Zachary Quinto Reads ‘An Affection Multiplier, With Four Feet and a Wet Nose’
On this week’s Modern Love podcast, the “Star Trek” star reads an essay about a dog named Zoloft.
On this week’s Modern Love podcast, the “Star Trek” star reads an essay about a dog named Zoloft.
The most anticipated match of the World Cup — a showdown between the United States and France in Paris — will send one team to the semifinals and the other on its way home.
Joe Biden is a fragile front-runner. Kamala Harris has a big chance to build political momentum. And the competition between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders is intensifying.
At Thursday’s presidential debate, Mr. Buttigieg, the South Bend mayor, was forced to address the police shooting that has consumed his campaign for more than a week.
President Trump criticized Ms. Rapinoe on Twitter this week over her comments about not visiting the White House, and she responded characteristically by doubling down.
Multiple rivals attacked the former vice-president in Thursday’s debate, but he has survived setbacks before in this campaign.
The “show of hands” question underscores how an issue that united the party in 2018 has potential to fracture it in 2020.
Watch our new TV show from The New York Times on FX and Hulu.
Thursday night’s second round for the Democrats yielded conflict and a potent TV moment.
After a long delay, the justices agreed to decide whether the Trump administration may shut down a program known as DACA that shields young immigrants from deportation.
North Carolina’s Republican-drawn maps are among the most egregious examples of partisan gerrymandering. Other states may now feel emboldened to follow its lead.
Friday: This Pride month, we're taking you to important locations in L.G.B.T.Q. history and telling you stories about gay New Yorkers.
Here’s what you need to know.
Kamala Harris dominated the night from beginning to end. Pete Buttigieg also got good reviews.
Kamala Harris dominated the night from beginning to end. Pete Buttigieg also got good reviews.
Twenty presidential candidates took the stage over two nights this week. We look at the major moments.
At the leaders’ first formal meeting in a year, President Trump again made clear that he does not take Russia’s electoral interference as seriously as others do.
With one exchange about race, the senator began to take aim at Joe Biden’s tenuous hold on his front-runner status in the Democratic presidential field.
Senator Kamala Harris confronted the former vice-president in a searing moment over racial equality, and others attacked him on policy and generational divide.
New York Times reporters are following the exchanges and providing context around the candidates’ claims.
The candidates on stage tonight are Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Kamala Harris, Andrew Yang, Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper, Michael Bennet, Marianne Williamson and Eric Swalwell.
The pair of decisions have vast implications for the political landscape and democracy itself.
With or without a citizenship question on the census form, the political climate has made immigrant communities wary of opening their doors for census workers.
A pair of stunning decisions on Thursday showed that the chief justice has replaced Justice Anthony M. Kennedy as the court’s swing vote.