↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

Coast Guard Softens Stance on Hate and Hazing

A new servicewide policy recasts swastikas and nooses as merely “politically divisive” and deletes protections for transgender troops.

© Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

A member of the Coast Guard patrolling the waterways near President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
  •  

Missouri Judge Who Wore Elvis Wig in Court Agrees to Resign

Judge Matthew E.P. Thornhill also talked about politics and played Elvis songs in court, a judicial commission said.

© St. Charles County Circuit Court

“Elvis was a super talent,” Matthew E.P. Thornhill, a circuit judge in St. Charles County, Mo., said last year in a local television interview. “If I just had Elvis’s hair, I’d be unstoppable.”
  •  

U.S. Ambassador to Canada Channels Harsh Trump Tone

Pete Hoekstra’s bluntness is seen as undiplomatic by Canadian officials and interpreted as a way for the Trump administration to turn up the heat as trade talks drag on.

© Jeff Mcintosh/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

Pete Hoekstra, the American ambassador to Canada, speaking in Banff, Alberta, in September.
  •  

U.S. Manufacturers to Benefit as GE Appliances Shifts Production

The company, now owned by a Chinese conglomerate, is investing $150 million in 19 American suppliers across 10 states.

© Jon Cherry/Associated Press

Assembly at a GE Appliances plant in Louisville, Ky., in August. The company on Thursday announced contracts with suppliers in 10 states, as part of an effort to bring production back to U.S. soil.
  •  

Mamdani Urges D.S.A. Not to Endorse a Challenger to Jeffries

Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani argued that an endorsement of a left-leaning ally, Chi Ossé, would hurt his efforts to secure mainstream Democratic support for his proposals.

© Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani, right, has tried to privately persuade Chi Ossé, left, not to challenge Representative Hakeem Jeffries. On Wednesday, he went public with his efforts.
  •  

Trump Calling Reporter ‘Piggy’ Was ‘Frankness,’ White House Says

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, addressed for the first time a schoolyard insult that President Trump lobbed at a Bloomberg News reporter last week.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, was asked to explain what the president had meant when he called a reporter “piggy.”
  •  

Short on Cash, D.N.C. Took Out $15 Million Loan in October

The move, unusual for a year without a midterm or presidential election, is the latest sign of financial distress for the Democratic Party.

© Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Ken Martin, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, at a rally this month in Newark for Representative Mikie Sherrill, who was elected New Jersey’s next governor.
  •  

Justice Dept. Appears to Be Examining Potential Leaks in Schiff Inquiry

A subpoena issued by the F.B.I. suggests the Justice Department may be seeking to identify officials who might have shared information about the inquiry into Senator Adam Schiff in an unauthorized way.

© Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press; Craig Hudson for The Washington Post, via Getty Images

The Justice Department appears interested in the interactions among Bill Pulte, Ed Martin and the “key witness” in the mortgage fraud investigation of Senator Adam Schiff.
  •  

U.S. Ran a War Game on Ousting Maduro. Venezuela Fell Into Chaos.

An official U.S. government exercise during President Trump’s first term forecast turmoil and potential violence in a post-Maduro Venezuela.

© Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times

Members of a group loyal to President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela, during a rally in Caracas in September.
  •