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G.M. Withdraws Profit Forecast as Trump Tariffs Take a Toll

General Motors also said its profit in the first three months of the year fell 7 percent from a year earlier.

© Brett Carlsen for The New York Times

The General Motors plant in Spring Hill, Tenn. The automaker previously forecast a profit of $11.2 billion to $12.5 billion for 2025, roughly double last year’s.
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Adidas Warns Sneakers Will Cost More in the U.S. as Trump’s Tariffs Take Effect

The chief of the German sportswear giant said that unpredictability surrounding the tariffs prevented the company from issuing a full-year forecast, but he predicted a price increase for American consumers.

© Yuki Iwamura/Associated Press

An Adidas store in New York. The company said that it was refraining from issuing a profit outlook for the full year, citing the unpredictability that tariffs have caused.
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Trump Travels to Michigan to Mark 100 Days in Office

President Trump is trying to show his commitment to U.S. manufacturing at a moment when many are growing dissatisfied with his economic agenda.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

President Trump’s trip to Michigan comes at a pivotal time for his presidency.
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Cardinal Who Threatened to Crash the Conclave Now Says He Won’t

The Vatican said that Francis had stripped a convicted cardinal, Angelo Becciu, of his right to vote for the next pope. Cardinal Becciu maintains his innocence but said he would sit this one out.

© Franco Origlia/Getty Images

Cardinal Angelo Becciu at Pope Francis’ funeral in Vatican City on Saturday.
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Finnish Leader Warns Russia: ‘You Don’t Play With President Trump’

President Alexander Stubb of Finland, who has become an interlocutor in peace talks, says in an interview he doesn’t want Ukraine to suffer the same fate his country once endured.

© Saara Mansikkamaki for The New York Times

President Alexander Stubb of Finland has inserted himself in the Ukraine peace process in what he calls “a humble way,” regularly speaking with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine and also talking to President Trump.
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Lab Animals Face Being Euthanized as Trump Cuts Research

Animal testing remains a fundamental part of biomedical research. But as funding evaporates, mice, rats and even monkeys may be euthanized.

© Jeff Roberson/Associated Press

The Trump administration has made deep cuts to the American research enterprise, with profound ramifications for the lab animals that serve as the basis for much of the nation’s biomedical research.
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How Photography From the Vietnam War Changed America

The images changed how the world saw Vietnam, but especially how Americans saw their country, soldiers and the war itself, which ended 50 years ago this month.

© Tay Ninh, 1965. Photograph by Horst Faas/Associated Press

Vietnam was the first “living room war,” seen on TV and through remarkable photography.
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Trump Administration to Use Federal Lands for Affordable Housing

Housing developers and researchers say the idea of building more homes on federal land could help ease shortages. But various obstacles could hinder the effort.

© Morgan Lieberman for The New York Times

Construction for a residential development in Henderson, Nev. The bulk of federal land is in the West, meaning an effort to build on it could help ease housing prices in states like Nevada.
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Can Reform U.K. Be More Than a Vessel for Rage?

Much of the British political class laughed at Nigel Farage in 2016. It isn’t laughing now.

© Oli Scarff/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Attendees at a Reform U.K. rally in Birmingham, England, in March.
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A Contender for the Papacy in the Mold of Francis

Cardinal Luis Tagle of the Philippines is known as the “Asian Francis.” But he has been criticized for not being vocal enough about his country’s brutal drug war and clerical sex abuse.

© Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

Cardinal Luis Tagle of the Philippines is on many unofficial short lists of “papabile” cardinals, or those with a good shot at succeeding the ailing Pope Francis.
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Trump’s Tariffs Put China’s E-Commerce Superpowers to the Test

Companies like Alibaba that built China’s world-leading online shopping sector are now helping its sellers find markets beyond the United States.

© Long Wei/VCG via Getty Images

Alibaba’s headquarters in Hangzhou, China, in February. China’s success at e-commerce has become a key feature of the country’s broader economic rise.
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Mexico to Give U.S. More Water From Their Shared Rivers

A joint agreement appeared to avert a threat by President Trump of tariffs and sanctions in a long-running dispute over water rights in the border region.

© Victor Medina/Reuters

The Morelos Dam, in Los Algodones, Mexico, diverts water to the Mexicali Valley from the Colorado, one of three rivers shared with the United States under a 1944 treaty.
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Despair Blankets Scene of Car-Ramming Attack at Festival

Filipinos in Vancouver returned to a neighborhood to mourn the 11 people killed in a weekend attack.

© Andrew Chin/Getty Images

People visiting a makeshift memorial near the scene where a car drove into a crowd during the Lapu Lapu Festival in Vancouver, British Columbia.
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U.S., Helped by Musk’s Team, Charges Iraqi With Voting Illegally in 2020

Akeel Abdul Jamiel, who appears to be a fan of President Trump, voted in upstate New York despite not being a citizen, officials said.

© Johnny Milano for The New York Times

John A. Sarcone III, the interim U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York, called an Iraqi citizen’s vote “a callous and illegal act.”
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National Climate Assessment Authors Are Dismissed by Trump Administration

The Trump administration told researchers it was “releasing” them from their roles. It puts the future of the assessment, which is required by Congress, in doubt.

© Adam Gray/Getty Images

Sunrise, shrouded in wildfire smoke, in Forked River, N.J., on Thursday. The National Climate Assessment examines how global warming affects aspects of American life from public health to the economy.
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Trump Looms Over Canada’s Election

Also, more than 100 Justice Department lawyers are resigning. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.

© Nasuna Stuart-Ulin for The New York Times

Voters cast ballots today at a high school in Montreal.
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