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Highlights

  1. The Daily

    How Air-Conditioning Conquered America

    Indoor cooling has transformed American life, reshaping homes, skylines and where people choose to live. As the planet warms, is that sustainable?

       By Michael BarbaroEmily BadgerShannon M. LinDiana NguyenMichael Simon JohnsonDevon TaylorMarion LozanoDan PowellRowan NiemistoWill Reid and

    If current trends continue, 10 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 could come from air-conditioning and other efforts to keep cool, a U.N. report found.
    If current trends continue, 10 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 could come from air-conditioning and other efforts to keep cool, a U.N. report found.
    CreditHolly Pickett for The New York Times
    1. The Run-Up

      Has RFK Jr.’s Moment Passed?

      Kamala Harris at the top of the Democratic ticket changes the pitch. But in Michigan, where every vote can make a difference, his message is still resonating.

         By Astead W. HerndonAnna FoleyNic Antaya and

      CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Nic Antaya for The New York Times

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The Daily

More in The Daily ›
  1. The Sunday Read: ‘The Man Who Couldn’t Stop Going to College’

    Benjamin B. Bolger has spent his whole life amassing academic degrees. What can we learn from him?

       By Joseph BernsteinRobert PetkoffJack D’IsidoroAaron EspositoKrish SeenivasanJohn WooSophia Lanman and

  2. A Controversial Crackdown on Homeless Encampments

    Gov. Gavin Newsom has taken sweeping action in the wake of a landmark Supreme Court ruling.

       By Sabrina TaverniseShawn HublerAsthaa ChaturvediOlivia NattEric KrupkeLiz O. BaylenMichael BenoistDan PowellMarion Lozano and

    Gov. Gavin Newsom worked with Caltrans employees to pick up trash at a homeless encampment under a freeway in Los Angeles.
    CreditMark Abramson for The New York Times
  3. How One Tech Monopoly Paved the Way for Another

    A judge’s ruling that Google abused a monopoly in internet search is likely to have major ripple effects, nearly a quarter-century after Microsoft lost a similar case.

       By Sabrina TaverniseSteve LohrRikki NovetskyRachelle BonjaSydney HarperNina FeldmanMarc GeorgesDiane WongDan PowellPat McCuskerElisheba Ittoop and

    Bill Gates, a founder of Microsoft, in 2001. Economists, legal scholars and business historians are still debating the impact that the Microsoft antitrust case had, or didn’t have.
    CreditRichard Drew/Associated Press
  4. Harris Takes the Lead in Key States

    Surveys of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin taken this month show the momentum of the vice president’s campaign.

       By Michael BarbaroNate CohnShannon M. LinCarlos PrietoClare ToeniskoetterLisa ChowDevon TaylorDan PowellRowan Niemisto and

    The polls show that Vice President Kamala Harris is ahead of former President Donald J. Trump by four percentage points in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan among likely voters in each state.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times; Erin Schaff/The New York Times
  5. Inside the Three Worst Weeks of Trump’s Campaign

    Kamala Harris’s entry into the race has knocked the former president off his bearings, unsure how to take her on.

       By Michael BarbaroJonathan SwanRob SzypkoClare ToeniskoetterDiana NguyenLuke Vander PloegPatricia WillensDevon TaylorMarion LozanoWill Reid and

    Former President Donald J. Trump held a hastily scheduled news conference on Thursday at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times

The Headlines

More in The Headlines ›
  1. All Eyes on Gaza Cease-Fire Talks, and Kennedy Explores a Cabinet Job

    Plus, a scourge of “deepfake” Elon Musk scams.

       By Tracy MumfordJulian E. BarnesAlan BlinderIan Stewart and

    American officials say Israel’s continued bombings in Gaza are only increasing risks to civilians.
    CreditEyad Baba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  2. Abortion Access on the Ballot, and Hamas Won’t Attend Peace Talks

    Plus, new details on Hunter Biden’s business dealings.

       By Tracy MumfordKenneth P. VogelMujib MashalIan Stewart and

    Abortion rights supporters in Arizona. Voters there will decide in November whether to establish a right to abortion in the state constitution.
    CreditRoss D. Franklin/Associated Press
  3. New Details on Gaza Cease-Fire Obstacles, and Musk Interviews Trump

    Plus, scenes after a Ukrainian attack in Russia.

       By Tracy MumfordRonen BergmanAndrew E. KramerIan Stewart and

    Israel made five new demands ahead of planned talks, according to documents detailing its newest negotiating positions.
    CreditPool photo by Naama Grynbaum
  4. Hacking Hits the 2024 Race, and a Pivotal Week for Gaza

    Plus, a cheery au revoir to the Paris Olympics.

       By Tracy MumfordIsabel KershnerCatherine PorterIan Stewart and

    Donald J. Trump said Iranians hacked his campaign but only obtained “publicly available” data. Microsoft said a “high-ranking official” at a presidential campaign was a hacking target.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times
  5. Trump Tries to Retake the Spotlight, and Ukraine Pushes Into Russia

    Plus, Noah Lyles’s Olympic run with Covid.

       By Tracy MumfordJonathan SwanAndrew E. KramerIan Stewart and

    Former President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago Club on Thursday. In an hourlong exchange with reporters, he insulted Vice President Kamala Harris and boasted about the size of his rallies.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times

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The Run-Up

More in The Run-Up ›
  1. Bernie Sanders Thinks Trump Fever Has Broken

    Democrats lost ground with rural voters. Sanders says Minnesota governor Tim Walz on the ticket gets them “back into that game.”

       By Astead W. HerndonAnna Foley and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press
  2. Kamala Harris’s $200 Million Vibe Shift

    First-time donors, reformed “double haters” and record-setting Zoom calls are fueling the change.

       By Astead W. HerndonElisa Gutierrez and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; Photo: Jim Wilson/The New York Times
  3. Kamala Harris on Kamala Harris

    The entire political world is now watching and wondering who she is and what she stands for. Let her tell you herself.

       By Astead W. HerndonCaitlin O’Keefe and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; Photo: Erin Schaff/The New York Times
  4. Where Democrats Go Next

    It took a donor revolt to get Biden to be the bridge to a new generation that he long talked about being. Now he’s all in for Harris.

       By Astead W. HerndonCaitlin O’KeefeAnna Foley and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; Photo: Yuri Gripas for The New York Times
  5. Lee Greenwood and the Soundtrack of Donald Trump

    The country star on “God Bless the U.S.A.” and the man he wants back in the White House.

       By Astead W. HerndonAnna FoleyCaitlin O’Keefe and

    Lee Greenwood at the Republican National Convention.
    CreditPatrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Hard Fork

More in Hard Fork ›
  1. Google’s Monopoly Money + Is the A.I. Bubble Popping? + The Hot-Mess Express

    “Maybe this actually is a chance to press the reset button on the internet.”

       By Kevin RooseCasey NewtonRachel CohnWhitney JonesShreeya SinhaDaniel RamirezDan Powell and

    Credit
  2. The Zoom Election, Google DeepMind’s Math Olympiad and HatGPT Olympics Edition

    Every presidential election has a defining technology.

       By Kevin RooseCasey NewtonWhitney JonesRachel CohnJen PoyantAlyssa MoxleyDan PowellElisheba IttoopMarion LozanoRowan Niemisto and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo Getty Images
  3. Kamala Harris’s Bratty Coconut Memescape + What Does $1,000 a Month Do? + The Empire CrowdStrikes Back

    An episode unburdened by what has been.

       By Kevin RooseCasey NewtonRachel CohnWhitney JonesJen PoyantAlyssa MoxleyDan PowellElisheba IttoopMarion Lozano and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Getty Images
  4. Social Media Reacts to an Attempted Assassination; Tech Elites for Trump; and TikTok’s Jawmaxxing Trend

    “The 2024 internet is just different than the internet we lived on four years ago.”

       By Kevin RooseCasey NewtonWhitney JonesRachel CohnJen PoyantChris WoodDan PowellMarion Lozano and

    Credit
  5. Alison Roman Answers Your Hard Questions

    Answers to your moral quandaries, ethical dilemmas and etiquette questions about technology.

       By Kevin RooseCasey NewtonRachel CohnWhitney JonesJen PoyantChris WoodDan PowellMarion Lozano and

    Credit

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The Interview

More in The Interview ›
  1. Jelly Roll Cannot Believe How His Life Turned Out

    From jail and addiction to music stardom, the singer says he’s living a “modern American fairy tale.”

       By

    CreditDevin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times
  2. The Man Who Tried to Solve Immigration for the G.O.P.

    The senator discusses how political calculations killed his border bill, the evangelical Christian vote and preparing for life after Trump.

       By

    Credit
  3. Vince Vaughn Turned This Interview Into Self-Help

    I went in expecting a swaggering, overconfident guy. I found something much more interesting.

       By

    CreditDevin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times
  4. Melinda French Gates Is Ready to Take Sides

    The billionaire philanthropist is turning 60, striking out on her own and getting political.

       By

    CreditDevin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times
  5. Pete Buttigieg Thinks the Trump Fever Could Break

    The Democrat talks about the election vibe shift and what a Kamala Harris win would mean for both parties.

       By

    CreditPhoto illustration by Devin Oktar Yalkin

The Culture Desk

More in The Culture Desk ›
  1. 45 Years of ‘Alien’ Movies From Worst to Best:

    This xenomorph, like the franchise, is “hard to kill.”

       By John WhiteKate LoPrestiWendy DorrCarole Sabouraud and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Image: 20th Century Studios
  2. Your Weekend Soundtrack: Adrianne Lenker, Leon Bridges and More

    Our chief pop music critic’s latest picks.

       By Kate LoPrestiWendy DorrRowan NiemistoDan Powell and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Erinn Springer for The New York Times
  3. Sex and Murder on Trial: ‘Presumed Innocent’

    Two critics on the legal thriller that just won’t die.

       By Wesley MorrisParul SehgalElyssa DudleyWendy DorrPaula Szuchman and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Apple TV+
  4. Cool Songs for a Hot Summer

    New tracks from Jack White, Meshell Ndegeocello and more.

       By Kate LoPrestiWendy DorrRowan NiemistoDan Powell and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Andre D. Wagner for The New York Times
  5. 100 Years of James Baldwin

    How his “radical honesty” gave me permission to be myself.

       By John WhiteWendy DorrDiane Wong and

    James Baldwin
    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Bettmann/Getty Images

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The Opinions

More in The Opinions ›
  1. The Anchovy Renaissance Is Here

    This humble fish could play a key role in our future.

       By Christopher Beckman and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; photograph by REDA&CO/Getty
  2. I’m a Liberal. We Need to Face an Awkward Truth.

    The columnist argues there’s a human cost to liberal purity.

       By Nicholas Kristof and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; photograph by George Rose/Getty
  3. My Old Church’s Fundamentalist Wing Canceled Me

    David French responds to reader reactions following his split from his church.

       By David FrenchAaron Retica and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; photograph by Teresa Kopec/Getty
  4. Why Toxic Opinions Can Be Appealing to Young Men

    And what to do about it.

       By Ruth Whippman and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; photograph by LaylaBird/Getty
  5. What Today’s Nuclear Arms Race Looks Like to Hiroshima Survivors

    The survivors of the last atomic bombs have a warning for us in the new arms race.

       By Kathleen KingsburyW.J. Hennigan and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times; photograph by Kentaro Takahashi for The New York Times

Matter of Opinion

More in Matter of Opinion ›
  1. 2024 Is Suddenly About Having Kids. Why?

    JD Vance and the dueling visions of the American family.

       By Michelle CottleRoss Douthat and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times. Photo: Benjamin Rondel
  2. Tim Walz Is Vibing

    Democrats are trying to make the election about who is cool and who is weird. Will it stick?

       By Michelle Cottle and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times. Photo: Sarah Yenesel/EPA, via Shutterstock
  3. ‘Mountain Dew and Racism’: Identity Enters the Election

    Week 2 of Trump vs. Harris is all about race.

       By Ross DouthatCarlos Lozada and

    CreditPhoto illustration by The New York Times; source photograph by Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press
  4. Has Kamala Harris Changed? Or Have We?

    Let’s talk about the Democrats’ vibe shift.

       By Ross DouthatCarlos Lozada and

    CreditPhoto Illustration of The New York Times. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  5. Trump Anoints Himself

    So that’s what a post-assassination-attempt speech sounds like.

       By Michelle CottleRoss Douthat and

    CreditIllustration by The New York Times. Photograph, Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

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Ezra Klein

More in Ezra Klein ›
  1. Manliness, Cat Ladies, Fertility Panic and the 2024 Election

    Christine Emba and Zack Beauchamp discuss how gender and family politics are shaping this election.

       By

    CreditChip Somodevilla/Getty Images
  2. Nate Silver on Kamala Harris’s Chances and the Mistakes of the ‘Indigo Blob’

    The election forecaster discusses 2024 and what politicians can learn from gamblers.

       By

    CreditRichard Burbridge
  3. Nancy Pelosi: ‘It Didn’t Sound Like Joe Biden to Me’

    The former speaker of the House discusses the election, Trump and the art of power.

       By

    CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
  4. Kamala Harris Isn’t Playing It Safe

    In picking Tim Walz, Harris is after more than just Pennsylvania.

       By

    CreditCaroline Yang for The New York Times
  5. ‘We Have Created the Scarcity on Purpose’

    Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii discusses policies that can make housing and college more affordable.

       By

    CreditOffice of U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz

Reporter Reads

More in Reporter Reads ›
  1. How Christian Conservatives Are Planning for the Next Battle, on I.V.F.

    Republicans may be backing away from abortion, but these activists have a strategy, with or without Trump.

       By

    Christian conservative activists are pushing ahead, fighting to restrict not only access to abortion but also to I.V.F. Here, frozen egg samples inside an I.V.F. facility.
    CreditMichael Wyke/Associated Press
  2. Meet a Family That’s Betting the Farm on a Wild Idea. Literally.

    After decades raising hogs in Iowa, they wanted a way out of factory farming. Their solution was a return to nature, and a lot of mushrooms.

       By

    Rand Faaborg, left, and his son Tanner. The younger Mr. Faaborg hopes the family farm’s conversion will serve as a blueprint to help other farmers.
    CreditAnnick Sjobakken for The New York Times
  3. Gwen Walz, the Coolheaded, Ultracompetent Political Spouse

    Early in her husband’s political career, she stepped in to help. Some wondered: Why isn’t she running?

       By

    Those who have long known Tim and Gwen Walz say that in politics they’re a package deal.
    CreditHiroko Masuike/The New York Times
  4. Elections Officials Battle a Deluge of Disinformation

    County clerks and secretaries of state are overwhelmed this year, as they stare down a “perpetual moving target” of new conspiracy theories, political pressure and threats.

       By

    Certificates of Voting are among the supplies sent out to each polling place from the Cobb County Elections & Registration offices in Georgia.
    CreditAudra Melton for The New York Times
  5. A Nazi Villa So Tainted Berlin Can’t Give It Away

    The former estate of Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, is too expensive to keep and perilous to sell. No one knows quite what to do with it.

       By

    Visitors in May at the main entrance of Joseph Goebbels’s former villa near Wandlitz, Germany.
    CreditLena Mucha for The New York Times

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Modern Love

More in Modern Love ›
  1. Peter Gallagher’s Marriage Advice? Don’t Get Divorced.

    Having a decades-long marriage in Hollywood is rare, but actor Peter Gallagher has managed to make it 41 years with his wife, Paula Harwood.

       By Anna MartinEmily LangDavis LandReva GoldbergChristina DjossaJen PoyantDaniel Ramirez and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Charley Gallay/Getty Images For Netflix
  2. Liza Colón-Zayas, of ‘The Bear,’ on Loving Someone Who’s in the Fight of Their Life

    Why it’s so hard to know what to say when the people we’re closest to need us most.

       By Anna MartinChristina DjossaReva GoldbergEmily LangDavis LandJulia BoteroJen PoyantDaniel RamirezDan PowellMarion LozanoPat McCuskerChelsea DanielRowan Niemisto and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Illustrations by Brian Rea; Photo: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
  3. ¡Hola Papi!, Does My Grandmother Need to Know I’m Gay?

    Ahead of Mother’s Day, the advice columnist John Paul Brammer (a.k.a. ¡Hola Papi!) has a reminder: Loving your abuela doesn’t have to mean telling her everything.

       By Anna MartinJulia BoteroChristina DjossaReva GoldbergEmily LangDavis LandJen PoyantDaniel Ramirez and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Illustration by Brian Rea; Photo: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
  4. Emily Ratajkowski Can Take Care of Herself, but a Little Help Would Be Nice

    Why the model and writer wants to blow up gender roles in dating, without chivalry having to die.

       By Anna MartinJulia BoteroChristina DjossaReva GoldbergEmily LangDavis LandJen PoyantDaniel RamirezDan PowellDiane WongPat McCuskerRowan Niemisto and

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Pierre Mouton/Getty Images for Acne
  5. Laufey, Gen Z’s Pop Jazz Icon, Sings for the Anxious Generation

    The Gen Z ‘it girl’ singer on the painful push and pull of young love.

       By Anna MartinJulia BoteroChristina DjossaReva GoldbergEmily LangDavis LandJen PoyantDaniel RamirezDan Powell and

    Credit

Popcast

More in Popcast ›
  1. Popcast (Deluxe): A Word With Action Bronson

    The rapper and gourmand answers our rapid-fire questionnaire covering the music of his childhood, how he manages stress and his go-to bodega order.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Epa-Efe/EPA, via Shutterstock
  2. Who Is Eminem for in 2024?

    A conversation about the Detroit rapper’s long and unlikely career as his 12th studio album reaches No. 1.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Carlos Osorio/Associated Press
  3. Popcast (Deluxe): Ranking Every Taylor Swift Album, Worst to Best

    Two longtime chroniclers of Swift’s career list their favorites — and least favorites — of the singer’s 11 original studio albums so far.

     

    CreditCassidy Araiza for The New York Times
  4. Popcast (Deluxe): Will There Ever Be Another Global Pop Icon?

    In a moment of success for newcomers like Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan, is there still a path to becoming a true cross-platform pop superstar?

     

    CreditArturo Holmes/Getty Images
  5. Charli XCX’s ‘Brat’ Breakthrough

    The pop songwriter’s sixth album is in some ways her most daring release yet. Improbably, it also yielded her best opening week.

     

    CreditHarley Weir

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Book Review

More in Book Review ›
  1. Liz Moore on ‘The God of the Woods’

    The author discusses her best-selling new novel about family secrets and a missing camper.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Maggie Casey, via Penguin Random House
  2. The End-of-Summer Reading Roundup

    Fall is on the horizon. Here are the books that have been keeping us company lately.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photos: Penguin Random House
  3. George Saunders Reflects on His Novel ‘Lincoln in the Bardo’

    The third in a series of conversations with authors appearing on our “Best Books of the 21st Century” list.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Leonardo Cendamo/Getty Images
  4. Sarah Jessica Parker on Her Life in Publishing

    Since 2016, the renowned actress has also worked in publishing, bringing her name and love of books to imprints at two companies. In this episode, she discusses what that work has meant to her.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Max
  5. Min Jin Lee Looks Back at ‘Pachinko’

    The second in a series of conversations with authors appearing on our “Best Books of the 21st Century” list.

     

    CreditPhoto Illustration by The New York Times

DealBook Summit

More in DealBook Summit ›
  1. Elon Musk’s Mindset: ‘It’s a Weakness to Want to Be Liked’

    In an interview, the tech billionaire slams advertisers for pulling back from X and discusses his emotional state.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  2. Kamala Harris on Polling and Polarization

    In an interview, the vice president discusses the extent to which she follows polls and why social division is like a virus.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  3. Jamie Dimon on Why He Thinks We Are Living in One of the Most Dangerous Times

    The JP Morgan chief on E.S.G., the dire state of the global economy and Elon Musk.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  4. Bob Iger of Disney on Culture Wars and Streaming

    The chief executive talks about returning to the company’s roots while adapting to changing times.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  5. How Andrew Ross Sorkin Gets Business and World Leaders to Open Up

    The many sides of Elon Musk, the challenges of political interviews, warming up guests beforehand — we take you behind the scenes of the DealBook Summit.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinLulu Garcia-NavarroEvan RobertsElaine Chen and

    Andrew Ross Sorkin with vice president Kamala Harris during the DealBook Summit at Lincoln Center in New York City.
    Credit

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  1.  
  2. The Sunday Read: ‘The Woman Who Could Smell Parkinson’s’

    She first noticed the scent on her husband. Now her abilities are helping unlock new research in early disease detection.

    By Scott Sayare, Sophia Hollander, Robert Petkoff, Adrienne Hurst, Aaron Esposito, Emma Kehlbeck, John Woo, Sophia Lanman and Quinton Kamara

     
  3. Breaking’s Olympic Debut

    A sport’s journey from the streets of New York all the way to the Paris Games.

    By Sabrina Tavernise, Jonathan Abrams, Sydney Harper, Luke Vander Ploeg, Shannon M. Lin, Will Reid, Lexie Diao, MJ Davis Lin, Ben Calhoun, Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Diane Wong and Alyssa Moxley

     
  4.  
  5. Dispatches From a Kamala Harris Field Office

    One group of voters may pose the biggest challenge to Democrats’ momentum.

    By Michael Barbaro, Reid J. Epstein, Jessica Cheung, Stella Tan, Rob Szypko, Lynsea Garrison, Rachel Quester, Ben Calhoun, Pat McCusker, Marion Lozano, Dan Powell, Diane Wong, Corey Schreppel, Rowan Niemisto and Alyssa Moxley

     
  6. Harris Chooses Walz

    A guide to the career, politics and sudden stardom of Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, now Vice President Kamala Harris’s running mate.

    By Michael Barbaro, Ernesto Londoño, Alex Stern, Eric Krupke, Olivia Natt, Lisa Chow, Patricia Willens, Marion Lozano, Pat McCusker and Alyssa Moxley

     
  7.  
  8. What Just Happened on Wall Street?

    Explaining Monday’s stock-market plunge, and its potential consequences.

    By Michael Barbaro, Jeanna Smialek, Rikki Novetsky, Shannon M. Lin, Liz O. Baylen, Lisa Chow, Marion Lozano, Diane Wong and Alyssa Moxley

     
  9.  
  10. She Used to Be Friends With JD Vance

    Why a friend of Donald Trump’s running mate from law school decided to speak out against him.

    By Michael Barbaro, Sofia Nelson, Alex Stern, Rikki Novetsky, Lynsea Garrison, Diana Nguyen, Rob Szypko, Ben Calhoun, Paige Cowett, Patricia Willens, Elisheba Ittoop, Dan Powell, Rowan Niemisto and Alyssa Moxley

     
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