T/24-by-section
An index of 121 articles and 4 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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Kamala Harris Suggests She Is Considering Another Presidential Run.
Ms. Harris, in an interview with the BBC, gave her strongest indication yet that she was thinking about making another bid for the Oval Office.
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Donor Who Gave $130 Million to Pay Troops Is Reclusive Heir to Mellon Fortune.
Timothy Mellon is a billionaire and a major financial backer of President Trump.
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Trump’s Plans for the East Wing Keep Changing. Here’s a Look.
Here’s what we know about Mr. Trump’s plans to remodel the torn-down East Wing.
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How Trump Is Getting Some Workers Paid Despite the Shutdown.
President Trump has been reprogramming funds to pay workers during the shutdown who are essential to his political agenda. Tony Romm, a New York Times reporter covering economic policy, explains the moves, and the questions they’ve raised.
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Keeping the House Absent, Johnson Marginalizes Congress and Himself.
The speaker’s decision to hold the House in an indefinite hiatus during the shutdown is his latest move to diminish the role of the legislative branch — and his own post.
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An Obamacare Hot Spot Where Price Spikes Pose an Outsized Threat.
South Florida will feel some of the most intense reverberations if Congress allows the extra insurance subsidies it approved during the pandemic to expire.
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As Vance Takes on a Forceful New Role, His Positions Are Shifting.
Vice President JD Vance has found himself defending or promoting positions that he once opposed, even as recently as the campaign.
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Trump Administration Plans a Shake-Up at ICE to Speed Deportations.
The preliminary plan stems from frustration over the pace of the deportations, which are lagging behind President Trump’s demands.
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Immigration Crackdown Spreads Through Chicago, Including Wealthy Neighborhoods.
Federal agents detained a man on the city’s North Side on Friday, and residents emerged from their homes, yelling and blowing whistles.
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Mamdani Says His Rivals Are Pushing Hate in Final Days of N.Y.C. Mayoral Election.
Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani spoke about the impact of Islamophobia on his family during a campaign event in the Bronx. At a mayoral debate earlier this week, his opponent Curtis Sliwa had accused him of supporting “global jihad.”
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Justice Department Will Monitor Elections in California and New Jersey.
The Trump administration said that monitors will watch polling in two states, led by Democrats, where key races or issues are on the ballot.
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Trump Leaves Behind a Reeling Washington to Chase a Deal With China.
President Trump is embarking on a six-day diplomatic tour of Asia, testing his role as a statesman and negotiator as he pursues a trade deal with Beijing.
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Bannon Claims ‘There Is a Plan’ for Trump to Run for a Third Term.
The claim comes after months of President Trump toying with the idea, insisting that he is “not joking” about defying a constitutionally-mandated term limit.
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Senior Border Patrol Official Throws Tear Gas at Chicago Residents.
Gregory Bovino, a senior Border Patrol official, threw a tear gas canister at a large group of Chicago residents on Thursday. Tensions escalated after officials arrested a security guard in a mall parking lot.
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D.C. Seeks to Block National Guard Deployment in Court.
During a hearing on Friday, lawyers told a judge that National Guard troops sent from Republican-led states had been conducting conduct law enforcement work.
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Trump Administration Won’t Use Emergency Funds for Food Stamps During Shutdown.
The Agriculture Department said that it would not use the funds to cover benefits in November, imperiling a program 42 million people use to pay for groceries.
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Trump Is Putting Election Deniers in Charge of Elections.
Now that he is back in the White House, he has made some of them more powerful than ever.
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Trump Ends Trade Talks with Canada After Anti-Tariff TV Ad Airs.
An ad, bought by the province of Ontario, sent an anti-tariff message using sound bites from an address President Ronald Reagan made decades ago. President Trump claimed the ad was “fraud” and terminated trade talks with Canada.
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What Is the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, and Why Is It Heading to Latin America?
The Pentagon is sending the Ford Carrier Strike Group, with several warships and thousands of sailors, to the region as the Trump administration ramps up attacks on boats it claims are carrying drugs.
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Jury Awards $42 Million in Death of Inmate at Private Jail in Louisiana.
Erie Moore, a retired millworker and father of three, died in 2015, a month after guards slammed him headfirst to the floor at the Richwood Correctional Center, lawyers for his family said.
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Trump’s Son Is Poised to Profit From Pentagon Drone Proposal.
A small company that has been manufacturing motors domestically for only a few weeks and has Donald Trump Jr. as an adviser won a parts order from the Army.
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Lengthy Execution by Nitrogen Gas in Alabama Renews Concerns Over Method.
Anthony Boyd was the eighth person executed by nitrogen gas since Alabama began using the method last year. His execution came over the strenuous objection of three liberal Supreme Court justices.
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Food Banks Offer Groceries for Furloughed Federal Workers.
In the Washington region, the Capital Area Food Bank is providing food distribution specifically for federal workers and contractors who are going without pay.
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Trump to Use $130 Million Donation to Help Pay Troops.
It is not clear how far the gift will go toward covering the salaries of the nation’s 1.3 million troops.
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Trump to Investigate Whether China Abided by 2020 Trade Deal.
The administration announced its trade investigation on Friday, ahead of a summit between U.S. and Chinese leaders.
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Federal Surge Called Off Across the Bay Area, Officials Confirm.
President Trump said on Thursday that he had called off the deployment in San Francisco. Two federal officials said on Friday that the action applied across the region.
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Trump Officials Float New Plan for Abrego Garcia: Send Him to Liberia.
The proposal was the latest twist in a byzantine saga that has transformed the Salvadoran migrant into one of the best-known symbols of President Trump’s aggressive deportation agenda.
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Amid the Rubble of the East Wing, Lessons in How Trump Exercises Power.
From the first day of his second term, President Trump has taken an ends-justify-the-means approach to his presidency.
World
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Papal Permission for Latin Mass in St. Peter’s Gives Traditionalists Hope.
Pope Francis greatly limited the use of the traditional Latin Mass, believing it sowed division. Traditionalist Catholics are hoping Pope Leo charts a different path.
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‘It’s Got to Be an Inside Job’: Jewelry Thieves Weigh In on Louvre Heist.
Was it the heist of the century or a master class in incompetence by the museum? Some prominent former jewelry thieves have plenty to say about the audacious break-in at the Louvre.
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Facing Lost Trade With the U.S., Carney Heads to Asia.
The prime minister will attend two meetings and visit three countries as part of his plan to wean Canada off its dependence on the U.S.
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Trump’s Russia Sanctions Shift War Dynamics to the Energy Front.
As winter slows the pace of battlefield combat, Moscow and Kyiv are betting on campaigns against each other’s energy assets to break a stalemate in the conflict.
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Trump Is All In on Milei. What About Argentines?
President Javier Milei of Argentina has earned U.S. support, but he faces a critical legislative election at home amid voter anger over job losses and corruption scandals.
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Hold the Fish? A Brazilian Chef Chafes at a Menu Request for a Prince’s Event.
He was asked to cater a climate event for Prince William and 700 guests. But for a renowned chef who wanted to showcase the Amazon’s culinary tradition, it was like “asking Iron Maiden to play jazz.”
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Where Trump Is Headed in Asia, and What Each Country Wants From Him.
From Kuala Lumpur to Gyeongju, President Trump is casting himself as a deal-maker and peace negotiator, while a wary region looks for tariff relief and steadier ties.
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Presidents Are Limited to Two Terms. He’s Running for His Fourth.
The main opposition candidates in the Ivory Coast’s presidential election have been barred from the race. Critics say the vote has been rigged.
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Asia, Caught in the Middle, Faces Trump and Xi’s Tug of War.
President Trump’s visit shows how the United States and China are vying for influence in Asia over trade, technology and the fate of Taiwan.
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‘You Love It or You Hate It’: Pumpkin Spice Lattes Divide Europe.
One of America’s favorite fall drinks shows up in Brussels and Antwerp, but rarely in Paris and Rome. It has yet to reach the ubiquity — or the sugar content — of its stateside counterpart.
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U.S. Sanctions Colombia’s Leader, One of President Trump’s Harshest Critics.
The United States Treasury Department accused President Gustavo Petro of allowing drug trafficking to flourish.
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A Missing Picasso Is Found, and a Small Spanish Town Loses Its Air of Mystery.
For a brief moment, the puzzle of what had happened to Pablo Picasso’s “Still Life With Guitar” infected Deifontes with caper fever.
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The Man at the Center of Trump’s $20 Billion Lifeline.
$20 billion bailout for Argentina comes with strings attached — namely, that the ruling party of his ally, President Javier Milei of Argentina, must prevail in the country’s legislative elections this month. Katrin Bennhold and Emma Bubola, reporters at The New York Times, talk about Mr. Milei, a polarizing figure who promised to revolutionize Argentina.
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British Drug Dealer Is Sentenced for Pro-Russian Attack Plots.
Dylan Earl recruited people to set fire to two London warehouses containing aid bound for Ukraine, the police said. He was also convicted of plotting against a dissident Russian restaurant owner.
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In a First for a Woman in France, Life Sentence Imposed for Murder of Schoolgirl.
Dahbia Benkired, an Algerian woman, was convicted of raping and killing 12-year-old Lola Daviet, in a case that outraged France and raised questions about the deportation of migrants.
New York
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‘See You in 4 Years’: Trump Drives Canadians Away From Western New York.
The presence of Canadian visitors in Western New York has dropped off since the start of the year following tensions between Washington and Ottawa.
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New York Is the Center of Basketball. And Basketball Betting Scandals.
Point shaving. Gambling rings. Illegal poker games. Prosecutors in New York have seen it all.
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How Jordi Fernández, the Brooklyn Nets Coach, Spends an N.B.A. Off Day.
Mr. Fernández starts game days with meditation. But when he’s off, his children keep him running all across the city.
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In Letitia James Case, Some Black Women See Their Own Family Sacrifices.
The federal indictment of New York’s attorney general centers on a home she purchased for a relative. It is an act that rings deeply familiar to many.
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Adams Eyes a Reality TV Star Who Could Help Block a Mamdani Rent Freeze.
Mayor Eric Adams has only weeks left in office, but he can use them to appoint people with the ability to shape policy beyond his tenure.
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Mamdani Says Rivals Are Pushing Hate as Mayor’s Race Enters Last Stretch.
Zohran Mamdani’s opponents, Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa, denied accusations that they are stoking Islamophobia with their rhetoric and actions.
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Texas Cheat ’Em? U.S. Details How Mob Lured High Rollers Into Poker Trap.
A Manhattan apartment was at the center of a Mafia-run ring that used former N.B.A. players as bait and technology to read cards, prosecutors say.
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Hakeem Jeffries Gives Mamdani Last-Minute Endorsement for N.Y.C. Mayor.
Mr. Jeffries, the House minority leader, had resisted backing Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee, for months. But his support provides a late boost.
Business
Obituaries
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Sirikit, Glamorous Former Queen of Thailand Who Wielded Power, Dies at 93.
As the wife of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, she supported local causes and traveled the world, charming government leaders and the public.
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Barbara Gips, Creator of Memorable Movie Catchphrases, Dies at 89.
Her best-known tagline was also her first to be published, written for “Alien”: “In space no one can hear you scream.”
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Nebojsa Pavkovic, Yugoslav General Convicted of War Crimes, Dies at 79.
Found guilty in 2009, he had been serving a 22-year sentence but was released for health reasons at the request of the Serbian government.
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J. William Middendorf II, 81, Dies; Navy Secretary and Musical Diplomat.
A G.O.P. fund-raiser, he was the Navy chief under Gerald R. Ford and held ambassadorships in the 1970s and ’80s. He gained notice for his classical music compositions.
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