The President’s talks with Xi Jinping, whose leadership style he seems to envy, yielded potential deals for airplanes and soybeans but no apparent agreement on Iran.
Nate Cohn, the New York Times’ chief political analyst, on whether the Democrats can match the G.O.P. in the fight over redistricting.
After a disastrous set of election results, the British Prime Minister’s authority is in tatters.
Pedro Sánchez, the Socialist Prime Minister, has led the European opposition to the Iran war from the start.
How President Trump’s approach to the war in Iran is turning endless conflict, interrupted by fleeting pauses, into the status quo.
Nearly two dozen kids were found at risk of abuse and neglect. Will their parents be held accountable?
After decades of false starts, a new rail line has opened along the city’s most congested boulevard.
For generations of TV viewers, the beloved presenter has linked the patch of glass in our living rooms and the wide world beyond. And he’s not...
The British government has declared antisemitism a “crisis” after a recent spate of violent attacks. But will its solutions protect Jews, or make the situation worse?
As the U.S.’s credibility and military capacity are tested abroad, China has gained leverage by staying out of the fight and learning from it.