Supreme Court Pauses Ruling Blocking Biden Administration’s Contacts With Tech Platforms

The court also agreed to hear the administration’s appeal, paving the way for a major ruling on how far government can go to encourage sites to delete asserted misinformation.Read More
South Korea’s Crowd Crush Disaster Prompts No Changes at the Top

Families of the 159 people crushed to death last year say the government has never acknowledged its mistakes or accepted responsibility.Read More
Kenneth Chesebro’s Plea Deal in Georgia Could Increase Peril for Trump

The lawyer Kenneth Chesebro pleaded guilty in the Georgia election tampering case and is an unindicted co-conspirator in the federal election case.Read More
U.S. Deficit, Pegged at $1.7 Trillion, Effectively Doubled in 2023

The widening gap between what the government spends and what it earns comes as Congress continues to spar over the proper levels of federal spending.Read More
Chaos and Frustration Rule as Republicans’ Bitter Speaker Fight Deepens

With the House G.O.P. back to square one on electing a new speaker, tempers flared and uncertainty over how the impasse might be resolved only grew.Read More
Israel Prepares to Invade the Gaza Strip

The latest from the Israel-Hamas war. Weekday afternoons with Lulu Garcia-Navarro, and Times journalists on the ground.Read More
Biden and Aides Advise Israel to Avoid Striking Hezbollah

U.S. officials learned that the Israeli defense minister and other military officials supported a pre-emptive strike on Hezbollah. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been cautious.Read More