1
The clay ves- sels and other objects that are part of a show now underway at the Metropolitan Museum of Art “come at you from all sides,” Roberta Smith writes. Above, “Ewer No. 50” by John Gill from 1990. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Ceramic Treasures U(D54G1D)y+$!,!=!?!# WASHINGTON — The Justice Department subpoenaed Apple for information in February 2018 about an account that belonged to Donald F. McGahn II, President Donald J. Trump’s White House counsel at the time, and barred the company from telling him about it, according to two people briefed on the matter. Apple told Mr. McGahn about the subpoena last month, said one of the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter. Mr. McGahn’s wife also received a similar notice from Apple, the person said. It is not clear what F.B.I. agents were investigating, whether Mr. McGahn was their specific focus or whether he was swept up in a larger net because he had commu- nicated with someone who was under scrutiny. As the top lawyer for the 2016 Trump campaign and then the White House counsel, Mr. McGahn was in contact with nu- merous people who may have drawn attention either as part of the Russia investigation or a later leak inquiry. Still, the disclosure that agents had collected data of a sitting Trump’s Justice Dept. Obtained Apple Data on His Chief Counsel By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and CHARLIE SAVAGE Continued on Page A21 JERUSALEM — The long and divisive reign of Benjamin Netan- yahu, the dominant Israeli poli- tician of the past generation, offi- cially ended on Sunday night, at least for the time being, as the country’s Parliament gave its vote of confidence to a precarious co- alition government stitched to- gether by widely disparate anti- Netanyahu forces. Naftali Bennett, a 49-year-old former aide to Mr. Netanyahu who opposes a Palestinian state and is considered to the right of his old ally, replaced him as prime min- ister after winning by just a single vote. Yair Lapid, a centrist leader and the new foreign minister, is set to take Mr. Bennett’s place af- ter two years, if their government can hold together that long. They lead a fragile eight-party alliance ranging from far left to hard right, from secular to reli- gious, that few expect to last a full term and many consider both the embodiment of the rich diversity of Israeli society but also the epit- ome of its political disarray. Members of the bloc agree on little but a desire to oust Mr. Ne- tanyahu, the longest-serving leader in the country’s history, and the need to end a lengthy po- litical gridlock that produced four elections in two years; left Israel without a stable government or a state budget; and formed the backdrop to a surge in interethnic mob violence between Jewish and Arab citizens during the recent 11- day conflict with Hamas. “We stopped the train before the abyss,” Mr. Bennett said in a speech to Parliament on Sunday. “The time has come for different leaders, from all parts of the peo- ple, to stop — to stop this mad- ness.” Mr. Netanyahu’s departure marks the end of a tenure in which FRAGILE COALITION OUSTS NETANYAHU AS PRIME MINISTER Ex-Aide Wins Office in 60-to-59 Vote By PATRICK KINGSLEY and RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA Benjamin Netanyahu, left, became an opposition leader Sunday as Naftali Bennett, right, took control as Israel’s prime minister. RONEN ZVULUN/REUTERS Continued on Page A9 JERUSALEM — He came to power like some conqueror from a distant land called Philadelphia. Educated in the United States, speaking flawless East Coast English, warning in pungent sound bites about the threats posed by Islamic terrorism and a nuclear Iran, the Benjamin Netan- yahu who stormed into Israeli politics in the 1990s was like no other politician the country had seen. Before long, he would capture the prime minister’s office, lose it, then seize it again a decade later, becoming Israel’s longest-serving leader and inspiring such admira- tion that supporters likened him to the biblical King David. His po- litical agility got him out of so many tight spots that even his de- tractors called him a magician. He presided over an extraordi- nary economic turnaround, kept the perennially embattled country out of major wars and kept casu- alty tolls to historic lows. He feuded with Democratic Ameri- can presidents, then capitalized on a symbiosis with the Trump ad- ministration to cement historic gains, including the opening of a U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem. He compartmentalized the Pal- estinian conflict, snubbing the endless peace talks that had stymied his predecessors, unilat- erally expanding the Jewish pres- ence in the occupied West Bank and treating Palestinians largely as a security threat to be con- tained. While the chance for a lasting peace with the Palestinians — the singular achievement that could give Israelis long-term stability and worldwide acceptance — re- ceded on his watch, he struck wa- tershed accords with four Arab countries that had long shunned Israel in solidarity with the Pales- tinians. Those agreements over- Record Term at Top Reshaped Israel Continued on Page A8 New York City’s leaders have been vexed for decades by a prob- lem that has helped turn the city into a worldwide symbol of in- equality: As years of prosperity gave rise to soaring luxury apart- ment towers, public housing crumbled and affordable neigh- borhoods vanished. The current mayor, Bill de Bla- sio, had made addressing the city’s housing crisis an imperative during his tenure. But now, the Democratic candidates vying to succeed him next year are con- fronting a crisis that may be even more severe as a result of the pan- demic. All the leading candidates agree that housing is a top issue with huge implications for New York’s future, and each has offered a sweeping plan to tackle the prob- lem. While their proposals overlap in many ways — every contender wants to spend more on public housing, for example — the candi- dates differ in the solutions and strategies they emphasize most. Kathryn Garcia, a former sani- tation commissioner, and Ray- mond J. McGuire, a former Wall Street executive, have made the creation of tens of thousands of new homes for the poorest New As Housing Crisis Grips New York, Mayoral Rivals Look to Fix It By MIHIR ZAVERI Post-Pandemic Priority as Evictions Loom Continued on Page A19 KARSTEN MORAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show relocated. The competitors were fine with it. Pages D4-5. They Had Their Day DEAL ON CLIMATE The G7 nations agreed to cut collective emissions in half by 2030. PAGE A15 VICTOR J. BLUE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Reflecting on a memorial at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn as deaths from the virus in the United States approach a milestone. 600,000 Just Like You RICHMOND, Va. — Alonzo Jones, a Black mayor in Southern Virginia, was used to the playbook of a white politician facing allega- tions of racism. So when Gov. Ralph Northam visited his town after a racist pho- tograph was discovered on the governor’s medical school year- book page, Mr. Jones expected more of the same: a requisite visit to a Black church, a news confer- ence with Black allies, and prom- ises of growth moving forward. Even so, Mr. Jones agreed to a private meeting. “What can we do for you?” he recalled asking Mr. Northam. “What can I do for you?” the governor shot back. And soon, to Mr. Jones’s sur- prise, Mr. Northam began making the kinds of statewide changes that the mayor suggested he should do. On a national level, Mr. Northam may forever be en- shrined as the Democrat who de- fied calls to resign in the face of unquestionable racism — a photo- graph on his yearbook page that showed one man in blackface and another in a Ku Klux Klan cos- tume. But among Black political leaders and elected officials in Vir- ginia, he is set to leave office with another legacy: becoming the most racially progressive gover- nor in the state’s history, whose fo- cus on uplifting Black communi- ties since the 2019 scandal will have a tangible and lasting effect. Mr. Northam’s arc, from politi- cal pariah denounced by nearly every national Democrat to a pop- ular incumbent with support from Black elected officials and even progressive activists, is a complex story of personal growth and polit- ical pressure, a testament to how crisis can also provide opportuni- ty. However, it would not have Result of Governor’s Blackface Scandal: Progress By ASTEAD W. HERNDON Black Virginians Took Northam Back, and Both Saw Benefits Continued on Page A20 BRUSSELS — President Biden and fellow Western leaders issued a confrontational declaration about Russian and Chinese gov- ernment behavior on Sunday, cas- tigating Beijing over its internal repression, vowing to investigate the pandemic’s origins, and exco- riating Moscow for using nerve agents and cyberweapons. Concluding the first in-person summit meeting since the out- break of the coronavirus pan- demic, the leaders tried to present a unified front against a range of threats. But they disagreed about crucial issues, from timelines for halting the burning of coal to com- mitting tens or hundreds of bil- lions of dollars in aid to challenge Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, China’s overseas investment and lending push. Still, as they left Cornwall, where they had met at a resort overlooking rocky outcroppings in England’s far west, almost all the participants welcomed a new tone as they began to repair the breaches from four years of deal- ing with Mr. Biden’s predecessor, Donald J. Trump. “It is great to have a U.S. presi- dent who’s part of the club and very willing to cooperate,’’ Presi- dent Emmanuel Macron of France said after meeting Mr. Biden — praise that many Americans will welcome but those who embrace Mr. Trump’s “America First” worldview might consider a be- trayal of U.S. interests. Though Rifts Persist, Unity Returns to G7 By DAVID E. SANGER and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A15 By DAVID M. HALBFINGER At Starbucks locations across the country, customers and em- ployees have com- plained about short- ages of key ingredi- ents for drinks, break- fast foods, and even cups, lids and straws. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-5 No Ingredients, Big Problems Novak Djokovic, above, rallied from two sets down to defeat Stefanos Tsitsipas in the French Open men’s final. PAGE D1 SPORTSMONDAY D1-8 A Comeback Triumph City leaders eager to rejuvenate down- town economies have lifted restrictions. But rising violent crime has kept resi- dents and tourists at home. PAGE A16 NATIONAL A16-21 Crime Soars as Virus Retreats With Turkey’s economy in crisis, the country’s strongman president is now trying to placate Western leaders rather than antagonize them. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-15 Erdogan Softens His Stance Ezra Klein PAGE A22 OPINION A22-23 Mudcat Grant, the American League’s first Black 20-game winner, was also an author about Black pitchers and sang in nightclubs. He was 85. PAGE B6 OBITUARIES B6-7 Twins Hurler in ’65 Series All over Maine, residents are finding poisonous browntail moths and the skin rashes that they cause. PAGE A21 A Plague of Caterpillars The Brooklyn Liberation march was held against the backdrop of a wave of violence that disproportionately affects Black transgender women. PAGE A18 Trans Rally Draws Thousands Alex Harrison, sexually abused by his high school tennis coach, helps others get justice as a prosecutor. PAGE D1 From Victim to Protector Companies are surveying and offering rewards to find out how many of their employees are vaccinated. PAGE B1 What’s Your Status? Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 59,089 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 14, 2021 Today, partly sunny, showers early, spotty afternoon thunderstorms, high 71. Tonight, rain, low 65. Tomor- row, morning showers, high 79. Weather map appears on Page B8. $3.00

AS PRIME MINISTER OUSTS NETANYAHU FRAGILE COALITION · 2021-06-14  · Though Rifts Persist, Unity Returns to G7 By DAVID E. SANGER and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A15 By DAVID

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Page 1: AS PRIME MINISTER OUSTS NETANYAHU FRAGILE COALITION · 2021-06-14  · Though Rifts Persist, Unity Returns to G7 By DAVID E. SANGER and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A15 By DAVID

The clay ves-sels and otherobjects thatare part of ashow nowunderway at theMetropolitanMuseum of Art“come at you fromall sides,” RobertaSmith writes. Above, “Ewer No. 50”by John Gill from 1990. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Ceramic Treasures

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-06-14,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+$!,!=!?!#

WASHINGTON — The JusticeDepartment subpoenaed Applefor information in February 2018about an account that belonged toDonald F. McGahn II, PresidentDonald J. Trump’s White Housecounsel at the time, and barredthe company from telling himabout it, according to two peoplebriefed on the matter.

Apple told Mr. McGahn aboutthe subpoena last month, said oneof the people, who spoke on thecondition of anonymity to discussthe matter. Mr. McGahn’s wifealso received a similar notice fromApple, the person said.

It is not clear what F.B.I. agentswere investigating, whether Mr.McGahn was their specific focusor whether he was swept up in alarger net because he had commu-nicated with someone who wasunder scrutiny. As the top lawyerfor the 2016 Trump campaign andthen the White House counsel, Mr.McGahn was in contact with nu-merous people who may havedrawn attention either as part ofthe Russia investigation or a laterleak inquiry.

Still, the disclosure that agentshad collected data of a sitting

Trump’s Justice Dept. ObtainedApple Data on His Chief Counsel

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and CHARLIE SAVAGE

Continued on Page A21

JERUSALEM — The long anddivisive reign of Benjamin Netan-yahu, the dominant Israeli poli-tician of the past generation, offi-cially ended on Sunday night, atleast for the time being, as thecountry’s Parliament gave its voteof confidence to a precarious co-alition government stitched to-gether by widely disparate anti-Netanyahu forces.

Naftali Bennett, a 49-year-oldformer aide to Mr. Netanyahu whoopposes a Palestinian state and isconsidered to the right of his oldally, replaced him as prime min-ister after winning by just a singlevote. Yair Lapid, a centrist leaderand the new foreign minister, isset to take Mr. Bennett’s place af-ter two years, if their governmentcan hold together that long.

They lead a fragile eight-partyalliance ranging from far left tohard right, from secular to reli-gious, that few expect to last a fullterm and many consider both theembodiment of the rich diversityof Israeli society but also the epit-ome of its political disarray.

Members of the bloc agree onlittle but a desire to oust Mr. Ne-tanyahu, the longest-servingleader in the country’s history,and the need to end a lengthy po-litical gridlock that produced fourelections in two years; left Israelwithout a stable government or astate budget; and formed thebackdrop to a surge in interethnicmob violence between Jewish andArab citizens during the recent 11-day conflict with Hamas.

“We stopped the train beforethe abyss,” Mr. Bennett said in aspeech to Parliament on Sunday.“The time has come for differentleaders, from all parts of the peo-ple, to stop — to stop this mad-ness.”

Mr. Netanyahu’s departuremarks the end of a tenure in which

FRAGILE COALITIONOUSTS NETANYAHUAS PRIME MINISTER

Ex-Aide Wins Officein 60-to-59 Vote

By PATRICK KINGSLEYand RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA

Benjamin Netanyahu, left, became an opposition leader Sundayas Naftali Bennett, right, took control as Israel’s prime minister.

RONEN ZVULUN/REUTERS

Continued on Page A9

JERUSALEM — He came topower like some conqueror from adistant land called Philadelphia.

Educated in the United States,speaking flawless East CoastEnglish, warning in pungentsound bites about the threatsposed by Islamic terrorism and anuclear Iran, the Benjamin Netan-yahu who stormed into Israelipolitics in the 1990s was like noother politician the country hadseen.

Before long, he would capturethe prime minister’s office, lose it,then seize it again a decade later,becoming Israel’s longest-servingleader and inspiring such admira-tion that supporters likened himto the biblical King David. His po-litical agility got him out of somany tight spots that even his de-tractors called him a magician.

He presided over an extraordi-nary economic turnaround, keptthe perennially embattled countryout of major wars and kept casu-alty tolls to historic lows. Hefeuded with Democratic Ameri-can presidents, then capitalizedon a symbiosis with the Trump ad-ministration to cement historicgains, including the opening of aU.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.

He compartmentalized the Pal-estinian conflict, snubbing theendless peace talks that hadstymied his predecessors, unilat-erally expanding the Jewish pres-ence in the occupied West Bankand treating Palestinians largelyas a security threat to be con-tained.

While the chance for a lastingpeace with the Palestinians — thesingular achievement that couldgive Israelis long-term stabilityand worldwide acceptance — re-ceded on his watch, he struck wa-tershed accords with four Arabcountries that had long shunnedIsrael in solidarity with the Pales-tinians. Those agreements over-

Record Term at TopReshaped Israel

Continued on Page A8

New York City’s leaders havebeen vexed for decades by a prob-lem that has helped turn the cityinto a worldwide symbol of in-equality: As years of prosperitygave rise to soaring luxury apart-ment towers, public housingcrumbled and affordable neigh-borhoods vanished.

The current mayor, Bill de Bla-sio, had made addressing thecity’s housing crisis an imperativeduring his tenure. But now, theDemocratic candidates vying tosucceed him next year are con-fronting a crisis that may be evenmore severe as a result of the pan-demic.

All the leading candidates agreethat housing is a top issue with

huge implications for New York’sfuture, and each has offered asweeping plan to tackle the prob-lem. While their proposals overlapin many ways — every contender

wants to spend more on publichousing, for example — the candi-dates differ in the solutions andstrategies they emphasize most.

Kathryn Garcia, a former sani-tation commissioner, and Ray-mond J. McGuire, a former WallStreet executive, have made thecreation of tens of thousands ofnew homes for the poorest New

As Housing Crisis Grips New York, Mayoral Rivals Look to Fix ItBy MIHIR ZAVERI Post-Pandemic Priority

as Evictions Loom

Continued on Page A19

KARSTEN MORAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show relocated. The competitors were fine with it. Pages D4-5.They Had Their Day DEAL ON CLIMATE The G7 nations

agreed to cut collective emissionsin half by 2030. PAGE A15

VICTOR J. BLUE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Reflecting on a memorial at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn as deaths from the virus in the United States approach a milestone.600,000 Just Like You

RICHMOND, Va. — AlonzoJones, a Black mayor in SouthernVirginia, was used to the playbookof a white politician facing allega-tions of racism.

So when Gov. Ralph Northamvisited his town after a racist pho-tograph was discovered on thegovernor’s medical school year-book page, Mr. Jones expectedmore of the same: a requisite visitto a Black church, a news confer-ence with Black allies, and prom-ises of growth moving forward.

Even so, Mr. Jones agreed to aprivate meeting. “What can we dofor you?” he recalled asking Mr.Northam.

“What can I do for you?” the

governor shot back.And soon, to Mr. Jones’s sur-

prise, Mr. Northam began makingthe kinds of statewide changesthat the mayor suggested heshould do.

On a national level, Mr.Northam may forever be en-shrined as the Democrat who de-fied calls to resign in the face ofunquestionable racism — a photo-graph on his yearbook page thatshowed one man in blackface and

another in a Ku Klux Klan cos-tume. But among Black politicalleaders and elected officials in Vir-ginia, he is set to leave office withanother legacy: becoming themost racially progressive gover-nor in the state’s history, whose fo-cus on uplifting Black communi-ties since the 2019 scandal willhave a tangible and lasting effect.

Mr. Northam’s arc, from politi-cal pariah denounced by nearlyevery national Democrat to a pop-ular incumbent with support fromBlack elected officials and evenprogressive activists, is a complexstory of personal growth and polit-ical pressure, a testament to howcrisis can also provide opportuni-ty. However, it would not have

Result of Governor’s Blackface Scandal: ProgressBy ASTEAD W. HERNDON Black Virginians Took

Northam Back, andBoth Saw Benefits

Continued on Page A20

BRUSSELS — President Bidenand fellow Western leaders issueda confrontational declarationabout Russian and Chinese gov-ernment behavior on Sunday, cas-tigating Beijing over its internalrepression, vowing to investigatethe pandemic’s origins, and exco-riating Moscow for using nerveagents and cyberweapons.

Concluding the first in-personsummit meeting since the out-break of the coronavirus pan-demic, the leaders tried to presenta unified front against a range ofthreats. But they disagreed aboutcrucial issues, from timelines forhalting the burning of coal to com-mitting tens or hundreds of bil-lions of dollars in aid to challengeBeijing’s Belt and Road Initiative,China’s overseas investment andlending push.

Still, as they left Cornwall,where they had met at a resortoverlooking rocky outcroppingsin England’s far west, almost allthe participants welcomed a newtone as they began to repair thebreaches from four years of deal-ing with Mr. Biden’s predecessor,Donald J. Trump.

“It is great to have a U.S. presi-dent who’s part of the club andvery willing to cooperate,’’ Presi-dent Emmanuel Macron of Francesaid after meeting Mr. Biden —praise that many Americans willwelcome but those who embraceMr. Trump’s “America First”worldview might consider a be-trayal of U.S. interests.

Though RiftsPersist, UnityReturns to G7

By DAVID E. SANGERand MICHAEL D. SHEAR

Continued on Page A15

By DAVID M. HALBFINGER

At Starbucks locationsacross the country,customers and em-ployees have com-plained about short-ages of key ingredi-ents for drinks, break-fast foods, and evencups, lids and straws.

PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-5

No Ingredients, Big Problems

Novak Djokovic, above, rallied from twosets down to defeat Stefanos Tsitsipasin the French Open men’s final. PAGE D1

SPORTSMONDAY D1-8

A Comeback Triumph

City leaders eager to rejuvenate down-town economies have lifted restrictions.But rising violent crime has kept resi-dents and tourists at home. PAGE A16

NATIONAL A16-21

Crime Soars as Virus RetreatsWith Turkey’s economy in crisis, thecountry’s strongman president is nowtrying to placate Western leadersrather than antagonize them. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-15

Erdogan Softens His Stance

Ezra Klein PAGE A22

OPINION A22-23

Mudcat Grant, the American League’sfirst Black 20-game winner, was also anauthor about Black pitchers and sang innightclubs. He was 85. PAGE B6

OBITUARIES B6-7

Twins Hurler in ’65 Series

All over Maine, residents are findingpoisonous browntail moths and the skinrashes that they cause. PAGE A21

A Plague of Caterpillars

The Brooklyn Liberation march washeld against the backdrop of a wave ofviolence that disproportionately affectsBlack transgender women. PAGE A18

Trans Rally Draws Thousands

Alex Harrison, sexually abused by hishigh school tennis coach, helps othersget justice as a prosecutor. PAGE D1

From Victim to ProtectorCompanies are surveying and offeringrewards to find out how many of theiremployees are vaccinated. PAGE B1

What’s Your Status?

Late Edition

VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 59,089 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 14, 2021

Today, partly sunny, showers early,spotty afternoon thunderstorms,high 71. Tonight, rain, low 65. Tomor-row, morning showers, high 79.Weather map appears on Page B8.

$3.00