↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Man Accused of Squirting Ilhan Omar with Vinegar Is Charged With Assault

Ms. Omar was sprayed with liquid from a syringe as she spoke at a town hall and called for the resignation of Kristi Noem, who leads the Homeland Security Department.

© Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Anthony J. Kazmierczak was accused of squirting Representative Ilhan Omar with a substance during a town hall in Minneapolis.
  •  

Democratic Governors Promise Accountability After Alex Pretti Killing

The chin-out rhetoric of Democratic governors about holding Trump administration officials responsible for violence in their cities may be more political than practicable.

© Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Mourners laid candles under posters of Renee Good and Alex Pretti Wednesday night near the site in Minneapolis where Mr. Pretti was killed.
  •  

Parents Navigate a Fracturing Vaccine Landscape

Rattled by the C.D.C.’s actions and the spread of measles, some parents are scrambling to figure out how to best protect their children.

© Matt Nager for The New York Times

Sabrina and Cameron Scully, parents to a 2-month-old in Denver, said it was unsettling to have the federal vaccine guidelines change so abruptly. “How do you know who to turn to?” Ms. Scully, 30, asked.
  •  

Why a New Mexico Developer Quit Natural Gas

For John Moscato, a land developer in Las Cruces, N.M., installing gas lines at new home sites was “an ongoing headache.” Ditching gas saved him money.

© Paul Ratje for The New York Times

  •  

Trump’s Lies Have a Purpose

What MAGA sees in the Minneapolis mirror.

© Illustration by George Douglas; source photographs by DebbiSmirnoff and Ruiyang Dai/Getty Images

  •  

Amazon and Google Eat Into Nvidia’s A.I. Chip Supremacy

The rivals made billions of dollars in the business over the past year, showing other companies that Nvidia isn’t the only game in town.

© Christie Hemm Klok for The New York Times

Google’s chips for artificial intelligence are increasingly being used by companies other than Google.
  •  

She Protested a Book Ban. Oklahoma Revoked Her Teacher’s License.

Summer Boismier, a high school English teacher in Oklahoma, lost her teaching license after she protested a book ban. Now she is fighting to return to the classroom.

© Nick Oxford for The New York Times

When Oklahoma passed laws that pressured teachers to remove books on race, gender and sexuality from their classrooms, Summer Boismier refused.
  •  

European Union Labels Iran’s Revolutionary Guard a Terrorist Group

The move, which comes after the killing of protesters, brings the European Union in line with the United States and Canada.

© UGC, via Reuters

A photo verified by The New York Times shows a screen grab from social media of bodies in body bags outside a morgue in Tehran after days of protests, earlier this month.
  •  

Girls Sue Saint Ann’s School and Former Teacher Over Sex Crimes

Winston Nguyen, a former teacher at Saint Ann’s School who pleaded guilty to a felony charge last year, is accused in the lawsuit of soliciting naked photos of students and sharing them online.

© Graham Dickie/The New York Times

The lawsuit against Winston Nguyen, a former teacher at Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn Heights, also names the school and several administrators.
  •  

Justice Dept. Playbook in Minnesota: Investigate Foes, Protect Allies

The Trump Justice Department has often cast aside normal procedures intended to seek accountability in favor of pushing prosecutors and the F.B.I. to focus on critics of the immigration crackdown.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Attorney General Pam Bondi and her chief deputy, Todd Blanche, have so far resisted authorizing traditional civil rights investigations into any of the officers who killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
  •  

San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan Will Run for California Governor in 2026

Matt Mahan, a moderate Democrat who serves as mayor of San Jose, Calif., is entering the crowded race for California governor.

© Lauren Segal for The New York Times

Matt Mahan, the mayor of San Jose, Calif., has focused on reducing homelessness and crime. He has avoided attacking President Trump.
  •  

Trump Warns Iran With Military Muscle, but Risks a Regional War

Iran’s Islamic Republic, weakened by airstrikes in June and huge popular unrest, warns that it will strike back hard if attacked by the United States. This time, Iran may mean it.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

Smoke from an explosion caused by Israeli airstrikes in Tehran in June. President Trump has shown that he likes military action to be short and limited, as it was in Iran at the time.
  •  

Wynton Marsalis, Founder of Jazz at Lincoln Center, to Step Down

After 40 years with the organization, the trumpeter and impresario will end his role as managing and artistic director in July 2027.

© Jutharat Pinyodoonyachet for The New York Times

“Jazz was dead in this country,” said Gordon J. Davis, the founding chairman of Jazz at Lincoln Center. “Wynton raised it up to make it what it should be: a true art of American culture.”
  •  

Amy Klobuchar Announces Run for Minnesota Governor

The Democratic senator, who signaled her bid after Gov. Tim Walz said he wouldn’t run again, talked about moving past political divides in a video announcement.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Senator Amy Klobuchar’s campaign will test how Democrats can harness the deep anger over ICE’s tactics among their base without losing moderate voters who still support border enforcement.
  •  

A Crisis for President Trump

The Department of Homeland Security is in turmoil after the killing of Alex Pretti.

© Vincent Alban/The New York Times

Trumped ordered Gregory Bovino, right, to leave Minneapolis.
  •  

Netanyahu Vows to Cut Israel’s Reliance on U.S. Military Aid

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed some soldiers’ deaths in the Gaza war on a lack of ammunition caused by a pause in American weapon deliveries during President Biden’s term.

© Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the funeral in Meitar, Israel, on Wednesday of a hostage, Ran Gvili, whose remains were returned to Israel from Gaza.
  •  
❌