Tabloid Publisher Defiant as Trump Lawyer Tries to Shake His Confidence
David Pecker, who was the keeper of Donald J. Trump’s secrets, insisted he had testified truthfully about his dealings with the former president.
By Jesse McKinley and
David Pecker, who was the keeper of Donald J. Trump’s secrets, insisted he had testified truthfully about his dealings with the former president.
By Jesse McKinley and
A tabloid publisher’s testimony dominated a week that began with opening statements setting the stage for the first prosecution of a president.
By Kate Christobek and
The confrontational strategy adopted by the lawyer, Emil Bove, did not seem to work with David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer.
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President Biden has been trying to hit his opponent where it hurts, critiquing everything from his hairstyle to his energy levels in court.
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How a Supreme Court Immunity Ruling Could Affect Trump’s Election Case
In arguments on Thursday, the justices appeared to signal two ways they could help Donald Trump as he fights charges that he plotted to overturn the 2020 election.
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Conservative Justices Take Argument Over Trump’s Immunity in Unexpected Direction
Thursday’s Supreme Court hearing was memorable for its discussion of coups, assassinations and internments — but very little about the former president’s conduct.
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Five Major Climate Policies Trump Would Probably Reverse if Elected
He has called for increased oil production and said that electric vehicles will result in an ‘assassination’ of jobs.
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Conservative Justices Appear Poised to Rule Ex-Presidents Have Some Level of Immunity
Such a ruling would probably send the case back to a lower court and could delay any trial until after the November election.
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4 Takeaways From the Supreme Court Hearing on Trump’s Immunity Claim
Several justices signaled interest in some protections for official acts, which could impede a swift trial in the federal election subversion case.
By Charlie Savage and
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Donald J. Trump’s relationship with Wall Street has changed dramatically since 2016. He was closely aligned with business leaders during his first term in office, until a series of events exposed their divisions.
By John Pappas, Caroline Kim, Gabriel Blanco and Noah Throop
No major American presidential candidate has talked like he now does at his rallies — not Richard Nixon, not George Wallace, not even Donald Trump himself.
By Charles Homans
Each day before and after court proceedings, the former president stepped out in front of the cameras and offered his version of the case.
By Linda Qiu
The Ohio senator and Donald Trump Jr. have bonded politically and personally. It’s a relationship that could factor into the former president’s search for a running mate.
By Sharon LaFraniere
Antes ese término estaba relegado a los márgenes del debate nacional, pero ahora forma parte del mensaje mayoritario del Partido Republicano sobre la inmigración.
By Jazmine Ulloa
The Health and Human Services Department finalized a rule prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, reversing a Trump-era policy.
By Noah Weiland
The first week of testimony has ended in Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives his takeaways.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Rebecca Suner and Gabriel Blanco
Mr. Meijer, a former House member, said he did not have a “strong pathway to victory” in the Michigan primary race.
By Neil Vigdor
The appearance allowed President Biden to tell the stories of love and loss that have defined his public image.
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Katie Rogers
Few people knew Donald J. Trump like Ms. Graff, a Queens native who made a career serving the defendant.
By Matthew Haag
A cluster of downtown buildings has served as the borough’s “epicenter of criminal justice in New York since the 1830s,” said a lawyer who has led walking tours of Manhattan courthouses.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg
Republicans have been increasingly using the word “invasion” in their ads and speeches to describe migrants on the southern border solidifying the word into party’s overall message on immigration.
By Jazmine Ulloa, Meg Felling and Claire Hogan
The president’s announcement came after months in which he and his campaign declined to say whether he would debate his predecessor.
By Reid J. Epstein, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Jonathan Swan
The majority leader says the measure to help Ukraine and other recent bipartisan efforts show there is a path to success on Capitol Hill. But deep partisan differences and institutional problems remain.
By Carl Hulse
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Once relegated to the margins of the national debate, the word is now part of the party’s mainstream message on immigration.
By Jazmine Ulloa
Prosecutors are sending a warning as Donald Trump and his supporters continue to spread conspiracy theories: that disrupting elections can bear a heavy legal cost.
By Danny Hakim and Richard Fausset
Plus, Haiti gets a new government.
By Tracy Mumford, Alan Feuer, Ian Stewart, Jessica Metzger and James Shield
The polarization of politics means that rules are imposed, gutted and restored with each election. Experts say that’s bad for the economy.
By Coral Davenport
David Pecker, former publisher of The National Enquirer, testified that Donald J. Trump thanked him for burying stories during the 2016 campaign. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives takeaways from Pecker’s testimony.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Gabriel Blanco, Claire Hogan and Rebecca Suner
The Campaign Legal Center said in a complaint that Trump political committees had used an intermediary firm “as a conduit to conceal payments” totaling $7.2 million.
By Chris Cameron
On social media, Arizona lawmakers are accused of being baby killers, cowards and traitors.
By Jack Healy
David Pecker told jurors of a universe in which favors for celebrities were demanded and dispensed. His cross-examination will continue Friday.
By Jesse McKinley and Kate Christobek
The justices could issue a ruling that would make a trial in the Jan. 6 case unlikely before the election.
By Alan Feuer and Maggie Haberman
David Pecker, former publisher of The National Enquirer, testified that Donald J. Trump thanked him for burying stories.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Ben Protess and Michael Rothfeld
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A man who pleaded guilty to stalking the lawyer, Lisa Page, had been discharged from the Marines after expressing an obsession with her as well as mass shootings, information that was shared with the F.B.I.
By Glenn Thrush and Adam Goldman
The publisher of the The National Enquirer said he was called upstairs at Trump Tower to a postelection meeting where Donald J. Trump introduced him to future White House figures.
By Michael Rothfeld
They called Donald J. Trump “the boss.” The desire to avoid his fury drove many decisions made by those around him.
By Matthew Haag
After a tape emerged of Donald J. Trump discussing how he groped women, she quickly struck a deal.
By Michael Rothfeld
The judge in his criminal case is already considering whether to punish the former president for statements about jurors and witnesses in the case.
By Matthew Haag
Marchers closed down a street calling for the former president to face justice.
By Nate Schweber
The early morning campaign stop exemplifies the balancing act required for a candidate who is also a criminal defendant.
By Michael Gold
Plus, new airline refund rules.
By Tracy Mumford, Alan Feuer, Ian Stewart, Jessica Metzger and James Shield
The $6.1 billion for Micron, to shore up the domestic supply of semiconductors, comes after a key union endorsement and passage of an aid bill central to the president’s foreign policy agenda.
By Madeleine Ngo and Zolan Kanno-Youngs
A conversation about the power of Trump’s punchlines — and the jokes President Biden should be telling.
By Astead W. Herndon, Elisa Gutierrez and Caitlin O’Keefe
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The parent company of The Enquirer, the tabloid now famous for its ties to former President Donald J. Trump, has tried repeatedly to sell the publication. It hasn’t been easy.
By Katie Robertson
Chad Nedohin, a part-time pastor, is among the fans of Donald J. Trump who helped turn Trump Media into a meme stock with volatile prices.
By David Yaffe-Bellany and Matthew Goldstein
Here’s how key figures involved in making hush-money payoffs on behalf of Donald J. Trump are connected.
By Molly Cook Escobar
The former president has skewed largely peaceful pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses as “riots,” filled with “tremendous hate.”
By Chris Cameron
Arizona on Wednesday indicted Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mark Meadows and a number of others who advised Donald J. Trump during the 2020 election, as well as the fake electors who acted on Mr. Trump’s behalf to try to keep him in power despite his loss in the state. Here is the indictment.
Those charged included Boris Epshteyn, a top legal strategist for Donald Trump, and fake electors who acted on Mr. Trump’s behalf in Arizona after the 2020 election.
By Danny Hakim and Maggie Haberman
President Biden has homed in on the infamous moment, which crystallized the chaos of the Trump presidency, as he trolls his political opponent.
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs
Trials are wars of words. These are some of the most memorable that have been spoken as a jury hears the criminal case against Donald J. Trump.
By Wesley Parnell
An investigator said in court that former President Donald J. Trump and some of his aides conspired with fake electors to overturn his 2020 defeat in Michigan.
By Danny Hakim
The former president is asking the Supreme Court to put the presidency above criminal law as he pursues a broader agenda of expanding the office’s power should he win the election.
By Charlie Savage
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After the justices hear arguments on Thursday, how they decide may be just as important as what they decide.
By Adam Liptak
Votes for dropout candidates, such as Nikki Haley, have been features of past election cycles, too.
By Alex Lemonides and Christine Zhang
Polls show voters are angry about costs, like mortgages, and worried they will stay high if the president wins re-election.
By Jim Tankersley and Jeanna Smialek
“Finish What We Started,” by the journalist Isaac Arnsdorf, reports from the front lines of the right-wing movement’s strategy to gain power, from the local level on up.
By Jennifer Szalai
A liberal Pittsburgh-area congresswoman turned away a centrist challenger, Nikki Haley kept ringing up votes against Donald Trump, and a Senate race began in earnest.
By Chris Cameron and Anjali Huynh
Tuesday’s session of Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial began with a heated clash between Justice Juan M. Merchan and Mr. Trump’s lead lawyer over a gag order. It ended with an insider look into a tabloid newspaper practices. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives the major takeaways.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Claire Hogan, Gabriel Blanco and Rebecca Suner
A tabloid publisher testified how he helped Trump’s 2016 campaign.
By Jesse McKinley
President Biden tied a six-week abortion ban that will soon take place in Florida to former President Donald J. Trump and Republican efforts to ban abortion nationwide.
By The New York Times
Si Trump fuera encarcelado, un destacamento de agentes trabajaría 24 horas al día dentro de las instalaciones para garantizar su seguridad, señalaron varios funcionarios.
By William K. Rashbaum
Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan is off to an ominous start for the former president, and it might not get any easier in the days ahead.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Ben Protess and Maggie Haberman
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The former publisher of The National Enquirer testified at Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial that he used a so-called catch-and-kill deal to silence the doorman.
By Matthew Haag and Michael Rothfeld
The tabloid’s parent company was fined for breaking federal election laws after spending money to buy and bury stories that could have harmed Donald J. Trump’s campaign.
By Jim Rutenberg
Testifying for the prosecution, Mr. Pecker spoke about the mutually beneficial relationship between Donald J. Trump and the supermarket tabloid.
By Matthew Haag
Donald J. Trump amplified a false assertion by the commentator Jesse Watters that activists were infiltrating the jury in his criminal trial.
By Matthew Haag
The former president’s claim ahead of a pivotal Supreme Court hearing that he was protecting the election system rather than subverting it is part of a pattern of shaping his own reality.
By Alan Feuer
La red social ha superado a la competencia sobre todo porque sus rivales han flaqueado. En marzo, registró 1,5 millones de visitantes únicos en Estados Unidos. La popularidad no asegura que sea rentable.
By David Yaffe-Bellany and Matthew Goldstein
Highlights from the first big day of the former president’s New York criminal case.
By David Leonhardt and Ian Prasad Philbrick
Los primeros días del juicio al expresidente, resultados de la consulta en Ecuador y más para el martes.
By Elda Cantú
Inside the criminal trial of former President Donald J. Trump.
By Michael Barbaro, Will Reid, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Mooj Zadie, Lexie Diao, Paige Cowett, Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Brad Fisher and Chris Wood
The former president is in line for a windfall after the stock price of Trump Media hit performance targets in its first few weeks of trading, raising the value of his already sizable stake.
By Jason Karaian and Joe Rennison
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The Biden campaign has made abortion one of its top issues, as polling shows it is one of the few subjects in which voters place more trust in President Biden than Donald Trump.
By Nicholas Nehamas and Patricia Mazzei
Democrats see an opening to win back rural Trump voters fed up with their groundwater being pumped by huge farms.
By Jack Healy
Officials have had preliminary discussions about how to protect the former president in the unlikely event that he is jailed for contempt during the trial.
By William K. Rashbaum
Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives the major takeaways from the opening statements and the first witness of Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan. An earlier version of this video misstated that it’s the sixth day of the Trump hush-money trial. It is Day 5.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Gabriel Blanco, Rebecca Suner and Claire Hogan
“Don’t give them a noble reason to indict you, because they will,” an unnamed associate told Donald J. Trump, according to an interview the person gave the F.B.I. in the classified documents case.
By Alan Feuer
The prosecution and the defense presented their opening statements.
By Jesse McKinley
With support from demonstrators in Lower Manhattan spotty so far, Donald Trump issued a call to “rally behind MAGA,” and suggested the poor turnout was a result of a plot against his supporters.
By Jonathan Swan, Maggie Haberman and Nate Schweber
Prosecutors signaled a sweeping case and Donald J. Trump’s lawyers began their assault on witnesses’ credibility. The judge seems intent on expediting the first trial of an American president.
By Jesse McKinley and Kate Christobek
TV networks began the challenging assignment on Monday of covering former President Trump’s trial without the luxury of cameras inside the courtroom.
By John Koblin
Letitia James had asked a court to reject the bond that Donald J. Trump posted in his civil fraud case. A deal on Monday will keep the terms of the bond largely unchanged.
By Matthew Haag
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The former president has put forth a law-and-order candidacy while also criticizing the legal system when it comes to himself and making exceptions for his supporters.
By Maggie Haberman and Michael Gold
The term was coined by tabloid editors for buying the rights to stories for the purpose of ensuring the information never becomes public. Donald J. Trump was a beneficiary.
By Michael Rothfeld
Mr. Pecker, the longtime publisher of The National Enquirer, is first on the stand at the former president’s trial.
By Michael Rothfeld
Mr. Blanche is also representing the former president in his federal classified documents case in Florida and his federal election interference case in Washington.
By Kate Christobek
New York courts generally do not permit video to be broadcast from courtrooms, although a feed is being transmitted into an overflow room for the reporters covering the trial.
By Ben Protess and Alan Feuer
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