State G.O.P. Leaders Move Swiftly Under One-Party Rule
- Rising state Republican leaders are acting quickly to enact longstanding conservative policies.
- Republicans in Washington, however, appear flummoxed.
A proxy race between party chairman candidates identified with Hillary Clinton and Senator Bernie Sanders has drawn other contenders and a heated debate about the best way forward.
Democrats and gay rights groups oppose Judge Neil M. Gorsuch, but interviews with his friends and legal experts suggest that his views are not so easy to determine.
President Trump and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan toured Trump’s golf courses and stayed at his resort in Florida, drawing attention to properties from which he has not divested himself.
Stephen Miller, a senior White House adviser, is now shaping some of the Trump administration’s most contentious domestic policies, including the order limiting immigration.
When Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, meets with the Israeli prime minister on Wednesday, it will be a gathering influenced by old encounters and shared experiences.
Melissa McCarthy reprised her role as the White House press secretary, and Alec Baldwin donned his Trump wig again.
The test drew angry statements from South Korea and Japan, while the United States Strategic Command said the missile was a medium- or intermediate-range system that “did not pose a threat to North America.”
The first hints that the phones of nutrition policy makers were infected were strange messages from unknown contacts.
The decision came after a series of protests from students, faculty and alumni who objected to honoring John Calhoun, the 19th-century white supremacist statesman.
Leslye Davis/The New York Times. Technology by Samsung.
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Here’s what you need to know about the week’s top stories.
Delaying the completion of a project may actually make you more creative.
Planning a renovation? The first step might be to snoop on the neighbors.
Residents of Thessaloniki, Greece’s second-largest city, left their homes as experts defused the bomb from below a gas station.
In 2002, The New York Times opened the wedding pages to gay and lesbian couples for announcements of their unions. It was a long time arriving.
Only the savviest teams find a way to contend every year, and most understand that they have a distinct window to win — and that once it closes, it’s time to start over.
The ceremony will be broadcast live on CBS at 8 p.m. Eastern. A showdown looms between Beyoncé and Adele for best album, record and song. And there’s plenty of competition for best new artist.
A look at Beyoncé’s Grammy Awards compared to the ceremony’s top winners since 1959.
Serving 32 years as its president and executive producer, Mr. Lichtenstein reorganized Brooklyn Academy of Music, and gave it a renewed purpose as a center for the performing arts.
The Interpreter brings sharp insight and context to the major news stories of the week. Sign up to get it by email.
Behind the scenes, female executives and visual effects experts have been working to bring gender equity to a specialty field.
This week, we review the first novel by George Saunders; a look at new graphic memoirs and fiction about life in the Middle East; and much more.
Efforts to add stalls gain speed as the theater industry awakens to the frustration women face at intermission and to a growing expectation of comfort.
In a score of red states, legislators lie about voting fraud to pass laws that will suppress Democratic votes.
Our acts of moral courage defend America as surely as any act of violence.
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This week’s properties are on the Upper West Side, in the West Village and in Red Hook, Brooklyn.