Trump Aides Raise Recession Fears, and Point Fingers at the Fed
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said some sectors were in a recession as he argued for more interest rate cuts.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said some sectors were in a recession as he argued for more interest rate cuts.
New York will soon know who will lead the city for the next four years, but other questions remain.
President Trump has yet to make a decision, but his advisers are pressing a range of objectives — from attacking drug cartels to seizing oil fields — to try to justify ousting Nicolás Maduro.
The top Senate Democrat never endorsed Zohran Mamdani, his party’s young left-wing nominee for mayor, and had yet to even say who he had voted for.
Accurate, reliable results play a role in free and fair elections. So does explaining the data and helping people understand when and how it will be reported.
Once pitched as dispassionate tools to answer your questions, A.I. chatbots are now programmed to reflect the biases of their creators.
The rise of artificial intelligence has produced serial writers to science and medical journals, most likely using chatbots to boost the number of citations they’ve published.
A draft Security Council resolution said that an international force would ensure that Gaza be demilitarized, though specifics were unclear.
China’s new national drive to embrace artificial intelligence is also giving the authorities new ways to monitor and control its citizens.
Companies that sell diamonds, plant sensors and wine all have one thing in common: They are weighing in against tariffs in a consequential case.
A 1975 episode introduced audiences to one of the first openly gay couples in mainstream American television not depicted as deviants or criminals.
President Trump is showing mounting frustration at his inability to win confirmation of U.S. attorneys in blue states or break the filibuster's grip on the Senate. The G.O.P. has been uncharacteristically uncooperative.
After three decades, the MSNBC brand will be retired on Nov. 15. The network has called in Rachel Maddow to help viewers make the transition.
The kingdom is pouring money into data centers and working with U.S. and Chinese tech giants, landing its A.I. ambitions in the middle of a geopolitical tussle for tech power.
The murder of Mexico’s most vocal anti-crime mayor shows that, despite President Claudia Sheinbaum’s crackdown on drug cartels, the battle is just beginning.
The former vice president helped shaped the role of the United States around the world.
Everything in the shop appeared to have been abandoned. A devoted customer took it all home and started selling the items herself.
The country will introduce fixed-term military contracts to try to attract recruits and ease the strain on soldiers after years of fighting.
Plus, killer whales versus great whites.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent dismissed the idea that his presence could be seen as an attempt to intimidate the court on a case that President Trump considers vital to his economic policy.
Blast waves may be damaging shooters’ brains. The Times has a new investigation on how it happens.
Voters will decide if California’s voting districts should be redrawn to help Democrats flip up to five House seats.
A former defense secretary and congressman, he held the nation’s No. 2 job under President George W. Bush and was an architect of policies in an era of war and economic change.
Bucking the anti-immigration trend in British politics, remote areas of Scotland would like to attract foreign workers to offset declining local populations.
When Republicans sing Kumbaya.
The Liberty Justice Center led by Sara Albrecht is better known for backing right-leaning causes, but it filed the tariff case that will be heard by the Supreme Court this week.
The Defense Department’s new press policy led to an exodus of traditional journalists. Supporters of the president have stepped in.
The remnants of Typhoon Halong scattered artifacts from an archaeological site along the shore of the Bering Sea.
Data centers need to become more flexible to squeeze more from the grid.
We are in the middle of the capitalistic order reinventing itself.