T/past-week
An index of 1,235 articles and 29 interactives published over the last week by NYT.
U.S.
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Harvard Adopts a Definition of Antisemitism for Discipline Cases.
Many universities have been reluctant to embrace a definition that, among other things, considers some criticisms of Israel as antisemitic. The university’s decision was part of a lawsuit settlement.
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4 Charged in String of Burglaries at Luxury Homes in Ohio.
The defendants, all from Chile, are accused of participating in a South American crime group targeting multimillion-dollar homes, the authorities said. One of them appeared to belong to the Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow.
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Undocumented Women Ask: Will My Unborn Child Be a Citizen?
President Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship is already facing lawsuits, but that has been little comfort to women who expect to give birth after the order goes into effect.
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Fire Chief Is Fatally Shot After Stopping to Help Driver Who Struck Deer.
James Cauthen was killed on Sunday as he and the driver he was assisting came under fire while seeking help in Stroud, Ala., the authorities said. A man was charged with murder.
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Winds relax in Southern California, but wildfire risk remains.
Bone-dry air, warm temperatures and another round of winds are all in the forecast this week for Los Angeles and Ventura Counties.
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L.A. faces a new threat: Rain, and maybe floods laden with ash and debris.
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In Letter to U.N., Panama Rejects Trump’s Remarks.
On Monday, President Trump said of the Panama Canal, “We’re taking it back.” The letter from Panama cited articles of the U.N. charter that prohibit member states from using threats and force.
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The Look, and Scent, of the Surreal.
Jennifer Medina, a political reporter who lives in Los Angeles, writes about a reporting trip that took her to both the Palisades and Eaton fire zones.
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22 States Sue To Block End To Citizenship As Birthright.
The lawsuit to block the president’s executive order is the first salvo in what is likely to be a long-running legal fight over immigration policy.
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Justices Say Lurid Evidence Tainted Murder Trial of Woman on Death Row.
The court instructed an appeals court to reconsider whether lurid evidence tainted the trial of Brenda Andrew, the only woman on Oklahoma’s death row.
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3 Small Fires Break Out in San Diego Area, Forcing Evacuations.
The blazes ignited in San Diego County early Tuesday, keeping Southern California on edge as dangerous fire conditions persisted.
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Prospect of an Immigration Crackdown Leaves Some Chicago Neighborhoods Bracing.
Activists are holding meetings to advise people about their legal rights and families have been drafting powers of attorney.
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What 7 Americans Thought About Trump’s Inauguration Speech.
We’ll be regularly checking in with this group of people during President Trump’s first 100 days in office. Here’s what they thought on Day 1.
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Hegseth’s Nomination Advances on Party Lines.
Republicans moved in private over the objections of Democrats. A last-minute bid to delay the vote failed.
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Border Patrol Agent Is Killed in Vermont Shooting.
Officials said the agent was shot on Interstate 91, which was closed for several hours near the border with Canada.
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In Car-Loving Los Angeles, the Charred Remains of Vehicles Cut Deep.
For many residents, a set of wheels is an extension of their home, a key to their income or a source of priceless memories.
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Donald Trump’s Second Inaugural Speech, Annotated.
In the first remarks of his second term, President Trump painted a grim portrait of the country while declaring that “the golden age of America begins right now.”
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L.A. officials say they are better prepared for dangerous winds.
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As dangerous winds resume, L.A. officials say they are prepared.
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Scarred, but Still Standing.
Eli Saslow, a Times writer at large, reflects on visiting relatives who were forced to evacuate, and the little kindnesses everywhere.
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Their Homes Are Intact, but the Fire Damage Inside Is Unbearable.
Some evacuees from the Eaton fire have been allowed back into their homes, only to find that smoke and ash have made living there impossible for now.
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Living Through the Fires, and Covering Them.
New York Times reporters have been writing personal portraits about the fires in the California Today newsletter. Here is a collection of their dispatches on what the disaster means to them, and to Los Angeles.
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Twelve Dudes and a Hype Tunnel: Scenes from the ‘Super Bowl for Excel Nerds’
At the Microsoft Excel World Championship in Las Vegas, there was stardust in the air as 12 finance guys vied to be crowned the world’s best spreadsheeter.
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Highlights From the Microsoft Excel World Championship.
The event’s organizer hopes to turn competitive Excel into a popular e-sport where pros compete for million-dollar prizes and big-league glory. That’s still a ways off.
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TikTok Ban Behind Fire Set at a Mall With Congressman’s Office, Police Say.
No one was injured. The building, which includes a district office of a Wisconsin congressman who has been a critic of TikTok, sustained moderate damage in the fire on Sunday.
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How to make sure your donations count, according to aid organizations.
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The Push and Pull of Los Angeles: Beauty and Danger.
Somini Sengupta, a climate reporter who has lived across Los Angeles, reflects on the city, its mythology and its reckoning with disaster.
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Asking Who’s in Charge As Agencies Overlap.
Who’s in charge? The muddled jurisdiction of Los Angeles leaves a critical question in doubt.
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They Built Their Fireproof Dream Home. Even if It Lasted, Would They?
The Vogts designed their Malibu house to withstand disasters. But they were only beginning to learn the mental toll the fires would take on them.
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How Will L.A. Rebuild? The Recovery From the Wine Country Fire Offers Clues.
The Tubbs fire in 2017 wiped out more than 5,000 structures in a Northern California county. Homeowners faced challenges, but hundreds were able to rebuild within two years.
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The fire chief in L.A. warned years ago of a ‘weakness’ in wildfire response.
The memo revealed that L
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Thousands Protest Trump Days Before Inauguration.
People nervous about the return of a Trump presidency demonstrated in Washington, D.C., New York and other cities to show support for women’s rights, racial justice and other causes.
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Losing Homes, and the Dream of One.
Emily Baumgaertner, a national health reporter who lives in Los Angeles, reflects on covering the fires while trying to buy a home.
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As Living Fled Fire, a Sprint to Save the Dead.
Workers at the Mountain View cemetery had unique concerns the night the Eaton fire broke out. The 55-acre expanse may also have spared some homes from the flames.
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In State Capitals, Republicans Propose New Limits on Transgender Identity.
The new lawmaking sessions open after a campaign year in which Republicans leaned on messaging that tapped into fears about transgender issues.
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Trump Has Promised Another Immigration Crackdown. Here’s a Primer on His First.
The hard-line policies in his first term were a significant shift that reframed the national conversation on immigration and helped return him to the White House.
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The 24 Hours When L.A. Went Up in Flames.
Poor planning, delayed evacuations, strained resources and treacherous conditions allowed firestorms to overrun a region that thought it knew how to fight wildfires.
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Who Are the Millions of Immigrants Trump Wants to Deport?
Trump wants to end several programs that offered new arrivals temporary relief. Millions of others without legal status may also be vulnerable to deportation.
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Supreme Court to Hear Case on Religious Objections to L.G.B.T.Q. Storybooks.
Parents in Maryland said a school board’s refusal to notify them and to excuse their children from discussions of the storybooks violated the First Amendment.
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Ex-Minister Is Acquitted In ’75 Murder Of 8-Year-Old.
The defense argued that David Zandstra, 84, had been coerced by investigators into confessing to the killing of Gretchen Harrington.
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Appeals Court Rules Obama-Era Immigration Program Is Unlawful.
But the judges stayed their ruling and for now, hundreds of thousands of DACA recipients will continue to have protection from deportation.
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U.S. Resolves Civil Rights Inquiry Into Illinois Deputy’s Killing of Black Woman.
While the Justice Department found no discriminatory practices in the shooting death of Sonya Massey, 36, Sangamon County must update its policies and training.
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The Inner Thoughts of a Nation Heading Into the Next Trump Era.
As Inauguration Day draws near, millions are wondering, hoping, worrying about what the coming changes will mean for their daily lives.
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California Gets Preview of Vowed Deportations.
Sweeps by Border Patrol agents in California have stoked fears among undocumented migrant workers on the eve of Donald J. Trump’s presidential inauguration.
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U.S. Finds Pattern of Excessive Force by Louisiana State Police.
A Black man died after a beating by the police in 2019. The assault “demonstrated serious failures,” the Justice Department said, including improper supervision.
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How Wildfires Came for City Streets.
Many Californians thought wildfires couldn’t reach deep into their cities. But the Los Angeles fires showed how older homes became fuel that fed the fires.
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Freed Cuban Dissident: The Church and Biden Got Duped.
Hundreds more Cuban dissidents are expected to be released in the coming days in a deal with President Biden, but even a top beneficiary is balking.
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As California Burns, ‘Octavia Tried to Tell Us’ Has New Meaning.
The phrase, which gained momentum in 2020, has resurfaced, in part because it can seem like Octavia Butler was more than a fiction writer.
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Battery Plant Catches Fire in California Near San Jose.
The plant is one of the largest battery storage sites in the world.
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Federal Corruption Charges for Ousted Oakland Mayor.
Sheng Thao, who was recalled by voters in the California city in November, said last year that she had done nothing wrong. She pleaded not guilty to the charges on Friday.
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Fire Breaks Out at a Huge Battery Site in California.
The fire at the Moss Landing plant, which stores electricity for the power grid, was unrelated to wildfires in Los Angeles.
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Discovering L.A., as L.A. Reels.
Jesus Jiménez, who started covering Southern California in December, describes how reporting on the wildfires has helped him learn about the city.
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Read the Supreme Court Ruling.
The Supreme Court rejected TikTok’s First Amendment challenge to the law that effectively bans the social media app in the United States.
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Criticism Over Readiness Confronts L.A. Fire Chief .
As a disastrous fire continues to burn on the city’s west side, some are calling Chief Kristin Crowley to account: Why wasn’t the city better prepared?
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Inside Copter 17’s Terrifying Ride Above an Inferno.
A former Army pilot. An aging helicopter. Furious winds. The race to put out the Eaton fire tested Los Angeles County’s night-flying firefighters like never before.
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A Family Finds Seeds of Hope in a Fire’s Ruins.
The Carrs have made their life’s work honoring the dreams of their precocious son, who died suddenly at 16. They rescued some mementos and others survived when their Altadena home burned to the ground.
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For Decades, He Has Regretted Sending a Man Away for Life. Can He Fix It?
Weakened by cancer and nagged by his conscience, a former Georgia prosecutor wants the courts to reverse the sentence he demanded for a man who didn’t physically harm anyone in his crimes.
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Why Trump’s Second-Term Agenda Could Hinge on Court He Hates Most.
Once again, an incoming Trump White House is likely to clash with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. But the court in San Francisco has changed since 2017.
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More Than a Week After the Fires, Los Angeles Evacuees Remain in Limbo.
Many neighborhoods are still off-limits to residents. Evacuees say they are increasingly frustrated and at a loss over what to do next.
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One stretch of the Malibu coast has become a buzzing base for firefighters.
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In Fire Evacuation Zone, Some Residents Insist on Staying Home.
In fire-scarred Altadena, dozens of people are still living in their homes and surviving without electricity or clean tap water.
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Darrin Bell, Pulitzer-Winning Cartoonist, Faces Child Pornography Charges.
More than 100 videos of child sex abuse material, some of which was computer generated, have been connected to Mr. Bell, 49, according to the authorities.
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L.A. Officials Warn of Compromised Drinking Water in Fire-Ravaged Areas.
“Do not drink” orders have been issued in some areas where damaged pipes that lost pressure might pull in toxic smoke and harmful chemicals that could linger in the system for years.
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New York Man Charged With Murder in Beating Deaths of 2 Homeless People in Miami.
The police said that Brenton Clarke, 36, of Long Island, N.Y., used a metal rod and a wooden stick to attack four homeless people in what they said was an unprovoked assault.
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Two Watchdogs Were Rebuffed From Joining Trump’s Cost-Cutting Effort.
“We have no room in our administration for Democrats,” a transition spokeswoman replied after good-government activists tried to join the president-elect’s new efficiency department.
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State Farm offers homeowners in fire areas a chance to renew insurance policies.
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Billie Eilish, Joni Mitchell and Lady Gaga Set for FireAid Benefit.
The concert, which also includes Dave Matthews, Katy Perry, Stevie Nicks and more, will take place on Jan. 30 at the Kia Forum and Intuit Dome in Los Angeles.
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State Attorneys General Ask Courts to Preserve Biden-era Gun Control Measures.
Days before Trump returns to office, the legal fight with Democratic state officials over his agenda has begun.
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‘Profit Off of My Tragedy’: Donation Scams Compound Suffering for Fire Victims.
Online fund-raisers with stories of loss and desperation have become a symbol of the Los Angeles wildfires’ destruction. Officials warned of scammers using them to prey on people’s generosity.
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Biden Administration Withdraws Proposal to Expand Protections for Rare Whales.
The proposed rules would have slowed more ships to prevent collisions with endangered North Atlantic right whales.
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2 Meatpacking Giants to Pay $8 Million for Child Labor Violations.
Perdue Farms and JBS have settled with the Labor Department after relying on migrant children to do dangerous work in their slaughterhouses. Most of the money will be used to help the children.
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It could take another week, most likely more, for people to return home, officials say.
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After the Fires, It’s a New City, and a New World.
Adam Nagourney, a former Los Angeles bureau chief, explores the extent to which no one is immune from the threat of fires.
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Some California lawmakers want to penalize polluters for wildfires.
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France Extradites Man in U.S. Sex Assault Case.
Ian Cleary is facing charges of sexually assaulting a Gettysburg College student in 2013. Years later, he sent her messages on Facebook that helped break the case.
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House Passes Bill to Deport Immigrants Convicted of Crimes Against Women.
Scores of Democrats joined Republicans in approving the measure, even though existing law already allows immigrants with contested legal status who are convicted of sex crimes to be deported.
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Man Is Arrested in Connection With Little Mountain Fire.
The police in San Bernardino, Calif., said they had apprehended a man in connection with the small brush fire. The blaze’s progress had been stopped by fire crews, officials said.
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California Issues Order to Ease Housing Crisis Set Off by Fires.
An executive order from Gov. Gavin Newsom cleared the way for more temporary housing and prohibited price gouging at rental properties to aid thousands of displaced residents.
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Here’s the latest on the L.A. fires.
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It Could Take Weeks Before Displaced L.A. Residents Can Go Home.
Workers need to assess damage, clear hazardous materials and ensure that neighborhoods are safe before people can return, officials have warned.
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Canelo, a Dog With Scorched Paws, Is Among Many Animals Rescued in the Los Angeles Fires.
Over 150 stray animals from the Eaton fire in Altadena are waiting to be reconnected with their owners at Pasadena Humane.
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Tacos, Water and ‘Homies’: A Gas Station Becomes a Uniquely L.A. Relief Site.
Out of desperation and a need for social bonding, volunteers have banded together to help Altadena residents.
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The L.A. fires present new challenges for those who are already homeless.
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With Spotlight on New Orleans, Louisiana Moves Homeless Out of Sight.
With the Super Bowl and Mardi Gras coming, Gov. Jeff Landry is using the emergency order from the New Year’s attack on Bourbon Street to remove the homeless from downtown.
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For firefighters, a ‘roller coaster’ week on the front lines.
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Russia and other foreign sources amplify disinformation about the California wildfires.
As often happens when disasters strike, adversarial governments are compounding false or exaggerated claims about the fires in Los Angeles.
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Students and teachers from schools that burned in the Palisades fire reunite and grieve.
Children who had been out of school for a week after fires destroyed or damaged school buildings reconvened in borrowed spaces.
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U.S. Finds Pervasive Safety Failures at South Carolina Jail.
Stabbings, sexual assaults and drug use are rampant in the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center because of staff shortages and security failures, a Justice Department investigation found.
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Misogynistic Taunts Cost Philadelphia Eagles Fan His Job at D.E.I. Firm.
The fan, who was caught on video harassing a female Packers fan at Sunday’s playoff game, was also barred from future events at Lincoln Financial Field.
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Mexican Firefighters Watch for Hot Spots From the Palisades Fire.
The firefighters were part of the first international team to join the effort to contain the Los Angeles-area blazes.
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L.A. fire chief defends decision not to deploy extra resources before fires started.
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L.A. Prosecutor Vows Severe Penalties for Looting and Price Gouging.
The recently elected district attorney of Los Angeles, Nathan Hochman, signals that crime fighting will be key to the region’s resurgence from the devastating wildfires.
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A Sense of Belonging, Shaped by Fire.
Conor Dougherty, who covers housing based in Los Angeles, explores the notion of where he’s from in the aftermath of the wildfires.
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Supreme Court Poised To Back Law Limiting Access to Pornography.
The law, meant to shield minors from sexual materials on the internet by requiring adults to prove they are 18, was challenged on First Amendment grounds.
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Gavin Newsom Criticizes Republicans for ‘Politicizing’ California Wildfires.
The governor lashed back after several Republican leaders said that aid to his state as it deals with deadly wildfires should be conditional.
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Firefighting Pilots Face High-Pressure Job: ‘It Gets a Bit Scary’
The people flying planes and tankers involved in dousing blazes face hot, sweaty, turbulent conditions — and the risk that fire retardant won’t land where it’s needed.
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Here’s the latest on the fires.
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School Wants to Sever Ties To the Methodist Church.
The dispute, which some critics say tests the church’s autonomy, reached the Texas Supreme Court on Wednesday for arguments.
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Millions Made Off Drug Plan Meant for Poor.
A private business has helped supercharge a controversial federal drug program. Patients and insurers have been left with big bills.
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Air Quality Improves Across L.A., but Ash Remains a Threat.
The fresh air came after days of acrid smoke from wildfires, but officials warned that conditions could rapidly worsen again.
Elections
Politics
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U.S. Orders Federal D.E.I. Efforts to Shut Down by Wednesday Night.
Staff members overseeing diversity, equity and inclusion efforts were to be placed on paid administrative leave by 5 p.m. Wednesday.
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Trump Expands Quick Deportations Across the U.S.
President Trump’s first administration tried to implement a similarly sped-up process for removing unauthorized immigrants, but those efforts were hampered by federal courts.
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Change to Birthright Citizenship Would Affect Visa Holders, Too.
President Trump’s public rhetoric has focused on undocumented immigrants, but the raft of new orders he signed would also affect those seeking to enter the U.S. legally.
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Who Is Mariann Edgar Budde, the Bishop Who Made a Plea to Trump?
The first woman to serve as the spiritual leader of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington, Bishop Budde had a message for President Trump during his first term, too.
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Trump’s Day 1 Crackdown on Immigration.
President Trump’s executive actions on immigration were the leading edge of an effort to upend the United States’ role as a sanctuary for refugees and immigrants. Zolan Kanno-Youngs, a White House correspondent for The New York Times, explains wha...
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Senate Questionnaire Sheds Light on F.B.I. Pick’s Early Years.
In the form, Kash Patel said he had participated in an American Bar Association program that promotes diversity. He also played down his role in the Benghazi investigation.
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How Trump’s New Department of Government Efficiency Will Work.
The structure and goals of the cost-cutting effort have changed over the past 10 weeks. Here’s how.
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‘Have Mercy’ On Migrants, Bishop Asks Of President.
The direct appeal to President Trump on the first full day of his term was a remarkable moment at a National Cathedral event that traditionally has not been political.
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Bishop Asks Trump to ‘Have Mercy’ During Sermon.
Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde addressed President Trump during an inaugural prayer service, and asked him to show mercy to immigrants and the L.G.B.T.Q. community.
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A Trump Executive Order Sets Out What Could Be a Road Map for Retribution.
The order is titled “Ending the Weaponization of the Federal Government,” but it asserts that the Biden administration might have acted illegally and directs agencies to seek evidence.
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Documenting a Historic Return: Photos of Trump’s Day 1.
A New York Times photographer followed President Trump for more than 18 hours on Inauguration Day. Here’s what he saw.
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Trump Revokes Former Aide’s Secret Service Protection.
President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had granted Bolton and another Trump national security adviser protection in 2021 after threats from Iran.
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Hegseth’s Former Sister-in-Law Claims He Was Abusive to Second Wife.
A woman once married to the brother of Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary nominee, submitted a sworn statement to the Senate in a late-hour complication to his confirmation. His lawyer denied her account.
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On Capitol Hill, Only a Handful of Republicans Object to Jan. 6 Pardons.
Even Republicans who once said violent rioters should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law declined to criticize the presidential clemency for violent offenders, saying it was time to move on.
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Federal Employees Union Sues Trump Over Worker Protections.
The National Treasury Employees Union argues a move to “radically reshape the civil service” by making it easier to fire federal workers violates the will of Congress.
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Pardoning of Rioters Angers the Police.
More than 150 officers from the Capitol Police and the D.C. police were injured when a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol four years ago.
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How Trump’s Plan to Label Some Drug Cartels ‘Terrorists’ Would Work.
His administration would have more power to impose economic penalties and travel restrictions, and potentially even take military action inside foreign countries.
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Rubio Oversees Halt to Foreign Aid and Meets With Asian Diplomats on Day 1.
Marco Rubio told State Department employees that changes under President Trump “are not meant to be destructive, they’re not meant to be punitive.”
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Elise Stefanik Pledges to Back Trump’s Vision of a ‘Reformed’ U.N.
During her Senate confirmation hearing, President Trump’s pick for ambassador to the United Nations said she was willing to leverage U.S. contributions to force changes in pursuit of his “America First” agenda.
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Trump Fires First Woman To Command Service Branch.
The first woman to lead a branch of the armed forces was relieved of command within 24 hours of President Trump’s inauguration.
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After Trump’s Orders, Mexico’s Leader Says She’ll ‘Always Defend’ Her Country.
On Tuesday, President Claudia Sheinbaum responded point by point to President Trump’s executive orders on migration, trade and other issues.
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New Leaders Are Named At U.S. Attorneys’ Offices.
The interim appointments, two in New York and one in Washington, signaled a break from past practice that reflects the importance of frontline prosecutors to the administration’s plans.
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Leaders of Far-Right Oath Keepers And Proud Boys Among Those Freed.
Two prominent far-right extremists with central roles in the Capitol attack, Enrique Tarrio of the Proud Boys and Stewart Rhodes of the Oath Keepers militia, have been set free.
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Judge Blocks Sharing Data On Trump And Records.
Judge Aileen M. Cannon said prosecutors should not be allowed to share the report outside the Justice Department, adding that it contained information that had not been made public.
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Questions and Some Confusion Over a Proposed Tariff Agency.
President Trump wants an External Revenue Service to collect tariffs on imports. One trade expert said the move may be “more branding than substance.”
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Trump Is at the Peak of Power, but the Clock Is Ticking.
Republicans are defined today more by a single man than perhaps either party has been in decades, even as the clock starts ticking on Donald Trump’s tenure.
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Here’s the latest on the start of the Trump administration.
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In Rare Criticism, Trump Says Putin Is ‘Destroying Russia’
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia praised President Trump’s second inauguration, but the American leader did not return the compliment.
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Trump Pardons Nearly All Charged in Jan 6. Attack.
On his first day back in office, President Trump pardoned all of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Maggie Haberman, White House correspondent for The New York Times, describes what’s behi...
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A Heavy Favorite Emerges in the Race to Lead the Democratic Party.
Ken Martin, the chair of the Minnesota Democrats, said he was nearing the level of support needed to become the next leader of the Democratic National Committee.
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What Trump Did on Day 1: Tracking His Biggest Moves.
President Trump made major policy moves immediately after taking office, withdrawing from major international agreements, promising steep tariffs and pardoning nearly all of the Jan. 6 rioters.
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Guatemala Gets Ready to Handle Planeloads of Trump’s Deportees.
The case of Guatemala reveals how President Trump’s promised sweeps could change life outside the United States, too.
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V.A. Pick Vows to Protect Private Care for Veterans.
Doug Collins, chosen by President Trump to lead the Veterans Affairs Department, does not have a traditional résumé for V.A. secretary, but he fits the mold of a Trump loyalist.
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Fact Check: Trump’s Inauguration Day.
In his Inaugural Address and remarks afterwards, President Trump repeated inaccurate talking points about the economy, immigration, world affairs and the prosecutions into his own conduct. Linda Qiu checked the facts.
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Trump’s Inaugural Address: 2017 vs. 2025.
The Inaugural Address that President Trump gave on Monday was in some ways even darker than his “American carnage” inaugural address eight years ago. Michael D. Shear, a White House correspondent for The New York Times, explains.
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Joy, Anger and Little Remorse Outside D.C. Jail After Trump’s Jan. 6 Pardons.
Dozens of people with ties to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol gathered outside the detention facility in Washington to celebrate Trump’s pardons of those convicted of crimes that day.
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Joy, anger and little remorse outside the D.C. jail that became a hub for Jan. 6 detainees.
Dozens of people with ties to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol gathered outside the detention facility in Washington on Monday to celebrate Trump’s pardons of those convicted of crimes that day.
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2 Americans Held in Afghanistan Are Freed in Prisoner Swap.
In exchange, the Biden administration released an Afghan man convicted on narcotics charges in 2008.
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Trump Moves to End Entry Program for Migrants From 4 Nations.
The president sought to end a program that allowed migrants fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti to fly into the United States and remain in the country for up to two years.
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Trump declared an emergency at the southern border. Here’s what that means.
Invoking presidential emergency powers gives the president the ability to go around Congress and unlock federal funding to crack down at the border.
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Trump Starts Immigration Crackdown, Enlisting the Military and Testing the Law.
The president’s Day 1 actions included directives that fly in the face of legal limits on involving the military in domestic operations and the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship.
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Trump Signs Two Orders to Dismantle Equity Policies.
The administration will take steps to roll back federal support for racial equity and protections for transgender people.
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What to Know About Trump’s Broad Grant of Clemency to Jan. 6 Rioters.
He issued formal pardons to more than 1,550 rioters charged with a wide range of crimes and commuted the sentences of 14 members of far-right groups.
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Pelosi says pardoning the Jan. 6 rioters was an ‘outrageous insult to our justice system’.
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How Trump could use the military in his immigration crackdown.
Longstanding U.S. laws limit the military’s ability to carry out operations on American soil, but President Trump could skirt those restrictions and use troops to help with deportations and border enforcement.
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In an instant, the Justice Department’s biggest investigation in history evaporated.
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Trump Crushes Justice Department’s Biggest Investigation In an Instant.
President Trump’s pardons in the Jan. 6 case abruptly ended the most complex investigation in U.S. history. It also raised questions about what he will do next against a department he has said is full of his enemies.
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How Trump Plans to Kill the Refugee System.
President Trump, who has criticized refugee resettlement, moved on his first day in office to suspend the decades-old program to admit persecuted people to the United States.
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Trump signs an executive order stripping security clearances from some former intelligence officials.
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Read President Trump’s Proclamation Granting Clemency to Jan. 6 Rioters.
President Trump has given sweeping pardons to nearly all of the 1,600 rioters charged with storming the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and commuted the sentences of several others.
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Trump moves to undermine Biden’s international tax deal.
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Trump Tries to Stall TikTok Ban With Executive Order.
President Trump signed an executive order on Monday to delay enforcing a federal ban of TikTok for at least 75 days. It’s unclear if the order could override the federal law.
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‘A Quiet Force’: Harris Returns Home After Making History in Washington.
The former vice president’s first acts as a nonelected official for the first time in decades could be a sign of what comes next.
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Packed In for Trump’s Indoor Inauguration, Awkwardness Abounds.
Tech billionaires, foreign leaders, ex-presidents and political nemeses. How did everyone behave?
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Trump Demands Search for Political Bias in Justice Dept., Other Agencies.
His ‘weaponization’ executive order begins with a list of misleading accusations against the Biden administration.
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A Day of Triumph, Jubilation and Gloating in Washington.
There were Proud Boys, billionaires, stiletto heels, cowboy hats, Village People, icy cold and happy Canadians at President Trump’s inaugural.
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Trump’s border emergency declaration comes as crossings are near a 4-year low.
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Trump Commutes Sentence of Stewart Rhodes, Founder of Oath Keepers Militia.
The move, in effect, validated the far-right leader’s defiant claim that his criminal prosecution was a kind of political persecution.
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Trump Withdraws U.S. from World Health Organization.
Public health experts say U.S. withdrawal from the W.H.O. would undermine the nation’s standing as a global health leader and make it harder to fight the next pandemic.
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Trump singles out the I.R.S. work force in his hiring freeze executive order.
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How Every Senator Voted to Confirm Marco Rubio as Secretary of State.
The Senate unanimously approved Mr. Rubio in the first vote on President Trump’s cabinet selections.
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Trump Grants Sweeping Clemency to All Jan. 6 Rioters.
The extraordinary pardons and commutations extended to those who committed both violent and nonviolent crimes on Jan. 6, including assaulting police officers and seditious conspiracy.
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DeSantis Adopts ‘Gulf of America’ Language Even Before a Trump Order.
The Florida governor used the wording in issuing a state of emergency over a cold snap expected in his state.
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Trump Signs Executive Orders at Inaugural Celebration.
President Trump signed several executive orders in front of his supporters at the Capital One Arena in Washington.
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In Dueling Pardons, an Intensified Fight Over the Meaning of Jan. 6.
President Trump’s grant of clemency to those who assaulted the Capitol in his name four years ago clashed with his predecessor’s decision to shield from retribution those who had sought to hold him to account.
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Senate Passes Border Crackdown Bill, Teeing Up Final House Vote.
The measure, which increases deportations for undocumented migrants charged with crimes, is likely to be the first bill to reach President Trump’s desk. It must pass one more House vote to clear Congress.
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Trump Administration Fires Immigration Court Officials as Crackdown Begins.
Four immigration court officials were removed from their positions on Monday. It’s unclear who is in charge at this point.
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Trump Promises Americans the Moon (Well, Mars).
Donald Trump’s pledge-filled speech made him sound like a candidate trying to run up the score.
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An Insistence To Not Take No For an Answer.
Wiser about the use of power, the newly sworn-in president suggests that this time he will not take no for an answer, whether in enacting an ambitious domestic agenda or in his expansionist worldview.
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Rubio Confirmed as Top U.S. Diplomat.
The Florida senator becomes the United States’ 72nd chief diplomat, and the first Latino to hold the job.
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Small crowds gather in some cities to protest Trump policies.
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Trump Swears Oath Without His Hand on Bible, but He Wasn’t Required To.
The tradition of swearing the oath of office on a Bible stretches back to George Washington, but not all presidents have observed it.
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In renaming Denali for McKinley, Trump invokes a presidential idol.
The move is likely to face some pushback in Alaska, where the Alaska Native name has long been favored for the continent’s tallest mountain.
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‘Golden Age of America Begins,’ Trump Says at Inauguration.
After being sworn in as the 47th president of the United States, Donald Trump laid out parts of his policy agenda, including taking back the Panama Canal and renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.
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Pardoned Biden Family Members Were Targets of Republicans.
The relatives who were granted clemency in the final minutes of Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s presidency had not been charged with wrongdoing, but some had drawn scrutiny.
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Biden Departs on a Somber Note but Vows, ‘We’re Not Leaving the Fight’
“We’re not leaving the fight,” he told supporters and members of his staff as he prepared to leave Washington.
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The White House Website Got a Quick Trump Makeover.
New administrations move quickly to replace the site, and Mr. Trump’s struck a starkly different tone from the message the Biden administration had offered.
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Biden commutes prison sentence of Leonard Peltier, an Indigenous rights activist convicted in F.B.I. killings.
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Elon Musk Ignites Online Speculation Over the Meaning of a Hand Gesture.
Speaking at a celebratory rally in Washington, Mr. Musk twice extended his arm out with his palm facing down, drawing comparisons to the Nazi salute.
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At Inauguration, Melania and Barron Trump Greet a Limelight They Once Avoided.
The returning first lady and Barron Trump, the son she had once shielded from the public eye, used Monday’s inauguration to reintroduce themselves.
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Trump Repeats Inaccurate Claims in Inaugural Remarks.
In his Inaugural Address, President Trump delivered a more tempered version of election talking points. But in remarks afterward, he reprised his grievances about the 2020 election.
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Ramaswamy To Exit Effort That Looks For Cost Cuts.
The billionaire decided he could not campaign while helping lead the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, but tensions with Elon Musk were also evident.
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At Trump’s luncheon, billionaires mingle with senators and Supreme Court justices.
The traditional inaugural luncheon at the Capitol, normally a staid affair attended primarily by government officials, this time featured an extraordinary commingling of money and power.
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Musk Is Likely to Get a West Wing Office for His Cost-Cutting Project.
The world’s richest man had been expected to be situated in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, but a West Wing office would give him closer access to President Trump.
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Vance Poised to Shape Role as Boss’s Right-Hand Man.
At age 40, a relative newcomer who made his name on the campaign trail for his fierce attacks on Democrats is first in the line of succession for president.
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Trump promised to end electric vehicle ‘mandates.’ Here’s what that means.
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Portrait of General Milley Is Removed From Pentagon.
The decision was an early salvo by the new administration against a military that President Trump has assailed for a variety of perceived offenses.
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Trump says he’ll take action to rename the Gulf of Mexico. It might not be that easy.
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A Closer Look at Who Attended President Donald J. Trump’s Second Inauguration.
Former presidents, members of Congress, and tech C.E.O.s were among those present to witness Mr. Trump take the oath of office.
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After no Biden appointee agreed to take the job, Pentagon taps midlevel official as acting defense secretary.
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Words Used in Donald Trump’s Second Inaugural Address.
Frequently mentioned words in historic speeches from Donald J. Trump to George Washington.
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Portrait of U.S. Is Even Bleaker, But Cure, One Man, Is the Same.
In his second inaugural address, the president reprised dark themes from his first and laid out an expansive policy agenda.
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TRUMP CAPS RETURN TO POWER, VOWING TO STOP A U.S. ‘DECLINE’
Donald John Trump took the oath of office again during a ceremony in the Capitol, promising a new “golden age of America” four years after he was evicted by voters.
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Nonprofit Groups Sue Trump Administration Moments After Oath.
Their lawsuits said the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, President Trump’s cost-cutting operation, violated a law requiring federal advisory committees to include a balance of views.
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Trump Shuts Down Migrant Entry App, Signaling the Start of His Crackdown.
The president moved quickly to cancel the CBP One app, which allowed migrants to schedule appointments to gain entry into the United States, turning away potentially tens of thousands of migrants.
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Who are the millions of immigrants Trump wants to deport?
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Trump Holds Off on Tariffs, but Paves the Way for Future Trade Action.
The president’s executive action on trade will keep all possibilities on the table, including eventual tariffs against China, Canada and Mexico.
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Transcript: Donald Trump’s Second Inaugural Speech.
In the first remarks of his second term, President Trump painted a grim portrait of the country while declaring that “the golden age of America begins right now.”
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Trump’s Family Stands by His Side at His Inauguration.
President Trump’s relatives return to Washington with more political and cultural support — and a far better understanding of how to wield their soft power.
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Trump Is the Oldest President to Take the Oath, Again.
Before Joseph R. Biden Jr. was sworn in 2021, Donald J. Trump held the record for the country’s oldest commander in chief. He reclaimed the record on Monday.
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Scores of Senior Diplomats Are Leaving Posts as Trump Takes Office.
The departures are common when a transition takes place, but it is now happening more quickly and on a larger scale than under previous administrations, a U.S. official said.
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Biden Pardons 5 Members of His Family in Final Minutes in Office.
Mr. Biden emphasized that he did not believe his family did anything wrong, but he feared political attacks by Donald J. Trump.
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Giuliani snags a seat but V.I.P.s lose theirs as the inauguration moves inside.
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Trump plans to put an end to birthright citizenship. That could be hard.
Incoming White House officials said the new president would sign an executive order meant to deny automatic citizenship for some people born in the United States. The Constitution could stand in the way.
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Trump Plans Comprise Experiment In Economics.
Tariffs and tax cuts amid high interest rates and lingering inflation will pose a test for the U.S. economy.
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In Shake-Up, Trump Administration Jolts F.B.I. by Installing Acting Leader.
Christopher A. Wray, the former director, stepped down Sunday. Brian Driscoll, who recently took charge of the F.B.I.’s Newark field office, will be acting director.
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Watching inside Capital One Arena, the crowd boos Pence and cheers Musk.
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Officer Beaten by the Jan. 6 Mob on Is On Duty Again, This Time to Protect Trump.
Officer Daniel Hodges said he had come to grips with the idea that his professional duty now required him to protect a man whose supporters beat him, kicked him and tried to gouge his eyes out in 2021.
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Trump has promised an immigration crackdown as his first order of business.
One of his advisers announced a slew of executive actions to be signed during his first hours in the White House, including some that would seal off the border.
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Religious leaders of different faiths are set to lead inaugural prayers.
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Plenty of tech billionaires are attending.
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What to Know About the Singers Who Will Perform at the Inauguration.
The country singers Carrie Underwood and Lee Greenwood and the tenor Christopher Macchio are all scheduled to sing at the swearing-in ceremony.
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Here Are Trump’s Expected Executive Orders.
The incoming president’s team said he would take unilateral action on a variety of fronts during his first hours in office, including 10 executive orders cracking down on immigration and immigrants.
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Some Jan. 6 Rioters Are Expected to Be in Washington for the Inauguration.
At least eight rioters who have faced criminal charges have been granted permission to attend. Most were accused of relatively minor offenses.
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Here’s the latest.
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Trump to Release Records on the Assassinations of the Kennedys and Martin Luther King.
The incoming president said the move was aimed at improving government transparency.
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Trump is set to take office with some important work already done.
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Defiance is out and deference is in as Trump returns to Washington.
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Last-Hour Pardons Aimed at Averting Reprisals.
President Biden used his executive clemency power to protect people targeted by Donald J. Trump, including five members of his family as well as Liz Cheney, Anthony S. Fauci and Mark A. Milley.
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Rotunda Ransacked by Pro-Trump Mob on Jan. 6 Will Be His Inauguration Backdrop.
The large domed expanse, a breathtaking and solemn space in the Capitol, was the scene of mayhem wrought by Trump supporters four years ago. A very different crowd of his backers will be on hand Monday.
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Inauguration Draws Leaders From Europe’s Right.
Many of the European politicians expected to be in Washington on Monday share President-elect Donald J. Trump’s anti-immigrant stance.
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Trump aims for a show of strength as he returns to power.
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Trump will be sworn in at noon. Here’s what to know.
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It’s Going to Be a Big News Day. Here’s What to Watch For.
From Donald J. Trump’s swearing-in to pardons, executive orders and more, the first day of the new administration promises to be busy and eventful.
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Searching for Lessons in Trump’s Return to Power on Same Day as King Holiday.
The dual celebrations of a second Trump inauguration and the civil rights leader’s birth raise profound questions about Black leadership and progress toward the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream.
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Fact-checking Trump’s rally the eve before his inauguration.
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Miller tells Republican leaders Trump will strip protections from career civil servants.
The president-elect’s incoming deputy chief of staff told lawmakers that early action would include directives to give the president more control over federal workers, as well as on energy and immigration.
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Trump Will Strip Protections from Career Civil Servants, Miller Says.
The incoming deputy chief of staff told lawmakers that early action would include directives to give President-elect Donald J. Trump more control over federal workers, as well as on energy and immigration.
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Trump Vowed to End the Ukraine War Before Taking Office. The War Rages On.
Donald J. Trump’s promise to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine in 24 hours, “before I even become president,” proved to be untrue.
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Trump Faithful Descended on D.C., but Not Everyone Made It Onto a Yacht.
The celebrations ahead of Donald J. Trump’s inauguration included passionate members of his base along with Trump-loving power brokers partying wildly all around them, but just out of reach.
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Accused 9/11 Mastermind Agrees to Use of Disputed Confession for Life Sentence.
Lawyers for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed have said for years that the confession was tainted by torture. Mr. Mohammed has now agreed that portions can be used at his sentencing trial if prosecutors agree to settle his case.
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Trump Aims for Show of Strength as He Returns to Power.
The incoming president has told allies he wants to seize momentum and avoid the missteps of his first administration.
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TikTok Engineered Its Shutdown to Get Saved. But Trump’s Solution May Fall Short.
President-elect Donald J. Trump’s idea, a 50-50 “joint venture” between the existing Chinese owner and some kind of American entity, was more politics than substance.
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White House changes hands and so do fortunes for lobbyists in Washington.
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Trump’s Cryptocurrency Surges to Become One of the World’s Most Valuable.
The new business venture by the Trump family is generating intensifying criticism and ethics questions, even as it has turned into an overnight phenomenon, generating a windfall on paper.
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Biden Pardons Five More People, Including a Late Civil Rights Leader.
Civil rights advocates and lawmakers have long said that Mr. Garvey’s 1923 conviction for mail fraud was unjust, arguing that he was targeted for his work.
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How Trump’s Promises Would Transform Society.
The campaign-style rally was a break with tradition for presidents, who have sought to reserve their comments for the official inauguration speech.
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Trump returns to D.C. with a full day of pre-inauguration events.
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How to Watch the Inauguration Events.
We have more than two dozen reporters and visual journalists covering the events in real time.
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On His Last Day in Office, Biden Urges Supporters in Charleston to ‘Hold on to Hope’
President Biden reflected on the “faith and friendship” he found in South Carolina during several critical moments in his life and career.
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Jake Sullivan, White House National Security Adviser, Reflects on China Policy.
President Biden and his team saw China as the one nation with the intent and capability to displace American primacy — and crafted policies to defend U.S. power.
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A Trump Oligarchy Is Moving to Washington, and Buying Up Prime Addresses.
Billionaires and multimillionaires are flocking to a city where power has been more important than money, but is now deeply intertwined with it.
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Biden Made a Global Push to Constrain China. Will It Continue?
Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, said in an interview that “we’ve just stuck with our theory, which is managed competition.” Trump and Xi Jinping might have other plans.
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This Time, Trump Finds Deference, Not Defiance.
As Donald J. Trump prepares to take the oath of office for a second time, much of the world seems to be bowing down to him and demoralized opponents are rethinking the future.
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Donald Trump’s Promises.
President-elect Donald J. Trump, over the course of the 2024 campaign and after his election, made big promises to the American people on everything from the economy to foreign policy. Here’s what he said he would do with a second term.
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How Washington Went From Resistance to Resignation.
President-elect Donald J. Trump will be sworn into office on Monday. Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent for The New York Times, explains what makes this time around so different from the start of Trump’s first term.
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Ahead of Day 1, Trump’s Team Works to Temper Expectations on Immigration.
The president-elect’s immigration advisers have warned Republicans that it will take time and money from Congress to carry out the mass deportation effort he has promised to execute immediately.
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Trump Resisters to Skip Mass Protests This Time .
The Democrats who mobilized against Donald J. Trump in 2017 feel differently about protesting his return.
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A Trump Party Hosted by Peter Thiel, With All of Silicon Valley.
The party symbolized the euphoria of the tech industry on the cusp of the Trump presidency. The guest list included Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Miriam Adelson and the vice president-elect, JD Vance.
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Get Your Scorecards: Global Opportunities for Trump the Deal Maker.
President-elect Donald J. Trump has made big promises on Ukraine, Iran, China and crises around the globe. But he will have to make difficult choices.
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Washington’s liberal inauguration-weekend party won’t be held at the African American history museum this year.
The founder of the Peace Ball, a party held since Barack Obama’s inauguration, said it was ousted after the museum received complaints about its “tone.”
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Virginia Governor Criticizes Biden for Commuting Sentences of 2 Men.
The men had been acquitted by a jury of the murder of a police officer, but the judge had concluded that they had been involved and sentenced them to life in prison.
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People’s March in Washington Draws Thousands of Demonstrators.
Just two days before Donald Trump’s inauguration, thousands of people attended the People’s March across Washington.
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Becerra, With No Regrets, Defends Vaccine Mandates and Misinformation Fight.
In a wide-ranging interview, Xavier Becerra, President Biden’s health secretary, defended his tenure and hinted that he might run for governor of California.
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Who Is Coming to the Inauguration — and Who Isn’t.
Billionaires, foreign leaders and celebrities including Mike Tyson and Carrie Underwood will appear at the inauguration. Some prominent Democrats are taking a pass.
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President-Elect Is Selling New Crypto Meme Coin, Raising Ethical Concerns.
The president-elect and his family have a direct and potentially lucrative stake in the sale of a cryptocurrency product that surged in value in the hours after going on sale, days before his inauguration.
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Some Potential Targets Of Pledged ‘Retribution’
President-elect Donald J. Trump believes he has been wronged by current and former officials, members of the media and more.
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Those in Trump’s Cross Hairs Anxiously Wait.
Donald Trump is returning to the White House vowing to seek retribution. Those in his sights are worried both about him — and his supporters.
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Trump chooses school choice supporter to help lead Education Department.
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Trump’s Inauguration: What to Know About the Schedule.
The president-elect will host a party at his golf club in Virginia on Saturday, kicking off four days of celebrations.
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Joe Biden’s Presidency in Six Photos.
How did he get those photos? Doug Mills, senior photographer in Washington for The New York Times, tells the stories behind six of his most memorable pictures from the presidency of Joe Biden.
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In Trump’s Big Tent, There’s More Room For Internal Battles.
Donald J. Trump won his battle with establishment Republicans. Now, it’s disputes over immigration, taxes and foreign policy that will test his party’s unity.
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Americans Warm To Trump’s Ideas, If Not to Trump.
A new poll found the public is sympathetic to the president-elect’s plans to deport migrants and reduce America’s presence overseas.
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Why the Supreme Court Upheld a Ban on TikTok.
A unanimous Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law that effectively bans the wildly popular app TikTok in the United States starting on Sunday, Jan. 19. Adam Liptak, who covers the Supreme Court for The New York Times, explains how free speech and n...
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C.I.A. Reboots Its Approach to Tech With A.I. Tools and Less Red Tape.
The spy agency is trying to give its teams better tools and make it easier for the private sector to develop technology for their secretive work.
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U.S. Spy Chief Took on Role of Negotiator in Gaza War.
As C.I.A. director, William J. Burns was deeply focused on China and Russia when the Middle East conflict plunged him back into his old life.
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Ukraine and Gaza Made America’s Top Diplomat Into a Secretary of War.
President Biden’s longtime aide rallied scores of nations to defend Ukraine, but then became a villain to the many critics of U.S. support for Israel’s war in Gaza.
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Polio Survivors Reject Kennedy And Pin Hopes on McConnell.
There are an estimated 300,000 polio survivors in the United States. For some, the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary is reviving their painful memories.
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The Art of the Image: Trump as His Own Executive Producer.
The once and soon-to-be president takes advantage of the blurry lines between appearance and perception, between reputation and reality.
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Trump’s Deportation Plan Could Start Next Week in Chicago.
Details of planned immigration raids are unclear, but they would be the opening step in the president-elect’s goal of overseeing the largest deportation program in history.
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Pence Is Said to Be Planning to Attend Trump’s Inauguration.
The relationship between President-elect Trump and his former vice president, Mike Pence, was irreparably broken when Mr. Pence refused Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn the election.
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Border Patrol sweeps in California could offer a preview of Trump’s plans.
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Little-Known Intelligence Agency Outlines Limits on Spying.
The move by an agency within the Department of Homeland Security was part of a broader effort by the Biden administration to strengthen oversight and set clear guidelines for handling intelligence.
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If Democrats Attack Trump’s Rich Pals as ‘Oligarchs,’ Will It Stick?
Some Democrats see Elon Musk as an ideal foil. But not everyone agrees.
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F.A.A. Temporarily Suspends Launches of Musk’s Starship After Explosion.
The agency launched an investigation into the “space vehicle mishap” on Thursday night that forced commercial flights to divert and caused debris to rain toward Caribbean islands.
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Report Projecting Drop in Freshman Enrollment Delivered Incorrect Findings.
The National Student Clearinghouse, which produced the report, reversed its conclusions after identifying methodological errors in its research.
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C.I.A. Analyst Pleads Guilty to Leaking Classified Documents About Israel.
The analyst was charged with two counts of violating the Espionage Act and faces up to a decade in prison for disclosing sensitive information about Israel’s response to an Iranian attack.
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Can He Do That? Here’s What Biden’s Move on the Equal Rights Amendment Means.
Presidents have no direct role in approving constitutional amendments. So what could President Biden’s pronouncement recognizing a new one actually do?
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Judge Mulls Release to Congress of Trump Classified Documents Report.
The decision by Judge Aileen M. Cannon not to issue an immediate ruling raised the possibility that President-elect Donald J. Trump would take office in the meantime and have power over the report’s release.
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U.S. to Deploy ‘Extraordinary Measures’ to Avoid Default on Jan. 21.
Janet L. Yellen, the outgoing Treasury secretary, urged lawmakers to raise the debt limit and protect the full faith and credit of the United States.
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The Biden administration archives a website devoted to reproductive rights.
The website, ReproductiveRights.gov, offered information on matters such as birth control, medication abortion, and emergency abortion care.
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Fed Has Left Climate Group After 4 Years.
The central bank said it had decided to leave the network after the group’s work “increasingly broadened in scope.”
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Will President-Elect Donald Trump Stop the Law From Taking Effect?
It is unclear if Mr. Trump, who has previously said he will spare the social media platform, will or can stop the ban.
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Deportation Bill Exposes Rift Among Democrats on Signature Issue for Trump.
A G.O.P. measure to deport immigrants accused of minor crimes has spotlighted a divide among Democrats over how to position themselves on immigration, with some already shifting to the right.
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What would a TikTok ban actually look like?
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Jan. 6 Cases Grind On, Days Before Trump Re-enters the White House.
It is unclear what Donald J. Trump intends to do with the Jan. 6 investigation, the largest single criminal inquiry the Justice Department has undertaken in its 155-year history.
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Track TikTok’s rise and fall.
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Vivek Ramaswamy Plans to Run for Ohio Governor.
The entrepreneur will continue leading Donald J. Trump’s government efficiency project before turning his attention to a campaign. He has encountered some turbulence with Mr. Trump, and with Elon Musk.
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Who Is Behind RedNote, the Chinese App Attracting TikTok Users?
Until this week, the app was little known outside of China.
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‘Red Note,’ a Chinese app, is dominating downloads, thanks to TikTok users.
The law that took aim at TikTok over national security concerns has prompted Americans looking for alternatives to download Xiaohongshu, a social media app that is popular in China.
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If TikTok is banned, can I still use it?
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Lt. Governor Is Set to Fill Vance’s Seat In the Senate.
Vivek Ramaswamy, who was also seen as a possible replacement for the vice president-elect, is widely expected to run for governor of Ohio instead.
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Government officials react to the looming TikTok ban.
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How Biden’s Inner Circle Shielded His Stumbles.
“Your biggest issue is the perception of age,” Mike Donilon, the president’s longtime strategist, told him in 2022, according to people who heard him.
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For Apple and Google, complying with the law would be easy.
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Monday Is Likely to Be One of the Coldest Inauguration Days in Decades.
An arctic chill is headed to Washington (and much of the United States) on Monday.
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Why Is This Man Glaring?
At a moment of peak triumph and celebration, President-elect Donald J. Trump looks stern in his inauguration portrait.
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The ban is based on national security concerns. Limits because of foreign ownership are not unusual.
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Here Are Key Dates in the Equal Rights Amendment’s 100-Year History.
President Biden says he believes the amendment has met the requirements to be enshrined in the Constitution. Its history has been long and complex.
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Teenagers on TikTok exchanged advice on how to get around a ban.
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Gillibrand never got an audience with Biden, but she got her wish on the E.R.A.
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Why Beijing Could Have the Last Say on Any TikTok Deal.
A change to China’s export rules could give Beijing sign off on any deal that would force the internet giant ByteDance to give up TikTok.
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Here’s how to download your videos and data from TikTok.
Here are a few methods for users who want copies of the videos they personally uploaded or made on TikTok.
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Here’s How to Download Your Videos and Data From TikTok.
Here are a few methods for users who want copies of the videos they personally uploaded or made on TikTok.
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Bill Covering Deportations Clears Hurdle In the Senate.
Ten Democrats joined Republicans in voting to advance the measure in a critical test vote that put it on track for quick enactment under President-elect Donald J. Trump.
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Parents express mixed reactions to a potential TikTok ban.
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Weather Concerns Push Inauguration Indoors.
The change, a rare break with tradition, will deny Mr. Trump the pomp and large audience he hoped for at his second swearing-in.
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Trump’s Advisers May Move His Swearing-in Indoors Because of Cold.
The potential change, a rare break with tradition, would deny Mr. Trump the pomp and large audience he hoped for at his second swearing-in.
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This Was the Government’s Case for Banning TikTok on National Security Grounds.
For years, American officials insisted that TikTok poses a grave national security threat — even if they couldn’t, or wouldn’t, share examples.
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The government’s case for banning TikTok on national security grounds was light on examples.
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A Potential TikTok Ban: What to Know.
The Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law that could result in the app going offline as soon as Sunday.
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The Supreme Court appeared poised to uphold the law when it heard arguments on Friday.
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Here’s the latest on the ruling.
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Justices Back TikTok Law Forcing App’s Ban or Sale.
The company argued that the law, citing potential Chinese threats to the nation’s security, violated its First Amendment rights and those of its 170 million users.
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Equal rights would be the 28th Amendment.
President Biden’s remarks were largely a symbolic gesture of support for a century-long campaign to enshrine gender equality into the Constitution. But advocates said they could add heft to a future legal fight.
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Biden Declares E.R.A. Passed; Won’t Enforce .
The remarks were largely a symbolic gesture of support for a century-long campaign to enshrine gender equality in the Constitution. But advocates said they could add heft to a future legal fight.
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U.S. Once Secretly Invested In Ukraine’s Drone Industry.
The development of a new generation of drones has revolutionized how wars are fought, according to U.S. officials.
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Biden to Commute Sentences of Over 2,000 Nonviolent Drug Offenders.
The action, aimed at inmates who received harsher sentences based on old disparities in drug laws, is the broadest commutation of individual sentences ever issued by a U.S. president.
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Pick to Run Homeland Security Backs Renewal of ‘Remain in Mexico’ Policy.
The department that the South Dakota governor seeks to lead will be critical to fulfilling the incoming administration’s promises to quickly crack down on immigration.
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An Illustrated Guide to Trump’s Conflict of Interest Risks.
President-elect Donald J. Trump has a range of new business ventures that could expose him to even greater potential conflicts of interest than during his first term.
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Inside the Democrats’ Private Pressure Campaign to Push Biden Out.
The New York senator, who swallowed concerns for months and then stalled for time on sharing them with President Biden, ultimately told him he risked going down as one of the “darkest figures.”
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How the Man Behind Trump’s Deportation Plan Found MAGA.
Thomas Homan once defended Obama-era policies and health care for transgender immigrants. Now he’s eyeing hotlines to report undocumented neighbors and arrests of local officials who get in the way.
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Nancy Pelosi Is Skipping Trump’s Inauguration.
The former speaker clashed with Donald Trump throughout his first term, and the acrimony between the two persisted after he left office.
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Garland, defending Justice Dept. in emotional remarks, denies politicization.
His final address sought to rebut the many criticisms deployed by presidents, members of Congress and media pundits for either being too cautious or too aggressive on politically sensitive cases.
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Johnson Installs Crawford on Intelligence Panel, Pulling It Closer to Trump.
The speaker replaced a Republican who had criticized the president-elect and broken with him on key issues, and who had drawn the ire and suspicion of those close to the president-elect.
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In Tightening Cyber Rules, Biden Gives Trump a Choice: Deregulation or Security?
The president’s latest executive order accelerates the move to mandatory compliance by software providers. It may run afoul of the Trump mandate to deregulate.
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Trump Picks a Jet-Setting Pal of Elon Musk to Go Get Greenland.
Negotiations over an 836,000-square-mile island may fall to a close friend of Elon Musk with experience in deal-making. Just not that kind of deal-making.
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Miller Built Clout With Trump. He’s Set to Use It.
Stephen Miller was the architect of Donald J. Trump’s hard-line immigration agenda in his first term. Now he is back with fewer internal rivals and even more influence with the president.
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Trump Weighs Order to Keep TikTok Online.
The move is under discussion as the Chinese-owned app faces a Sunday deadline to find a new buyer or shut down in the United States.
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DeSantis Picks Florida’s Attorney General to Replace Rubio.
Ashley Moody, a Republican, would take the seat of Senator Marco Rubio once he is confirmed as President-elect Donald J. Trump’s secretary of state.
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Democrats Take New Approach to Trump: Coexistence.
Elected officials across the party are engaging in a balancing act, signaling they have heard voters’ demands for change while grappling with when to oppose Donald Trump.
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New York State Senator Quits D.N.C. Leadership Fight.
James Skoufis endorsed Ken Martin, the Minnesota party chairman, as he ended his own outsider bid to lead Democrats.
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Choice for Housing Says Agency Is Falling Short.
Scott Turner, an official during the first Trump administration, said that the country was not building enough homes and that the housing department was “failing at its most basic mission.”
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Euphoric Tech Donors to Revel In Their New Clout at Inaugural Parties.
The elite of Silicon Valley are set to revel in their new clout during a long weekend of inaugural parties as President-elect Donald J. Trump is set to resume power.
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Pick for Treasury Defends Trump’s Economic Agenda.
Scott Bessent, President-elect Donald J. Trump’s choice to be Treasury secretary, will be in charge of steering the president’s economic agenda if confirmed by the Senate.
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Did Republicans Take Washington in a Landslide? Not So Much.
President-elect Donald J. Trump was the first Republican to win the popular vote in two decades, but by only a 1.5-point margin, the narrowest since 2000.
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Investments by Burgum Created Conflict in Office.
Doug Burgum, President-elect Donald J. Trump’s pick to be interior secretary, said he would sell some holdings if confirmed. He held on to his investments while running North Dakota.
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TikTok C.E.O. Plans to Attend Trump Inauguration.
Shou Chew will join tech moguls like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk at President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration as the fate of the app hangs in the balance.
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Biden Delivers Farewell Address Packed With Warnings to Americans.
Speaking from the Oval Office, the president warned of a rising oligarchy, a potential tech-industrial complex and the threat of the climate crisis in his farewell address to the nation.
-
Full Transcript of President Biden’s Farewell Address.
The president delivered the 17-minute speech from the Oval Office in the White House.
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President Biden Is Bowing Out After One Term. He’s Not the First.
Other American presidents have faced the delicate challenge of bidding farewell with grace after serving only one term in the Oval Office.
-
Johnson Ousts Turner as Intelligence Chairman, Bowing to Trump.
Representative Michael R. Turner, Republican of Ohio, had at times been critical of the president-elect. He told people that he was removed after an edict from Mar-a-Lago.
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Marco Rubio Faces Senate Committee Hearing.
Senator Marco Rubio received a relatively friendly welcome from both sides at his confirmation hearing for secretary of state.
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Working Hand in Hand With Fists Still Clenched.
But the extraordinary collaboration between outgoing and incoming presidents did not stop both sides from claiming credit.
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How Biden Surprised Progressives.
To the departing president, F.D.R. seemed a guiding, if often elusive, star.
-
A Fractious City Mourns, and Hopes, Together.
More than a week after the wildfires ignited, the hazy numbness described by many looks a lot like grieving.
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Here’s the latest.
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Albania Gives Jared Kushner Hotel Project a Nod as Trump Returns.
The project is one of several that family members of President-elect Donald J. Trump have with foreign countries that have pending policy matters with the United States.
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Why Trump Wanted a Mideast Cease-Fire Deal Before Taking Office.
The agreement removed one of the most vexing international conflicts that hovered over the start of his second term.
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Why Trump wanted a Mideast cease-fire deal before he took office.
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Takeaways From Marco Rubio’s Senate Hearing.
Mr. Rubio expressed views aligned with those of most senators who work on foreign policy, while taking care not to break from Donald J. Trump’s unorthodox ideas.
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Trump and Biden Came Together Over Talks.
Rarely have representatives of current and new presidents of different parties worked together at such a high-stakes moment. But the president and the president-elect didn’t quite share credit.
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A Presidential Legacy Framed By the Triumph of a Bitter Rival.
Biden’s disastrous debate performance highlighted age concerns.
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The Justice Department will play a key role in carrying out Trump’s immigration agenda.
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Bondi is being pressed on the independence of the Justice Department.
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Tackling Trump’s Policy in the Americas, Rubio Would Confront New Tensions.
As the country’s top diplomat, Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who has a special interest in Latin America, would be tasked with navigating Donald Trump’s efforts to expand U.S. influence.
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Bondi may set the tone for how other Trump lawyers handle confirmation questions.
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From Ramaswamy’s High-Profile Perch, a Web of Potential Conflicts.
Vivek Ramaswamy, Elon Musk’s partner in an effort to cut government costs, could make decisions that ultimately make him and his investors richer.
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Nonprofit Founded by Stacey Abrams Admits Secretly Aiding Her 2018 Campaign.
The New Georgia Project, whose leaders also included Raphael Warnock, now a senator, admitted violating campaign finance laws. It agreed to a $300,000 penalty.
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Zuckerberg Will Host a Party for Trump’s Inauguration.
Mark Zuckerberg, the Meta chief executive, is one of several tech leaders expected to play a high-profile role in celebrating the new administration next week.
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Defending Auto Industry, Whitmer Warns of Tariffs.
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addressed the Detroit Auto Show, saying that tariffs should not be used “to punish our closest trading partners,” like Canada.
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Rubio Aims to Take on the Axis of Anger: China, Russia, North Korea and Iran.
The loose arrangement of hostile powers could pose a series of conundrums for President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for secretary of state.
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Kash Patel’s loyalty to Trump is a point of concern for some lawmakers.
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Bondi turned to lobbying after two terms as a ‘business-friendly’ attorney general.
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Former Aide For Sanders Runs to Lead The D.N.C.
Mr. Shakir said his mission, should he win the post, would be to redefine the Democratic Party as the party of the working class.
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Pam Bondi has transformed from a traditional Republican into a warrior for Trump.
-
Who is Marco Rubio?
-
Here’s what to know about Bondi’s confirmation hearing.
-
Here is the latest on Rubio’s appearance before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
-
Biden Races to Cement His Legacy With Moves That May Stymie Trump’s Agenda.
The president has issued policy decisions in a number of areas in the final days of his term to cement his agenda, including environmental justice, prison reform and immigration.
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Attorney General Nominee Says ‘Politics Will Not Play a Part’
Pam Bondi cast herself as an independent prosecutor who would keep politics out of the Justice Department if confirmed as President Trump’s attorney general.
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In Farewell, Biden Warns of a Rising ‘Oligarchy’
President Biden did not explicitly name President-elect Donald J. Trump, but his remarks went straight at the tension at the heart of the incoming White House.
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Transportation Hearing Will Focus on Aviation Safety and Infrastructure.
Sean Duffy, a former Fox Business host and Wisconsin congressman, would head a sprawling Transportation Department that oversees aviation, rail and transit.
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Pete Hegseth’s Confirmation Hearing.
In a hearing that stretched more than four hours, Democrats pressed Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald J. Trump’s pick for defense secretary, on numerous allegations of misconduct, his views about women in combat and his ability to lead the depa...
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Rubio Is in Spotlight on Second Big Day of Cabinet Hearings.
Senator Marco Rubio, who is nominated for secretary of state, has a long history of personal and policy differences with President-elect Donald Trump.
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Trump’s C.I.A. Pick Lays Out His Vision for a More Aggressive Agency.
Donald Trump’s pick for the agency’s director seems likely to win some Democratic support for this nomination, but how much is unclear.
World
Africa
Americas
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With Border Closed, Migrants in Mexico Face Few Options.
On Monday, President Trump took action to close the nation’s southern border and terminate a widely used app. Many migrants expressed despair, and some moved to cross the border anyway.
-
Latin American Leaders Welcome and Warn Trump.
Several chafed at his plans as President Trump enacted immigration measures affecting their countries and vowed to impose tariffs on Mexico and Canada.
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‘We will be stranded.’ Migrants shocked after Trump cancels border appointments.
In Tijuana, migrants who had scheduled meetings to plead their cases at U.S. ports of entry were devastated to learn the new administration had canceled those appointments and the program that facilitated them.
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New Wave of Violence In Colombia Is Blamed On Two Rival Groups.
Clashes between armed groups in Colombia have led to some of the worst violence in the country in years.
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Mexico Is Getting Ready for Trump. Here’s What’s Different This Time.
President Claudia Sheinbaum is detaining more migrants, seizing more fentanyl and positioning her country as a key ally against China. But the U.S. stance has shifted, too.
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Shelters Quiet In Mexico Before Trump Takes Office.
Ahead of the inauguration, migrant shelters south of the Rio Grande are far from full, a reflection of the tougher measures imposed on both sides of the border.
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‘We Couldn’t Stay’: A California Family’s Life After Evacuating.
Shortly after the fires began in Los Angeles, Bethany Martinez and her daughter evacuated their home on the Altadena-Pasadena border after losing power and heat. They’re waiting until they feel it’s safe enough to go back.
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Trump’s Team Vows Deportations, but Has Said Little to Latin America.
Mexican officials and other leaders in the region have not been able to meet with the incoming administration about its migration and deportation plans.
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Bolsonaro Hid at Hungary’s Embassy. Not for Asylum, He Says, but Maybe for Love.
Jair Bolsonaro and a Times reporter discussed the former Brazilian president’s two mysterious nights at the Hungarian Embassy.
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Brazil’s Ex-Leader Hopes Ally’s Comeback Is His Stay-Out-of-Jail Card.
The former Brazilian president, squeezed by criminal investigations, looks to the United States to shift his nation’s politics — and maybe keep him a free man.
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Why Trump Is Returning to Power While Bolsonaro Faces Prison.
Three reasons help explain why the two politicians have faced such contrasting fates.
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With Eye on Canal, Trump May Push Panama Toward China.
President-elect Donald J. Trump’s threat to take back the Panama Canal may be posturing, but it could dampen the Panamanian government’s wish to broaden relations with the United States, analysts say.
Asia Pacific
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Bimla Bissell, Ambassadors’ Aide and a Social Hub in India, Dies at 92.
Her home drew generations of heads of state, diplomats, journalists and artists, who relied on her for her political acumen and were buoyed by her friendship.
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A Nobel Laureate Who Mines Her Country’s Nightmares, and Her Own.
Han Kang’s latest novel, about a South Korean massacre, delves into why atrocities must be remembered. “It’s pain and it is blood, but it’s the current of life,” she said.
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Trump’s Suspension of Refugee Admissions Puts Afghans at Risk, Advocate Says.
The order “risks abandoning thousands of Afghan wartime allies” who worked with Americans before the Taliban takeover, the head of a resettlement group said.
-
Uyghurs Held in Thailand Continue Hunger Strike, Fearing Their Deportation.
Dozens of men from the ethnic minority sought escape from repression in China a decade ago, but have been detained in Thailand ever since.
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In One Indian City, ‘Love Hotel’ Booker Is Pulling Back.
A policy change by a popular hotel platform shows the tension between traditional values and modern ideals in India.
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Trump’s Return Has Unnerved World Leaders. But Not India.
An upward trajectory in relations is “almost inevitable,” the U.S. ambassador, Eric Garcetti, said in an interview before leaving his post.
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A President’s New Reality: Soup and Solitude in a Jail Cell.
President Yoon Suk Yeol, a former prosecutor, used to put people in jail. Now, after his formal arrest, he himself is in a cell, alone.
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In Pakistan, Some Hope Trump Can Free Former Prime Minister.
A Trump ally has called on Pakistan to release the former prime minister from prison, inspiring fervent hope among his supporters.
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Saif Ali Khan, Famed Bollywood Actor, Is Stabbed at Home in Mumbai.
The police said Mr. Khan was recovering in the hospital after an intruder attacked him. He sustained a major injury to his spinal cord, a doctor said.
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Bracing for Life after TikTok, Americans Join the Chinese Internet.
Hundreds of thousands of self-described TikTok refugees are flocking to Xiaohongshu, a Chinese social media app also known as RedNote. Americans users say they feel welcome, but politically sensitive topics are off limits.
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China Deploys More Security to Calm a Country on Edge Over Killings.
Police are checking on safety at schools and visiting karaoke bars and rental homes to root out perceived malcontents, after several mass killings alarmed the public.
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What China Wants in Panama: More Trade, Projects and Influence.
Beijing’s efforts to expand its reach in the country have hit several obstacles, in part because of American pressure.
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Cambodian Aide Sought By Thailand in Shooting.
The Thai authorities accused an adviser to Hun Sen of hiring the gunman who killed a former Cambodian opposition figure in Bangkok last week.
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Actor’s Abduction Has Chinese Tourists Avoiding Thailand Trips.
The brief abduction of a Chinese actor who was trafficked into Myanmar to work in a scam camp has rattled travelers from a country that Thailand relies on for tourism.
Canada
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Proposed U.S. Tariffs May Undo Economies In Mexico and Canada.
While much about the threatened tariffs is still unclear, experts predict they would be bad news for all three economies, with few winners.
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When the U.S. Hit Canada With Steep Tariffs Before, Canada Had a Plan B.
But economic, political and technological changes have left Canada with few ways to handle trade restrictions now.
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In Canada’s ‘Suburb of Detroit,’ Fears Over Trump’s Tariff Threat.
The president-elect’s vow to impose 25 percent duties on Canadian imports could ravage Canada’s auto industry and decimate Windsor, a city deeply tied to the U.S.
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Canada Plans Retaliatory Tariffs That Target Republican-Led States in U.S.
Canadian officials are preparing retaliatory measures if the new U.S. administration imposes tariffs on Canadian imports.
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The ‘Minister of Everything’ for Justin Trudeau Enters Race to Replace Him.
Chrystia Freeland, the former deputy prime minister, sought to distance herself from Mr. Trudeau in a public letter criticizing him for “costly political gimmicks.”
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Banker, Investor, Prime Minister? Mark Carney Bids to Lead Canada.
The former governor of the Canadian and British central banks announced he was running to become head of the Liberal Party and prime minister.
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Canada Readies Measures To Respond to Tariff Threat.
The government is preparing for the possibility that the incoming U.S. administration will impose high tariffs on Canadian goods, setting the close allies up for a showdown.
Europe
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Fire Kills Dozens of People at Turkish Ski Resort.
At least 76 people were killed and several others injured in a blaze that broke out overnight at the 12-story Grand Kartal Hotel in Kartalkaya, Turkey.
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At Davos, Zelensky Urges Europe to Unite Against Russia.
Speaking a day after Trump’s inauguration, Ukraine’s president told world leaders at Davos that Europe needs to remain united and “learn how to take care of itself.”
-
E.U. on Pins And Needles As It Awaits A Shake-Up.
President Trump appears willing to shake up almost every policy area, and a behind-the-scenes E.U. task force has been trying to prepare. But is Europe ready?
-
Facing Setbacks and Desertions at the Front, Ukraine Detains Commanders.
Two generals and a colonel blamed for the loss of territory in eastern Ukraine to Russian forces last year have been held, the country’s security service said.
-
Last-Minute Settlement Talks Halt Prince Harry’s Trial Against Tabloids.
The case, which would represent the last major legal reckoning for victims and perpetrators of Britain’s phone hacking scandal, was adjourned until Wednesday.
-
Southport Killings Are a New Kind of Terrorism, U.K. Prime Minister Says.
After a teenager admitted murdering three girls at a dance class, Keir Starmer said people were being radicalized into violence for its own sake and terrorism laws might need to change.
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Behind Killings at Girls’ Dance Class in U.K., a Boy Obsessed With Death.
Axel Rudakubana, who killed three young girls in the Southport attack, appeared to have no particular ideology but was obsessed by violence and genocide, investigators said.
-
At Least 76 Are Killed in Fire at Ski Resort in Turkey.
The pre-dawn blaze broke out at a popular resort during a school break. Some survivors spoke of terrifying escapes.
-
Hostages Are Being Freed. Some Israelis Ask: At What Cost?
More than 30 hostages are set to be released during the cease-fire in Gaza. But many Israelis have mixed feelings about the deal because they feel it came at a high price.
-
U.K. Teen Pleads Guilty To Murder of Three Girls.
Axel Rudakubana on Monday admitted committing the deadly attack last July. Officials later said he had been referred to a government counterterrorism program three times before his rampage.
-
Fighting Has Halted in Gaza, but the War Is Not Over.
Sunday’s delayed start to the truce was a minor problem compared with the difficult choices and American leverage needed to get both parties to the second phase, which could end the war.
-
Ukrainians Eager for Peace But Wary of Trump’s Plans.
Soldiers and civilians alike say that after so much loss, the new U.S. president must push for a just settlement, not peace at any cost.
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A Killer Was Taken Back Into Custody. Was It Because of His Drill Rap Songs?
A man convicted of murder in London was taken back into custody after a report emerged that he was anonymously making drill rap music. The victim’s family worries his music could bring him more fame.
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How the October 2023 Attacks Reshaped Israel, Lebanon and Beyond.
With an Israel-Hamas cease-fire set to begin, the shock waves from their war have reshaped the region in unexpected ways.
-
Hacking Trial to Begin In Harry vs. Murdoch.
Barring a late settlement, Harry’s lawsuit against News Group Newspapers will begin Tuesday, with potential consequences for the royal family, the media baron and even The Washington Post.
-
Russia Bombards Kyiv With Drones and Ballistic Missiles, Ukraine Says.
At least three people were killed in the assault on the capital, and at least one died and 11 were wounded in a separate strike in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia.
-
Lifestyles of the Rich and Ancient: Some in Pompeii Even Had a Home Spa.
Hot, warm and cold baths in a recently uncovered villa offer a new glimpse of life in the city before it was smothered by tons of volcanic fragments.
-
3 Lawyers Sentenced For Helping Navalny.
A Russian court said the lawyers for Aleksei Navalny, the country’s top opposition figure before his death in a penal colony last year, were guilty of involvement in an extremist group.
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Effort to Prosecute Founder Of Chat Site Tests New Law.
Isaac Steidl founded the Coco platform, which authorities tied to criminal activity for years. The effort to hold Mr. Steidl accountable tests a new legal frontier.
-
Russia-Iran Treaty Addresses Trade and Security Issues.
The agreement is focused more on trade than military issues, but it will bring two countries with a shared desire to challenge the West closer together.
-
‘Harrowing’ British Report Details Crisis in Hospitals.
A damning report on overcrowded hospitals added fuel to a painful debate over the crises at the National Health Service.
-
U.K. to Re-Examine Child Sexual Abuse by Gangs.
Britain’s Labour government came under pressure to act after Elon Musk reignited a decade-old scandal involving child sexual abuse mainly by men of Pakistani heritage.
-
Hundreds Pay Respects To Far-Right Firebrand Who Drove an Ideology.
The memorial for Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was known for his racist and antisemitic remarks, comes as the National Rally has become the driving force in French politics.
-
In Kyiv Visit, U.K. Leader Makes Pledge Of Partnership.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer signaled continued solidarity, with further U.S. support in question under a second Trump administration.
-
Azerbaijan’s Leader, Furious Over Crash, Picks a Rare Fight With Putin.
Russia’s president is said to have blamed birds or a Ukrainian drone for a Dec. 25 crash of an Azerbaijani plane. Azerbaijan says Russian air defenses were at fault.
-
British Man Freed From Prison Over Video Misidentification.
Ademola Adedeji was ensnared in a murder conspiracy case with no murder victim. Prosecutors labeled him a gang member and won a conviction and eight-year sentence.
-
Polish Leader Agrees Russia Planned ‘Acts Of Air Terror’
“I can only confirm that Russia planned acts of air terror, not just against Poland but against airlines across the globe,” said Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk.
-
Mine Helped Armor Ukraine Until Foe Was at the Gate.
The mine, near the frontline city of Pokrovsk, produced coking coal crucial for Ukraine’s steel industry. It kept running until the very last moment, when Russian forces finally reached its gates.
-
Ukraine, Hit by Missiles, Cuts Power.
President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said air defenses had shot down at least 30 missiles from a “massive” barrage that had targeted gas and energy facilities.
Middle East
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Commander Of Military For Israel Is Resigning.
Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, who has commanded the Israeli military throughout 15 months of war in Gaza, said he was resigning over its failure to protect against the 2023 assault.
-
Israel Embarks on an ‘Extensive’ Military Operation in the West Bank.
The announcement came shortly after President Trump rescinded Biden-era sanctions on Israeli settlers and Jewish extremists raided Palestinian villages in protest against the cease-fire in Gaza.
-
Palestinians Returning to Towns Find Destruction Where Homes Once Stood.
Palestinians returning to parts of the enclave have been picking their way through vast piles of rubble and trying to salvage what they can.
-
Relatives of freed hostages thank Trump, and call on Israel to win the freedom of remaining captives.
-
Reports of sporadic violence cast a shadow over the Gaza cease-fire.
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Israel tells its military to prevent West Bank celebrations for released Palestinians.
-
‘There’s Nothing Left’: Gaza Lies in Ruin.
As a pause in fighting came into effect, displaced Gazans took stock of how destroyed their cities were after 15 months of a devastating war.
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For some freed Palestinian prisoners, the return home was marred by delays and fear of attacks.
-
Food and other vital aid surges into Gaza after 15 months of hunger and scarcity.
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Food and Other Vital Aid Surge Into Gaza After 15 Months of Scarcity.
Hunger has gripped the enclave, besieged by Israel, and the surge is a step toward alleviating it. But with Hamas asserting its grip on Gaza, questions remain about how aid is distributed.
-
Mother of Missing U.S. Journalist Asks Syria’s New Leaders for Help.
Debra Tice, whose son Austin was abducted near Damascus in 2012, said the rebel group that toppled the Assad regime promised support in helping to find him.
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West Bank settlers attack Palestinian villages, angry about prisoner releases.
-
Scenes of Elation as Hostages Released, but the Path Ahead Is Uncertain.
Doctors at Sheba Medical Center said the three women are in stable condition, but little is known about what the former captives went through in Gaza.
-
Houthi rebels say they will limit attacks in the Red Sea to ships linked to Israel.
The Yemeni rebels have targeted ships since the early days of the war in Gaza in what they say is solidarity with Hamas.
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Previously released hostages have described harrowing experiences in captivity.
-
A father and son return to their Gaza neighborhood to find their home destroyed.
-
Here’s the latest on the cease-fire.
-
Relief, Joy and Uncertainty as Gaza Truce Begins.
After the fighting paused, Hamas began to free some of its hostages, releasing 3, and Israel said it had released 90 Palestinian prisoners.
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What’s behind the uneven exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners?
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Awaiting prisoner releases, West Bank Palestinians hold off celebrating.
-
As Israel loosened its own bombing rules, civilians paid a heavy price.
-
Long-Awaited Cease-Fire Between Hamas and Israel Takes Effect.
Hamas released three hostages after more than 15 months of captivity, while residents of the Gaza Strip celebrated a long-awaited respite from the war.
-
Hamas Tries to Show It’s Back in Charge of Gaza.
Rarely seen in the open while the war raged, masked and armed fighters spread out publicly through Gaza’s cities in a show of force on Sunday.
-
For most hostage families, an agonizing wait for news and reunions goes on.
-
Aid trucks began moving into Gaza as part of the cease-fire deal.
-
Israel-Hamas Truce Leaves Big Questions Unresolved for Now.
It remains unclear whether the six-week truce will lead to a permanent cease-fire and the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza, or if fighting will resume.
-
Gazans greet the cease-fire with joy — and sadness for all that was lost.
Palestinians race back to the homes they fled, uncertain about what they will find or what lies ahead.
-
Both Sides Wondering How Next Six Weeks Will Play Out.
After 470 days of death, a tentative cease-fire began on Sunday in Gaza. But Palestinians could not be sure that the war had ended, and Israelis fear that many hostages will still remain in Gaza.
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First 3 Israeli Hostages Are Freed Under Gaza Cease-Fire.
Thirty-three people were set to be released during the first phase of the agreement, including female soldiers and civilians, children and men over 50.
-
Israeli attacks continued during a nearly three-hour delay in the cease-fire.
-
Here’s what to know about the cease-fire.
-
On Eve of Truce, Netanyahu Says, ‘We’ve Changed the Face of the Middle East’
Qatar, which mediated the agreement, said the cease-fire deal was set to begin at 8:30 a.m. local time on Sunday.
-
Two Prominent Judges Are Shot Dead Outside Iran’s Supreme Court.
The gunman took his own life after killing two judges and wounding a third in what officials described as a terrorist attack.
-
What We Know About the Hostage Release.
The first phase of the cease-fire deal calls for the release of 33 hostages, including women, children, men over 50 and sick and wounded people. Three hostages were released on the first day of the deal.
-
Reporter’s Ordeal at Feared Iranian Prison.
Cecilia Sala found herself in the middle of Iran’s hostage diplomacy.
-
As deadly strikes continue, Gazans anticipate first moments of peace.
-
Hostages are to be freed after more than a year of talks. Here are some key moments.
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Hundreds of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel will be freed under the cease-fire deal.
-
UNRWA’s head warns of catastrophe for Gaza if Israel stops its work.
-
Israeli Cabinet Approves Deal For Cease-Fire.
The full Israeli cabinet passed the agreement during a meeting that continued into the Jewish Sabbath, setting up the first reprieve in Gaza in over a year.
-
Israel Prepares to Receive Hostages Held in Gaza for Over a Year.
Hospitals and health officials have been preparing isolated areas where the hostages can begin recuperating, and there are concerns that the returning captives may be malnourished.
-
A Sheikh, a Mogul and a Diplomat Who Sealed the Gaza Truce.
The Qatari prime minister, working with both President Biden’s envoy and President-elect Donald J. Trump’s representative, formed an unlikely partnership.
-
On a Raid With Syria’s New Security Forces.
After the fall of the Assad regime in Syria, The New York Times joined a group of former rebel soldiers trying to enforce law and order in a country grappling with the ghosts of its past.
-
With guarded hopes, families of hostages in Gaza anticipate their release.
-
The World Health Organization looks to rebuild medical services as aid into Gaza increases.
-
Strikes Kill Dozens of Gazans After Cease-Fire Deal Is Announced, Officials Say.
Israel has continued to bomb the enclave as it prepares to implement a cease-fire. Civil Defense said Gaza City had the highest toll with more than 80 killed.
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Dozens of Gazans have been killed in Israeli strikes since the deal was announced, emergency officials say.
-
Gazans Dream Of Going Back, Even to Rubble.
They daydreamed about the people they would hug as soon as the truce took hold, the graves they would visit and the homes they would rebuild.
-
Biden Says He Urged Netanyahu to Accommodate Palestinians’ ‘Legitimate Concerns’
President Biden said in an MSNBC interview that he pushed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to prevent civilian deaths during the Gaza war. He also defended his steadfast support for Israel.
-
Israel and Hamas Work Out Differences That Had Delayed Cease-Fire Deal, Netanyahu Says.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had called a meeting of his security cabinet for later on Friday.
-
Angry about a potential cease-fire in Gaza, far-right protesters block roads in Israel.
-
Disputes Delay Key Israeli Vote On A Gaza Truce.
Even though negotiators for Israel and Hamas reached a provisional deal for a truce starting Sunday, they continued to discuss outstanding issues through mediators.
-
Blinken is shouted down over Gaza as he insists cease-fire deal is on track.
Two pro-Palestinian journalists who accused him of enabling “genocide,”
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Netanyahu Faces a Political Crisis Over the Gaza Cease-Fire Deal.
With his far-right coalition partners opposing an end to the war and threatening to quit, the Israeli prime minister may have to choose: them or the agreement.
-
A cease-fire would mean more aid for Gaza, but getting it to people in need may still be hard.
-
‘Honestly, I feel numb.’ Gazans react to cease-fire deal.
-
Deadly strikes in Gaza continue despite the announcement of a cease-fire deal.
-
Disputes Postpone Crucial Vote in Israel on Gaza Cease-Fire Deal.
Hamas remains the dominant Palestinian power in Gaza even after 15 months of Israeli bombardment, holding sway in displacement camps and refusing to surrender.
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Since the killing of Hamas’s longtime leader, his brother and others have stepped in.
-
Several Gaza Hostages Could Soon Be Released, but in a Slow, Frustrating Trickle.
Citizens of Israel, the United States, Britain, Mexico, Thailand and other countries were among about 250 people abducted in the Oct. 7, 2023 raids into Israel.
-
The latest on the cease-fire agreement.
-
Israel and Hamas Reach Gaza Truce and Hostage Deal.
The agreement, which must still be approved by the Israeli cabinet, incited joy in the Gaza Strip and Israel, even as some feared that it could fall apart.
-
Israel and Hamas Agree to Gaza Cease-Fire and Hostage Deal.
The Israeli cabinet still has to ratify the deal, and some details remained unresolved.
-
What to Know About the Gaza Cease-Fire.
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a cease-fire deal. For Palestinians, the agreement provides a respite from a devastating Israeli military campaign that has killed more than 45,000 people in Gaza. For Israelis, it could allow for the release of at ...
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Hostage families are celebrating the cease-fire deal — with a dose of trepidation.
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News of a deal brings hope and a painful reminder for residents of villages overrun by Hamas.
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The leaders of Britain and France say the deal should be the basis for a long-term political settlement.
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Here is what the provisional cease-fire deal says.
In the first phase, 33 hostages and hundreds of Palestinian prisoners would be freed, and hundreds of trucks with humanitarian aid would be allowed into Gaza daily, a copy of the agreement says.
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Here’s What the Provisional Cease-Fire Deal Says.
In the first phase, 33 hostages and hundreds of Palestinian prisoners would be freed, and hundreds of trucks with humanitarian aid would be allowed into Gaza daily, a copy of the agreement says.
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An Ambiguous Reprieve Is Tenuous, Temporary and Fraught.
An agreement offers Gazans at least some respite, and for Israelis it means the release of hostages. But the deal’s ambiguity leaves open the possibility that fighting could resume within weeks.
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The deal has exposed fissures in Netanyahu’s right-wing government.
One far-right minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, claimed to have scuppered similar agreements over the past year. But, the prime minister has blamed Hamas for the failures.
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Deal Has Exposed Fissures in Netanyahu’s Right-Wing Government.
One far-right minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, claimed to have scuppered similar agreements over the past year. But, the prime minister has blamed Hamas for the failures.
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Cease-Fire Deal With Israel Comes as Hamas Is Severely Weakened.
Israel’s 15-month bombardment of Gaza has destroyed much of Hamas’s military wing. It has also degraded the Iran-backed proxy network that helps sustain the militant group.
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Deal at Close Of Biden Term Evokes 1981 And Tehran.
Dozens of American hostages held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran for more than a year were freed just as Ronald Reagan was inaugurated.
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Musk Said to Have Aided Iran-Italy Prisoner Swap That Biden Opposes.
The Italian journalist was released soon after Elon Musk met with an Iranian ambassador, officials in Iran said. So was an Iranian detained in Italy who was wanted by the U.S.
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The current deal on the table is similar to one pushed by President Biden in May, officials say.
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Israel and Hamas Hope to Secure Cease-Fire Deal Within Days, Officials Say.
Negotiators and mediators meeting in Qatar were rushing to address outstanding issues on Wednesday.
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After Decades of Assad Rule, Syrians Seek Justice or Revenge.
The new interim Syrian government says it will hunt down and punish senior security officials and others, but concern is growing about attacks on former low-level members of the Assad regime’s forces.
New York
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Adams, Back in New York City, Stays Mum on Trump.
Mayor Eric Adams of New York City, a Democrat, declined to say anything negative about Donald J. Trump’s early executive orders, saying he would bring any concerns directly to the president.
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New York City Seeks Jolt for Midtown With Plan to Build 10,000 Homes.
The plan, which rezones parts of the Manhattan neighborhood, aims to address the city’s housing shortage and the area’s beleaguered commercial sector.
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Hochul’s Budget Plan Aims More at Pocketbook Issues Than at Trump.
The $252 billion spending plan for New York addressed concerns about affordability, crime and the cost of living, but did little to anticipate President Trump’s policies.
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John Lennon Came to My School When I Was 8. Or Did I Imagine It?
A story of hazy memories, a reluctant rock star and a special day in 1973. Or was it 1974?
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The Voices in His Head Would Not Stop. Then a Boy Was Stabbed to Death.
Waldo Mejia’s psyche had been showing cracks, a longtime friend said. Now he is charged with killing 14-year-old Caleb Rijos at random.
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Enrique Tarrio, the pardoned Ex-Proud Boys leader, helped initiate the Capitol riot.
Until President Trump’s pardon, Enrique Tarrio was serving a 22-year prison term, the longest sentence handed down to any of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with Jan. 6.
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Ex-Proud Boys Leader, Pardoned by Trump, Helped Initiate Capitol Riot.
Until President Trump’s pardon, Enrique Tarrio was serving a 22-year prison term, the longest sentence handed down to any of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with Jan. 6.
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New Jersey’s Governor Asks Trump to Move Swiftly on Congestion Pricing.
Gov. Phil Murphy wrote a letter to the president saying that the surcharge on drivers entering Manhattan’s busiest area was a “disaster” for commuters and residents in his state.
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Adams Attends Inauguration of President Who Could Pardon Him.
The New York City mayor canceled plans to honor Dr. Martin Luther King to attend the inauguration of Donald J. Trump, who has said he is considering pardoning Mr. Adams in his federal corruption case.
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Adams Accuses Former Prosecutor of Bringing Case to Help His Own Career.
A lawyer for Mayor Eric Adams argued in court documents that Damian Williams, the former federal prosecutor who charged the mayor with bribery, had brought the case for his own political benefit.
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A Long Career in Black Rock Music Comes to a Tragic End in the Bronx.
Peter Forrest was the charismatic lead singer of 24-7 Spyz, which did shows with Jane’s Addiction. Last week, Mr. Forrest, 64, was found beaten to death in the ambulette he drove for a living.
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Zoning Changes Aim to Fill Housing Gap.
A new rezoning plan for the city aims to remove long-outdated barriers to building housing and to spread development across all the city’s neighborhoods.
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‘After I Got Into the Cab, the Driver and I Began Chatting’
A familiar face on the way to the airport, a surprise on the F train and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
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New York Rescuers Break the Ice to Save Moose From a Frozen Lake.
The bull moose had fallen into a lake in the Adirondacks and been in the frigid waters for about two hours before rescuers arrived and used a chain saw to free it.
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Will Cuomo Run for Mayor? Racial Politics Complicate His Decision.
An ill-fated run against a Black opponent nearly ended the career of Andrew Cuomo. As he weighs challenging Mayor Eric Adams, he cannot afford a repeat.
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Mozambique’s Ex-Finance Minister Sentenced to Prison Over ‘Tuna Affair’
Manuel Chang will spend eight and a half years in prison for taking about $7 million in bribes and kickbacks in a loan scandal that sent the country’s economy into a crisis.
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Overtures to Trump Put Mayor Adams on a Political Tightrope.
Mayor Eric Adams said that a meeting with President-elect Donald J. Trump was about New York City’s future. Each man has his own reasons to forge close ties.
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U.S. Drops Corruption Case Against New York’s Former Lieutenant Governor.
Brian Benjamin had been accused of funneling state money to a real estate developer in exchange for campaign contributions. A key witness in the case has died.
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Mayor Has Meeting With Trump and His Son.
The New York mayor, who has expressed interest in a pardon to resolve federal corruption charges, met with President-elect Donald J. Trump and his son Eric on Friday.
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New York City Bus Crashes Near Bronx Overpass, Dangling Above Roadway.
The express commuter bus missed a turn on the route that travels between Manhattan and the Bronx. The driver, the sole occupant of the bus, was not injured.
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A Robot Made My Lunch.
Sweetgreen and other spots are using automation in some Manhattan restaurants. Humans still slice the vegetables, but they don’t put the food in bowls.
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The Evolution of New York’s Sanctuary Status.
New York’s status as a sanctuary city for undocumented immigrants has shifted over time. Now, as President-elect Donald J. Trump prepares to enter office, it may shift once again.
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Adams Heads to Mar-a-Lago To Meet With President-Elect.
The New York City mayor, who is under federal indictment, has spoken warmly about President-elect Donald J. Trump in recent weeks and has said he is open to receiving a pardon from him.
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Rosy Election-Year Budget Unveiled by Adams, Citing Lower Costs for Migrants.
The $114.5 billion spending plan anticipated $2 billion less in asylum seeker costs, but also called for an additional $550 million for nonmigrant shelters.
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Stringer Kicks Off Mayoral Bid With Child Care Proposal.
Scott Stringer, a former New York City comptroller who is running for mayor, will center his campaign on making the city more livable for families.
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What Happens to an ‘Antiquated’ New Year’s Eve Ball?
After 17 years, the ball that dropped at the beginning of 2025 is being retired. It will join several other balls from the past in a Times Square exhibit.
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40 Big Ideas to Make New York City More Affordable.
As the cost of living dominates politics, dozens of residents offered plans to bring down the price of housing, child care, transportation, cultural life and more.
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Giuliani Keeps Homes in Settlement of Defamation Case.
An agreement allowed the former mayor of New York City to keep his apartments and other valuables in return for an undisclosed payment to two election workers he defamed after the 2020 vote.
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Sheriff’s Deputies Handcuff Girl, 11, After Mistaking Her for Suspect.
Deputies in Syracuse, N.Y., detained the girl, who is Black, for several minutes after mistakenly identifying her as a suspect in a car theft. Video of the episode drew fierce criticism.
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Adams Collects $250,000 From Donors After Federal Corruption Charges.
Mr. Adams, who is facing a federal corruption indictment and was denied public matching funds, said his totals show “my base of support is still there.”
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N.Y.P.D. Sharply Restricts Its High-Speed Chases.
A quarter of the nearly 2,300 vehicle pursuits last year led to crashes, property damage or physical harm, the police said. Most chases will no longer be allowed.
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New Boss Tries to Tame a Troubled Police Department.
Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch is shaking up the Police Department after some of its former leaders, elevated by Mayor Eric Adams, came under scrutiny by federal investigators.
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A Bakery, a Landlord and a Heated Fight About Back Rent.
The Silver Moon Bakery on the Upper West Side is embroiled in a legal dispute. Loyal customers are worried about its fate.
Business
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2 Families, in Business for 50 Years, Wage War in a South Korean Boardroom.
Control of Korea Zinc, the world’s largest producer of zinc, is at stake in a battle challenging the country’s entrenched chaebol system of powerful conglomerates.
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Trump Says He Intends to Impose 10% Tariffs on Chinese Imports on Feb. 1.
The president said the planned duties were a response to China’s failure to curb fentanyl exports.
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Tariffs on Canada and Mexico Would Upend U.S. Carmakers.
North American car companies have operated across borders for three decades. Tariffs would raise prices and cost jobs in the short run, analysts say.
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Leaders at Davos Economic Forum Vow to ‘Stay the Course’ on Climate Action.
Officials and business executives at the annual gathering in Switzerland said the fight against global climate change would continue with or without the United States.
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Turnaround On E.V. Plan Is Disruptive, If It Stands.
Automakers and even some Republicans may fight to preserve funds, and environmental activists will likely sue, but some experts said that some changes may not survive legal challenges.
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C.E.O.s, and President Trump, Want Workers Back in the Office.
Amazon, JPMorgan and others have been telling their employees that remote work is over. Now federal employees have been ordered to come to work in person, too.
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India’s Economy Slows Down Just When It Was Supposed to Speed Up.
Industrial growth, the stock market and the rupee are sinking, and most consumers earn too little to buoy them, stymieing India’s drive to become a developed economy.
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Paris Olympics Medals Are Tarnishing, Putting LVMH in the Spotlight.
The medals were designed by a jewelry maker owned by the French luxury conglomerate, which has declined to comment on their deterioration.
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Trump Takes Office as a Newly Minted Crypto Billionaire.
The Trump family’s new crypto tokens, which went on sale over the weekend, have soared in value — along with crypto markets in general.
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Life in Prison for Hospital Rape and Murder That Shocked India.
The police had sought the death penalty in a horrific but familiar crime. Its handling by the local authorities had outraged the nation.
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TikTok Got a Reprieve, but Americans and Chinese Are Still on RedNote.
The Chinese social media app, popular in the United States a week after being flooded by TikTok users, has added language translation features.
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Does a Strong Holiday Shopping Season Mean a Better Year Ahead?
Consumers spent more than expected over the holidays on clothes and electronics. But the retail economy is still a mixed bag.
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Big Banks Quit Climate Change Groups Ahead of Trump’s Term.
Several large U.S. financial institutions, including the Federal Reserve, have withdrawn from the networks after years of growing political and legal pressure.
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Chinese Tech Had Promise And Esteem. Now What?
China’s internet companies and their hard-working, resourceful professionals make world-class products, in spite of censorship and malign neglect by Beijing.
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Thousands of Capital One Customers Are Locked Out of Accounts for Days.
The company said a technical issue with a third-party vendor was to blame for a disruption with deposits and payment processing that stretched into the weekend.
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Chinese Firms Hit New Limits On U.S. Access.
Start-ups with Chinese ties have found it increasingly difficult to do business and list shares in the United States.
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Key Changes That May Affect Your Savings.
This year, older workers will have ways to save more for retirement, spend less on medicine and see other ways to improve their finances.
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How Vuori Became One of Fashion’s Hottest Names.
The 10-year-old company has ridden the popularity of its tech pants to the top rungs of the athleisure market. But “it’s still early days,” Vuori’s founder says.
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Oracle May Hold TikTok’s Future in Its Hands.
The company is one of the app’s leading server providers, managing the data centers where billions of 40-second videos are stored.
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Vanguard To Pay Millions In Restitution.
An investigation by the S.E.C. and several states found that the company had failed to notify investors of changes in the terms of some funds, leading to higher capital gains taxes.
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Kremlin-Linked Propaganda Group Repeatedly Posted Facebook Ads.
A new report details how a covert influence operation linked to the Kremlin continued to place ads on Facebook despite U.S. and E.U. prohibitions on doing business with the organization.
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U.S. Faces Record Debt As Tax Cuts Are Planned.
The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that annual deficits will top $21 trillion over the next decade.
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U.S. Growth Is Exceeding Expectation, I.M.F. Says.
It is projecting 2.7 percent growth for 2025. But uncertainty about pending Trump policies looms over the global economic trajectory.
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E.U. Expands Investigation of X Over Spread of Illicit Content.
The probe is a test of the European Union’s willingness to go after X’s owner, Elon Musk, whose geopolitical influence has grown because of his ties to the incoming Trump administration.
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D.E.I. on the Ropes Ahead of the Next Trump Era.
Corporate policies concerning diversity, equity and inclusion, already under pressure from conservatives, are facing greater threats from allies of the president-elect.
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What to Know About Plane Maintenance After the South Korean Crash.
Airlines have been increasingly outsourcing repair and upkeep work to other countries, but experts and consumer groups disagree about its impact on safety.
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Facing U.S. Sanctions, China Is Preparing to Strike Back.
With days until Donald Trump is sworn in, China is bracing for a trade war, aiming at industries as diverse as semiconductors, apparel and industrial plastic.
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China’s Population Drops for Third Year.
The fall came despite a slight rise in births last year, the first increase since 2016. State efforts to cajole women to have children have met resistance.
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Beijing Says Exports in ’24 Helped Economy Grow 5%.
Analysts say they see signs of malaise in China’s domestic economy, but those problems were offset mainly by robust exports and a $1 trillion trade surplus.
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F.T.C. Sues Landlord Over Hidden Rental Fees.
The antitrust and consumer protection agency accused Greystar Real Estate Partners of deceptive pricing, charging tenants millions of dollars in unadvertised fees.
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Southwest Pilot Is Removed From Flight and Charged With D.U.I.
The pilot, David Paul Allsop, was taken off a flight to Chicago at the airport in Savannah, Ga., on Wednesday, officials said.
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Trump Taps Mel Gibson, Sylvester Stallone and Jon Voight as Hollywood ‘Ambassadors’
The president-elect said the actors would be his “eyes and ears” with the goal of helping the entertainment industry, which he said had lost business to foreign countries.
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Cash App to Pay $255 Million in Penalties Over Fraud Refunds.
The transfer-money app, owned by Jack Dorsey’s Block, racked up a hefty bill of fines and restitution for what federal regulators called “woefully incomplete” customer protections.
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30-Year Mortgage Rate Rises Above 7% for First Time Since May.
The latest jump threatens to sideline more buyers and sellers.
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Toyota Truck Unit Agrees to Pay $1.6 Billion for Emissions Fraud.
Hino Motors, a Toyota subsidiary, will plead guilty to conspiracy charges and pay penalties for deceiving regulators about its diesel engines, the E.P.A. said.
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They Escaped the Wildfires. Now, They Are Facing the Cost.
Evacuating a disaster is often the lifesaving choice, but it comes with short-term costs to address immediate needs and incalculable personal and financial tolls in the future.
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Nintendo Switch 2 Is Announced With a 2025 Release Date.
The new console looks physically similar to the popular Switch system, which has sold more than 146 million units in seven years.
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Users React to a Looming TikTok Ban.
Ahead of a Supreme Court ruling, they are mocking U.S. national security concerns about the Chinese-owned app.
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It’s a Good Time to Be Making Mocktails.
The nonalcoholic beverage industry could get a boost from the surgeon general’s warnings linking alcohol to some cancers. But don’t expect the industry to condemn your glass of pinot.
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What to Know About the E.V. Tax Credit That Trump Might Repeal.
Rules for a $7,500 tax break for electric vehicle purchases and leases recently changed, but more far-reaching changes are expected when President-elect Donald J. Trump takes office.
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Meet Japan’s Original Decluttering Guru (No, Not That One).
Before Marie Kondo stormed into the global consciousness, Hideko Yamashita taught Japan the art of creating tidier spaces.
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U.S. Sues Southwest Airlines Over Delays on 2 Routes.
The Transportation Department said in a lawsuit that two of the airline’s routes were consistently delayed in violation of federal rules.
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F.T.C. Suit Accuses Deere Of Unfair Repair Rules.
The lawsuit against the maker of John Deere tractors represents a final push in the Biden administration’s broader efforts to make repairs less costly for consumers.
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TikTok Says Employees Will Have Jobs Even if Ban Takes Effect.
The company is awaiting a decision over the constitutionality of a new law that aims to force a sale of the app to a non-Chinese owner under the threat of a ban.
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Earnings Show It’s a Good Time to Be a Big Bank.
The largest banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs, reported bumper profits on Wednesday.
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In Germany, Seeking Cure For Economy.
Candidates in the upcoming federal election are focused on lowering taxes and increasing public spending.
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Russell Vought Poised to Expand Power of White House Budget Office.
If confirmed, Mr. Vought will be at the center of President-elect Donald Trump’s plans to upend the federal bureaucracy.
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Epstein’s Associates Stand To Benefit From Tax Refund.
The estate’s assets have swelled to $145 million, a probate court filing in the U.S. Virgin Islands shows. Much of that won’t make its way to Mr. Epstein’s victims.
DealBook
Economy
Media
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A Big Day for Fox News, but TV Ratings Were Down for Trump Speech.
A peak of 34.4 million people tuned in live to watch the president’s lunchtime swearing-in on the major TV networks, according to Nielsen.
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Netflix Adds 19 Million Subscribers in Latest Quarter.
The company said those results were buoyed by programming in recent months that exceeded internal expectations.
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MSNBC Mourns and Fox Makes Merry as Trump Season 2 Premieres.
The inaugural’s pageantry was interpreted in sharply different ways across the media spectrum. Podcasters weighed in, too.
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‘Mufasa’ Builds Into Roar After Quiet Box Office Start.
The “Lion King” prequel arrived to weak ticket sales last month, but moviegoers have since embraced it, pushing global box office returns toward $700 million.
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Fox Prepares For Coverage Of Alumni.
President-elect Donald J. Trump has leaned heavily on familiar faces from the cable network as he fills out his second-term cast.
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CNN Settles Defamation Suit After a Jury Found It Liable.
The case, which involved a 2021 segment about a private security contractor in Afghanistan, played out as media organizations face more legal and political pressures.
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Baldoni Is Suing Fellow Actors After Harassment Accusations.
The lawsuit is the latest legal action in a feud tied to the 2024 film “It Ends With Us,” which starred Ms. Lively and Mr. Baldoni, who also directed the film.
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Post Updates Aim: Target All America.
This week, The Post began trying out a new mission statement: “Riveting Storytelling for All of America.”
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‘Alarmed’ Staff At Post Asks Bezos to Meet.
In a letter, more than 400 employees asked Mr. Bezos, the company’s owner, to meet, saying they were “deeply alarmed” by recent decisions at the paper.
Your Money
Technology
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Trump Pardons Creator of Silk Road Drug Marketplace.
Ross Ulbricht was serving a life sentence for creating a site in a shady corner of the internet to sell heroin, cocaine and other illicit substances.
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CapCut, a Video-Editing App From ByteDance, Returns for U.S. Users.
Other apps from the company behind TikTok, including CapCut and Lemon8, went dark this weekend before flickering back. The federal law banning TikTok also applies to them.
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Trump Announces $100 Billion A.I. Initiative.
OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank formed a new joint venture called Stargate to invest in data centers, building on major U.S. investments in the technology.
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When Google Altered Its Ad Rules, Charities Paid the Price.
After the search giant welcomed more ads from small rivals like Ask.com, Google ad costs for some nonprofits ballooned.
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Trump Signs Executive Order in Attempt to Stall TikTok Ban.
Shortly after taking office Monday, the president issued the order to delay the app’s ban for 75 days. The law went into effect on Sunday.
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TikTok Butters Up Trump, Again and Again.
The app has repeatedly name checked the president-elect in pop-up messages and statements, as it navigates a ban in the United States unless it is sold to a non-Chinese owner.
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Instagram Debuts New Video-Editing App, as TikTok Deals With a Ban.
Instagram on Sunday rolled out Edits, a video-editing product that appeared similar to CapCut, which is owned by TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance.
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What We Know About the TikTok Ban.
The popular video app went dark in the United States late Saturday and then came back around noon on Sunday, even as a law banning it took effect.
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TikTok Revived After Trump Pledges to Stall Ban.
Some users saw the social media app come back online on Sunday, following a shutdown when a federal law went into effect requiring a sale or ban.
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Does Banning TikTok solve the National Security Issue?
TikTok is set to be blocked in the U.S. after the Supreme Court upheld a law that effectively bans the app. TikTok, a Chinese-owned social media platform, has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers for its national security risks and its ties to China. Sap...
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TikTok Goes Dark in the U.S.
The popular video app stopped working shortly before a federal law barring U.S. companies from hosting or distributing TikTok was set to take effect on Sunday.
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What’s Missing In TikTok Ban? A Viral Protest.
TikTok’s cultural footprint in America is huge. Why is its disappearance being met with a shrug?
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Biden and Trump Weigh In as TikTok Threatens to ‘Go Dark’ on Sunday.
The Chinese-owned company said it would cut off its services unless the U.S. assures Apple, Google and other companies that they would not be punished for hosting and distributing TikTok.
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TikTok Evaded a Ban Time and Time Again. Has Its Time Run Out?
After a decisive loss at the Supreme Court, the app is set to be blocked in the U.S. starting Sunday, ending its streak of Houdini-like escapes.
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TikTok Ban Is Set to Deal Major Blow to ByteDance.
While TikTok remains hugely popular in Brazil, Indonesia and other markets, its 170 million users in the United States are its most valuable.
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TikTok Makes Last-Minute Push as Supreme Court Is Poised to Rule on Ban.
With the court signaling it will release a decision on Friday, lobbyists for the app pushed lawmakers to shift course.
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Spain to Overhaul System That Assesses Abuse Risk.
Spain uses an algorithm to score how likely a domestic violence victim is to be abused again. A Times investigation last year identified flaws in the system.
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Apple Disables A.I. App That Summarized News.
The company’s Apple Intelligence system has erroneously characterized news stories, provoking a backlash from media companies.
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G.M. Agrees to Stop Selling Data on Drivers.
An investigation by the Federal Trade Commission determined that consumers had not been aware that the automaker was providing their driving information to data brokers.
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A Federal Bitcoin Stockpile? Trump Likes the Idea.
The cryptocurrency industry has pushed President-elect Donald J. Trump to establish one, creating real political momentum behind the plan.
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A.I. Military Start-Up Anduril Plans $1 Billion Factory in Ohio.
The company said its Columbus plant could eventually produce tens of thousands of autonomous systems and weapons each year.
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Whisper Sweet Nothings, ChatGPT.
A 28-year-old woman with a busy social life spends hours on end talking to her A.I. boyfriend for advice and consolation. And yes, they do have sex.
Personal Tech
Sports
Baseball
Pro Basketball
Skiing
Obituaries
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Joel Paley, Writer of ‘Ruthless,’ an Off Broadway Hit, Dies at 69.
The show, with music by Marvin Laird, portrayed a schoolgirl’s murderous theatrical ambition. Paley also performed in the parody dance group Les Ballets Trockadero.
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Jules Feiffer, Piercing Pen Behind Cartoons, Novels and Plays, Dies at 95.
In his long-running Village Voice comic strip and in his many plays and screenplays, he took delight in skewering politics, relationships and human nature.
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Cecile Richards, Former Planned Parenthood President, Dies at 67.
She oversaw the United States’ largest provider of reproductive health care and sex education from 2006 to 2018.
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Claire van Kampen, 71, Playwright and Arranger of Early Music World, Dies.
After she married Mark Rylance, the two often collaborated; her specialty was arranging music for Tudor-era plays. Then she wrote a period piece of her own.
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Heinz Kluetmeier, Inventive Sports Photographer, Dies at 82.
His work for Sports Illustrated included the renowned cover photo of the United States men’s hockey team celebrating their upset win at the 1980 Winter Olympics.
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André Soltner, Who Gilded the Culinary Standard at Lutèce, Dies at 92.
Customers returned again and again for his impeccable French dishes at a restaurant that one food critic said “set the gold standard.”
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George Kalinsky, 88, Madison Square Garden’s First Official Lensman, Dies.
With camera in hand, he parlayed a chance encounter with Muhammad Ali into a photography career documenting the Knicks, the Rangers and Garden headliners like Elvis Presley.
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Zilia Sánchez, Painter Who Found Acclaim In Her 80s, Dies at 98.
A Cuban-born minimalist painter who spent much of her life in Puerto Rico, she was in her 90s when her erotically charged work first appeared at the Venice Biennale.
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Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, 90, Who Wrote of Internment, Dies.
In “Farewell to Manzanar,” she wrote about the years she and her family were imprisoned in a camp for Japanese Americans. It became the basis for a TV movie.
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Joan Plowright, Acclaimed Actress and Olivier’s Widow, Dies at 95.
She won many accolades — and was honored with a damehood — during a seven-decade career on the London stage, in film and on Broadway.
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Nathalie Dupree, 85, Southerner Who Added Flair to Cooking, Dies.
As a cookbook author, TV personality and mentor, she sought to burst the chicken-fried stereotype of the South. Sometimes her life was as messy as her kitchen.
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David Lynch, 78, Creator of Eerie Cult Films and ‘Twin Peaks,’ Dies.
A visionary, his films included “Eraserhead,” “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive.” He also brought his skewed view to the small screen with “Twin Peaks.”
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Bob Uecker, Clubhouse Wit Turned Popular Sportscaster, Dies at 90.
Uecker turned his meager baseball career into humorous fodder covering games on TV and as a commercial pitchman.
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Shirah Neiman, 81, Lawyer Who Cracked Glass Ceiling In the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
In 1970 she broke an unwritten rule against women lawyers in the Southern District’s criminal division. She went on to mentor a long list of prominent lawyers.
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Howard Buten, 74, Who Juggled Careers as Autism Therapist, Novelist and Clown.
By day, he helped run an autism center he opened in a suburb of Paris. In the evening, he delighted audiences as a clown named Buffo. In between, he wrote novels.
Baseball
College Football
Cultura
Dance
Media
Music
Pro Basketball
Briefing
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Wednesday Briefing.
Trump’s opponents push back.
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States Sued to Stop Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order.
Also, Jan. 6 defendants were set free. Here’s the latest at the end of Tuesday.
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Wednesday Briefing: Trump Opponents Push Back.
Plus, an interview with the Nobel laureate Han Kang.
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Trump’s First Day Back.
We’re covering President Trump’s inauguration, executive orders and pardons.
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Tuesday Briefing.
Donald Trump takes office.
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Trump Is Sworn In as President.
Also, Biden issued several final-hour pardons. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
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Tuesday Briefing: Trump Takes Office.
Plus, exploring Indonesia’s spiritual hub.
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The Trump Changes Begin.
We cover the start of Donald Trump’s second term.
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Monday Briefing.
The start of a truce in Gaza.
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Monday Briefing: A Gaza Cease-Fire Begins.
Plus, how Oscar contenders are rethinking sex scenes.
-
A Major Change in College Football.
General managers — once purely the domain of professional sports — are taking over.
-
A Big, Bold TikTok Ban.
Banning the popular app is audacious. It’s also a sign that officials really believe the alternative is unacceptable.
-
The Supreme Court Cleared the Way for U.S. to Ban TikTok.
Also, Trump said it will be too cold for an outdoor inauguration. Here’s the latest at the end of Friday.
-
Can Communities Survive the Fires?
A writer from Los Angeles surveys the loss.
-
The New York Times News Quiz, Jan. 17, 2025.
Did you follow the news this week? Take our quiz to see how well you stack up with other Times readers.
-
Friday Briefing.
A vote on the Gaza cease-fire deal.
-
Israel’s Vote on a Gaza Cease-Fire Was Delayed.
Also, winds and fire risks eased in Los Angeles. Here’s the latest at the end of Thursday.
-
Friday Briefing: Cease-Fire Vote Delayed.
Plus, remembering David Lynch.
-
A Cease-Fire in Gaza.
Israel and Hamas have finally agreed to a truce.
-
Thursday Briefing.
Here’s what you need to know.
-
Israel and Hamas Reached a Cease-Fire Deal.
Also, Biden is set to deliver a farewell address tonight. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.
-
Thursday Briefing: A Gaza Cease-Fire Deal.
Plus, ancient Celtic gender roles.
-
Why Biden May Matter.
We explore the president’s legacy.
Podcasts
-
What Trump Did on Day 1, and Biden’s Final Acts.
Plus, an Olympic medal fail.
-
Trump Takes Office, and the TikTok Roller Coaster.
Plus, women’s history on the National Mall.
-
Pivot Point.
Life in the moment before everything changes.
-
Remembering David Lynch.
From “Blue Velvet” to “Twin Peaks,” here are five of the visionary director’s most notable works.
-
Goodbye TikTok, Ni Hao RedNote? + A.I.’s Environmental Impact + Meta’s Masculine Energy.
“This is truly one of the funniest and most unexpected stories of the young year so far.”
-
Cease-Fire Expected to Move Forward, and a Last-Ditch Pitch to Save TikTok.
Plus, remembering David Lynch’s weirdness.
-
What to Know About the Cease-Fire Deal, and Biden Warns the Nation.
Plus, Drake sues his own music label.
-
Tell Us: When Did You Know You Were Falling in Love?
We may include your story in an episode of the “Modern Love” podcast.
-
Gaza Cease-Fire ‘Right on the Brink,’ and the S.E.C. Sues Elon Musk.
Plus, who gets a quinceañera?
-
Relax? Don’t Do It.
Wesley Morris on the culture that keeps chemical hair relaxers on shelves.
-
Hank Azaria’s Advice for Overcoming Codependency.
After his divorce devastated him, Azaria, a well-known voice actor, “dated himself” for a year.
The Daily
Science
-
Scientists Finally Make Heads of Giant Stingray Tails.
The long structures seen in manta rays and their relatives function as an early warning system, rather than a defensive weapon.
-
What Trump’s Pledge to Plant the U.S. Flag on Mars Really Means.
The president’s Inaugural Address linked landing on the Red Planet with Manifest Destiny, but left many of the specifics unclear.
-
Mother Chimp and Daughter Share a Special Sign.
Humans are known to invent private hand gestures. Chimps in the wild do, too, a new study suggests.
-
Do Chimps Who Urinate Together Stay Together?
Scientists suspect that contagious urination, a behavior they observed among a troop of apes in Japan, may play an important role in primate social life.
-
Ex-Congressman From New York Tapped as Keeper of Nuclear Arsenal.
Brandon Williams served aboard a nuclear submarine and represented a New York congressional district for one term, but has said little about his experience in the management of atomic weapons.
-
Readers Share Their Near-Death Experiences.
After the death of Peter Fenwick, a neuropsychiatrist who studied near-death experiences, readers shared stories of their own.
-
Rain-Collecting Rattlesnakes Give New Meaning to ‘Thirst Trap’
A new study reveals the surprising ways rattlesnakes have evolved to collect water in the desert.
-
A Meteorite Is Caught on Camera as It Crashes Outside a Front Door.
Home security-camera footage shows a puff of smoke, with the sound of an explosion included, as the space rock lands in Canada. A geologist said it was a rare recording.
-
Debris Rains From Space After SpaceX’s Starship Is Lost in Flight.
While Elon Musk’s spaceflight company repeated a spectacular catch of its powerful booster stage, the upper stage experienced a catastrophic malfunction.
-
Blue Origin Roars Into Space, Muting Skeptics.
The successful flight to orbit of the Amazon founder’s powerful rocket suggests it could grow into a credible competitor with Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
-
Extinct Human Species Lived in a Brutal Desert, Study Finds.
A million years ago, a species known as Homo erectus most likely survived in an arid desert with no trees.
-
Why is Jeff Bezos’ space company so far behind Elon Musk and SpaceX?
-
How Blue Origin could beat SpaceX to the moon.
-
What are Blue Origin’s plans for the future?
-
Here’s what New Glenn is carrying to space.
-
Will it be fair to call New Glenn’s launch a success or failure? Here are some scenarios.
-
What Blue Origin has done so far.
-
For Jeff Bezos, New Glenn’s success is personal.
-
What is the New Glenn rocket?
-
This is what will happen during New Glenn’s flight.
-
What’s happening on the launchpad.
-
She Made Things Better Down Where It’s Wetter.
Julie Packard discusses highlights of her four decades with the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which she has led since it opened. She’s now stepping back from the role.
-
Celtic Women Held Sway in ‘Matrilocal’ Societies.
An ancient cemetery reveals a Celtic tribe that lived in England 2,000 years ago and that was organized around maternal lineages, according to a DNA analysis.
Space & Cosmos
Climate
-
President Wants to Unleash Energy, but Not if It’s Wind or Solar.
Legal experts said the president was testing the boundaries of executive power with aggressive orders designed to stop the country from transitioning to renewable energy.
-
Why is the South so cold right now?
A mass of air called the polar vortex has escaped the Arctic and plunged southward, causing freezing temperatures and snow as far away as Florida.
-
U.S. Wind Power Faces Huge Challenges After Trump Orders a Crackdown.
In a sweeping order, President Trump halted federal approvals for new wind farms, in a move that could affect projects on land and in the ocean.
-
3 of the Most Important Trump Executive Orders on Climate.
President Trump’s wave of executive orders yesterday sent an undeniable signal to the world about the United States’ role in fighting climate change.
-
Trump Announces a Raft of Measures to Promote Fossil Fuels.
The president said he’d declare an energy “emergency,” promote drilling and end support for electric cars. His pivot to oil and gas follows the hottest year in recorded history.
-
Trump Orders a U.S. Exit From the World’s Main Climate Pact.
The United States will be one of only four countries outside the Paris Agreement, which is designed to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions.
-
Release of Homes’ Toxins Points to a Growing Danger.
The findings give new insight into the dangers of urban wildfires that burn plastics and other chemicals in homes and property.
-
To Be From L.A. Is to Know Its Twin Temptations: Beauty and Danger.
A Times climate reporter reflects on a city, its mythology and a reckoning with disaster.
-
Hit by Wildfire? Here’s How to Deal With Insurers and FEMA.
You don’t need to settle for what your insurance company or the government first offers. And you don’t have to fight alone.
-
Girding for Trump Return Since Day He Left Office.
Agencies and unions have put in place new guardrails designed to limit political interference in government research.
-
L.A. Fires Revive Calls for a ‘Climate Superfund’ Law in California.
New York and Vermont recently passed laws like these, which require energy companies to pay climate damages and will likely face fierce challenges.
-
Biden Administration Creates Final Limits for Oil Drillers in Alaska.
Republicans said they were seeking ways to quickly reverse the restrictions in the state’s North Slope region.
-
More Americans, Risking Ruin, Drop Their Home Insurance.
As climate threats worsen, they are skipping payments and losing protection.
-
How Do You Convince Consumers to Eat Plant-Based Meat?
The imitation meat industry is facing an identity crisis, and the challenge of convincing American consumers to make more planet-friendly choices.
-
Long After Blazes Ebb, New Threats Will Loom: Floods and Landslides.
While firefighters begin containing the Los Angeles wildfires, the land left behind is at a higher risk of floods and debris flows.
-
Energy Dept. Offers Loans To Reshape Power Grids.
The loan guarantees are one of the final attempts by the outgoing Biden administration to encourage power companies to cut emissions while trying to keep rates down.
-
For Trump Pick to Lead E.P.A.: Learning on the Job.
Mr. Zeldin, a Trump loyalist, would be charged with dismantling climate rules and perhaps the agency itself. He faced questions from the Senate Thursday.
-
Trump’s Choice to Lead the Interior Dept. Aims for ‘Energy Dominance’
The former North Dakota governor told senators at his confirmation hearing that he saw limits on energy production as a national security threat.
-
Yes, Imitation Meat Is Processed. Can It Also Be Healthy?
After being targeted by the meat industry, swept up in the culture wars and pummeled in sales, two plant based meat companies are reinventing themselves.
-
He Saved His Home From Fire. But Toxic Dangers Still Lurk.
Health hazards from soot and smoke blown indoors onto furniture and walls can linger for months, researchers say: “Wind will get through every crack.”
-
How to Get FEMA Help.
The agency offers different types of financial assistance after disasters. The fastest is a one-time payment of $770.
-
Are Biden and Trump at Odds on Global Energy Strategy? Maybe Not So Much.
When it comes to gas exports and competition with China, the two administrations share a similar vision, the top U.S. energy diplomat says.
-
More Americans Than Ever Are Living in Wildfire Areas. L.A. Is No Exception.
Fierce winds and months of drought set the conditions for the catastrophic wildfires in Los Angeles, but the growth of housing in fire-prone areas also played a major role.
-
Quizzed About Climate, Pick for Energy Secretary Takes a Diplomatic Stance.
Wright, the founder of a fracking firm, testified that he would back all forms of low-carbon energy as well as gas, oil and coal.
The Upshot
Opinion
-
You Asked for This Cease-Fire, Mr. President. Make Sure It Holds.
The fate of the Israel-Hamas agreement will require huge effort.
-
President Trump’s Dark New Beginning.
Readers react to President Trump’s Inaugural Address, his clemency toward Jan. 6 rioters and more. Also: Joe Biden’s last pardons as president.
-
Trump’s Opening Act of Contempt.
To open his term with such an act of contempt toward the legal system is audacious, even for Mr. Trump.
-
Are the Democrats in Even More Trouble Than They Think?
Democrats need a course correction, but the 1980s are a reminder that it doesn’t always happen naturally.
-
The Line in Trump’s Speech That Will Echo in Time.
The niceties of Donald Trump’s first speech as president couldn’t mask the darkness within — or the way he views his mission now.
-
Fixing America’s Immigration System.
Readers respond to an editorial with their own suggestions. Also: The benefits of virtual therapy; in praise of solitude; our warming planet.
-
On a Cold, Dark Inauguration Day, a Message From the Birds.
Seeing those cardinals watching over each other, I wondered: What can I, too, do to be watchful? To take care?
-
Join the U.S.? Canadians ‘Politely Decline.’
Readers give reasons to turn down Ross Douthat’s invitation. Also: The 2024 election; helping the hurting; reasons not to fly.
-
Checking In on America’s Vibes as Trump Takes the Stage.
After Trump won, Americans seem to have traded anger for hope.
-
Sean Spicer on Trump 2.0: ‘It’s Going to Be Cataclysmic’
The former White House press secretary shares his predictions for Trump’s second term.
-
Reflections on Expat Life: The Delights and the Challenges.
Readers discuss a guest essay by Paul Theroux about his experiences as an American expat.
-
What Happens When the TikTok Economy Dies?
The outcry over the app’s ban is really about economic security.
-
A Mind at Ease, Away From the Distractions.
Responses to an essay by Chris Hayes. Also: Evasiveness at cabinet hearings; politicizing aid for L.A.; reducing fire risks; ex-presidents together.
-
The TikTok Ruling Signals a New Age of Competition.
A cold war between the United States and China has now truly begun.
-
Saying No to Fear.
There is a real risk that the nation’s institutions will succumb to Trump’s campaign of intimidation and not do their jobs.
-
Is America an Oligarchy Yet?
The question hangs in the air, begging to be taken up by the American people.
-
Reality TV Takes Washington (Again).
It once might have seemed beneath the dignity of the office for politicians to go at each other, but in today’s mercenary attention company, some aggressive table flipping is essential.
-
Biden’s ‘Bittersweet’ Farewell Address.
Readers offer both praise and criticism of the outgoing president. Also: Greenland’s rights; resilience amid trauma; near-death experiences.
-
‘Where’s Our Place in Society?’: 12 Men Who Backed Trump Grapple With America.
The group discusses the news and podcasts that shape their opinions about America and the world, what being a man’s man means and what they do and don’t want Trump to do in office.
-
Hegseth’s ‘Deeply Troubling’ Selection.
Readers say he lacks the qualifications and integrity to be defense secretary. Also: Heroism amid the tragedy in L.A.; alone in an empty church.
Op-Ed
-
Three Opinion Writers on Trump Day 1: He Is Exploiting ‘Civic Ignorance’
The president’s executive orders show us where things are headed.
-
I Spent the Inauguration In Ukraine. This Is What I Saw.
“And Panama!” a Ukrainian military analyst said. “What did calm, peaceful Panama do?”
-
Trump Just Pardoned Himself.
Because presidents exercise such unfettered discretion in granting clemency, these actions provide useful insights into their true character.
-
The Right Is Winning the Battle for Hearts and Minds.
The full-scale assault by the conservative movement on liberal domination of the nation’s culture has begun to deliver key victories.
-
Thomas Friedman: The Global Challenges Facing Trump.
The columnist on why the president is facing a rare moment of opportunity in the Middle East.
-
How My Mother-in-Law Lost Her Mind and Found Herself.
“I can’t change it. I’m not in control, so I have to listen.”
-
TikTok, Trump and What Crony Capitalism Does to Our Economy.
The fealty that corporate chieftains are showing the new president is a worrying sign for our economy.
-
Trump Dreams of a New American Empire.
He is tapping into a vision of a United States that is forever growing, forever moving outward.
-
How Trump Can Remake the Middle East.
While the wages of success in the region will be enormous, the consequences of failure will be utterly hellish.
-
Trump Has Everyone Just Where He Wants Them.
A boast and a warning as the 45th president becomes the 47th.
-
‘American Carnage 2: Ultimate Carnage’: Best and Worst Moments From Trump’s Inaugural Address.
Fourteen Opinion writers assess the substance and style of Trump’s speech.
-
The Debate Over Trump’s Favorite Word Needs a Reset.
Are tariffs good or bad policy? The answer is less simple than you might think.
-
Four More Years! Four More Years! Wait. Four More Years?
Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.
-
I Was an Undocumented Immigrant. I Beg You to See the Nuance in Our Stories.
The situations of undocumented immigrants are varied, and call for a variety of solutions.
-
Trump Won’t Change the Fact That America Needs Immigrants.
Binyamin Appelbaum argues that immigration is America’s rocket fuel.
-
A King? A Pawn? A Rogue? The Founders Could Barely Imagine a President.
The young nation had seen many things, but a single executive? Surely not.
-
Trump Doesn’t Have What It Takes to Be a Great President.
Pushing power to the limit does not guarantee presidential success.
-
Sorry, No Secret to Life Is Going to Make You Live to 110.
Some of the claims behind the longest-lived people are simply improbable.
-
This Day Calls for Martin Luther King’s Vision.
The troubled times many of us feel we are in make his message especially relevant.
-
It’s Trump’s Messy, Dangerous World Now.
The key to peace is strength, and the key to strength is leadership.
-
Texas Has a Perverse Idea of Religious Freedom.
MAGA’s cruelty toward immigrants and its disregard for civil liberties are on full display in the Lone Star State.
-
Kyle MacLachlan: How David Lynch Invented Me.
How could words possibly do justice to an experience like that?
-
I’m a 17-Year-Old TikTok Junkie. I Need This Ban.
What worries me most right now is the future of my generation.
-
Trump Barely Won the Popular Vote. Why Doesn’t It Feel That Way?
The president-elect’s cultural victory has lapped his political victory.
-
‘We’d Have Been Better Off if Trump Won in 2020’
What kind of disruptions does America need? And what will Trump not actually follow through on?
-
Sean Spicer Has Regrets. But He Still Believes in Trump.
A former White House press secretary shares his predictions for Trump’s second term.
-
There Is No Way to Retreat From the Risk of Wildfires.
Some more realistic ways to think about the challenges ahead.
-
Mark Zuckerberg Has a Funny Idea of What It Is to Be a Man.
The standards of masculine energy have fallen.
-
Trump Brings a Chill to Washington.
A more seasoned Trump prepares to work his will in a more biddable D.C.
-
The Real Battle To Define Trumpism Has Only Just Begun.
Trump’s unruly coalition is threatening to tear itself apart.
-
It’s Still The Best Time To Be Alive.
What matters isn’t so much a Trump rant as that children are less likely to die now than at any other time in the history of the world.
-
Ten Years On, ‘Hamilton’ Looks Heartbreakingly Different.
It’s a glimpse at a long-lost era, but not the one the characters sing about.
-
I Lost Everything in a California Fire. It Changed How I Lived.
I realized I could live more simply, as I’d always wished to do.
-
Two of the World’s Leading Thinkers on How the Left Went Astray.
Thomas Piketty and Michael Sandel debate the value of open borders and what we owe migrants.
-
A Racist Purge Almost Destroyed My Family. Another One Is Coming.
If Trump issues his own order on Day 1, as he’s vowed, the first people could enter detention camps by February.
-
What Are the Omens for Trump 2.0?
The only possibility for a second Trump term that would be truly surprising is a period of unlooked-for calm.
-
A Cease-Fire Agreement Isn’t a Peace Deal. Yet.
After initial celebrations, challenges will be enormous as the terms of the Israel-Hamas cease-fire progress.
-
Economics Has a Name for the Costs of Loneliness.
“Social capital” is hard to define, but the loss of it in recent decades is palpable.
-
Neil Gaiman, ‘Babygirl’ and the Ethics of Social Liberalism.
The tortured quest for a morality both liberated and safe.
-
The Suburban Dream of Los Angeles Was Always A Delusion.
Awareness of doom in Los Angeles, and yet a need to push disaster away, has created a kind of collective psychosis.
-
What Makes You ‘You’? Hollywood Is Trying to Answer.
Cleaving a consciousness off one’s own is the trope of the season. Why?
-
Doctors Should Prepare for Mass Deportations.
Doctors have a responsibility to reassure their patients, regardless of immigration status, that they are welcome and protected.
-
Why Silicon Valley Gave Up on Democrats.
Marc Andreessen explains the newest faction of conservatism.
-
Democrats Are Losing the War for Attention. Badly.
The MSNBC anchor Chris Hayes on why attention has become more valuable than money in politics.
-
The Stable World Order Has Passed. What’s Next?
The global landscape of today is less predictable and more disordered. But it need not be less cooperative.
-
How Hollywood’s Awards Season Could Change the World (a Little).
It’s not just which actors win a prize that matters. It’s also what we call them.
-
Republicans in North Carolina Are Treading a Terrifying Path.
They’re trying to overturn a fair election. Gee, who gave them that idea?
-
MAGA Is Misreading Its Mandate.
America’s political future belongs to the most competent, not the most ideological.
-
Why Do We Encourage Americans to Move to Disaster Zones?
Our policies encourage Americans to flock to areas particularly prone to climate-related disasters.
-
Megafires Don’t Have to Be Inevitable.
Instead of addressing staffing shortages on the lands the federal government manages, Republicans have proposed making them worse.
-
This Jail in Rural Maine Is a Model for Treating Opioid Addiction.
An addiction specialist on how one monthly injection can save lives.
-
The Decline in Geriatric Care Hurts Us All.
The growing number of older people may suffer, but the geriatric approach can help every patient.
-
Hegseth Is the Secretary of Defense We Deserve.
If you thought the former TV host would be asked important questions at his confirmation hearing, you are under the illusion that we live in a serious country.
-
What Does the Palisades Disaster Mean for L.A.’s Future?
Do these disasters signal a shift in social conditions?
-
The Israeli Right Could Soon Sour On Trump.
The president-elect may have the soul of a bully, but he also has the instincts of a dealmaker.
-
Content Moderation Helps Keep Girls Safe.
On “Girls Gone Wild,” Meta’s moderation changes and the permanence of online cruelty.
-
Zuckerberg’s Macho Posturing Looks a Lot Like Cowardice.
Focus on what the Meta chief does, not what he says.
-
The Home Insurance L.A. — and America — Needs.
In an era of climate catastrophe, the government must take action to save home insurance — and homeownership.
-
The Perplexing Case of Pam Bondi.
The former Florida prosecutor is qualified to be the U.S. attorney general. But will she stand up to Trump when it counts?
-
Are We Sleepwalking Into Autocracy?
What we can learn from countries that have pushed back on threats to democracy.
-
Trump’s New Favorite President.
What does the president-elect actually mean when he talks about making America great again?
-
The Catholic Church Must Speak Out Against Mass Deportations.
Its voice has been largely absent in the national conversation.
Arts
-
How a Monument to Women Finally Won a Place on the National Mall.
The Women’s Suffrage National Monument, which will be the Mall’s first dedicated to women’s history, overcame congressional and other roadblocks.
-
An Earthling Reflects on a Wartime Salesman’s Bold Act of Resistance.
The French photographer Raoul Minot took clandestine photos of Nazi-occupied Paris. Now, his images serve as a reminder of the power of art.
-
Naomi Watts Thinks David Bowie Was Onto Something.
“The first album I ever bought was ‘Hunky Dory,’” said the actress and author, “and all those songs, every single one, is amazing.”
-
A Video Game Writer’s Lament: ‘We Can Do Quite a Lot Better’
Jon Ingold, an author of celebrated narrative-driven games, thinks the industry fails to celebrate good writing or recognize it as a craft.
-
Historians Debate Gaza ‘Scholasticide’
The American Historical Association’s council rejected a resolution condemning Israel’s actions in Gaza, which have destroyed much of the enclave’s educational system.
-
Can This Mobile Still Be a Calder?
A collector says the Calder Foundation sunk the value of an $8 million mobile by Alexander Calder by deciding it was too damaged to still be viewed as a work by the artist.
-
Wendy Williams Speaks Out.
The former daytime host, who has been diagnosed with dementia, said in an interview on “The Breakfast Club” that she was “not cognitively impaired” and spoke about her life in a care facility.
-
For TikTok Refugees, a Wry Welcome on a Chinese App.
In their mass migration to the Chinese app RedNote, social media users make a gleeful mockery of the American government.
-
A New Space Race Could Put the Moon At Risk, Group Says.
The organization said that more than 90 important sites on the moon could risk destruction if space tourism is left unregulated.
Art & Design
-
‘Starry Night,’ All Night Long, as a Van Gogh Blockbuster Ends.
The National Gallery in London stayed open all night for die-hard fans of the Dutch painter. “Midnight offers more room for reflection,” one attendee said.
-
Maligned ‘Iron Horse’ Glistens Once Again.
Exactly why the sculpture was attacked by University of Georgia students may always be a mystery. But 70 years later, restored, it rides again.
-
Impressionism: Le Quiz!
It’s been 150 years since Monet and the Impressionists shocked Paris with their rebellious Société Anonyme show. How well do you know those once-revolutionary smudges?
-
They Practiced the Art of Resilience.
“Pictures of Belonging” traces the careers of three female artists who flourished despite the U.S. government’s imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War II.
-
Metal, Flowers and Rejuvenation.
To match Jack Shainman Gallery’s new Beaux-Arts flagship, the artist known for his Soundsuits debuts a sculpture nearly 26 feet high.
-
Among the Carnage, a City’s Cherished Legacy of Design.
The finality of the wildfires’ destruction has taken 10 more cherished buildings — by Richard Neutra, Gregory Ain, Eric Owen Moss and others —that showed the city’s great diversity.
-
Fire Relief In Sight For Artists.
The fund, already at $12 million, is led by the Getty and includes major museums, foundations and philanthropists.
-
Calder Gardens Names a Curatorial Leader.
Juana Berrío, currently at the Whitney Independent Study Program, will be senior director of programs at the cultural center in Philadelphia.
Dance
Music
-
Garth Hudson: 11 Essential Songs.
The last surviving original member of the Band died on Tuesday. He was a master on keys and saxophones who could conjure a panoply of scenes and eras.
-
David Lynch’s Enchanting Sound Worlds.
Music played a huge role in defining the filmmaker’s distinctive atmosphere on the big and small screens. Hear 13 examples.
-
In Minneapolis, a Layer of Hygge Warmth for a Top-Notch Orchestra.
With the Nordic Soundscapes Festival, Thomas Sondergard puts his stamp on the Minnesota Orchestra (and its interior spaces).
-
At 90, the Ghanaian Highlife Pioneer Ebo Taylor Finds a New Voice.
The singer, guitarist and composer released heralded music in the 1970s and early ’80s before retreating. The label Jazz Is Dead is boosting his rediscovery.
-
Review: The Philharmonic Breezes Through Wagner’s Epic ‘Ring’
The conductor Nathalie Stutzmann led Lorin Maazel’s coolly efficient 1987 distillation, “The ‘Ring’ Without Words,” at David Geffen Hall.
-
At Prototype Festival, Opera With Lynchian Strangeness.
This year’s Prototype, a showcase of experimental opera and theater, was stylistically broad but the focus was on the human voice in all its weirdness.
-
Bob Dylan’s Draft of Lyrics, Once Tossed in Trash, Sells for $500,000.
Two pages of lyrics, written in the kitchen of a pioneering rock ‘n’ roll journalist, offer glimpses into the Nobel Prize-winning musician’s writing process.
-
At Trump’s Rally, the Contradictions Are in the Music.
The president-elect danced along with Village People as his rally closed with a live performance of “Y.M.C.A.,” after Kid Rock and Lee Greenwood played.
-
The Dylan-Chalamet Connection.
A conversation about “A Complete Unknown” and the power of celebrity.
-
The Ultimate Neko Case Primer.
Listen to 10 songs by the golden voiced, poetic singer-songwriter.
-
A 100-Year-Old Jazz Legend’s Solo Debut, and 11 More New Songs.
Hear tracks by Perfume Genius, Lucy Dacus, Bartees Strange and others.
-
After an Orchestra’s Rebirth, The Focus Turns to Thriving.
The San Antonio Philharmonic was formed after the demise of the city’s 83-year-old orchestra in 2022. But rebuilding has not been easy.
-
Late Adopter? Bob Dylan Joins TikTok in What May Be Its Final Days.
Dylan seemed to be in on the joke, posting an old black and white clip of himself saying “Good God, I must leave right away.”
-
A New Place for Her Hard Truths.
In “The Harder I Fight the More I Love You,” the singer and songwriter outlines the personal and professional challenges that have shaped her career.
-
Beer First, And Then The Music Followed.
After the pianist, Vikingur Olafsson, asked for a concerto over beers, the composer, John Adams, wrote “After the Fall,” which will now travel the world.
-
Drake Sues His Own Record Label.
In a federal lawsuit on Wednesday, Drake accused Universal Music Group of putting his life and reputation at risk by releasing and promoting the popular diss track.
-
A Satirist’s Farewell: Surprisingly Heartfelt.
On “Poet of Motel 6,” due March 21, the country musician known for shocking audiences grapples with death and his own legacy.
Television
-
‘Prime Target’ Is a Charming Popcorn Thriller.
Don’t think overly hard about the premise. Just enjoy the constant cliffhangers and beautiful people.
-
Jimmy Fallon: Melania’s Hat Is Her ‘Very Own Border Wall’
The “Tonight Show” host donned his own version of the first lady’s inaugural hat, which seemed to prevent the president from kissing her.
-
Trump Returns, and So Does His TV Spectacle.
The president’s second inauguration began with somber pageantry and ended with a reality-TV document signing.
-
This Week on TV.
The new Apple TV+ series stars Leo Woodall as a math genius, and President-elect Donald J. Trump is inaugurated for his second term.
-
Chappelle on ‘S.N.L.’: Nudging All of Us Toward Peaceful Change.
The comic took his usual jabs at everyone and everything, then invited Americans, including the president-elect, to be their best, most compassionate selves.
-
The 13 Greatest ‘S.N.L.’ Commercial Parodies.
To us, anyway. Over 50 seasons, “Saturday Night Live” has introduced crystal gravy, robot insurance and countless other demented goods and services. Share your favorites in the comments.
-
Roy Wood Jr. Wants to Connect.
The funny but bleak “Lonely Flowers,” isn’t directly about the new president, but it builds small observations into larger points about our lives.
-
A ‘Severance’ Recap to Jog Your Memory.
It’s been almost three years since the Season 1 finale. This refresher should help jog your memory.
-
Biden’s Farewell Address Leaves Late Night Befuddled.
After the president warned about various threats to democracy, Seth Meyers said: “I agree, but why are you giving us a to-do list on your way out?”
-
Title Sequences Ooze Symbolism.
“Twin Peaks” was his ultimate portrait of a land of terror and beauty.
-
A Glamorous Trajectory For a Fashion Pioneer.
The six-part Hulu series follows the pioneering designer’s life and career with startling beauty and potency.
-
Kitchen Drama Fired Up By a Prickly Relationship.
The Israeli series, now available in the United States, calls to mind “The Bear” but was made first.
-
Conan O’Brien Tapped For Mark Twain Prize.
The comedian and former late-night talk show host will be given the Kennedy Center’s annual comedy honor at a ceremony in March.
-
A Mind-Blowing Return to the Office.
It’s time to return to the office, as the loopy sci-fi marvel makes its world bigger and stranger.
-
Late Night Is Willing to Bet on a TikTok Ban.
Jordan Klepper called the Supreme Court “not exactly TikTok’s core demographic,” adding that they are “more of a Walgreens app type of crowd.”
-
‘S.N.L.’ Archive Heads to University of Texas.
Michaels, the creator of “Saturday Night Live,” has donated his papers to the university’s Harry Ransom Center.
-
Late Night Seems to Think This Pete Hegseth Fellow Is Unqualified.
Jordan Klepper said the former weekend show host’s only qualification to run the Pentagon was that “Trump liked watching him sit on a couch on Saturday mornings.”
Theater
Books
Book Review
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Can You Find the 13 Book Titles Hidden in This Text Puzzle?
This short scene conceals the names of 13 books published in the middle decades of the 20th century. See if you can find them all and build a reading list along the way.
-
Fire Sail.
In “Dark Laboratory,” Tao Leigh Goffe traces the origins of global environmental collapse to the explorer’s conquest of the Caribbean.
-
In ‘Mona Acts Out,’ #MeToo Shakes Up a Downtown Theater.
Mischa Berlinski’s shrewd comic novel finds a veteran actress reconnecting with her deposed mentor while facing the challenge of playing Cleopatra.
-
You’ve Been Invited to a Secret House Party in London.
Details are in Caleb Femi’s new poetry collection, “The Wickedest.”
-
The Tragedies That Came After Freedom in the American South.
“Somewhere Toward Freedom” tells the story of Sherman’s March to the Sea from the perspective of the formerly enslaved.
-
Bats Out of ‘Hellboy’
Mike Mignola’s “Bowling With Corpses” is full of suspicious shadows and offbeat jokes.
-
Remember Body Glitter and Chat Rooms? ‘Y2K’ Won’t Let You Forget.
In a vibrant collection of “essays on the future that never was,” Colette Shade takes a cold look at the cheery promise of the 2000s.
-
Want to Get Sucked Into a Black Hole? Try This Book.
Marcus Chown’s “A Crack in Everything” is a journey through space and time with the people studying one of the most enigmatic objects in the universe.
-
The Queen Is Dead. Long Live the Queen?
Two very different books examine the reigns and legacies of Victoria and Elizabeth II.
-
The Absurd, Dizzying Humanity of a 20th-Century Genius.
Mavis Gallant wrote short stories full of brutal humor that examined the hell of other people.
-
How Silence Improves Pico Iyer’s Life.
The travel writer and essayist discusses his new book, “Aflame,” about his stays at a California monastery.
-
The Desperate Housewife Whose Face Launched a Thousand Ships.
In “Helen of Troy, 1993,” the poet Maria Zoccola relocates a figure from Greek mythology into small-town Tennessee.
-
Seeking Refuge in 1941 Iowa.
In H.M. Bouwman’s wise and heartbreaking “Scattergood,” the shadow of the Holocaust reaches a farm girl trying to help her ailing friend.
-
In Han Kang’s Latest, a Quixotic Bird Rescue Expedition Turns Tragic.
The Nobel laureate’s new novel, “We Do Not Part,” revisits a violent chapter in South Korean history.
-
5 New Books We Recommend This Week.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
-
Masters of Allusion: The Art of Poetic Reference.
Poets have a way of incorporating other poets into their work. Our columnist approves.
-
A Case for Hookups With Strangers.
In his new essay collection, Manuel Betancourt explores the beauty, depth and riches found in brief romantic encounters with unfamiliar people.
-
Adam Haslett.
His new novel is titled after Turgenev’s “Fathers and Sons,” he says, “given the theme of incomprehension between generations in that book.”
-
Think Big.
In “Open Socrates,” the scholar Agnes Callard argues that the ancient Greek philosopher offers a blueprint for an ethical life.
-
Three Men and a Rabbi Face a Life-Changing Test: A Toddler.
Tom Lamont’s debut novel, “Going Home,” considers the joys and frustrations of raising a child who is not your own.
-
Gay Talese, Well Suited For the City.
In a new collection about New York City, the writer turns his gimlet eye on its icons, its architecture, its hot spots — and its suits. “Clothes matter — especially when you get old,” he says.
Movies
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‘Problemista,’ ‘Stress Positions’ and More Streaming Gems.
A pair of inventive comedies lead off this month’s exploration of the hidden discoveries on your subscription streaming services.
-
Sex Scenes in Movies Are Back, but They Aren’t Exactly Sexy.
Instead, these moments in “Anora,” “Babygirl,” “Challengers” and more involve complex power dynamics that speak volumes about their characters.
-
‘Grand Theft Hamlet’ Stages Shakespeare in a Land of Shootouts.
During a pandemic lockdown, out-of-work actors turned to the video game Grand Theft Auto Online, where a tortured soliloquy may be interrupted by a rocket launcher.
-
5 Scenes That Define David Lynch’s Vision.
The director developed such a distinct style that “Lynchian” became a go-to term for any sort of surrealism onscreen. These scenes from his work get to the heart of what that term embodied.
-
Five Science Fiction Movies to Stream Now.
In this month’s sci-fi picks, what’s worse? Coming face-to-face with the apocalypse or with our older selves?
-
7 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
-
With ‘Grand Theft Hamlet,’ The Gameplay’s the Thing.
The film captures two players staging the classic within an online video game, raising fascinating questions about community and connection.
-
What the Songs of ‘Moana 2’ Owe to Beyoncé and ‘Beauty and the Beast’
In writing their first film soundtrack together, the TikTok duo of Abigail Barlow and Emily Bear looked to those influences and “Anchorman.” Of course.
-
They Traded the Spy Life for the Suburbs.
Cameron Diaz and Jamie Foxx star as former agents, now parents, who must protect their children. You can guess the rest.
-
David Lynch Peered Under America’s Mask.
The director himself came off as almost performatively normal. Masterpieces like “Eraserhead” and “Mulholland Drive” said otherwise.
-
12 Cryptic Titles From David Lynch and Where You Can Stream Them.
Films like “Blue Velvet” and “Mulholland Drive” aren’t always easy to explain, but they live on in your mind and burrow under your skin.
-
David Lynch: A Life in Pictures.
The filmmaker possessed a singular vision — and a knack for finding collaborators who could convey it.
-
The Entertainment World Mourns the ‘Dreamer’ Director David Lynch.
Lynch’s death inspired tributes from fellow filmmakers, celebrities and past collaborators, who praised his visionary work and singular voice.
-
Producers Guild Reveals Award Nominations.
The list includes “Anora,” “Conclave,” “Emilia Pérez” and “A Complete Unknown,” which all received directors and actors guild nominations, too.
-
Alarum.
Sylvester Stallone briefly stabilizes this artless action movie about a rogue agent and his wife on the run.
-
Night Call.
An ordinary locksmith undergoes an action-hero transformation in this snappy thriller set in Brussels during the height of the Black Lives Matter protests.
-
Trauma Transforms a Writer Into a Pitiful Beast.
Julia Garner stars as a weary wife to Christopher Abbott, who might be transforming into a savage animal, in this cabin-in-the-woods thriller.
-
One of Them Days.
Keke Palmer and SZA play short-on-cash roommates on a mad dash across Los Angeles in this exhilarating comedy.
-
One Woman, Two Men, Different Paths.
A tepid romance follows familiar genre lines, but lacks some fundamental appeal.
-
Political Lies Mangle a Resilient Family.
The award-winning Brazilian film has been a major hit in its home country — and it’s easy to see why.
-
Leigh Whannell and His Personal Monsters.
The writer and director of “The Invisible Man,” 21st-century style, is back with an interpretation of another Universal Pictures monster movie, “Wolf Man.”
-
‘Wicked’ And ‘Anora’ Among WGA Nominees.
The three films have momentum leading up to the planned Oscars nomination announcement next week.
-
‘Conclave’ Collects 12 BAFTA Nominations.
“Anora,” “A Compete Unknown” and “The Brutalist” are also in the running for best film at the British equivalent of the Oscars.
-
He’s Taken His Sweet Time.
After roles in “Memento” and “L.A. Confidential” made him famous, Pearce turned his back on Hollywood. At age 57, he’s returned in “The Brutalist.”
-
Black Cinema’s New Sense of Time.
RaMell Ross, A.V. Rockwell, Raven Jackson and Garrett Bradley are the new Black directors chronicling Black life at a different speed.
Food
-
Pitt’s Offers Fried Saltines and Country Captain in Red Hook.
Periyali becomes Opto, Nerina opens a location in Brooklyn and more restaurant news.
-
Just Think of the Leftovers.
Meatballs, scallion chicken and cauliflower adobo are quick and delicious dinners, but they really shine when repurposed or reheated.
-
This Quick Noodle Soup Is Vivid in Every Sense of the Word.
This creamy butternut squash and coconut noodle soup from Christian Reynoso boasts an incredible color and a perfectly calibrated sour-spicy tang.
-
Practice Makes Perfect Fish.
I’m cooking Kenji López-Alt’s gorgeous Cantonese-style fish this weekend so that I have the technique nailed in time for Lunar New Year.
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Chana Masala, Roast Orange Chicken and a Flexible Cabbage Salad.
Or: a chickpea favorite, the roast chicken I want to make this Sunday and how I plan to use the leftovers of said chicken.
-
Restaurant Workers Bring Unique Skills to the L.A. Fire Crisis.
Even as it faces economic setbacks of its own, the hospitality industry is stepping up to feed emergency workers and evacuees.
-
This Kung Pao Tofu is an Absolute Stunner.
That’s dinner tonight, with applesauce coffee cake for breakfast and Jamie Oliver’s chicken roasted in milk for Sunday supper.
-
A Brooklyn Barbecue Pioneer Sets His Sights on Manhattan Fine Dining.
Billy Durney of Hometown Bar-B-Que plans to open a 57th Street restaurant with the group founded by the late chef James Kent.
-
As the Power Shifts, D.C. Restaurateurs Are Nervous, and Diplomatic.
With Trump back in town, owners are wondering how the dining scene will shape up.
-
TikTok Changed How We Cook. What Changes When It’s Gone?
Ahead of a potential ban of the app, The Times spoke to 11 prominent food content creators about what is at stake.
-
Three Back-Pocket Restaurants for Last-Minute Reservations.
Dinner for all tastes, the perfect brunch and tonkotsu ramen that will blow your friends’ socks off.
-
Feeding Me Softly.
Coconut saag, soondubu jjigae and haluski answer the question, “What if you could eat a hug?”
-
I Read This Recipe, Then Immediately Made This Soup.
Andy Baraghani’s chicken soup with red lentils and lemony yogurt is super easy, super flavorful and, well, just really super.
-
These Sheet-Pan Noodles Have Very Little Cleanup.
Eric Kim cleverly cooks and assembles his japchae on a single sheet pan in this fast and fortifying dinner.
Wine, Beer & Cocktails
Style
-
The Ball Gowns of Trump’s New ‘Golden Age’
Melania and Ivanka Trump and Usha Vance wore a pastiche of bygone eras — perhaps a glimpse of what they hope the future looks like.
-
Piled On Prints and an ‘Upstate Vibe’
Camouflage, animal, scenic — oh my!
-
Fresh Off ‘Severance,’ John Turturro Tries Modeling.
With a Turturro cameo and a very surreal set, Zegna’s latest presentation brought to mind the hit Apple TV show. Though the clothes were far from corporate.
-
Melania Trump Tips Her Hat.
Inauguration fashion statements from the first lady — as well as the second.
-
Armani Takes Inspiration From … Armani.
As a new generation seeks out vintage Armani on eBay, the label is leaning into its own archive. The Armani renaissance is officially on.
-
Tech Titans and Donors Hit D.C. to Toast Trump’s Inauguration.
Fans of Donald J. Trump spent millions for the opportunity to jump from ballrooms to rooftops for lavish events held across Washington this weekend.
-
How Can I Get Out of My Leggings Rut?
Our fashion critic proposes alternative pant styles to a reader searching for a comfortable yet fashionable replacement to leggings in public.
-
Prada Creates Genuine Pants Anxiety.
In the label’s sexiest men’s runway show in recent memory, tight trousers waged a comeback.
-
What’s With All the Dancing in Suits?
In Milan, arty dance routines seemed more prevalent than runway shows, as fashion houses aimed to give their audiences something — anything — to Instagram about.
-
For U.S. Users, A Brief Period Of Lamenting.
The app went dark nationwide on Saturday night, but the company indicated it was in the process of restoring the service after assurances from President-elect Donald J. Trump.
-
When Your Son Goes MAGA.
Some liberal parents face a new, unexpected challenge: how to talk to their children who voted for Donald J. Trump.
-
First Ladies and Fashion, Over the Decades.
From Eleanor Roosevelt to Jill Biden, first ladies have often made statements through what they wore on Inauguration Day and to the inaugural balls.
-
A Woman of a Certain Age, on Full Display.
In “The Last Showgirl,” Jamie Lee Curtis upends a host of cinematic clichés about women.
-
In TikTok’s Final Hours, a Mix of Silliness and Sadness.
Users in the United States react to a nationwide ban of the app.
-
Fashion’s TikTok Conundrum.
At the men’s shows in Europe, Ralph Lauren and Brunello Cucinelli brushed off virality in favor of reliable classics, while Philipp Plein had a bit of an identity crisis.
-
A Simple Brown Coat That Set the Tone for the U.S. Presidency.
For a limited time, George Washington’s inaugural coat, which distanced his office from the military and from European royalty, will be on display at Mount Vernon.
-
Care for a Cup of Tea? Then Toast May Be for You.
A low-key brand, founded by archaeologists in Wales, has quietly expanded in New York.
-
Parents Cheer as Ms. Rachel Heads to Netflix.
Rachel Accurso, the beloved children’s YouTube star, announced a deal with the streaming service, broadening her audience and making it even easier to find her content.
-
What’s ‘In’ for Weddings This Year?
Experts share eight predictions for what will happen in the world of weddings in 2025.
-
A Call for Millennial Complaints Draws an Enormous Crowd.
At a time of social media upheaval, a post to X had people making jokes and longing for what felt like a simpler (and less expensive) era.
-
Influencers React to a World Without TikTok.
Grief, frustration and tears followed the Supreme Court’s decision on Friday.
-
From the Renegade to the Supreme Court: A Timeline of TikTok’s Rise and Fall.
What started as “the dance app” spawned countless memes, launched lucrative careers and shaped entire industries. Here’s how it got here.
-
The Lynchian Look.
Lavish hair, nondescript clothes and a smoking habit were hallmarks of the filmmaker David Lynch’s visual persona.
-
Turning the Page on a Calm, Steady Style.
Joe, Jill and the look of the last four years — what will we remember?
-
As the Detroit Lions Surge, Fans Flock to an Unofficial Uniform.
With support from Dan Campbell, the Lions’ wildly popular head coach, Detroit Army’s apparel has emerged as an unlikely alternative to the team’s licensed gear.
-
Fortunately, the Honeymoon Period Came to an End.
The perils (and surprising benefits!) of getting hitched while still seeing other people.
-
The Best Coffee? Maybe Right Here.
When Justin Ryan Leung and Andrea Ng first connected on OkCupid, neither expected a casual cafe date to lead to three wedding celebrations.
-
Three Years After Meeting, an Instagram Invitation.
Cynthia Hinojosa and Gianluca Bianchezi met at a music festival. A few years later, their romance took them from Mexico to Canada and back.
-
Thanks to Burned Pizza, Workplace Crush Heats Up.
When Taylor Maki first met Jorge Melgoza at an organization that provides social services to Native Americans, she was immediately smitten. It took him a while to notice.
-
First a Wedding, Then a Trip to the Supreme Court.
Sydney Hopfer and Jes Graham, who met three years ago, pushed up their wedding date and used the occasion to include “our political statement.”
-
Too Many Clothes.
After natural disasters, relief organizations are overwhelmed by clothing donations. Aid groups in Southern California say money is more helpful.
-
Is the Criticism of L.A.’s Mayor Unfair? Black Women Rise to Defend Her.
Many celebrities and politicians have criticized Karen Bass for her city’s response to the wildfires, but her defenders say she is being held to a double standard.
-
Haven of Hippie Life Survives Fire.
Though landmarks were lost, the tight-knit and storied community of Topanga Canyon counts its blessings.
-
Weddings That Are Out of This World (or at Least Way Out of the Chapel).
Some couples bring in numerologists or lip print readers, while others choose to be married by a spirit guide or practicing witch.
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On TikTok, a Thrifty Gentleman Keeps It Formal.
Larry Pennington, a fashionable former educator, was looking to share some advice on home décor and thrifting. He became an unlikely social media darling.
-
The Film Was Prescient, but to What Degree?
Eleven years ago, Spike Jonze’s tech drama imagined a budding romance between a man and his virtual assistant. If anything, the film was holding back.
-
A Fire Relief Effort by and for Teenage Girls.
An eighth grader started a donation drive for teenagers whose homes burned in Los Angeles. Ariana Grande, Prince Harry, Meghan and others have chipped in.
-
Tiny Love Stories: ‘Let Your Gut Lead’
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.
-
Access Is Tight Around Kamala Harris’s Los Angeles Home.
The Brentwood house she shares with Doug Emhoff is in an evacuation zone, but the vice president has been in Washington.
-
Proenza Schouler Designers Depart in Further Fashion World Tumult.
After a year of major creative change, a new round of musical chairs has begun.
-
Feeling Left Out.
Adjusting to life in a new city, a couple was stung to learn that the only people they know in town, the husband’s childhood friends, didn’t invite them on a recent getaway.
-
Ye-Speak Is a Mystery, but It Also Sells.
His new clothing collection has words and letters in a foreign language, the message of which is unclear. But people are buying it.
Magazine
T Magazine
Travel
-
It’s Zinc Bar vs. Barista in a Paris Battle of the Buzz.
The city’s traditional cafes and bistros are staking out their cultural territory in an emerging duel against highly caffeinated upstarts serving up latte art.
-
Never Heard of Yogyakarta? It Might Be the Center of the Universe.
The Indonesian city is home to some of the greatest Hindu and Buddhist temples, a thriving food scene and an area known as the Cosmological Axis, a cradle of Javanese culture.
-
A.I. Helped Us Review the ‘Places’ We’ve Been.
Two decades of destinations amount to more than 300,000 words. To take a closer look, we needed more than the human eye.
-
TikTok Fueled Travel Crazes, What Happens Now?
The app gave places like an ice cream shop/wine bar fame, and sometimes overwhelmed them with crowds. Influencers and destinations await the fallout.
-
American Airlines Accused of Discrimination by Interracial Couple.
In a lawsuit, two newlyweds say they were detained after a passenger and airline employees wrongly suspected the Black husband of trafficking his white wife.
-
5 Vacations That Could Improve Your Sex Life.
At these retreats in places like Costa Rica, California and the Berkshires, you’ll learn how to express your desires, enhance intimacy and build self-confidence.
-
36 Hours in Barbados.
Snorkel from the beach, sample the rum, dance to reggae, and don’t miss the early morning procession of thoroughbreds heading for a swim.
-
Overbooked Flight? What You Can Do if an Airline Bumps You.
When airlines sell more tickets than available seats, passengers can get kicked off their flights — whether they want to or not.
Real Estate
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Loving an ‘Untouched’ Modernist House, and Then Getting Down to Work.
A couple bought a home in Palo Alto, Calif., that was designed by an associate of Frank Lloyd Wright. Happily, they were also smitten with the two-year renovation.
-
Rescuing Pongo, Pearl, Bandit, Tiger and Zipper.
Throughout the burn zone, Angelenos struggled to save their pets. Among the most difficult to save are those that live in water.
-
$2,000 Rentals in Los Angeles.
A studio apartment in Koreatown, one-bedroom units in Long Beach and East Hollywood, and links to resources for those displaced by the fires.
-
Open Houses in Los Angeles Take on an Eerie Feeling.
Though thousands of residents who have lost their homes are desperately searching for somewhere to live, potential home buyers are weighing risks.
-
Can We Compel the Board to Explain The Work Being Done to Our Building?
Most condo associations must provide a record of all receipts and expenses. But they also need residents’ maintenance fees to operate.
-
Amid Wildfires, a New Reality for L.A.’s Reality TV Stars.
Binge-worthy guilty pleasures like “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” and “Selling Sunset” document luxury real estate in Los Angeles, a market that now faces an uncertain future.
-
$700,000 Homes in Spain’s Balearic Islands.
A five-bedroom townhouse on Majorca, a two-bedroom cottage on Ibiza, and a two-bedroom flat with a private roof deck on Ibiza.
-
Don’t Eat the Burger. It’s a Stool.
Furniture resembling food — fruit, sandwiches and more — has gone viral on social media and led to a shopping frenzy.
-
All the Usual Backstabbing and Big Commissions. This Time in Manhattan.
“Selling the City,” the newest offshoot of the “Selling Sunset” franchise, features a team of real estate professionals dedicated to breaking records and to building empires.
-
Outside Nashville, She Rebuilt Her Life With $200,000 and a Dream.
After leaving prison and regaining custody of her children, a single mother looked for a house where she could chart a brighter future.
-
Homes for Sale in Manhattan and Brooklyn.
This week’s properties are in Chelsea, NoMad and Brighton Beach.
-
Homes for Sale in New York and New Jersey.
This week’s properties are a six-bedroom in Scarsdale, N.Y., and a five-bedroom in Manchester, N.J.
-
Subway Lines That Try Your Patience.
The winner — that is, the loser — was delayed 40,360 times between December 2023 and November 2024.
-
New York Judge Deems Alexander Brothers Flight Risk, Denies Bail.
Oren, Tal and Alon Alexander will be extradited from Miami to New York, where they will remain in federal detention until trial.
-
Whisper Network Emerges in the Desperate Rush for Housing in L.A.
In a market with few homes available, real estate agents are searching for the ones no one knows about.
-
Did You Lose Your Home in the California Fires? Share Your Memories With Us.
The New York Times would like to help tell the stories of people who are facing this devastating reality by sharing photos and memories of what has been lost.
-
Saving Pink Potatoes and Smoky Zucchini.
The Exchange, on Seed Savers’ website, pairs the people who save heirlooms with those who want them, all for the price of postage.
-
$400,000 Homes in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Louisiana.
A Greek Revival house in Milan, a condo in Philadelphia and a shotgun-style home in New Orleans.
-
Yonkers, N.Y., More Than an Easy Commute.
The third largest city in New York has new residential projects in the pipeline and is attracting businesses.
Real Estate
-
At Home With David Rasche.
The “Succession” actor and his wife, Heather Rasche, have made their home in Maplewood, N.J., all about family.
Health
Well
Family
Mind
Move
Times Insider
Corrections
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Wednesday, January 22, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Tuesday, January 21, 2025
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Monday, January 20, 2025.
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No Corrections: Jan. 20, 2025.
No corrections appeared in print on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
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A Veteran Photographer With Scrambled Plans.
Doug Mills has photographed every presidential swearing-in ceremony since 1985. “I’ve learned a lot from all of them,” he said.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Sunday, January 19, 2025.
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025.
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Saturday, January 18, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Friday, January 17, 2025.
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No Corrections: Jan. 17, 2025.
No corrections appeared in print on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Thursday, January 16, 2025.
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025.
Crosswords & Games
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Drum Location.
Landon Horton makes his New York Times Crossword debut.
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Wordle Review No. 1,313.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025.
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The Connections Companion No. 591.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025.
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Spelling Bee Forum.
Feeling stuck on today’s puzzle? We can help.
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So, So, So Long.
Tap into your animal instincts to solve Dan Caprera’s crossword puzzle.
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Wordle Review No. 1,312.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.
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The Connections Companion No. 590.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025.
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Manual for Consistency in Writing.
Katie Byl and Jeff Chen make their collaboration debut.
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The Connections Companion No. 589.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
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Wordle Review No. 1,311.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
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Word Problems.
Emily Sharp and Kunal Nabar collaborate on a puzzle that’s greater than the sum of its parts.
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The Connections Companion No. 588.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025.
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Wordle Review No. 1,310.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025.
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Catchers of Waves.
Scott McMahon’s New York Times Crossword debut stacks up against all comparisons.
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The Connections Companion No. 587.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025.
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Wordle Review No. 1,309.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025.
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Quarter Back?
Willa Angel Chen Miller steps out on her own.
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The Connections Companion No. 586.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Friday, Jan. 17, 2025.
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Wordle Review No. 1,308.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Friday, Jan. 17, 2025.
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Letters Put in Boxes.
Rebecca Goldstein and Adam Wagner want us to look both ways.
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The Connections Companion No. 585.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025.
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Wordle Review No. 1,307.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025.
The Learning Network
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What Are Your Hopes and Fears for President Trump’s Second Term?
Donald J. Trump was sworn in on Monday as the 47th president of the United States. What does this transition in leadership mean to you?
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What Do You Do to Stay Healthy?
The Times asked 35 experts to share one health tip they swore by. Which resonate most with you? What advice can you offer to other teenagers?
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Red Words.
What do you think this image is communicating?
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Word of the Day: cognizant.
This word has appeared in 133 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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How Much Say Do You Have in What You Learn at School?
A guest essay argues that when students are more involved in setting their own academic goals, they’re more excited to learn. Is that true for you?
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Hug.
Tell us a story, real or made up, that is inspired by this image.
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Word of the Day: jeremiad.
This word has appeared in five articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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What Teens Are Saying About Barring Children Under 16 From Social Media.
When Australia passed a law last year that set a minimum age for users, we asked students how they would feel if their country did the same.
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What’s Going On in This Picture? | Jan. 27, 2025.
Look closely at this image, stripped of its caption, and join the moderated conversation about what you and other students see.
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What’s Going On in This Graph? | Jan. 29, 2025.
Lead poisoning can cause lower I.Q.s, behavioral problems and cardiovascular damage. How big of a problem is it worldwide?
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Watch: ‘When Progressive Ideals Become a Luxury’
How persuasive is the concept of luxury beliefs to explain many popular progressive ideas about drugs, marriage and crime?
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Person and Shapes.
What do you think this image is communicating?
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Word of the Day: presto.
This word has appeared in 23 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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As 2025 Begins, How Are You Feeling About the State of Politics?
Scroll through artwork by the teenage winners of our Coming of Age in 2024 contest. Then, tell us how well the collection captures your feelings and experiences.
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Teens on Politics Today: The Winners of Our Coming of Age in 2024 Contest.
We asked, “What can you show or tell us to help explain what it’s like to grow up in this political moment?” Students from around the world responded with powerful art and writing.
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Is It OK to Be Messy?
A guest essay argues that we need to embrace our clutter more. Do you agree?
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Religious Ceremonies.
Do you belong to a religious or spiritual community? What traditions and rituals are important to you and your faith?
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Word of the Day: emporium.
This word has appeared in 45 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
Lesson Plans
En español
América Latina
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Claudia Sheinbaum promete ‘defender a México’ tras las órdenes ejecutivas de Donald Trump.
El martes, la mandataria mexicana respondió punto por punto a las órdenes ejecutivas del presidente Trump sobre migración, comercio y otros temas.
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Los líderes de Latinoamérica dan la bienvenida y advierten a Donald Trump.
Varios se mostraron contrariados por sus planes, ya que el presidente de EE. UU. promulgó medidas migratorias que afectan a sus países y prometió imponer aranceles a México y Canadá.
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Guatemala se prepara para reintegrar a sus ciudadanos deportados.
El caso de Guatemala muestra cómo las deportaciones anunciadas por Donald Trump podrían afectar la vida de millones de personas fuera de las fronteras de EE. UU.
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Al menos 80 muertos y más de 11.000 desplazados en un nuevo brote de violencia en Colombia.
Miles de personas han huido de los enfrentamientos entre grupos armados en Catatumbo, región ubicada en la frontera con Venezuela, frustrando las esperanzas de paz en Colombia.
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México se prepara para Trump. Esta vez las cosas son diferentes.
México se prepara para Trump. Esta vez las cosas son diferentes
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A días de la toma de posesión de Trump, la frontera entre México y Estados Unidos está en calma.
El número de migrantes ha disminuido de forma constante en los últimos meses. El descenso se ha atribuido en gran medida al endurecimiento de las restricciones introducidas por el gobierno de Biden y las autoridades mexicanas y panameñas.
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Biden y la Iglesia fueron engañados por el gobierno de Cuba, según un disidente liberado.
Aunque José Daniel Ferrer está contento de estar en casa con su esposa y su hijo de 5 años, quien apenas lo conoce, dijo que su postura siempre ha sido clara: “Prefiero la muerte al deber mi liberación a un trato indigno”
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El equipo de Trump evade las conversaciones sobre las deportaciones masivas, según funcionarios de países latinoamericanos.
Según los analistas, es posible que el gobierno entrante quiera limitar la confrontación antes de firmar una serie de decretos en materia de inmigración que harían que los gobiernos de la región tuvieran que reaccionar.
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Panamá quiere preservar la alianza con EE. UU., pero Trump podría acercar ese país a China.
Expertos advierten que Trump puede enemistarse con Panamá en un momento en el que China intenta atraer a ese país como aliado y ampliar su influencia en América Latina.
Ciencia y Tecnología
Cultura
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En el mitin de Trump previo a la toma de posesión, la música era contradictoria.
Para un movimiento construido en parte sobre la exclusión, la concentración del domingo tuvo insinuaciones evidentes a la diversidad y la inclusión musicalizadas con Village People y Kid Rock.
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Las 13 mejores parodias de anuncios de SNL.
Al menos para nosotros. A lo largo de 50 temporadas, “Saturday Night Live” ha presentado la salsa de cristal, el seguro contra robots e innumerables productos y servicios dementes.
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Reseña de ‘De vuelta a la acción’: el regreso de Camerón Diaz merecía algo mejor.
Con una historia trillada y sensiblera, esta historia de exespías convertidos en padres no está a la altura de su reparto.
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Vuelve ‘Severance’ (y está complicada). Aquí es donde se quedó.
Han pasado casi tres años desde el final de la primera temporada. Este resumen de sus puntos clave te refrescará la memoria.
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Nintendo anuncia el lanzamiento de la Switch 2 para 2025.
La empresa compartirá más detalles sobre la nueva consola en abril, cuando realice exposiciones en todo el mundo.
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Ben Stiller habla de ‘Severance’, de venderse y de ser judío hoy en día.
El actor y director habla del esperado regreso de la exitosa serie, de las comedias que lo convirtieron en estrella y de cómo fue crecer con sus famosos padres.
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Drake demanda a Universal Music Group alegando que la canción ‘Not Like Us’, de Kendrick Lamar, lo difama.
En una demanda presentada el miércoles, Drake acusó a Universal Music Group de poner en peligro su vida y su reputación al publicar y promocionar la popular canción.
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Neil Gaiman responde a la explosiva denuncia de agresión sexual.
En un comunicado en su sitio web, el autor de éxitos de superventas negó rotundamente las acusaciones publicadas en la revista New York.
Estados Unidos
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La agencia arancelaria propuesta por Trump plantea dudas y confusión.
Muchos aspectos de la nueva entidad siguen sin estar claros y, según los expertos en comercio, el grueso de los ingresos arancelarios vendría de las empresas estadounidenses que importan productos.
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¿Qué implica que Donald Trump designe como terroristas a los cárteles?
Esta medida tendría repercusiones a nivel global, ampliaría el alcance de los fiscales estadounidenses y podría afectar la diplomacia con México.
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EE. UU. cierra las puertas a migrantes que han esperado durante meses para ingresar.
El lunes, el presidente Trump tomó medidas para cerrar la frontera sur de Estados Unidos y poner fin a las citas de CBP One. Muchas personas expresaron su desesperación; alguas decidieron cruzar la frontera de todos modos.
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Trump aplica mano dura contra la migración desde el inicio.
Entre las medidas del presidente figuran una declaración de emergencia nacional para desplegar el ejército en la frontera y un intento de suprimir la ciudadanía por nacimiento para los hijos de los no ciudadanos.
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Trump dice que Putin está ‘destruyendo a Rusia’
El presidente de Rusia, Vladimir Putin, elogió el segundo mandato de Trump, mientras que el presidente estadounidense criticó al dirigente ruso por su guerra en Ucrania.
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Trump promete no dejarse frustrar ni en casa ni en el extranjero.
En su discurso de investidura, el presidente habló con un tono de agresividad destinado a ser escuchado por el público nacional y extranjero como una advertencia de que EE. UU. no aceptará no por respuesta.
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El primer día de Donald Trump: un recuento de sus principales medidas.
El presidente de EE. UU. hizo movimientos políticos después de tomar posesión: se retiró de acuerdos internacionales, prometió aranceles e indultó a casi todos los alborotadores del 6 de enero.
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Donald Trump, 47.º presidente de Estados Unidos.
El nuevo mandatario promete una ‘época dorada’ y más para estar el día.
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Los últimos indultos de Biden buscan frustrar la campaña de represalias que Trump prometió.
Los indultos fueron un notable epílogo para la carrera política de medio siglo de Biden, subrayando la desconfianza y el enfado que el mandatario siente hacia Trump, el hombre que le precedió y le sucederá en el cargo.
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Trump dice que tomará medidas para cambiar el nombre del golfo de México. Puede que no sea tan fácil.
Al asumir el cargo, el presidente entrante volvió a decir que promoverá cambiar la nomenclatura que el cuerpo de agua compartido recibe desde el siglo XVI.
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Conmoción en la frontera mexicana tras el cierre de CBP One.
En Tijuana, personas que tenían previsto solicitar asilo en EE. UU. quedaron desoladas al enterarse de que sus citas habían sido canceladas por el gobierno entrante.
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Trump no impone aranceles, por ahora.
La acción ejecutiva del presidente en materia comercial mantendrá todas las posibilidades abiertas, entre ellas eventuales aranceles contra China, Canadá y México.
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Trump cierra CBP One, señal del inicio de su campaña represiva hacia la migración.
El presidente se apresuró a cancelar la aplicación que permitía concertar citas para ingresar a Estados Unidos, rechazando así a decenas de miles de migrantes.
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Trump lanza una criptomoneda y ahora es una de las más valiosas del mundo.
Antes de tomar posesión, el presidente anunció el lanzamiento del nuevo tóken, $Trump, el viernes por la noche.
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Estas son las órdenes ejecutivas de Donald Trump que están previstas.
El equipo del presidente entrante dijo que tomaría medidas unilaterales en diversos frentes durante sus primeras horas en el cargo, entre ellas 10 órdenes ejecutivas para abordar la migración y los inmigrantes.
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Joe Biden indulta a 5 familiares en sus últimos minutos en el cargo.
El presidente saliente subrayó que no creía que su familia hubiera hecho nada malo, pero temía los ataques políticos de Donald Trump.
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Donald Trump toma posesión como presidente de EE. UU.
La ceremonia, que se celebró en interiores debido al frío, culminó el notable regreso de Trump a la presidencia.
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¿Quién está en la lista de represalias de Trump?
El presidente electo ha prometido utilizar los amplios poderes de su cargo para vengarse de políticos y funcionarios que, asegura, lo han agraviado.
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Cómo ver la toma de posesión de Donald Trump.
Tenemos a más de dos decenas de reporteros y periodistas gráficos cubriendo los acontecimientos en tiempo real.
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El plan de deportación de Trump podría empezar la próxima semana en Chicago.
El plan, denominado “Operación Salvaguardia” por el Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas, comenzaría el martes, al día siguiente de la toma de posesión de Trump.
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¿Por qué Trump sale tan serio en su retrato oficial?
El retrato, que aparecerá impreso en los programas de la toma de posesión del lunes, no luce precisamente festivo. Trump aparece entrecerrando los ojos con severidad, bañado por una inquietante iluminación lynchiana.
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El viaje aterrador de un helicóptero de bomberos para combatir los incendios en California.
Un expiloto del ejército. Un helicóptero viejo. Vientos feroces. La carrera para apagar el incendio de Eaton puso a prueba como nunca a los bomberos nocturnos del condado de Los Ángeles.
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Trump elige a un acaudalado amigo de Musk para conseguir Groenlandia.
Se espera que Ken Howery, propuesto como embajador en Dinamarca y amigo cercano del magnate de X, sea fundamental para las negociaciones sobre la isla.
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La Corte Suprema de EE. UU. respalda la ley que obliga a vender o prohibir TikTok.
La empresa argumentaba que la ley violaba sus derechos de libertad de expresión y los de sus 170 millones de usuarios estadounidenses.
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Nancy Pelosi no asistirá a la toma de posesión de Donald Trump.
La congresista se enfrentó al presidente electo durante su primer mandato, y la animadversión entre ambos persistió después de que él dejara el cargo.
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Biden y Trump dejan a un lado su enemistad para alcanzar el alto al fuego en Gaza.
La extraordinaria colaboración entre el presidente saliente y el entrante no impidió que ambas partes se atribuyeran el mérito.
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Ucrania, Medio Oriente, China: ¿cuáles son los retos del Pentágono en el nuevo gobierno de EE. UU.?
El nuevo secretario de Defensa enfrentará retos importantes en el mundo y en casa.
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Ron DeSantis elige a la fiscal general de Florida para sustituir a Marco Rubio.
La republicana Ashley Moody ocuparía el puesto del senador Marco Rubio una vez que sea confirmado como secretario de Estado del presidente electo Donald Trump.
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Unida por la catástrofe, Los Ángeles llora y confía.
¿Los incendios son la gran fuerza igualadora, divisora o unificadora de la comunidad? O ¿son todo eso a la vez?
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Bomberos mexicanos se unen a las labores de extinción del incendio de Palisades.
La tarea del primer equipo internacional que se unió a las labores de contención era vigilar los lugares donde los incendios pudieran reavivarse y propagarse de nuevo.
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El legado presidencial de Biden: una era de cambio, marcada para siempre por Trump.
La gestión de Biden estará en los libros de historia como un interregno entre dos mandatos de Donald Trump, una pausa en medio de un periodo caótico de cambio, para bien o para mal.
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Biden pronuncia su discurso de despedida con una advertencia a EE. UU.
En su último discurso desde el Despacho Oval, el presidente Biden instó al país a recordar sus raíces y a no renunciar a sus valores en el altar de un nacionalismo populista que considera peligroso.
Estilos de Vida
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¿Funcionan las mascarillas faciales LED?
Estos dispositivos emisores de luz están por todas partes en internet. Preguntamos a los expertos si pueden reducir las arrugas, eliminar el acné y mucho más.
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Melania Trump da un mensaje con su sombrero.
La primera dama usó un sombrero que le daba un aire de misterio e inaccesibilidad poco común en una toma de posesión. La segunda dama, Usha Vance, hizo una importante excepción en los diseñadores de sus atuendos.
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Cómo la lengua de signos puede ayudarnos a todos a ser mejores comunicadores.
La emotividad la lengua de signos puede liberarte de la trampa de la precisión.
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Ni abstemio, ni ebrio: ¿qué significa estar ‘casi sobrio’?
En un intento de llegar a más personas, los expertos han adoptado este enfoque. Aseguran que es mejor reducir al menos un poco el consumo de alcohol, que no hacerlo en absoluto.
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¿Es posible maridar la salud y el gusto por el vino?
¿Qué ocurre cuando tu pasión y el trabajo de tu vida se califican de riesgo para la salud? Nuestro crítico de vinos contempla la reciente advertencia del cirujano general de Estados Unidos.
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El nervio vago influye en casi todos los órganos internos. ¿También puede mejorar nuestro estado mental?
En las redes sociales, los ejercicios para “tonificar” el nervio vago se han difundido como una panacea para la ansiedad y otros males psicológicos. Esto dicen las investigaciones.
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En esta isla puedes encontrar arena rosa, palmeras y a Robert De Niro.
El actor desde hace tiempo se desempeña también como empresario de hoteles y restaurantes. Ahora, él y sus socios planean abrir un pequeño hotel de lujo en el Caribe.
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Aún no sé por qué dije que sí.
Fuimos lo que la física llama un entrelazamiento cuántico.
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¿Quieres viajar barato este año? Hay que saber cuándo reservar.
Marca tu calendario y aprovecha las rebajas, los periodos lentos y las mejores ofertas de viajes.
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El look lynchiano.
El pelo abundante, la ropa común y un cigarro en la mano eran las marcas distintivas de identidad visual del cineasta recientemente fallecido, David Lynch.
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Una rutina de 15 minutos con pesas rusas.
Este entrenamiento fortalece tanto los músculos como el corazón y puede ser especialmente útil para las personas con problemas de rodilla.
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¿Debería preocuparme por los microplásticos de las bolsitas de té?
No todas las bolsas de té los desprenden. Hemos preguntado a expertos si es arriesgado utilizar las que sí lo hacen.
Mundo
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Ucrania detiene a 3 de sus comandantes ante reveses y deserciones en el frente de batalla.
Dos generales y un coronel fueron acusados de la pérdida de territorio en el este de Ucrania a manos de las fuerzas rusas el año pasado.
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¿Qué hay detrás del desigual intercambio de rehenes israelíes por prisioneros palestinos?
Es probable que los futuros intercambios sigan una fórmula similar: decenas de palestinos liberados de cárceles israelíes por cada rehén retenido en la Franja de Gaza.
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Quiénes son las 3 primeras rehenes israelíes liberadas en el alto al fuego en Gaza.
Treinta y tres personas serían liberadas durante la primera fase del acuerdo, entre ellas mujeres soldados y civiles, niños y hombres mayores de 50 años.
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El jeque, el magnate y el diplomático: el trío que selló la tregua de Gaza.
El primer ministro catarí, el enviado del presidente Biden y el representante del presidente electo Donald Trump formaron una asociación imprevisible.
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El gobierno de Israel aprueba el acuerdo de alto al fuego en Gaza.
El gabinete israelí en pleno votó a favor del cese al fuego en una reunión que duró hasta el ‘sabbat’ judío, la primera pausa en las hostilidades en Gaza en más de un año.
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Su plataforma estuvo vinculada a las violaciones de Pelicot. Ahora Francia quiere enjuiciarlo.
Isaac Steidl fundó la plataforma Coco, que las autoridades relacionaron con actividades delictivas durante años. El esfuerzo por responsabilizar a Steidl pone a prueba una nueva frontera jurídica.
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Conoce a LA gurú japonesa del orden (no, esa no).
Antes de que Marie Kondo se convirtiera en un referente mundial del orden, Hideko Yamashita ya mostraba a Japón el arte de crear espacios más armoniosos.
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Netanyahu enfrenta una crisis política por el acuerdo de alto al fuego en Gaza.
Con sus socios de coalición de extrema derecha oponiéndose al fin de la guerra y amenazando con abandonarla, el primer ministro israelí puede tener que elegir: ellos o el acuerdo.
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Una casa de Auschwitz abre sus puertas para revelar un pasado escalofriante.
La casa del comandante del campo de exterminio, un elemento central de la película ganadora de un Oscar “Zona de interés”, pronto comenzará a recibir visitantes.
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Israel y Hamás acuerdan un alto al fuego en Gaza, según las autoridades.
El alto al fuego entrará en vigor inmediatamente, dijo un funcionario de la Casa Blanca. La primera fase del acuerdo, que incluye el inicio de la liberación de rehenes, durará seis semanas, aunque no estaba claro qué día comenzaría, dijo el funcionario.
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Lo que China busca en Panamá: más comercio, proyectos e influencia.
Los esfuerzos de Pekín por ampliar su alcance en el país centroamericano se han topado con varios obstáculos, en parte debido a la presión estadounidense.
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Las claves de la crisis de liderazgo de Corea del Sur.
Yoon Suk Yeol, el presidente coreano destituido, ha sido detenido en el marco de una investigación sobre su declaración de la ley marcial el 3 de diciembre. He aquí cómo se desarrolló el caos político.
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La mayor reunión humana del mundo comienza en India.
El festival religioso, denominado Maha Kumbh Mela, se celebra cada 12 años a orillas de los ríos Ganges y Yamuna, al norte de India. Este año, las autoridades esperan que a cientos de millones de personas en las siguientes seis semanas.
Negocios
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Las medallas de las Olimpiadas de París se están deteriorando y LVMH no responde.
En poco más de 100 días desde la clausura de las Olimpiadas, más de un centenar de atletas han pedido que les cambien sus medallas.
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Un gesto de Elon Musk desata especulaciones en internet.
En un mitin de celebración en Washington, Musk extendió dos veces el brazo con la palma hacia abajo, lo que provocó comparaciones con el saludo nazi.
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TikTok, RedNote y la promesa incumplida del internet chino.
Hubo un tiempo en que los gigantes chinos de internet parecían listos para conquistar el mundo, pero este parece haberlos olvidado, salvo para verlos como amenazas.
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TikTok volvió a funcionar en EE. UU. luego de que Trump dijo que paralizará su prohibición.
Algunos usuarios vieron cómo la aplicación de redes sociales volvía a estar en línea el domingo, luego de que dejara de funcionar al entrar en vigor una ley federal que exigía su venta o prohibición.
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TikTok empieza a desaparecer. Y quizás pocos lo extrañen.
La huella cultural de TikTok en Estados Unidos es enorme. ¿Por qué sus usuarios parecen aceptar su partida sin mayor interés?
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Ella tiene un tórrido romance con ChatGPT.
Una mujer de 28 años con una ajetreada vida social pasa horas y horas hablando con su novio de IA para pedirle consejo y consuelo. Y sí, tambien tienen sexo.
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Starbucks toma medidas enérgicas: si no compras, no te quedes.
Starbucks dijo que los visitantes de sus cafeterías tendrían que comprar algo para poder usar el baño o permanecer en la tienda. Se trata de la respuesta del nuevo director ejecutivo de la empresa al descenso de las ventas.
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Cómo descargar tus videos y otros datos de TikTok antes de que desaparezca.
Ante la inminente prohibición de TikTok en Estados Unidos y la incógnita sobre el futuro de la aplicación, este podría ser un buen momento para guardar tu trabajo.
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¿Cómo impactará el superávit de China de 1 billón de dólares en la estrategia arancelaria de Trump?
Solo un tercio del superávit comercial de China fue con Estados Unidos, y solo un tercio del déficit estadounidense fue con China. Esa es una ecuación complicada para el presidente electo estadounidense.
Opinión
Weather
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How do coldblooded creatures stay warm in a winter storm?
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Record Snowfall Blankets New Orleans.
A powerful winter storm tore across the Gulf Coast on Tuesday, bring record snowfall to parts of Louisiana and Texas.
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Riding out the winter blast under a Houston freeway.
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How a Florida mayor is managing snow. Hint: He’s learning.
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They’ve Never Seen Snow Like This Before. They Wanted to Make the Most of It.
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They’ve never seen snow like this before. They wanted to make the most of It.
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Thousands of Flights Delayed or Canceled as Winter Storm Disrupts Travel in Southeast.
Snow and cold temperatures hitting a broad swath of the region also disrupted travel via rails and roadways.
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New Orleans, a City That Has Seen It All, Gets Its First Snow in 15 Years.
Many roadways were impassable, classes were canceled in local schools and many businesses could not open as a winter storm essentially brought New Orleans to a standstill.
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In the Sun Belt, There’s Never a Snowplow Around When You Need One.
As Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida noted, “We’re not necessarily used to walking in a winter wonderland here.”
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The Gulf Coast Storm Will Blanket Southern Beaches With Snow.
As the system moves around the coast, it should bring a wintry mix of snow, sleet and freezing rain to the Florida Panhandle.
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No snow in Chicago, but it’s cold. Even for Chicago.
Temperatures in the Upper Midwest plunged below zero on Tuesday.
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Chicago shivers through an Arctic blast.
Temperatures in the Upper Midwest plunged below zero on Tuesday.
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Southern U.S. Braced for Power Outages Due to Snow: How to Stay Safe.
Officials are warning of the dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning and fires.
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A Silent, Snowy Houston Has Its Residents Joyful but Also Wary.
With memories of the deadly 2021 winter storm still fresh, Houston residents greeted the city’s blanket of snow with joy but also concern.
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A Rare Winter Storm Is Sweeping Through the Gulf Coast.
“So many of you have never seen an event like this,” Louisiana’s state climatologist warned, with New Orleans facing possibly the most snow it has ever seen.
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Scenes From Across an America Bracing Itself Against Brutal Winter Cold.
An intense blast of arctic air blanketed the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast with frigid temperatures, and a rare winter storm was expected along the Gulf Coast.
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As Brutal Cold Settles Across U.S., Gulf Coast Braces for Rare Winter Storm.
Closures of schools, airports and businesses were taking effect in areas from southern Texas to Florida and South Carolina. Snow and ice could bring major travel disruptions and power outages.
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Southern California Is Threatened by More Damaging and Dangerous Winds.
With more critical fire weather this week in Los Angeles, the National Weather Service once again issued one of its strongest warnings possible.
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Significant Winter Storm Moves Into the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast.
Snow was falling in the Mid-Atlantic and New York City on Sunday. The coldest air in several years will descend across much of the country starting Monday, forecasters said.
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Powerful Santa Ana Winds Expected to Elevate Fire Risk in Southern California.
Meteorologists said there was a chance the winds would be as severe as those that fueled the Palisades and Eaton fires, but that different locations would likely be affected.
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Winter Storm Expected to Bring at Least 6 Inches of Snow to the Northeast.
The snow is likely to fall on Sunday from the Appalachians to New England. New York City may see its largest snowfall in years.
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Northeast Braces for Snow as Frigid Air Settles Across Most of the U.S.
Temperatures are expected plunge across the country this weekend.
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