The Year American Jews Woke Up
American Jews need to recover their instinct for danger.
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American Jews need to recover their instinct for danger.
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Now is the time to bolster regional cooperation and make a broad effort to confront Iran.
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She’s strong. But she’s warm. That makes all the difference.
By Alison Fragale and
Netanyahu repeatedly rolled the American president, leading us all to the precipice of a much larger war.
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The Supreme Court Should Stop the Glossip Execution
When prosecutors admit they were wrong in a death penalty case, courts should listen.
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JD Smirks His Way Into the Future
The misogynist ticket takes a shot at Kamala for dancing — and being a woman.
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The One Thing Not Named Trump That Trump Cares About
For the former president, removing millions of undocumented immigrants is the solution to most of the nation’s most pressing challenges.
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The sidelining of the White House in global crisis spots is a big red flag.
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Democrats Have a Corruption Problem. They Can’t Keep Ignoring It.
For the sake of their electoral fortunes and the country, Democrats must show voters a plan to curb corruption — including within their own ranks.
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“Stop the Steal” is about not trusting voters.
By Jamelle Bouie
Except maybe Jewish men.
By Jessica Grose
My job is no longer safe.
By Jonathan Reisman
The sidelining of the White House in global crisis spots is a big red flag.
By Ross Douthat
Netanyahu repeatedly rolled the American president, leading us all to the precipice of a much larger war.
By Nicholas Kristof
Now is the time to bolster regional cooperation and make a broad effort to confront Iran.
By Benny Gantz
The misogynist ticket takes a shot at Kamala for dancing — and being a woman.
By Maureen Dowd
It’s as if we are living in two different countries, each with a different understanding of who counts as American.
By Richard Slotkin
Readers discuss a guest essay by a Chinese adoptee.
Weakening the dollar is a good idea. How to do it is another question.
By Peter Coy
A story that’s grist for big debates without necessarily being a good movie.
By Ross Douthat
Responses to a conservative professor’s guest essay. Also: JD Vance at the debate; caring for child caregivers; smaller restaurant portions.
For the sake of their electoral fortunes and the country, Democrats must show voters a plan to curb corruption — including within their own ranks.
By Sarah Chayes
For the former president, removing millions of undocumented immigrants is the solution to most of the nation’s most pressing challenges.
By Jamelle Bouie
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The economist Jason Furman discusses the economic fights that the next presidential administration will face.
By Ezra Klein
Neither candidate engaged with the core criticisms facing their parties.
By Michelle Cottle, Ross Douthat and Carlos Lozada
When prosecutors admit they were wrong in a death penalty case, courts should listen.
By Kenneth Cuccinelli
She’s strong. But she’s warm. That makes all the difference.
By Alison Fragale and Adam Grant
For many Brazilians, the First Capital Command’s push into politics across the nation has been a shock.
By Will Freeman
American Jews need to recover their instinct for danger.
By Bret Stephens
The question is not whether to do industrial policy but how.
By David Brooks
His usual trash-talking is losing its mojo.
By Paul Krugman
Amy Wax’s statements are indefensible. But so is the University of Pennsylvania’s response.
By John McWhorter
Readers respond to the special counsel Jack Smith’s filing. Also: The pain of IUD insertions; food and the environment; A.I. and the patient.
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Do not use normal appraisals for an abnormal election.
By Frank Bruni
Despite the supreme leader’s stated religious objections to nuclear weapons, Tehran has been steadily making progress on its nuclear weapons capabilities over the course of the past year.
By Reuel Marc Gerecht and Ray Takeyh
If voters felt 81 was too old for Joe Biden, it’s hard to believe they can overlook 78 in Donald Trump.
By Gail Collins
It’s our politics.
By M. Gessen and Jillian Weinberger
It’s unnerving how many fortunate things have happened to this guy.
By Pamela Paul
As with many stories of celebrity illness, Ms. Ford’s was inspirational but complicated.
By Barron H. Lerner
America’s goal shouldn’t be merely to block Chinese goods, but to outcompete them. That will require cooperation.
By Bob Davis
Well-meaning regulations and reforms intended to prevent another financial crisis has pushed millions of affordable homes out of the reach of everyday buyers and into the coffers of investors.
By Yuliya Panfil and Craig J. Richardson
Last week the president of Russia appeared to lower the threshold for his country’s use of nuclear weapons. It wasn’t subtle, and it wasn’t meant to be.
By Lawrence Freedman
“This is not a date, it’s a debate!”
By Tony Hale and the Gregory Brothers
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“This is not a date, it’s a debate!”
By the Gregory Brothers and Tony Hale
JD Vance’s response to a question about challenging this year’s election results was telling.
By ‘The Ezra Klein Show’
Extreme climate was supposed to shock us into action. What happened?
By David Wallace-Wells
It has begun to acknowledge what Rose knew: That sports are deeply intertwined with gambling.
By Daniel J. Wakin
Readers offer assessments of the candidates’ performances while praising the debate’s civility. Also: A college president’s resignation; storm relocation.
The majority of them support equality, even if they don’t call themselves feminists.
By Jessica Grose
The former president’s views of virtual coins have shifted markedly in recognition of the emergence of this sector as a major player in campaign finance.
By Thomas B. Edsall
She’s everywhere, and she’s giving a lot of work to female talent. Is that such a bad thing?
By Jennifer Weiner
Our columnists and contributors rate Tim Walz’s and JD Vance’s debate performances.
By New York Times Opinion
Germany’s unilateral decision to close its borders has angered its neighbors in Europe.
By Serge Schmemann
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Public health experts too often fail to sound the alarm.
By Caitlin Rivers
The exodus of the young means high-risk towns could enter a population death spiral.
By Abrahm Lustgarten
Trump’s running mate is no Mike Pence.
By David French
Harris’s running mate missed multiple opportunities to demonstrate how Trump and his running mate are unfit for office.
By David Firestone
Iran now presents an intolerable threat to Israel, America and the liberal-international order.
By Bret Stephens
He’s making a case for Trump’s record far more effectively than Trump has ever been capable of doing.
By Ross Douthat
The columnist weighs in on Iran’s retaliatory strike against Israel and what comes next.
By Thomas L. Friedman and Alison Bruzek
It is long past time to fix the regulatory regime that created this mess.
By Clifford Winston
Readers condemn the former president’s attacks and cite examples of his incoherence and unfitness. Also: Jimmy Carter at 100; Christian women; the Oakland A’s.
And this one could involve the United States.
By Thomas L. Friedman
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Having grown up in an increasingly diverse America, I find Amy Wax’s resentments more pathetic than threatening.
By Zaid Jilani
If other nations can influence New York City’s mayor, who can’t they influence?
By Casey Michel and Vishakha Darbha
With Harris and Trump locked in a tight race, will the vice-presidential debate do anything to help or hurt either ticket?
By David Brooks, Ross Douthat, Tressie McMillan Cottom and Pamela Paul
The vice president is an institutionalist politician. Her membership in a “Divine Nine” organization helps explain why.
By Charles M. Blow
Why he represents a grave risk to the rule of law in American democracy.
By Matthew A. Seligman
In some countries, the job of a president or prime minister is a visionary one. Not here in the Netherlands.
By Ben Coates
His father was “an honest, loving man” but then fell under the sway of MAGA.
By Michelle Goldberg
The participants discuss what either candidate might say that could solidify their vote.
By Patrick Healy, Adrian J. Rivera and Margie Omero
The former president is contemplating policies that would act like a self-inflicted pandemic.
By Paul Krugman
For many U.S. companies, Chinese partnership may be too important to quit.
By Peter Coy
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The “total victory” that Netanyahu and his cabinet are seeking over Hezbollah will not bring the absolute security that Israelis want and need.
By Fawaz A. Gerges
Readers discuss an essay about whether it is a disease and how it should be diagnosed. Also: Fear in schools; natural disasters; political distractions.
Eric Adams gives new meaning to the concept of the frequent-flier program.
By Gail Collins and Bret Stephens
Listen to Kathleen Kingsbury, the Times Opinion Editor, make the case for Kamala Harris.
By Kathleen Kingsbury and Alison Bruzek
You have made the most of a long life, Mr. President, serving in nearly every way imaginable as an example of moral seriousness and service to others.
By Margaret Renkl
We need to recapture faith in government to be a great builder again.
By Ross Barkan
Giving him a top health job would entrench partisanship around public health.
By Rachael Bedard
Highlighting efforts to reduce the power of Big Ag over farmers can be a winning strategy for Harris.
By Farah Stockman
Being tougher on so-called frauds, cheaters and financial predators would make the criminal justice system a bit more equal.
By Jed Handelsman Shugerman
Kamala Harris has demonstrated care, competence and respect for the Constitution — the fundamental qualities necessary for high office.
By The Editorial Board
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Few in Britain will mourn the passing of coal, but it’s hard not to feel a little nervous about what, at its heart, is an experiment, one fraught with danger.
By Ed Conway
The devastating blow to Hezbollah by Israel has a place in the global struggle between the “coalition of inclusion” and “coalition of resistance.” It could be the keystone.
By Thomas L. Friedman
Readers discuss a guest essay about famous cases and offer personal stories. Also: Helping immigrants; A.I. at war; Donald Trump, TV and real life.
The vice-presidential nominee should be thinking of how to extend a ladder to those he left behind, not how to pull it up behind him.
By Beth Macy
Military success rarely brings true peace, but it can preserve societies.
By David French
Artificial intelligence poses unique risks, so the people warning us of safety threats deserve unique protections.
By Garrison Lovely
She has prosecuted the case against Donald Trump and clarified some policy views, but not her why. That’s what voters want to know.
By Ashley Etienne
The prospect of a second Trump administration has rekindled an important debate from four years ago.
By Graham Parsons
It’s not as maudlin as it might seem. If you take a few minutes to try it, you might find the same.
By Kelly McMasters
Why the latest court reform bill matters.
By Jamelle Bouie
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The latest worm in the Big Apple.
By Maureen Dowd
The mayor is accused of injecting foreign funds directly into his election campaigns, compromising not only his office but also American elections.
By Casey Michel
What would a President Harris do about the war in Ukraine?
By Ross Douthat
The world has largely abandoned Sudan, but this woman risked everything to stand up to evil.
By Nicholas Kristof
To truly appreciate her novels, we have to stop imagining that they’re all about her, or about us.
By B.D. McClay
What we can learn from the greatest season in baseball history.
By Brad Stulberg
Spending a personal fortune to fund a passion project isn’t folly. It’s the ultimate kind of cinematic courage.
By Sam Wasson
She has been doing an effective job of vice signaling from the left.
By Adam Jentleson
Readers discuss a guest essay arguing that young people are unfairly burdened by supporting boomers.
By Ross Douthat
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Frank McCourt hopes to make TikTok safer to use. He’ll have to buy it first.
By Peter Coy
Readers react to the corruption charges against New York’s mayor. Also: A path for Iran; the state of speech on campus; a tally of Trump insults.
Americans are experts in the comedy of bluster, as many of our late night hosts can attest. We’re less practiced in precision.
By Adam Sternbergh
More than the sheer repetition of extreme weather, the stakes have grown — for our homes, our communities and our lives.
By Jeff VanderMeer
With all its talent, how did the city end up with a mayor accused of being an incessant petty grifter?
By Nicole Gelinas
Supporters of the filibuster argue that without unlimited debate, democracy succumbs to silence. Or something.
By Jamelle Bouie
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