↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Before the Attack in Boulder, the Gaza War Consumed the City Council

Activists have regularly disrupted council meetings to demand that the city call for a cease-fire in Gaza. The unusual tension suggests a changing Boulder.

© Michael Ciaglo for The New York Times

Twelve people were injured on Sunday after a man threw Molotov cocktails at demonstrators marching in support of the Israeli hostages in Gaza.
  •  

U.S. May Strip Harvey Milk’s Name From Navy Vessel

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered a review of ship names honoring Mr. Milk, a gay rights pioneer, and other leaders. In Mr. Milk’s case, the move is intended as a rebuke of Pride Month.

© Ariana Drehsler/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The U.S.N.S. Harvey Milk during its launching ceremony in San Diego in 2021.
  •  

Trump Rescinds Biden Policy Requiring Hospitals to Provide Emergency Abortions

At issue is how to interpret a federal law barring hospitals from turning away poor or uninsured patients.

© Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

The emergency department of the University of Wisconsin hospital in Madison. The Trump administration did not explicitly tell hospitals they were free to turn away women seeking abortions in medical emergencies.
  •  

In N.Y.C. Mayor’s Race, Mamdani Responds to a Call for His Deportation

Vickie Paladino, a councilwoman from Queens, called Zohran Mamdani a “radical leftist” who hates America, and warned against “future Zohrans.”

© Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani said the comment calling for his deportation was a byproduct of what President Trump “and his sycophants have wrought.”
  •  

Jim Marshall, Iron Man Defensive End for the Vikings, Dies at 87

Part of Minnesota’s famed unit the Purple People Eaters, he started a record 270 consecutive games. Also famously, he once scooped up a fumble and ran to the wrong end zone.

© Jim Mone/Associated Press

Jim Marshall, No. 70, was carried off the field on Dec. 9, 1979, after the Vikings defeated the Buffalo Bills, 10-3. It was Marshall’s last home game in Minnesota.
  •  

U.S.-China Trade War Morphs From Tariffs Into Fight Over Supply Chain

Instead of battling over tariffs, Washington and Beijing have turned to a potentially far more harmful strategy: flexing their control over global supply chains.

© Lindsey Wasson for The New York Times

The jet engine technology that powers airplanes comes mostly from U.S. companies, but the engines can’t function without rare earth minerals that are manufactured largely in China.
  •  

There Are Limits to Republican Lawmakers’ Reach, Even in Texas

Republican factions united to pass most but not all of their conservative priorities in this year’s legislative session, illustrating the limits of right-wing governance.

© Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick at a news conference in May defending a ban on consumable T.H.C. products.
  •  

What to Know About China’s Halt of Rare Earth Exports

Since early April, China has stopped almost all shipments of critical minerals that are needed for cars, robots, wind turbines, jet fighters and other technologies.

© Keith Bradsher/The New York Times

A truck hauling material out of a mining valley for heavy rare earth metals in April on the outskirts of Longnan, China.
  •  

A DNA Technique Is Finding Women Who Left Their Babies for Dead

Genetic genealogy is identifying the mothers of deceased newborns found abandoned, shedding light on crimes that went unsolved for years. Women now may face lengthy prison sentences for decades-old chapters of their pasts.

© Jordan Vonderhaar for The New York Times

Wayne Springer, a former investigator for Medina County, at the site in Hondo, Texas, where a deceased newborn was found.
  •  

Trump Pressures Divided G.O.P. to Back Policy Bill

The president is pressing Republicans in the Senate to unite quickly behind sprawling legislation that carries his domestic agenda, but the measure’s opponents have a powerful new ally: Elon Musk.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky is part of a group of Republican senators agitating for deeper spending cuts in a bill carrying President Trump’s domestic agenda, noting that it is projected to balloon federal deficits.
  •  

Mexico’s Supreme Court Likely to Be Dominated by the Governing Morena

In a divisive and far-reaching election pushed by the governing Morena party, Mexicans voted for thousands of judges at every level on Sunday, remaking the courts.

© Luis Antonio Rojas for The New York Times

The chamber of the Supreme Court in Mexico City. After the court blocked some of the plans of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, he pushed to change the system to one in which voters elect judges at every level.
  •  

The Washington Post Plans an Influx of Outside Opinion Writers

A new program, known internally as Ripple, would open The Post to journalists at other publications and influential writers on Substack.

© Eric Lee/The New York Times

The Washington Post’s new project will operate outside the opinion section and aims to broaden the newspaper’s audience.
  •  

Trump’s Gilded Gut Instinct

Trump is governing by unchecked gut impulses, with little or no homework or coordination among agencies. The results could be disastrous.

© Damon Winter/The New York Times

  •  

Is Civil War Coming to Europe?

How the continent’s divisions compare to America’s own factions.

© Illustration by Sam Whitney/The New York Times; source image by S-S-S/Getty Images

  •  

How a 3D-Printed Rifle Ended Up in the Middle of the Baltic Sea

An island resident designed and made a 3D-printed gun, an example of how enthusiasts abroad embrace firearms technology nurtured in the United States.

© Loulou d'Aki for The New York Times

Elias Andersson in his workshop with a Printax rifle. He built the gun because, he said, he had to create his own next thing on an isolated island.
  •  

Trump Administration Backs Off Effort to Collect Data on Food Stamp Recipients

In response to a federal lawsuit, the Agriculture Department said it would refrain, for now, from demanding that states turn over the personal information of people receiving assistance.

© Sara Hylton for The New York Times

The Agriculture Department has paused plans to compile a database of Americans who receive food stamps.
  •  

Troop Casualties in Ukraine War Near 1.4 Million, Study Finds

With high casualty figures and the slow pace of Russia’s territorial gains, President Vladimir V. Putin could face years more of a grinding war of attrition in Ukraine.

© Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

Ukrainian volunteers identifying the remains of Russian soldiers in eastern Ukraine in February. Nearly one million Russian troops have been killed or wounded in the country’s war against Ukraine, according to a new study.
  •  

ICE Detains Family of Suspect in Colorado Attack

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the agency would be investigating whether Mohamed Sabry Soliman’s family had information about his alleged plot.

© Michael Ciaglo for The New York Times

Police officers near the site of the attack in Boulder, Colo.
  •  

Police Hunt for Father Who They Say Killed 3 Daughters Near Campground

The bodies of the girls, ages 5, 8 and 9, were found near a campground in Washington State on Monday. They had apparently been asphyxiated, and each was found with a plastic bag over her head, the police said.

© Wenatchee Police Department

The bodies of Paityn Decker, 9, left, and her sisters, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5, were found near a campground in Washington State on Monday.
  •  

U.S. Charges 2 Chinese Students With Smuggling Fungus

An arrest by the F.B.I. comes as the Trump administration has promised to crack down on Chinese academics.

© David Goldman/Associated Press

A customs agent at Detroit Metropolitan Airport found the baggies of fungus last summer. The Justice Department has accused Yunqing Jian and Zunyong Liu, both Chinese students, of trying to smuggle the fungus into the United States.
  •  

Who Is South Korea’s New Leader?

After months of political turmoil in South Korea, Lee Jae-myung has won the presidential election by a wide margin. Mr. Lee’s campaign has ridden a wave of anger against former President Yoon Suk Yeol after he tried to impose martial law in December.
  •  

U.S. Proposal in Iran Nuclear Talks Allows Some Enrichment of Uranium

An outline by the Trump administration would allow Iran to continue enriching uranium at low levels while a broader arrangement is worked out that would block the country’s path to a nuclear weapon.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

The proposal is the first concrete indication since President Trump took office that the United States and Iran might be able to find a path to compromise.
  •  

The White House Gutted Science Funding. Now It Wants to ‘Correct’ Research.

Thousands of scientists, academics, physicians and researchers have responded to the administration’s executive order about “restoring a gold standard for science.”

© Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Keeling flasks used to measure carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in a research laboratory at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California in April.
  •  

Denouncing Antisemitism, Trump Also Fans Its Flames

President Trump’s effort to punish Harvard over antisemitism is complicated by his extensive history of amplifying white supremacist figures and symbols.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Since reclaiming the White House, President Trump has brought into his orbit and his administration people with records of advancing antisemitic tropes.
  •  

The Perks of Being Harvey Weinstein’s Publicist

Juda Engelmayer took a job that leading crisis communications pros didn’t want. Now he’s the pied piper of pariahs.

© Jonah Rosenberg for The New York Times

Juda Engelmayer has been working for Harvey Weinstein since 2018.
  •  

Tesla Protesters Claim a Victory as Elon Musk Leaves Trump’s Side

The activists behind the Tesla Takedown campaign say they intend to expand beyond protests at the company’s showrooms.

© Sophie Park for The New York Times

“That first one on Feb. 15 was me and like 50 people,” said Joan Donovan, a sociology professor at Boston University who started the #TeslaTakedown hashtag. “It’s just grown.”
  •  

In the Age of the Algorithm, Roots Music Is Rising

Streaming services are helping revive America’s most old-fashioned, undigital genre.

© Kristine Potter for The New York Times

Charley Crockett, a rising star in the roots-music field, performing in Nashville, Ind., in May.
  •  

Newark’s Mayor Sues a Top Trump Lawyer, Claiming Malicious Prosecution

The mayor, Ras Baraka, is suing Alina Habba, the interim U.S. attorney for New Jersey, who dropped charges against him soon after his arrest near an immigration jail.

© Dakota Santiago for The New York Times

Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark spoke to supporters after his arrest last month outside an immigration detention center.
  •