Category: Everydaynews


  • An Ambitious Prosecutor Quits Rather Than Do Trump’s Bidding

    Danielle R. Sassoon shot like a laser through the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office, with stints fighting violent crime and securities fraud as well as handling appeals before she was elevated, at age 38, to be its interim head. There, just weeks into her tenure running the country’s most prestigious federal prosecutor’s office, she encountered an…

  • At Least 4 Killed in Suspected Gas Explosion at Taiwan Shopping Mall

    At least four people were killed and 26 others injured in a suspected gas explosion in the food court of a Taiwan shopping mall on Thursday morning, according to Taiwan’s state-owned news outlet. The explosion occurred in the city of Taichung, about 100 miles southwest of Taipei, Taiwan’s capital, local officials said. The fire department…

  • Dozens Injured as Driver Crashes Car Into Munich Protest

    More than two dozen people were injured when a car crashed into a union demonstration in Munich on Thursday, and the driver, a 24-year-old man who was known to the authorities, was taken into custody, the police said. The authorities believe the crash, which was carried out by an Afghan citizen, was a deliberate attack,…

  • Trump’s Resignation Program for Federal Workers Can Move Forward, Judge Rules

    A federal judge said Wednesday that the Trump administration’s deferred resignation program for federal workers could move forward, allowing the White House to advance a key part of its plan to reduce the federal work force through mass payouts. Judge George A. O’Toole Jr., a U.S. District Court judge in the District of Massachusetts, did…

  • Republicans Love Trump’s Spending Cuts. Just Not in Their States.

    Republicans in Congress have responded to President Trump’s unilateral moves to freeze federal spending, dismantle programs and fire civil servants with a collective shrug, staying mostly silent and even praising him as he circumvents the legislative branch. But in recent days, as his slash-and-burn campaign to remake the government has begun to affect their states…

  • More Power for Elon Musk, and the Risk of Lithium-Ion Batteries

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  • Appearing With Trump, Musk Makes Broad Claims of Federal Fraud Without Proof

    The billionaire Elon Musk said in an extraordinary Oval Office appearance on Tuesday that he was providing maximum transparency in his government cost-cutting initiative, but offered no evidence for his sweeping claims that the federal bureaucracy had been corrupted by cheats and officials who had approved money for “fraudsters.” Answering questions from the media for…

  • Opinion | The Imperative Remains: End Hamas’s Control of Gaza

    On Saturday, Hamas gunmen paraded three skeletally thin Israeli hostages for a propaganda video in which they were forced to thank their captors before their handover to the Red Cross. One of the hostages, Eli Sharabi, returned to Israel to learn that his wife, Lianne, and their teenage daughters, Noiya and Yahel, had been murdered…

  • Trump Pauses Enforcement of Foreign Bribery Law

    President Trump on Monday ordered a pause in the enforcement of a federal law aimed at curbing corruption in multinational companies, saying it creates an uneven playing field for American firms. The law, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, makes it illegal for companies that operate in the United States to pay foreign government officials to…

  • Opinion | France Is in a Deep, Deep Hole

    François Bayrou, France’s fourth prime minister in a year, knew he had trouble ahead. In his inaugural speech in December, he acknowledged “all kinds of difficulties”: a debt mountain, political strife and, alarmingly, “the splintering of society itself.” So far, he’s at least succeeded in holding a government together. Tasked with reducing a deficit currently…