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The latest news on Trump's presidency and updates on the wide-ranging tariffs he announced on multiple countries and imports Wednesday.
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The Republican speaker, who has mostly wielded power by relying on the threat of retribution from President Trump, has chosen an institutional fight it's not clear he can win.
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In addition to reductions at agency personnel, federal regulators are demanding $2.9 billion in contract cancellations, The Times has learned.
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"No one wants a trade war" but "nothing is off the table", UK business secretary says.
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The Democratic senator on Ukraine, Russia, and Signalgate.
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The White House hopes to boost domestic manufacturing, but global markets fear rising prices and high inflation.
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Milbank, based in Manhattan, agreed to provide $100 million in pro bono legal services to causes supported by the president and the firm.
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The case has raised questions not only about how the man could have ended up on a plane to El Salvador, but also about why the administration has apparently not moved to correct its mistake.
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Democrats achieved their biggest gains to date in the second Trump era, winning a fiercely contested State Supreme Court race in Wisconsin, while also landing relatively strong showings despite losing two Florida special elections. Shane Goldmacher, a national political correspondent for The New York Times, describes what the results mean for Democrats and for Elon Musk, who spent millions in Wisconsin to support the defeated conservative candidate.
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Judge Crawford defeated Judge Brad Schimel, who was backed by President Trump, for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. She worked as a prosecutor and in private practice before joining the bench.
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Princeton has become the latest university to be targeted by the Trump administration, as the federal government pauses dozens of federal grants to the school. The news comes after the Trump administration threatened to cut off more than $8.7 billion to Harvard and earlier suspended $175 million in federal funding to the University of Pennsylvania and $400 million to Columbia University. In all cases, the Trump administration has claimed to be fighting antisemitism, citing the schools' responses to student-led campus protests in solidarity with Gaza. "It's time for us to step back … and think more critically about how we run our universities," says former Columbia law professor Katherine Franke, who says students from abroad, even those with green cards and U.S. citizenship, are now "terrified" of being swept up in the Trump administration's crackdown. "It feels like a kind of racial and ethnic cleansing that is happening on our campuses."
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Conservatives were unable to topple the 4-3 liberal majority in the most expensive judicial contest in U.S. history.
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Only pressure on both sides will end the war in Ukraine.
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The New Jersey senator criticized the president's plans for Social Security, education, immigration and health care, saying the "nation is in crisis." He began speaking Monday night. He was still going on Tuesday afternoon.
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President Trump justifies his plan to shutter the Education Department by saying that states should control schools. He's using the idea to explain other policies now, too.
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