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Banned From YouTube, Sneako Is Welcomed by Eric Adams

Mayor Adams did an hourlong interview with Sneako, a streamer who has made remarks many consider antisemitic. The conservative influencer Amber Rose was also present.

© Angelina Katsanis for The New York Times

Eric Adams has prioritized the Orthodox Jewish vote in his independent run for mayor in November.
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Senate Bill Would Make Deep Cuts to Medicaid, Setting Up Fight With House

The proposal would salvage some clean-energy tax credits and phase out others more slowly, making up some of the cost by imposing deeper cuts to Medicaid than the House-passed bill would.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

The 549-page measure, released by the Senate Finance Committee, outlines changes to Medicaid that would be far more aggressive than the version passed in the House, making millions more Americans subject to a work requirement.
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Israel Attacked Iran’s State TV

Also, the suspect in the Minnesota killings could face the death penalty. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

Tehran after an Israeli airstrike today.
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Nina Kuscsik, First Woman to Win Boston Marathon, Dies at 86

Overcoming male resistance, she became the first woman to enter the New York City Marathon and the first official female winner of the Boston event.

© Joseph Dennehy/The Boston Globe, via Getty Images

Nina Kuscsik finishing the 1972 Boston Marathon as the first woman ever to do so.
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Trump Will Not Sign G7 Statement on Iran and Israel, Official Says

A White House official said President Trump had decided not to sign onto a statement drafted for Group of 7 allies that urges restraint from both Israel and Iran, which have been trading attacks for days.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

From left, Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada, President Trump and Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain on Monday at the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta.
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Mike Lee Draws Outrage for Posts Blaming Minnesota Assassination on Far Left

The Republican senator from Utah suggested in social media posts that the killings were the work of “Marxists,” and mocked Minnesota’s Democratic governor. He later issued a more sober condemnation of the violence.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Senator Mike Lee of Utah at the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing at the Capitol in Washington earlier this year.
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36 More Countries May Be Added to Trump’s Travel Ban

The administration gave the nations 60 days to fix concerns, according to a State Department cable. The president already imposed a full or partial ban on citizens of 19 countries.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

The Trump administration set a Wednesday deadline for countries facing a potential travel ban to provide remediation plans.
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U.S. Investigators Arrive at Scene of Plane Crash in India

Officials said they had found the cockpit voice recorder that may provide crucial clues about what caused the Air India flight to crash, killing at least 270 people.

© Atul Loke for The New York Times

The crash site in Ahmedabad, India, on Friday. The recorders could hold information about what happened leading up to the disaster.
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Negotiation or Capitulation? How Columbia Got Off Trump’s Hot Seat.

The university has largely complied with the administration’s demands, but has adjusted them in meaningful ways. One department offers a window into that effort.

© Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York Times

Top academics in the Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies Department at Columbia University, including Professors Timothy Mitchell and Gil Hochberg, the department’s chair, say the school is committed to the program’s autonomy.
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California’s Wildfires Could Be Brutal This Summer

Experts say there could be more large wildfires than usual this year. Here’s why.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

The aftermath of the Eaton fire in Altadena, Calif., in January. The peak of California’s fire season, when fires are most abundant and the most acres burn, occurs from June through October.
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William Langewiesche, the ‘Steve McQueen of Journalism,’ Dies at 70

He was a master of long form narratives, often involving high-stakes topics. He reported for Vanity Fair, The Atlantic and The New York Times Magazine.

© Chip East/Reuters

William Langewiesche in 2002. For a decade, his articles were routinely finalists for the National Magazine Award, two of which won the prize.
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Supreme Court to Hear Case on Subpoena to Anti-Abortion Pregnancy Centers

The question for the justices is whether the centers may pursue a First Amendment challenge to a state subpoena seeking donor information in federal court.

© Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

The precise question the Supreme Court agreed to hear in the case involving First Choice Women’s Resource Centers, which runs five centers that say they “offer free medical services and material support to women facing unplanned pregnancies,” is a narrow one.
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Ukraine Takes First Step Toward Carrying Out Minerals Deal With U.S.

The government is trying to show the Trump administration that it can deliver on the agreement.

© Ukraine's Deputy Prime Minister, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

In a handout image from Ukraine’s government, Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury secretary, and Yulia Svyrydenko, the Ukrainian economy minister, signed the minerals deal in Washington in April.
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Toymakers Team Up With Artists for Tariff-Proof Toys

Seeking adult fans with money to spend, companies like Mattel and Lego are working with artists to make exclusive — and expensive — versions of their products.

© Colin Sussingham for The New York Times

Gary Basemen holding a plush doll he designed based on a vintage Mattel mascot.
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Trumps Promote American Bitcoin, a New Crypto Mining Venture

The debut of American Bitcoin, a mining firm backed by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., has heightened the ethical concerns swirling around the Trump presidency.

© Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

Eric Trump spoke on a panel with his brother Donald Trump Jr. at Bitcoin 2025 in Las Vegas last month.
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Trump’s Trade and Tax Policies Start to Stall U.S. Battery Boom

Battery companies are slowing construction or reconsidering big investments in the United States because of tariffs on China and the proposed rollback of tax credits.

© Margaret Albaugh for The New York Times

Group14 Technologies, a start-up, slowed the construction of a battery materials factory in Moses Lake, Wash., after its customers in China balked at paying higher tariffs.
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Business Lobbyists Scramble to Kill $100 Billion ‘Revenge Tax’

Critics contend that the measure will scare off the foreign investment that President Trump wants to attract.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Legislation being advanced by Republicans in Congress would substantially increase the tax bills for many foreign companies that operate in the United States, raising more than $100 billion over a decade.
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Jurors at Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial See Video of ‘Freak-Off’ Sexual Encounters

Earlier on Monday, the judge dismissed a juror over a “lack of candor” and prosecutors strove to show that the mogul’s “right hand” aide helped organize sex nights.

© Mark Von Holden/Invision, via Associated Press

On Monday at the Sean Combs trial, jurors watched brief videos of “freak-off” sexual encounters while wearing headphones and looking at screens that had been outfitted with privacy guards.
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France’s Macron Faces Dilemma With Intention to Recognize Palestinian State

The French-Israeli relationship has always been turbulent, but the prospect that President Emmanuel Macron may recognize a Palestinian state has brought tension to a new level.

© Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

In recent months, President Emmanuel Macron of France has spoken of “a moral duty and political requirement” to recognize a Palestinian state.
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