The Times's reporting covered the Mayor's comments -- and their careful, measured nature -- fairly and accurately, including the departure from his more direct and engaged messaging strategy during his election campaign.
The Times's reporting covered the Mayor's comments -- and their careful, measured nature -- fairly and accurately, including the departure from his more direct and engaged messaging strategy during his election campaign.
How The New York Times Reports on the War in Iran and Beyond www.nytimes.com/2026/03/09/i...
This Womenβs History Month, The New York Times is revisiting its archive to highlight a multitude of extraordinary women through their obituaries. Take a deep dive into a century of women whose stories shaped our world: nyti.ms/4sp1eW8
We've been working to collect evidence, including new satellite images of the area, to come to stronger conclusions about responsibility, as much was unknown. 3/3 www.nytimes.com/2026/03/05/w...
Our live blog tracked the rising death toll as we were able to report it. We published this piece on accountability yesterday and an in-depth follow-up investigation today. 2/3 www.nytimes.com/2026/03/04/u...
This is a disingenuous attack. In the wake of the strike, we began working to verify videos and images, publishing a detailed report hours later that showed the scale of destruction and children killed in Minab. This story spent 12 hours on our homepage on Sunday. 1/3 www.nytimes.com/2025/03/01/w...
The New York Times, Deep South Today and Big Local News are thrilled to announce the addition of Anna Wolfe to the Deep South Today Investigative Reporting Center where she will cover Mississippi. www.nytco.com/press/anna-w...
President and CEO of The New York Times Company, Meredith Kopit Levien, spoke to attendees during a recent installment of the Distinguished Speaker Series at CBS, sharing key moments from her extensive career in media and the role independent journalism has to play in society today.
Hereβs a Gift Link to the original report: nyti.ms/4rXs07P
We followed up this story with an interview with Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, in which she discussed the discourse around her appearance at the Munich Security Conference: nyti.ms/4tYjxDp
Our coverage of Joe Biden: nyti.ms/4rfS91I
And Kamala Harris: nyti.ms/46e8wDA
And Donald Trump: nyti.ms/4qEQrpm
Our report offers plenty of context for readers as to why the full quote is relevant in our coverage of Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez's first major overseas trip as a lawmaker.
We often omit extraneous syllables from quotes like "um" and "ah" pauses, but if a politician's quote is particularly striking for how stalled or jumbled it was, we sometimes reflect it in full to show the reader. You can see this in our coverage of Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump and others
Hereβs a Gift Link to the original report: nyti.ms/4rXs07P
We followed up this story with an interview with Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, in which she discussed the discourse around her appearance at the Munich Security Conference: nyti.ms/4tYjxDp
And Donald Trump: nyti.ms/4qEQrpm
And Kamala Harris: nyti.ms/46e8wDA
Our coverage of Joe Biden: nyti.ms/4rfS91I
Our report offers plenty of context for readers as to why the full quote is relevant in our coverage of Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez's first major overseas trip as a lawmaker.
We often omit extraneous syllables from quotations like "um" and "ah," but if a politician's quote is particularly striking for how stalled or jumbled it was, we sometimes reflect it in full to show the reader. You can see this in our coverage of Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, and others.
Hi Howard. The headline accurately represents the statement made by the prosecutor. On your broader point, Susan Wessling, our head of the Standards, answered a reader question about calling out 'lies' from politicians and officials here: www.nytimes.com/2025/03/06/i...
Introducing The Docket, a new weekly newsletter about the law and the courts from @adamliptak.bsky.social. Get the context behind the latest legal developments, delivered every Thursday.
Sign up: www.nytimes.com/newsletters/...
The Times's coverage of Feb. 3 and 4 accurately reported the public statements of both the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and the American Medical Association. Our reporting also accurately contextualized the shift from both of these organizations regarding gender-related surgical procedures.
To read the full reporting: www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/u...
From the second paragraph of this article, and further examples throughout the piece:
We are thrilled to announce the first fellows in our 2026-27 Local Investigations Fellowship class. The journalists, who hail from Mississippi and Louisiana, are part of the new investigative reporting center established by The Times and Deep South Today. www.nytco.com/press/introd...
The New York Times is expanding its Supreme Court coverage. Read how four reporters are examining the most secretive branch of government β and the nine justices who shape the nation's laws. www.nytimes.com/2026/02/02/u...
Todayβs arrest of the journalists Georgia Fort and Don Lemon is a troubling development in the escalating campaign of pressure and intimidation that the Trump administration has leveled against a free press in the last year. Federal judges twice rejected these charges for a good reason: Reporting on a protest is not a federal crime. The arrests continue a clear pattern of ignoring established law and infringing constitutionally protected rights to target reporting the administration finds politically disfavorable. -Charlie Stadtlander, a spokesperson for The Times
AG Sulzberger, publisher and chairman of The New York Times, spoke at Stanford University in a wide-ranging interview at the business school. He shared lessons from a decade navigating digital disruption and anti-press campaigns. www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6hc...
βThe reports of F.B.I. agents raiding the home of a journalist and seizing her electronic devices are deeply concerning and portray a stark threat to free press rights in this country. Actions like this inevitably impede reportersβ ability to gather news in the public interest and as a result make the government less accountable. Reporting and newsgathering enjoy protection under the U.S. Constitution. Law enforcement intimidation like this imperils the transparency provided by independent media.β - David McCraw, Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel
Weβve published the 23,000-word transcript of my @nytimes.com colleagues' interview with President Trump and opened it up for reader comments this morning. Weβve written many news stories off the interview but also think it's important for readers to see the president's words for themselves.
Three videos of the shooting posted on social media and verified by The New York Times show two federal agents trying to get a woman to exit a vehicle that is partially blocking an intersection. The driver reverses, then pulls forward and begins to turn. A third agent pulls out a gun and aims it at the driver, then fires three times.
You're showing a screenshot from the first entries in a live blog covering a breaking news event. Our journalists report what we confirm, and our live coverage continues to be updated. Readers can follow the developments here: www.nytimes.com/live/2026/01...