorsed Donald Trump, you saw some younger voters who were on the fence as to whether they would get off their couch this election, say that they would go and vote for Kamala Harris.

And I saw a lot of the people who had said they were considering Bobby Kennedy now say that they will be supporting Donald Trump in November. As you point out in the piece, Ross Perot did really well in Nevada back in the 1992 presidential elections. Why do voters there seem to be more open to third party candidates than in other states?

Nevada has what few people in the state described as a cowboy spirit. It's a relatively transient electorate. It is a Western state. Like many Western states, there are many voters have something of a libertarian streak in them. There's a big live and let live element among both Republicans and Democrats. And many people said that that has led people in the silver state to be more open to looking beyond the two top party candidates.

Jimmy Vielkind is a political reporter for The Wall Street Journal. Thanks, Jimmy. Thanks, Tracy. Always a pleasure. And you can listen to Jimmy's reporting from Nevada on Chasing the Vote this Sunday.

Americans are having fewer babies, and it's become an issue for politicians and policymakers. What questions do you have about America's falling birth rate and what it means for politics in the economy? 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.

Coming up, how President Biden is being sidelined, losing influence over Israel's decisions. That's after the break. ♪

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To learn more, visit morganstanley.com slash why us. Investing involves risk. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. As Israel prepares a retaliatory strike against Iran, the Biden administration looks a lot more like a spectator as its closest ally is reshaping the Middle East.

White House officials say they've been coordinating closely with their Israeli counterparts and are hopeful that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will limit a likely attack against Iran. But President Biden and his team have been repeatedly blindsided by Israel in recent weeks. Joining us now is Wall Street Journal national security reporter Lara Seligman. So, Lara, how did we get here? It's been almost a year now since the October 7th attacks.

against Israel. And all along, it seemed like President Biden has had little influence on or even insight into Israel's military plans from going into Gaza, from the deaths of the World Food Kitchen workers. A lot of the time, Israel is surprising the U.S.,

But now this has really been striking in the last two weeks as the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seems to be openly defying, if not outright ignoring, U.S. calls for restraint. And this is making the U.S., arguably the world's most powerful country, look like a bystander while Israel reshapes the Middle East. What is behind Netanyahu's

emboldened actions now. While the U.S. does have leverage over Israel, I mean, the U.S. provides Israel with the vast majority of its weapons and munitions. President Biden does not seem willing to hold any of that back and give any kind of concrete threat to get Israel to stop

He did withhold one shipment of 2,000-pound bombs because of the invasion of Rafa, which was going to cause many civilian deaths. But that's been the only time he has ever followed through on a threat to have real consequences for Israel.

The October 7th attacks really fundamentally changed Israel and Netanyahu and his government because it was such a surprise and it was such a tragedy. And it made Netanyahu go on offense to make sure this never happens again. What risks does this entail for the administration? Well, first of all, with tension so high in the region, there is a threat to U.S. troops in the region. We have anywhere from hundreds to thousands of

of Marines and sailors and soldiers all over the Middle East. There was a long period last year where they were getting attacked almost every day by Iranian proxies in Iraq and Syria and Jordan. And then more broadly than that, any broad regional war between Israel and Iran would inevitably draw the U.S. in. Already you saw on Tuesday the U.S. was involved in the defense. The U.S. ballistic missile defense-capable destroyer shot down several missiles.

But Iran will likely use any excuse to see the U.S. and Israel as aligned on this. So the war draws in the U.S.

So what does this mean going into a presidential election? Well, the biggest impact of being 30 days from the election is that where traditionally Netanyahu hasn't cared too much about what the U.S. thinks, now he really, really does not care because he sees Biden as a lame duck president. Any policy changes on the U.S. side that happen now may not survive the election. Domestically, the war in Gaza has reflected badly on this administration because it's

Biden has not been able to rein Israel in enough to get a ceasefire. And I think that although most voters don't vote on foreign policy, there are a lot of regular people who are very upset about that Biden hasn't done anything to stop the conflict in Gaza. Laura Seligman is a national security reporter for The Wall Street Journal. Thanks so much, Laura. Thank you.

In business news, OpenAI is leasing its first ever office in New York City. According to people familiar with the matter, the chat GBT startup has agreed to rent 90,000 square feet in Manhattan's iconic Puck building. The move raises property owners' hopes that the budding artificial intelligence industry will develop a bigger appetite for office space.

And that's What's the News for this week. Tomorrow, you can look out for our weekly markets wrap-up, What's the News in Markets. Then on Sunday, in Chasing the Vote, Jimmy Veilkind travels to the battleground state of Nevada to find out how voters responded to the candidates' shifts going into November.

And we'll be back with our regular show on Monday morning. Today's show was produced by Anthony Bansi and Pierre Bien-Aimé with supervising producer Michael Cosmitas. Michael LaValle wrote our theme music. Aisha Al-Muslim is our development producer. Scott Salloway and Chris Zinsley are our deputy editors. And Falana Patterson is the Wall Street Journal's head of news audio. I'm Tracy Hunt. Thanks for listening. ♪

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