1
U(D54G1D)y+%!}!.!#!_ SAN JUAN, P.R. — Two days af- ter Hurricane Maria flattened this island of 3.5 million people, knock- ing out all its power and much of its water, the rebuilding of the services and structures needed for people to resume some sem- blance of ordinary life was looking more complicated by the day. All or part of three towns in the northwestern part of the island — Isabela, San Sebastián and Que- bradillas — were being evacuated Friday because of fears about structural damage to the nearby Guajataca Dam. Close to 70,000 people could be affected if the 90- year-old dam, which is 120 feet high and can hold about 11 billion gallons of water, collapsed, said Puerto Rico’s governor, Ricardo Rosselló. And with everyone from the governor of Puerto Rico to the mayor of San Juan predicting that it could take four to six months to resume electrical service, people were contemplating empty refrig- erators, campfire cooking, bathing in their own sweat and perhaps wrangling for fresh water on an island accustomed to hard times but nothing like what the fu- ture may bring. “It’s been hard to see infrastruc- ture deteriorate in Puerto Rico, but it has been harder to meet citi- Ordinary Life ‘Beyond Reach’ In Puerto Rico This article is by Frances Robles, Lizette Alvarez and Mary Williams Walsh. Continued on Page A15 Education Secretary Betsy De- Vos on Friday scrapped a key part of government policy on campus sexual assault, saying she was giving colleges more freedom to balance the rights of accused stu- dents with the need to crack down on serious misconduct. The move, which involved re- scinding two sets of guidelines several years old, was part of one of the fiercest battles in higher ed- ucation today, over whether the Obama administration, in trying to get colleges to take sexual as- sault more seriously, had gone too far and created a system that treated the accused unfairly. The most controversial portion of the Obama-era guidelines had demanded colleges use the lowest standard of proof, “preponder- ance of the evidence,” in deciding whether a student is responsible for sexual assault, a verdict that can lead to discipline and even ex- pulsion. On Friday, the Education Department said colleges were free to abandon that standard and raise it to a standard known as “clear and convincing evidence.” In announcing the change, the latest in a widespread rollback of Obama-era rules by the Trump ad- ministration, the department is- sued a statement saying that the old rules “lacked basic elements of fairness.” DeVos, Citing Fairness, Eases Sex Attack Rule By STEPHANIE SAUL and KATE TAYLOR Continued on Page A14 LONDON — Uber’s history of scandals and disregard for local rules finally caught up with it on Friday, when London declined to renew the ride-hailing company’s license to operate in the city, its largest European market. Transport for London, the agency that oversees the city’s subways, buses and taxicabs, de- clared that Uber was not suffi- ciently “fit and proper.” The desig- nation carries significant weight in Britain. The decision, which Uber plans to appeal, raises the possibility that other cities could be embold- ened to crack down on the com- pany. Over the past few years, Uber has been temporarily forced out of a few major markets, like Delhi in India and Austin, Tex. Uber also voluntarily left China af- ter selling its business there to a rival, Didi Chuxing. But it had never been told to leave a market as important as London. Losing the license to operate in London presents a major chal- lenge for Uber’s new chief execu- tive, Dara Khosrowshahi, who re- placed its founder, Travis Kala- nick, in August. The company has faced an array of controversies over the past year or so, including charges of insufficient back- ground checks on drivers, the use of software to evade the gaze of the authorities, and complaints of Uber, Lamenting Cost of ‘Bad Reputation,’ Loses London License By PRASHANT S. RAO and MIKE ISAAC Continued on Page A10 REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Families sheltering outside in the Roma section of Mexico City, known for its hip restaurants but also a vulnerability to earthquakes. Residents are asking if rebuilding is worth the risk. Page A4. After a Quake, Thoughts of Starting Over SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea has long cultivated an im- age of defiant belligerence, punc- tuating its propaganda and diplo- macy with colorful threats, insults and bluster. But by addressing President Trump in a personal statement on Friday, the nation’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has pushed his government’s brinkmanship to a new, potentially more perilous level. In a statement written in the first person, published on the front pages of state newspapers and read on national television, Mr. Kim called Mr. Trump a “men- tally deranged U.S. dotard” who had “denied the existence of and insulted me and my country in front of the eyes of the world.” Mr. Kim vowed to take the “highest level of hard-line coun- termeasure in history.” In a country where the leader is essentially portrayed as a god, Mr. Kim’s decision to respond person- ally to Mr. Trump’s speech to the United Nations General Assembly and pledge reprisals escalated the standoff over the North’s nuclear program in a way that neither he nor his predecessors had done be- fore. Though the statement made no mention of nuclear weapons, in the context of a political system built on a cult of personality, Mr. Kim’s intervention appeared to sharply reduce the possibility that his government might retreat or compromise, even in the face of war. Mr. Kim condemned Mr. Trump’s threat to “totally de- DICTATOR’S REPLY TURNS PERSONAL Name-Calling Escalates With Level of Threats By CHOE SANG-HUN People in Pyongyang, North Korea, watched a broadcast on Friday of Kim Jong-un’s response to President Trump’s speech at the U.N. ED JONES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES Continued on Page A9 WASHINGTON — The war of words between President Trump and Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s leader, raised concerns on Friday that it could escalate into a new and more volatile phase as the White House weighed its next steps in response to a threat by Pyongyang to conduct the world’s first atmospheric nuclear test in 37 years. Mr. Trump derided Mr. Kim as a “madman” on Friday, hours after the North Korean called him a “mentally deranged U.S. dotard,” the sort of name-calling exchange most presidents have avoided. North Korea’s accompanying warning that it might test a nucle- ar bomb over the Pacific Ocean added fresh urgency to an admin- istration debate over options for a pre-emptive strike if preparations for a launch are detected. Mr. Trump’s long-distance con- frontation with “Rocket Man,” as he earlier dubbed Mr. Kim, defied diplomatic convention and took the penchant for reality-show in- sults that he perfected on the cam- paign trail to the international arena — only with potential real- world consequences. The president seemed to be gambling that the same style that put his domestic opponents on the defensive could work on the diplo- matic front as well. But foreign policy veterans said the president was playing a dangerous game that at the very least complicates his own efforts to find a diplomatic resolution to the dispute over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs. “Personal insults make com- promise more difficult,” said Kori Schake, a former national security Amid Bluster, White House Ponders Next Step By PETER BAKER and DAVID E. SANGER A Debate Over Options if the North Koreans Prepare to Launch Continued on Page A8 WASHINGTON Senator John McCain of Arizona an- nounced on Friday that he would oppose the latest proposal to re- peal the Affordable Care Act, leav- ing Republican leaders with little hope of succeeding in their last- ditch attempt to dismantle the health law and fulfill their long- standing promise to conservative voters. For Mr. McCain, it was a slightly less dramatic reprise of his mid- dle-of-the-night thumbs-down that killed the last repeal effort in July. This time, the senator, bat- tling brain cancer and confronting his best friend in the Senate, Lind- sey Graham of South Carolina, is- sued a statement saying that he could not “in good conscience” support the proposal by Senators Graham and Bill Cassidy of Loui- siana. “I believe we could do better working together, Republicans and Democrats, and have not yet really tried,” Mr. McCain said. “Nor could I support it without knowing how much it will cost, how it will affect insurance premi- ums, and how many people will be helped or hurt by it.” With two other Republican sen- ators likely to vote no, Mr. Mc- Cain’s opposition to the bill could be fatal. With Democrats united in opposition, Senate Republicans can afford to lose only two of their members. Senator Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky, has said that he would not vote for the bill because it did not dismantle enough of the Affordable Care Act. And Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, has expressed broad con- cerns about the legislation, strongly suggesting that she, too, would vote against it, just as she voted no in July along with Mr. McCain and a third Republican senator, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Ms. Collins said on Friday that she was “leaning against” the proposal. For months, Mr. McCain has la- mented a Senate legislative process that avoided hearings or formal bill-drafting procedures and excluded Democrats. On Fri- day, he said those tactics were in- tolerable. “We should not be content to pass health care legislation on a party-line basis, as Democrats did REBUFF BY McCAIN SPELLS LIKELY END TO HEALTH REPEAL G.O.P.’s Slim Senate Majority Erodes — Deadline for Bill at End of Month By THOMAS KAPLAN and ROBERT PEAR John McCain criticized the Senate’s partisan approach. TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A12 Donor anger was one reason for Republicans’ zeal to take on health care repeal again, Carl Hulse writes. Page A12. Money Woes An independent Kurdish state could prove valuable to Israel in its continu- ing struggle with Iran. PAGE A10 Israel Allies With Kurds The broader conversation about women made it to Milan when Miuccia Prada started thinking with her scissors. Anger on the Runway President Trump is imposing restric- tions on people from nations he says are lax in vetting travelers. PAGE A11 Travel Ban to Be Replaced Republican leaders are seeking proof of their optimistic assumptions about tax cuts’ impact on the deficit. PAGE A11 NATIONAL A11-15 Republicans vs. Economists The amfAR charity is under scrutiny after it allowed proceeds from an auc- tion to be used for a play produced by Harvey Weinstein. PAGE A18 NEW YORK A17-19 AIDS Fund-Raiser Tumult The designer Alessandro Michele is trying to build his own brave new world for Gucci in Milan. FASHION A16 Living in Gucci-Land Mark Zuckerberg’s approach at Face- book is to fix things — like Russia’s election meddling via Facebook ads — after the fact, rather than to avert prob- lems, Farhad Manjoo writes. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 Zuckerberg’s Russia Reaction Manchester City midfielder Ilkay Gun- dogan prepared for the worst when he went down with a torn A.C.L. in Decem- ber. Now he just had to face it. PAGE D1 SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6 The Lonely Road Back Jacob J. Lew PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 THIS WEEKEND After meddling in the American and French elections, Russia seems to be sitting out Germany’s contest. PAGE A6 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 No Sign of Interference Late Edition VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,729 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2017 Today, sunshine and a few clouds, a warm day, high 86. Tonight, clear, warm, low 71. Tomorrow, sunshine, record-breaking warmth, high 90. Weather map appears on Page C8. $2.50

TO HEALTH REPEAL SPELLS LIKELY END REBUFF BY McCAIN · Delhi in India and Austin, Tex. Uber also voluntarily left China af-ter selling its business there to a rival, Didi Chuxing

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Page 1: TO HEALTH REPEAL SPELLS LIKELY END REBUFF BY McCAIN · Delhi in India and Austin, Tex. Uber also voluntarily left China af-ter selling its business there to a rival, Didi Chuxing

C M Y K Nxxx,2017-09-23,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+%!}!.!#!_

SAN JUAN, P.R. — Two days af-ter Hurricane Maria flattened thisisland of 3.5 million people, knock-ing out all its power and much ofits water, the rebuilding of theservices and structures neededfor people to resume some sem-blance of ordinary life was lookingmore complicated by the day.

All or part of three towns in thenorthwestern part of the island —Isabela, San Sebastián and Que-bradillas — were being evacuatedFriday because of fears aboutstructural damage to the nearbyGuajataca Dam. Close to 70,000people could be affected if the 90-year-old dam, which is 120 feethigh and can hold about 11 billiongallons of water, collapsed, saidPuerto Rico’s governor, RicardoRosselló.

And with everyone from thegovernor of Puerto Rico to themayor of San Juan predicting thatit could take four to six months toresume electrical service, peoplewere contemplating empty refrig-erators, campfire cooking,bathing in their own sweat andperhaps wrangling for fresh wateron an island accustomed to hardtimes but nothing like what the fu-ture may bring.

“It’s been hard to see infrastruc-ture deteriorate in Puerto Rico,but it has been harder to meet citi-

Ordinary Life‘Beyond Reach’

In Puerto RicoThis article is by Frances Robles,

Lizette Alvarez and Mary WilliamsWalsh.

Continued on Page A15

Education Secretary Betsy De-Vos on Friday scrapped a key partof government policy on campussexual assault, saying she wasgiving colleges more freedom tobalance the rights of accused stu-dents with the need to crack downon serious misconduct.

The move, which involved re-scinding two sets of guidelinesseveral years old, was part of oneof the fiercest battles in higher ed-ucation today, over whether theObama administration, in tryingto get colleges to take sexual as-sault more seriously, had gone toofar and created a system thattreated the accused unfairly.

The most controversial portionof the Obama-era guidelines haddemanded colleges use the loweststandard of proof, “preponder-ance of the evidence,” in decidingwhether a student is responsiblefor sexual assault, a verdict thatcan lead to discipline and even ex-pulsion. On Friday, the EducationDepartment said colleges werefree to abandon that standard andraise it to a standard known as“clear and convincing evidence.”

In announcing the change, thelatest in a widespread rollback ofObama-era rules by the Trump ad-ministration, the department is-sued a statement saying that theold rules “lacked basic elements offairness.”

DeVos, CitingFairness, EasesSex Attack Rule

By STEPHANIE SAULand KATE TAYLOR

Continued on Page A14

LONDON — Uber’s history ofscandals and disregard for localrules finally caught up with it onFriday, when London declined torenew the ride-hailing company’slicense to operate in the city, itslargest European market.

Transport for London, theagency that oversees the city’ssubways, buses and taxicabs, de-clared that Uber was not suffi-ciently “fit and proper.” The desig-nation carries significant weightin Britain.

The decision, which Uber plansto appeal, raises the possibilitythat other cities could be embold-ened to crack down on the com-

pany. Over the past few years,Uber has been temporarily forcedout of a few major markets, likeDelhi in India and Austin, Tex.Uber also voluntarily left China af-ter selling its business there to arival, Didi Chuxing. But it hadnever been told to leave a marketas important as London.

Losing the license to operate inLondon presents a major chal-

lenge for Uber’s new chief execu-tive, Dara Khosrowshahi, who re-placed its founder, Travis Kala-nick, in August. The company hasfaced an array of controversiesover the past year or so, includingcharges of insufficient back-ground checks on drivers, the useof software to evade the gaze ofthe authorities, and complaints of

Uber, Lamenting Cost of ‘Bad Reputation,’ Loses London License

By PRASHANT S. RAOand MIKE ISAAC

Continued on Page A10

REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Families sheltering outside in the Roma section of Mexico City, known for its hip restaurants butalso a vulnerability to earthquakes. Residents are asking if rebuilding is worth the risk. Page A4.

After a Quake, Thoughts of Starting Over

SEOUL, South Korea — NorthKorea has long cultivated an im-age of defiant belligerence, punc-tuating its propaganda and diplo-macy with colorful threats, insultsand bluster. But by addressingPresident Trump in a personalstatement on Friday, the nation’sleader, Kim Jong-un, has pushedhis government’s brinkmanshipto a new, potentially more perilouslevel.

In a statement written in thefirst person, published on thefront pages of state newspapersand read on national television,Mr. Kim called Mr. Trump a “men-tally deranged U.S. dotard” whohad “denied the existence of andinsulted me and my country infront of the eyes of the world.”

Mr. Kim vowed to take the“highest level of hard-line coun-termeasure in history.”

In a country where the leader isessentially portrayed as a god, Mr.Kim’s decision to respond person-ally to Mr. Trump’s speech to theUnited Nations General Assemblyand pledge reprisals escalated thestandoff over the North’s nuclearprogram in a way that neither henor his predecessors had done be-fore.

Though the statement made nomention of nuclear weapons, inthe context of a political systembuilt on a cult of personality, Mr.Kim’s intervention appeared tosharply reduce the possibility thathis government might retreat orcompromise, even in the face ofwar.

Mr. Kim condemned Mr.Trump’s threat to “totally de-

DICTATOR’S REPLYTURNS PERSONAL

Name-Calling EscalatesWith Level of Threats

By CHOE SANG-HUN

People in Pyongyang, North Korea, watched a broadcast on Friday of Kim Jong-un’s response to President Trump’s speech at the U.N.ED JONES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES

Continued on Page A9

WASHINGTON — The war ofwords between President Trumpand Kim Jong-un, North Korea’sleader, raised concerns on Fridaythat it could escalate into a newand more volatile phase as theWhite House weighed its nextsteps in response to a threat byPyongyang to conduct the world’sfirst atmospheric nuclear test in37 years.

Mr. Trump derided Mr. Kim as a“madman” on Friday, hours afterthe North Korean called him a“mentally deranged U.S. dotard,”the sort of name-calling exchangemost presidents have avoided.

North Korea’s accompanyingwarning that it might test a nucle-ar bomb over the Pacific Oceanadded fresh urgency to an admin-istration debate over options for apre-emptive strike if preparationsfor a launch are detected.

Mr. Trump’s long-distance con-frontation with “Rocket Man,” ashe earlier dubbed Mr. Kim, defieddiplomatic convention and tookthe penchant for reality-show in-

sults that he perfected on the cam-paign trail to the internationalarena — only with potential real-world consequences.

The president seemed to begambling that the same style thatput his domestic opponents on thedefensive could work on the diplo-matic front as well. But foreignpolicy veterans said the presidentwas playing a dangerous gamethat at the very least complicateshis own efforts to find a diplomaticresolution to the dispute overNorth Korea’s nuclear and missileprograms.

“Personal insults make com-promise more difficult,” said KoriSchake, a former national security

Amid Bluster, White House Ponders Next StepBy PETER BAKER

and DAVID E. SANGERA Debate Over Options

if the North KoreansPrepare to Launch

Continued on Page A8

WASHINGTON — SenatorJohn McCain of Arizona an-nounced on Friday that he wouldoppose the latest proposal to re-peal the Affordable Care Act, leav-ing Republican leaders with littlehope of succeeding in their last-ditch attempt to dismantle thehealth law and fulfill their long-standing promise to conservativevoters.

For Mr. McCain, it was a slightlyless dramatic reprise of his mid-dle-of-the-night thumbs-downthat killed the last repeal effort inJuly. This time, the senator, bat-tling brain cancer and confrontinghis best friend in the Senate, Lind-sey Graham of South Carolina, is-sued a statement saying that hecould not “in good conscience”support the proposal by SenatorsGraham and Bill Cassidy of Loui-siana.

“I believe we could do betterworking together, Republicansand Democrats, and have not yetreally tried,” Mr. McCain said.“Nor could I support it withoutknowing how much it will cost,how it will affect insurance premi-ums, and how many people will behelped or hurt by it.”

With two other Republican sen-ators likely to vote no, Mr. Mc-Cain’s opposition to the bill couldbe fatal. With Democrats united inopposition, Senate Republicanscan afford to lose only two of theirmembers.

Senator Rand Paul, Republicanof Kentucky, has said that hewould not vote for the bill because

it did not dismantle enough of theAffordable Care Act. And SenatorSusan Collins, Republican ofMaine, has expressed broad con-cerns about the legislation,strongly suggesting that she, too,would vote against it, just as shevoted no in July along with Mr.McCain and a third Republicansenator, Lisa Murkowski ofAlaska. Ms. Collins said on Fridaythat she was “leaning against” theproposal.

For months, Mr. McCain has la-mented a Senate legislativeprocess that avoided hearings orformal bill-drafting proceduresand excluded Democrats. On Fri-day, he said those tactics were in-tolerable.

“We should not be content topass health care legislation on aparty-line basis, as Democrats did

REBUFF BY McCAIN SPELLS LIKELY ENDTO HEALTH REPEAL

G.O.P.’s Slim Senate Majority Erodes —Deadline for Bill at End of Month

By THOMAS KAPLAN and ROBERT PEAR

John McCain criticized theSenate’s partisan approach.

TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A12

Donor anger was one reason forRepublicans’ zeal to take onhealth care repeal again, CarlHulse writes. Page A12.

Money Woes

An independent Kurdish state couldprove valuable to Israel in its continu-ing struggle with Iran. PAGE A10

Israel Allies With KurdsThe broader conversation about womenmade it to Milan when Miuccia Pradastarted thinking with her scissors.

Anger on the Runway

President Trump is imposing restric-tions on people from nations he saysare lax in vetting travelers. PAGE A11

Travel Ban to Be Replaced

Republican leaders are seeking proof oftheir optimistic assumptions about taxcuts’ impact on the deficit. PAGE A11

NATIONAL A11-15

Republicans vs. Economists

The amfAR charity is under scrutinyafter it allowed proceeds from an auc-tion to be used for a play produced byHarvey Weinstein. PAGE A18

NEW YORK A17-19

AIDS Fund-Raiser Tumult

The designer Alessandro Michele istrying to build his own brave new worldfor Gucci in Milan.

FASHION A16

Living in Gucci-Land

Mark Zuckerberg’s approach at Face-book is to fix things — like Russia’selection meddling via Facebook ads —after the fact, rather than to avert prob-lems, Farhad Manjoo writes. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

Zuckerberg’s Russia Reaction

Manchester City midfielder Ilkay Gun-dogan prepared for the worst when hewent down with a torn A.C.L. in Decem-ber. Now he just had to face it. PAGE D1

SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6

The Lonely Road Back

Jacob J. Lew PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

THIS WEEKEND

After meddling in the American andFrench elections, Russia seems to besitting out Germany’s contest. PAGE A6

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

No Sign of Interference

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,729 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2017

Today, sunshine and a few clouds, awarm day, high 86. Tonight, clear,warm, low 71. Tomorrow, sunshine,record-breaking warmth, high 90.Weather map appears on Page C8.

$2.50