Tracking Trump’s New Tariffs on Every Country
See which countries are being targeted by President Trump, as he seeks to remake the global trading system.
By Lazaro GamioTony Romm and

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See which countries are being targeted by President Trump, as he seeks to remake the global trading system.
By Lazaro GamioTony Romm and

The Texas Legislature gave final approval to a congressional map redrawn by Republicans that they hope will result in a gain of five seats in the U.S. House after the 2026 midterm elections.
By J. David GoodmanAshley CaiNick Corasaniti and

New data provides the clearest picture yet of how Zohran Mamdani pulled off his primary election upset.
By Elena ShaoSaurabh DatarKeith Collins and

Their actions range from pressuring the administration to release more information to spinning additional conspiracy theories about the case of Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender.
By Karen Yourish and

How Louisiana Built Trump’s Busiest Deportation Hub
ICE wants to make immigration enforcement as efficient as FedEx or Amazon. Louisiana was poised for this moment.
By Brent McDonaldCampbell RobertsonZach LevittAlbert SunSingeli Agnew and

The Changing Map of Palestinian Recognition
Belgium is the latest country to have said it is ready to recognize a Palestinian state.
By

How Did Hunger Get So Much Worse in Gaza?
Less food is going into Gaza now than during most other times in the war. Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed while heading toward aid sites. Many others are suffering from serious malnutrition, and Gazan health officials say scores have died from it.
By Aaron BoxermanSamuel GranadosBora Erden and

This Is What Basic Food Costs in Gaza Now, if You Can Find It
Obtaining humanitarian aid can be difficult and dangerous, and though some essentials are available at markets, they are prohibitively expensive for many Gazans.
By Adam Rasgon and

How Syria’s Dictator Buried His Victims
A cemetery near Damascus was transformed into an industrial-scale mass grave for Syrians who opposed President Bashar al-Assad.
By Charlie SmartAnjali SinghviBora ErdenMika Gröndahl and

The Lives Lost to the Texas Floods
Eight-year-old girls at sleep-away camp, families crammed into recreational vehicles, local residents traveling to or from work. These are some of the victims.
By
Camp Mystic Cabins Stood in an ‘Extremely Hazardous’ Floodway
An analysis of flood maps shows that several buildings, including those where children were sleeping, were in known hazard zones. A $5 million expansion in 2019 did nothing to alleviate the problem.
By Mike BakerMalika KhuranaHarry Stevens and

Here’s Why There’s So Much Flash Flooding in the U.S. Right Now
July’s hot temperatures and moist air are the perfect ingredients for rain.
By William B. DavisJudson Jones and

How Your Phone Gets the Weather
The more weather observations meteorologists can rely on, the more precise their forecasts will be. Here's what goes into an accurate forecast.
By Marco Hernandez and

2024: The Year in Visual Stories and Graphics.
Selected Times graphics, visualizations and multimedia stories published this year. All free to read for a limited time.

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Donald Trump’s signature has evolved over the years, but when signing just his first name, he often includes the same flourish at the end.
By Russ Buettner and Lazaro Gamio

Jails play a growing role in immigrant detention, housing thousands of people who have never been convicted of a crime.
By Allison McCann

They’ve been a mainstay in battle since the early 20th century. But in just three years of war in Ukraine, tanks have evolved.
By Marco Hernandez and Thomas Gibbons-Neff

As ICE detains more immigrants and detention centers exceed capacity, the agency is turning to local jails. Allison McCann, a reporter and graphics editor for The New York Times, visited one jail holding detainees in Ohio.
By Allison McCann, Leila Medina, Melanie Bencosme and David Jouppi

A recent ruling against the Trump administration’s federal funding cuts was a temporary win for Harvard. But a dozen other institutions already struck deals with the government involving millions of dollars in payments and commitments to prioritize causes championed by the president.
By Ashley Wu

Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City, has amassed more support from small-dollar donors than his rivals.
By Ashley Cai

We’d like you to look at one piece of art for 10 minutes, uninterrupted.
By Larry Buchanan

Our reporter Larry Buchanan invites you to spend time staring at a single work by the surrealist painter Gertrude Abercrombie, guiding you through the painting and revealing how Abercrombie used her art to bring you inside her mind.
By Larry Buchanan, Coleman Lowndes, Estelle Caswell and James Surdam

Deep within obscure footnotes, the Trump administration is claiming more of Congress’s constitutional power of the purse by threatening to block funding.
By Alicia Parlapiano, Emily Badger and Alex Lemonides

For decades, the Assad regime locked up its opponents in prisons like Sednaya. The New York Times created a 3-D model of the prison and its brutal conditions.
By Christina Goldbaum, Charlie Smart, Helmuth Rosales, Anjali Singhvi and Reham Mourshed

The Trump administration increased tariffs on imports from India to 50 percent. It will likely disrupt the international diamond trade and potentially lead to increases in retail prices in America.
By Keith Collins

If President Trump succeeds in replacing Lisa Cook, his nominees will make up a majority of the Federal Reserve’s seven-person board.
By Lily Boyce and Christine Zhang

With red states growing fast, the Democratic Party will have a tough path to the White House without making more states competitive, according to a New York Times analysis.
By Nick Corasaniti, Jeff Adelson, Irineo Cabreros and Charlie Smart

President Trump’s planned pharmaceutical tariffs threaten to hit many of the most common and well-known drugs that Americans take.
By Rebecca Robbins and Jonathan Corum
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In his seven months back in office, President Trump has declared nine national emergencies, plus a “crime emergency” in Washington. Those emergency declarations have been used to justify hundreds of actions — including immigration measures, sweeping tariffs and energy deregulation — that would typically require congressional approval or lengthy regulatory review, according to a New York Times analysis of presidential documents.
By Karen Yourish, Claire Hogan and June Kim

The president has declared 10 emergencies since returning to office, far outpacing what is typical. He has used them to justify hundreds of actions.
By Karen Yourish and Charlie Smart

With an infusion of cash from Mr. Trump’s domestic policy bill, ICE appears poised to scale its operations even further.
By Albert Sun

See detailed maps of the latest temperature forecasts across Canada.
By Lazaro Gamio, Zach Levitt and Eric Rabinowitz

It may be quite some time before outside experts can gauge exactly how seriously Fordo was damaged. But a look at the bomb used, the facility’s structure and the site’s geology offers some clues.
By James Glanz, Samuel Granados, Junho Lee, Eric Schmitt and Marco Hernandez

Putin has demanded that Ukraine give up the entirety of the Donbas region before Russia stops fighting. Here is a look at Russia’s advances into Ukrainian territory since in 2014.
By Josh Holder and Leanne Abraham

Republicans have a clear advantage over Democrats in the total number of states that could redraw their maps.
By Elena Shao and Nick Corasaniti

Republicans claim California is more gerrymandered than Texas, based on a simple partisan calculation. Experts say such a comparison is one of many useful but imperfect measures to quantify gerrymandering.
By Elena Shao and Nick Corasaniti

As he heads to Alaska for talks with President Trump, the Russian leader projects confidence that his edge on the battlefield will secure a peace deal on his terms. It’s the result of a yearslong re-engineering of his country’s military and economy.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev, Josh Holder, Paul Sonne and Oleg Matsnev

Sleuths have solved three of the panels of the Kryptos sculpture at the agency’s headquarters. Now the artwork’s creator is announcing the sale of the solution to the fourth.
By John Schwartz and Jonathan Corum
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Also, Trump spoke with European leaders ahead of his talks with Putin.
By Aurelien Breeden and Josh Holder

Also, Trump spoke with European leaders ahead of his talks with Putin.
By Aurelien Breeden and Josh Holder

Starvation has spread in Gaza, as the prices of basic goods have skyrocketed and getting aid is difficult and often deadly. Ashley Wu, a graphics reporter for The New York Times, explains the dire choices that many Gazans face, as Israel faces growing condemnation over the crisis.
By Ashley Wu, Christina Shaman, June Kim, James Surdam and Rebecca Suner

As heat waves batter Europe, the need (or not) for air-conditioning has become part of the political tug of war in France between the right and the left.
By Aurelien Breeden and Josh Holder

Yes, it still makes plenty of mistakes, but it has become part of the job for many.
By Larry Buchanan and Francesca Paris

President Trump fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics last week and described a jobs report that included a big downward revision as “rigged.”
By Ben Casselman, Keith Collins and Christine Zhang

The Rybachiy base, which hosts nuclear-powered submarines from Russia’s Pacific Fleet, lies in a cove about 80 miles from the powerful earthquake that struck near the Kamchatka peninsula last week.
By Nataliya Vasilyeva and Josh Holder

We’d like you to look at one piece of art for 10 minutes, uninterrupted.
By Larry Buchanan

This was featured in live coverage.
By Elena Shao, Leanne Abraham, Eli Murray and Lazaro Gamio

An analysis released Thursday by the Council on Criminal Justice shows that the majority of crimes the council tracks are continuing to decrease in 42 U.S. cities.
By Ashley Wu and Tim Arango
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China’s biggest networks have deployed less than 1 percent of their planned satellites, falling far behind SpaceX for dominance in space communications.
By Selam Gebrekidan and Malika Khurana

The loss of federal funding threatens scores of public TV and radio stations across the United States.
By Elena Shao and Benjamin Mullin

The Senate voted 51 to 48 to reclaim spending previously approved by Congress.
By Alicia Parlapiano

Unregulated activity led by Chinese enterprises in conflict-ravaged Myanmar is creating an environmental calamity in neighboring Thailand.
By Hannah Beech, Mauricio Lima and Weiyi Cai

The A.I. chip maker reached the landmark before Apple and Microsoft, as its value rose more than tenfold after ChatGPT’s release in late 2022.
By Tripp Mickle, Karl Russell and Blacki Migliozzi

Experts worry that if vaccination rates do not improve, deadly outbreaks will become the new normal.
By Teddy Rosenbluth and Jonathan Corum

The National Weather Service began sending flash flood warnings that should have triggered cellphone alerts a little after 1 a.m., while local officials began posting on Facebook about four hours later.
By K.K. Rebecca Lai, Judson Jones and Erin McCann

The speed and intensity of the flooding appeared to take officials by surprise.
By Leanne Abraham

Months after President Bashar al-Assad’s regime was toppled, Charlie Smart, a reporter at The New York Times, traveled to a mass burial site in Syria to understand how the Assad regime hid the bodies of the people it had made disappear.
By Charlie Smart, Melanie Bencosme, Gabriel Blanco, David Jouppi, James Surdam and Valentina Caval

We’d like you to look at one piece of art for 10 minutes, uninterrupted.
By Larry Buchanan
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Many of the missing girls appeared to have been in cabins near the river.
By Ashley Cai, Malika Khurana and Daniel Wood

The wide-ranging domestic policy legislation could impact your taxes, clean energy choices, health care access and more.
By Ashley Wu, Christine Zhang, Ron Lieber and Tara Siegel Bernard

Who benefits, and who gets hurt? How much does it really add to the debt? And what’s the deal with Alaska?
By Alicia Parlapiano and Margot Sanger-Katz

The House voted 218 to 214 to pass President Trump’s sweeping domestic policy package.
By Alicia Parlapiano, Martín González Gómez, Ashley Cai, Karen Yourish and Ani Matevosian

See detailed maps of the latest temperature forecasts across Europe.
By Lazaro Gamio, Zach Levitt and Erin McCann

Though some aspects of the president’s net worth are murky, it has unmistakably soared in the early months of his second term.
By Ben Protess, Andrea Fuller and David Yaffe-Bellany

The Senate voted 51 to 50 to pass President Trump’s sweeping domestic policy package.
By Alicia Parlapiano, Ashley Wu, Elena Shao, Christine Zhang, Karen Yourish, Martín González Gómez and Jon Huang

The legislation includes tax cuts as well as big cuts to Medicaid, food benefits and other programs, and it’s expected to add more than $3 trillion to the national debt.
By Alicia Parlapiano, Margot Sanger-Katz, Aatish Bhatia and Josh Katz

Using truncated procedures, the six-justice conservative majority gave a green light to many of the president’s most assertive initiatives.
By Adam Liptak, Abbie VanSickle and Alicia Parlapiano

Photos, videos and flight tracking data reveal what happened before the flight crashed less than a minute after taking off.
By Mika Gröndahl, Zach Levitt and Karthik Patanjali
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The Senate voted 53 to 47 to reject a resolution to block the president’s use of force against Iran without congressional approval.
By Robert Jimison

A look at some of the key provisions in Republicans' domestic policy bill and where the two chambers are divided.
By Ashley Wu, Andrew Duehren, Brad Plumer, Tony Romm, Margot Sanger-Katz and Michael Gold

Let’s review how we got here, and closely examine what the rock would allow.
By John Branch and Jeremy White

How an atomic weapon is built, and what the recent Israeli and U.S. attacks on Iran may mean for the country’s nuclear ambitions.
By Agnes Chang, Pablo Robles, Josh Holder, William J. Broad and David E. Sanger

Some states have seen immigration enforcement more than triple since President Trump took office, new data shows.
By Albert Sun

A Times analysis shows where Zohran Mamdani has built a strong lead in the votes counted so far.
By Keith Collins and Nicholas Fandos

Every day, roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply squeezes through a narrow waterway on Iran’s southern border. It is one of the energy industry’s most important trading routes — and one of its most vulnerable.
By Albert Sun, Josh Holder, Rebecca F. Elliott, Peter Eavis and Samuel Granados

See neighborhood-level election results from the first round of the mayoral race.
By Martín González Gómez, Saurabh Datar, Matthew Bloch, Andrew Fischer and Jon Huang

The period after President Trump announced the cease-fire was muddied by time zone differences, unclear wording in statements and continuing strikes.
By Lazaro Gamio, Elena Shao and Daniel Wood

So far, the parliamentarian has determined that dozens of provisions do not pass muster to be included.
By Alicia Parlapiano
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After the fires clouded neighborhoods in smoke, residents whose homes were spared learned that danger was still lurking in the walls, the furniture and the air. But their insurers have doubts.
By Blacki Migliozzi, Rukmini Callimachi and K.K. Rebecca Lai
The latest barrage hit a notorious prison in Iran and a building near a humanitarian aid facility.
By Elena Shao

Once a ballistic missile is fired into the air, a defender has only minutes to identify its precise trajectory and try to shoot it down. Even the world’s best defenses can’t always stop them.
By Agnes Chang and Samuel Granados
Qatari officials said its air defenses had intercepted the missiles that were fired at Al Udeid Air Base.
By Elena Shao, Lazaro Gamio and Daniel Wood

As countries race to power artificial intelligence, a yawning gap is opening around the world.
By Adam Satariano, Paul Mozur, Karl Russell and June Kim

This was featured in live coverage.
By Lazaro Gamio

Ventilation shafts “are probably the most vulnerable points of the facility,” one expert said.
By Samuel Granados and Josh Holder

The few hundred programs that survived DOGE’s purge reveal the future of foreign aid.
By Amy Schoenfeld Walker, Malika Khurana and Christine Zhang

A Times analysis shows the extent of the U.S. strikes’ impact on the three nuclear sites.
By Leanne Abraham, Ashley Cai, Agnes Chang, Lazaro Gamio, Josh Holder, Elena Shao and Amy Schoenfeld Walker
This was featured in live coverage.
By Lazaro Gamio and Elena Shao
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The aircraft can carry the bunker-buster bombs that would be necessary to penetrate the Fordo underground nuclear site in Iran.
By Elena Shao and Devon Lum
Shockwaves from the attack in Israel’s third-largest city damaged a mosque and a church.
By Elena Shao and Junho Lee

Thousands of U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East are within striking distance of ballistic missiles Iran has stockpiled.
By Ashley Cai, Albert Sun and Lazaro Gamio

President Trump says he’s considering attacking Iran’s underground nuclear site. Here’s what that might look like.
By Samuel Granados, Junho Lee, Jeremy White and Leanne Abraham
By Bora Erden

At the heart of the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory is a digital camera that will create an unparalleled map of the cosmos.
By Jonathan Corum, Kenneth Chang and Marcos Zegers
The shutdown appears to be the result of an internal decision rather than a consequence of an Israeli strike.
By Ani Matevosian and Elena Shao

Recent evacuation warnings from Israel affect hundreds of thousands of the capital’s residents.
By Daniel Wood and Elena Shao
This was featured in live coverage.
By Lara Jakes

Israel has attacked nuclear, military and energy facilities in Iran. Here is a look at the destruction so far.
By Bora Erden, Marco Hernandez and Karen Yourish
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This was featured in live coverage.
By Elena Shao
This was featured in live coverage.
By Lazaro Gamio and Karen Yourish

Has A.I. become a part of your daily work routines? We want to know.
By Francesca Paris and Larry Buchanan

Investigators will examine many things, including what the pilots did and whether critical plane systems worked as they are supposed to.
By Niraj Chokshi, Christine Chung and Mika Gröndahl

The event will kick off when Army officials report to President Trump — who turns 79 on the same day — and end when parachutists jump from the sky and present a flag to him.
By Junho Lee and John Ismay

A Times analysis identified more than a dozen agencies that were on the ground in the past week. See which are represented, the gear they carry and how they interact.
By Bora Erden, Lazaro Gamio, Bedel Saget, Raj Saha and Elena Shao

Israel launched a series of strikes against Iran, targeting the country’s nuclear program and other military infrastructure. Iran launched its own strikes in retaliation.
By Martín González Gómez, Julie Walton Shaver, Pablo Robles, Daniel Wood, Samuel Granados, Bora Erden, Malachy Browne, Christiaan Triebert, Devon Lum, Lazaro Gamio, Elena Shao and Ashley Wu

Estimates from the Congressional Budget Office, released Thursday, offer a detailed view into the effects on income groups.
By Emily Badger, Alicia Parlapiano and Margot Sanger-Katz

House members approved the cuts by a vote of 214 to 212.
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Maps show how an Air India flight carrying 242 passengers and crew members crashed in the city of Ahmedabad shortly after taking off.
By Samuel Granados, Pablo Robles and Daniel Wood

The U.S. will hold a rare military display in Washington D.C. soon. The motives of countries that stage military parades vary, but the spectacles all tend to share a common visual vocabulary.
By Marco Hernandez

A Venezuelan man’s criminal past made him a target of immigration agents. His family was determined to stay in touch.
By Allison McCann

Track the latest polls about Mamdani, Cuomo, Adams and Sliwa in the New York City mayoral election.

President Trump called in the National Guard on Saturday after isolated clashes between federal law enforcement and people protesting immigration raids.
By Bora Erden, Lazaro Gamio, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Blacki Migliozzi, Bedel Saget, Elena Shao and Ashley Wu

A timeline of the praises and insults that President Trump and Elon Musk have lobbed at each other shows how their volatile clash was years in the making.
By Elena Shao and Eli Murray
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