As Trump Wavers, Europe Is More Optimistic About Defending Ukraine
Europe has the money and the artillery shells, but key U.S. capabilities like operational intelligence and air defense would be difficult to replace.
Europe has the money and the artillery shells, but key U.S. capabilities like operational intelligence and air defense would be difficult to replace.
Courts would be hard-pressed to explain why arguments that were fatal to the Biden administration’s overreach do not apply to Trump’s tariffs.
Explore the catalog of “The First Lady of Song” with tracks chosen by Valerie June, Yaya Bey, Imani Perry and 13 more writers and musicians.
Gerard Comeau fought back after being fined for bringing too much beer into his province. He lost the battle, but may yet win the war.
The combination of a data center boom, rising gas exports and cuts to clean energy tax breaks could spike American energy bills, analysts say.
Adrienne Adams, the New York City Council speaker who is running for mayor, visited The New York Times for an interview.
As immigration officials ramp up a crackdown in downtown Manhattan, employees at a neighboring federal agency have been ordered not to get in the way.
“Oh, no, not my two favorite people fighting!” said the “Daily Show” host Michael Kosta. “Don’t make me choose who I love more.”
What happened in Russia can happen in the United States — or anywhere else.
The president has ratcheted up the rate on foreign metals to 50 percent, double the previous rate, saying the levies weren’t high enough to help the U.S. industry.
Millions will make the annual pilgrimage to Mecca. The kingdom faces scrutiny over safety after more than 1,300 people died last year.
Even before the U.S. threatened to bar international students and besieged universities, China’s huge spending campaign on the sciences was bearing fruit.
President Trump wants to revive factories, using tariffs as a tool. Companies that want to re-shore manufacturing are grappling with how to do it.
The deviant behavior of a subatomic particle might point to undiscovered forms of matter and energy in the universe. Or it might not.
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.
The sprawling legislation carrying President Trump’s domestic agenda squeaked through the House with one vote to spare, but some Republicans now say they didn’t realize what they voted for.
Experts said the move, which did not offer explicit guidance to hospitals, could discourage doctors from performing emergency abortions in states that ban or restrict them.
The tech executive criticized the president’s legislation in a series of posts on Tuesday, signaling a widening rift with Republicans.
The request seeks to codify spending cuts advanced by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.
Santa Ono, the former president of the University of Michigan, was also criticized by conservatives for his handling of campus protests.
A new proposal by the Trump administration would allow Iran to continue enriching uranium at low levels while a broader arrangement is worked out.
At issue is how to interpret a federal law barring hospitals from turning away poor or uninsured patients.
Vickie Paladino, a councilwoman from Queens, called Zohran Mamdani a “radical leftist” who hates America, and warned against “future Zohrans.”
Kristi Noem said a Mexican immigrant wrote a letter saying that he wanted to assassinate the president. Another man has now been charged with setting him up.
The names of several other vessels that honor civil rights leaders and Supreme Court justices might also be changed.
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.
Also, a study revealed a potential cure for a deadly blood cancer. Here’s the latest at the end of Tuesday.
Instead of battling over tariffs, Washington and Beijing have turned to a potentially far more harmful strategy: flexing their control over global supply chains.
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.
Trump is governing by unchecked gut impulses, with little or no homework or coordination among agencies. The results could be disastrous.