Biden Has a Historically Strong Job Market. It May Not Be Enough.
Job gains continue to surge, and the unemployment rate remains low, but as the president seeks re-election, voters say they care more about high prices.
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Job gains continue to surge, and the unemployment rate remains low, but as the president seeks re-election, voters say they care more about high prices.
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The two presidents, in a brief appearance before reporters, declined to take questions, in a departure from tradition.
By Michael D. Shear and
The president said “echoes of 1944 are summoning us” during his address that honored the valor of D-Day fighters.
By Peter Baker and
At Pointe du Hoc in Normandy, President Biden plans to follow one of the former president’s most iconic speeches with his own testimonial to democracy and the need to resist isolationism.
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Biden Links Fight for Ukraine With Allied Effort on D-Day
Speaking in Normandy, the president argued that similar principles were at stake in both wars: the defense of freedom and a rules-based international order.
By Michael D. Shear and
Whose Fault Is Inflation? Liberals Want Biden to Blame Big Business.
“Greedflation” is a moniker about corporate price increases that has bolstered some Democratic senators, and now the president is being encouraged to lean in on the issue for his economic messaging.
By Nicholas Nehamas, Jim Tankersley and
Biden’s New Order Leaves Migrants at Border in Limbo Over Asylum Fate
In Mexican cities along the border with the United States, migrants were taking a wait-and-see approach to a restrictive new executive action.
By Rocío Gallegos, Simon Romero and
Small Shift Toward Biden After Trump Verdict
We reached nearly 2,000 people who participated in previous Times/Siena polls to see if any had changed their minds.
By Nate Cohn, Ruth Igielnik and
The President’s Son: A Routine Gun Case, but Abnormal in Every Way
At Hunter Biden’s trial, he listened with the jury to his own voice on the audio version of his memoir. “We’ve all been inside rooms we can’t afford to die in,’’ he heard himself say.
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The One Thing Voters Remember About Trump
We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.
By Christine Zhang, Sean Catangui and
‘Don’t Inject Bleach’: Biden Mocks Trump on Anniversary of Covid Comments
President Biden has homed in on the infamous moment, which crystallized the chaos of the Trump presidency, as he trolls his political opponent.
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How a Pandemic Malaise Is Shaping American Politics
Four years later, the shadow of the pandemic continues to play a profound role in voters’ pessimism and distrust amid a presidential rematch.
By Lisa Lerer, Jennifer Medina and
Large Grocers Took Advantage of Pandemic Supply Chain Disruptions, F.T.C. Finds
A report found that large firms pressured suppliers to favor them over competitors. It also concluded that some retailers “seem to have used rising costs as an opportunity to further hike prices.”
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Examining Trump’s Alternate Reality Pitch
The war in Ukraine. Hamas’s attack on Israel. Inflation. The former president has insisted that none would have occurred if he had remained in office after 2020.
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Kamala Harris Courts Union Members, an Up-for-Grabs Group of Voters
Speaking in Philadelphia to supportive members of a major labor union, the vice president sought to draw a sharp contrast with Donald Trump and build support with a bloc of crucial voters.
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Harris Warns of Supreme Court’s Future Rulings: ‘I Worry About Fundamental Freedoms’
In an interview with The Times, Vice President Kamala Harris deepened her criticism of the conservative justices who overturned Roe and singled out Clarence Thomas’s views on other settled cases.
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Kamala Harris Leads Push to Shore Up Democratic Support From Black Voters
Speaking in Atlanta, the vice president began a national tour to highlight how the Biden administration is trying to help Black Americans economically.
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As College Students Protest, Harris Keeps Her Focus on Abortion
“When we think about what is at stake, it is absolutely about freedom,” Vice President Kamala Harris said during a visit to Wisconsin.
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Harris Blasts Trump on Abortion at Arizona Campaign Stop
At a rally in Tucson, Ariz., days after the state’s top court upheld a near-total ban on abortion, Vice President Kamala Harris placed the blame directly on former President Donald J. Trump.
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Biden Will Choose a New Leader for Bank Regulator With ‘Toxic’ Culture
Martin Gruenberg, the chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, said he would step down once the Senate confirmed a successor.
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How Biden Adopted Trump’s Trade War With China
The president has proposed new barriers to electric vehicles, steel and other goods.
By Sabrina Tavernise, Nina Feldman, Carlos Prieto, Sydney Harper, Luke Vander Ploeg, M.J. Davis Lin, Brendan Klinkenberg, Lisa Chow, Diane Wong, Marion Lozano, Dan Powell and
Leader of Federal Student Aid Office Steps Down After College Admissions Crisis
During Richard Cordray’s tenure at the agency, the botched rollout of the new FAFSA upended the college admissions process.
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Opposition to Muslim Judicial Nominee Leaves Biden With a Tough Choice
Adeel Mangi would be the first Muslim American to be a federal appeals court judge, but has faced vitriolic attacks from the G.O.P. The president could run out of time to fill the seat.
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Trump’s Plan to Take Away Biden’s Biggest Advantage
Why the former president decided that the Republican National Committee needed to be systematically dismantled.
By Michael Barbaro, Shane Goldmacher, Michael Simon Johnson, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Mooj Zadie, M.J. Davis Lin, Lexie Diao, Marion Lozano and
Estados Unidos y la frontera, elecciones anticipadas en Francia y más para el martes.
By Elda Cantú
The order to suspend asylum when crossings surge shows how drastically immigration politics have shifted in the United States.
By Sabrina Tavernise, Zolan Kanno-Youngs, Carlos Prieto, Eric Krupke, Mooj Zadie, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell and Alyssa Moxley
Never has the country looked less like a leader and more like the head of a faction.
By Stephen Wertheim
The Italian prime minister was a rare leader to be fortified by the vote for the European Parliament. This week she has a chance to show her influence on an even broader stage.
By Emma Bubola
The president assailed attacks on Black history, and vowed that his administration was committed to protecting civil rights.
By Erica L. Green
The White House is weighing relief for immigrants who crossed the border unlawfully but are eligible for green cards through marriage to U.S. citizens.
By Miriam Jordan
Entre las medidas que se estudian figuran proteger a los cónyuges de la deportación y facilitarles el acceso a permisos de trabajo, según funcionarios con conocimiento de las conversaciones.
By Hamed Aleaziz, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Jazmine Ulloa
The Security Council endorsed a U.S.-backed plan, while Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken visited the Middle East to lobby for it, but Hamas and Israel were noncommittal.
By Farnaz Fassihi, Michael Crowley, Mike Ives and Thomas Fuller
Los refugios a lo largo de la frontera estaban más tranquilos el viernes y el sábado en comparación con meses anteriores, pero muchos que esperaban cruzar a EE. UU. se sentían desamparados y temerosos.
By Edgar Sandoval and Reyes Mata III
It has nothing to do with law or politics.
By Patti Davis
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