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President Trump is confronting a crisis that is not bending to his narrative of a “pretty reasonable” new regime in Iran and all-but-assured victory for the United States.

Iran’s stranglehold over the waterway completely reshaped shipping during the war. The U.S. naval blockade is an attempt to stop that.

Oil prices stabilized and stocks rose on optimism that diplomatic talks could yield a permanent peace deal.

Plus, forget sneakers — Allbirds is going A.I.

Fresh off a two-week break, lawmakers returned to turmoil in the House, where legislation to reopen the Department of Homeland Security is stalled and the G.O.P. is struggling to keep its agenda on track.

Jerome H. Powell’s term as chair of the Federal Reserve ends on May 15, but it appears increasingly likely that he will stay on in some capacity at the central bank after that.

Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer asked staff members to bring wine to her hotel room, and to keep in touch with her husband and father.

The vice president is also the finance chair of the Republican National Committee, allowing him to court donors who could prove helpful should he run for president.

Democrats in key Senate races out-raised their Republican rivals, but super PACs on the right are poised to play a powerful role in the midterms, new campaign finance filings showed.

Money from Democratic donors has flowed into the coffers of the party’s top Senate candidates — especially its nominee in Texas.

A steep slide in housing prices has left consumers less prosperous and less willing to spend, but the government is pouring money into new rail lines and other projects.

China used a visit by the Vietnamese leader to show a deepening of security ties that analysts say far outpaces U.S. defense ties in the region.

In a city of notoriously small apartments, New Yorkers keep their meaningful mementos and quirky collections elsewhere.

The story of how President Trump quadrupled the size of the original proposal for the arch follows a now-familiar pattern.

See how the 250-foot structure would dwarf other monumental arches, including the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

Corruption and economic mismanagement brought down Hungary’s authoritarian leader. Will his political disciples avoid those pitfalls?

The money could jump-start affordable housing projects across the metropolitan region.

Amid calls from the left to tax the rich, a tax proposal on multimillion-dollar second homes in New York City, backed by Gov. Kathy Hochul, seems to have better odds of passing than in years past.

“I wanted something new and something traditional and something that felt holy.”

An effort to privatize the facility is a key test of whether Kyiv can overcome concerns about Russian attacks and corruption to attract foreign investment.

Moscow is again ramping up missile and drone attacks on civilian targets, dispelling any notion that a temporary cease-fire for Orthodox Easter might become more lasting.

The Saudi league, established in 2022, attracted some of the sport’s biggest stars with huge contracts.

Will MAHA stay committed to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.?

What a shift in the dating preferences of younger men reveals about our changing norms.

We’re covering today’s top stories.

The “Late Show” host scolded JD Vance for suggesting that Pope Leo XIV “be careful when he talks about matters of theology.”

The leftist lawmaker has been a prime target of President Trump’s attacks on South Africa. The ruling, handed down after a conviction on gun charges, leaves Mr. Malema’s political future in doubt.

Analilia Mejia, a progressive Democrat, is competing on Thursday in New Jersey against Joe Hathaway, a Republican who has tried to distance himself from President Trump.

Once held up as a key solution to climate change, a field that aims to remove carbon from the atmosphere is struggling to catch on.

A jury found that the concert giant operated as a monopoly, a verdict that could have major reverberations in the music industry.