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While the president says the agreement with Iran would open the Strait of Hormuz and provide economic relief, the country’s nuclear program is still a subject for negotiation.

The U.S.-Iran framework agreement appears to omit some of the most important provisions that Israel wanted.

Secret memos show that the White House debated last year, to a greater degree than previously known, whether to limit habeas corpus rights for undocumented immigrants.

President Trump sat ringside beside his wife, Melania Trump, for an event that used the trappings of the White House for a U.F.C. brawl.

A day after the National Symphony Orchestra played perhaps its final notes at the Kennedy Center for years, mixed martial artists brawled outside the White House.

The first half of the year had few big, buzzy hits. But there were some nice surprises (“Widow’s Bay”) and returning favorites (“The Comeback”).

The United States is reliant on unpaid family caregivers, and millions of adult children are caring for parents who didn’t really care for them.

A bishop reported that many holy items had been recovered from the church, at the site of the Perchersk monastery, a revered place for the Ukrainian and Russian Orthodox faiths.

Even though negotiations will begin for Ukraine to join the bloc, the path ahead is a long one.

Ukraine is running out of American-made Patriot air-defense interceptors, and is pleading for more.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his government planned to bar children under 16 from social media, following policies in Australia and elsewhere.

Britain said it would ban social media access for children under 16 starting in 2027, joining several other countries introducing similar measures.

President Trump has long been at odds with European leaders over trade, Ukraine and NATO, but he has lashed out in recent weeks over their refusal to support the U.S. war with Iran.

It’s finally the Knicks’ time. But the five-decade title drought, full of both joy and pain, was all some devoted fans were ever able to experience.

A parade up Broadway to City Hall on Thursday will celebrate the team’s N.B.A. championship win, and Mayor Zohran Mamdani will present players with keys to the city.

For decades, Islamic governance held allure in the Middle East. Now some scholars say the Islamist wave has passed.

Representative Barry Moore, an early backer of the president during his first campaign, faces Jared Hudson, a former Navy SEAL tapping into the excitement for outsiders.

A bitterly fought Democratic primary in New York’s Hudson Valley will determine who takes on Representative Mike Lawler, one of the more vulnerable Republicans this cycle.

Tuesday’s runoff for a slot on the Alabama Public Service Commission has a familiar ring to it, with talk of data centers and electricity costs. But in a southern twist, solar power has joined the list of villains.

A gunman believed he was defending the crowd, then killed an innocent protester. The legal case is complicated.

A prolonged drought means the nation’s largest reservoirs are dwindling, and litigation over access to water could lie ahead.

Women who can’t take hormone therapy because of breast cancer or other diseases say they are deeply frustrated.

A large real estate development in the middle of Vancouver, British Columbia, shows how cities can build more housing.

Nominating Mr. Blanche to be the nation’s top law enforcement officer crosses a red line, and the Senate needs to defeat him.

The United States and Iran have a deal that could lead to the end of their monthslong war.

Ten years after a landmark peace deal, armed groups are wreaking deadly violence, blending jungle combat with new drone warfare.