The One Thing Voters Remember About Trump
We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.
By Christine Zhang, Sean Catangui and
We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.
By Christine Zhang, Sean Catangui and
Categorizing previous third-party bids helps us understand where he fits in and where he might wind up.
By
Seven hundred miles to the nearest clinic: how one ban will reshape access in the South.
By Josh Katz, Margot Sanger-Katz and
10 Years, 100 Stories: The Work That Defines the Upshot
The Upshot is 10 years old this week. Here’s a collection of our most distinctive work from the last decade.
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A Huge Number of Homeowners Have Mortgage Rates Too Good to Give Up
On a scale not seen in decades, many Americans are stuck in homes they would rather leave.
By Emily Badger and
Our calculator takes the most important costs associated with buying or renting and compares the two options.
By Mike Bostock, Shan Carter, Archie Tse and
Spelling Bee Buddy: Personalized Hints That Update as You Play
Customized hints that update based on your progress in today’s puzzle.
By Neil Berg, Matthew Conlen, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Eve Washington and
WordleBot: Your Daily, Personalized Wordle Score
First, play today’s Wordle. Then come here.
By Josh Katz and
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The president used the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel to underscore the threat that Jewish people still face after the Holocaust.
By Reuters
People with two copies of the gene variant APOE4 are almost certain to get Alzheimer’s, say researchers, who proposed a framework under which such patients could be diagnosed years before symptoms.
By Pam Belluck
Recent studies cast doubt on whether large-scale mental health interventions are making young people better. Some even suggest they can have a negative effect.
By Ellen Barry
New research finds that the death rate among Black youths soared by 37 percent, and among Native American youths by 22 percent, between 2014 and 2020, compared with less than 5 percent for white youths.
By Emily Baumgaertner
Can you sort 8 historical events?
Can you sort 8 historical events?
Picks are likelier to be dealt than kept, as a “very strong inertia” has been replaced by complex models and frenzied swapping.
By Ben Blatt
There’s 50 percent more carbon dioxide in the air than before the Industrial Revolution.
By Aatish Bhatia
Can you sort 8 historical events?
His liabilities weren’t dominating the conversation the way they once did, perhaps helping his polling, but the trial could change things.
By Nate Cohn
Is this how one of the world’s greatest cities still deals with garbage? Larry Buchanan, one of the New York Times reporters who walked miles around the city pondering trash for this story, explains what will be required to take New York’s trash bags off the street.
By Larry Buchanan, Karen Hanley and Ruru Kuo
An average of recent surveys, including the Times/Siena poll, finds President Biden inching closer to Donald Trump.
By Nate Cohn
Can you sort 8 historical events?
The trend toward the Republican Party among white voters without a college degree has continued, and Democrats have lost ground among Hispanic voters, too.
By Ruth Igielnik
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Some companies discriminated against Black applicants much more than others, and H.R. practices made a big difference.
By Claire Cain Miller and Josh Katz
Yesterday’s hippies have become today’s seniors — and they’re still voting Democratic.
Can you sort 8 historical events?
A study found that when older workers in Bangladesh were given free reading glasses, they earned 33 percent more than those who had not.
By Andrew Jacobs
One Super 8 in Illinois advertised $949 a night. Its normal rate is $95.
By Ben Blatt
The evidence is strong that, all else being equal, Al Gore would have won if not for an infamous ballot design in Palm Beach County.
By Nate Cohn
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