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On Friday, Janet Yellen’s nomination as Treasury secretary was approved unanimously by the Senate Finance Committee. It will head for final vote by the full Senate. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007566382/janet-yellen-senate-committee-approval.html | On Friday, Janet Yellen’s nomination as Treasury secretary was approved unanimously by the Senate Finance Committee. It will head for final vote by the full Senate. | new video loaded:Janet Yellen Is Unanimously Approved by Senate Committee
transcript
Janet Yellen Is Unanimously Approved by Senate Committee
On Friday, Janet Yellen’s nomination as Treasury secretary was approved unanimously by the Senate Finance Committee. It will head for final vote by the full Senate.
“This is an urgent nomination — you look at yesterday’s unemployment numbers still right at the top of all-time records, and it’s my hope that when Janet Yellen is in place, she will work with us to come up with a strong economic package.” “I think that in her testimony before this committee really focused on how she was going to focus on Main street instead of Wall Street, or at least and there’s a lot of policy that she has to continue to focus on, and making sure that shadow banking isn’t a key aspect of the challenges we face in making sure that depositors interests are looked after. But I really do hope that she can lead a new day at Treasury to focus on the Main Street issues.” “I have very strong disagreements with Dr. Yellen on a number of her positions, particularly in the tax policy arena. But she has committed to us that she will work with us on these issues, and the concerns that we have. And I think the strong vote on our side to support her today is an indication that we want to engage. And I simply want to ask my colleagues to engage with us, and Dr. Yellen to engage with us as we develop the new policies.” “I congratulate Dr.Yellen on her nomination. And I will say a second time that I will support it.” “Mr. Chairman, the final tally is 26 ayes, zero nays.” “The nomination will be reported unanimously from the committee.”
Janet Yellen Is Unanimously Approved by Senate Committee
On Friday, Janet Yellen’s nomination as Treasury secretary was approved unanimously by the Senate Finance Committee. It will head for final vote by the full Senate.
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How different groups voted | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/ap-polls-new-york.html | How different groups voted | New York Voter Surveys: How Different Groups Voted
UpdatedJune 1, 2021, 2:51 PM ET
State Results
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New York Voter Surveys: How Different Groups Voted
The numbers on this page areestimatesfrom A.P. VoteCast, a survey conducted for The Associated Press by NORC at the University of Chicago. These surveys were conducted online and by phone, largely in the days before the election.
The estimates shown here reflect the responses of 2,222 likely voters. They have been adjusted to match the actual vote count.
Demographic
Do you describe yourself as a man, a woman, or in some other way?
What is your age?
Which best describes your level of education?
What is your present religion, if any?
Do you consider yourself to be gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender?
Are you:
Are you the parent or guardian of any children under the age of 18?
What was your total household income in 2019?
Have you, or has any member of your household, ever served in the U.S. military?
Which of the following best describes the area where you live?
When did you vote?
Which type of vote did you cast?
Is this election your first time ever voting, or not?
Do you consider yourself a Democrat, a Republican, or do you not consider yourself either? Do you lean toward either party?
Do you consider yourself to be a liberal, moderate, or conservative?
Did you vote in the 2016 presidential election for Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, or someone else?
Have you or someone in your household lost a job or income because of the coronavirus pandemic?
Have you missed out on a major event, like a wedding or funeral, because of the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you have a close friend or family member who has died from the coronavirus?
Issues and attitudes
Which best describes when you decided how you would vote?
Generally speaking, would you say things in this country are heading in the:
Which one of the following would you say is the most important issue facing the country?
Do you think the condition of the nation’s economy is:
Do you think the coronavirus in the United States is:
Which should be the federal government’s higher priority:
Do you favor or oppose requiring people to wear masks when around other people outside of their homes?
How serious a problem is racism in U.S. society?
How serious a problem is racism in policing?
Thinking about the criminal justice system in the United States, would you say it:
Do you approve or disapprove of recent protests against police violence?
Do you favor or oppose building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border?
Which comes closest to your opinion on abortion? Abortion should be:
In general, how concerned are you about the effects of climate change?
Should gun laws in the U.S. be made:
Do you favor or oppose increasing federal government spending on green and renewable energy?
Do you favor or oppose increasing taxes on goods imported to the U.S. from other countries?
Do you favor or oppose reducing government regulation of business?
Which of the following comes closest to what you would like to see lawmakers do with the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare?
Do you favor or oppose changing the health care system so that any American can buy into a government-run health care plan if they want to?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that votes will be counted accurately?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are eligible will be allowed to vote?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you were Supreme Court nominations?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you were protests over police violence?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you was the federal government’s response to the coronavirus?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of the Republican Party?
Overall, do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Mike Pence?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Joe Biden?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Kamala Harris?
Would you say Joe Biden is a strong leader?
Would you say Donald Trump is a strong leader?
Would you say Joe Biden is honest and trustworthy?
Would you say Donald Trump is honest and trustworthy?
Would you say Joe Biden cares about people like you?
Would you say Donald Trump cares about people like you?
Would you say Joe Biden has the mental capability to serve effectively as president?
Would you say Donald Trump has the mental capability to serve effectively as president?
Would you say Joe Biden is healthy enough to serve effectively as president?
Would you say Donald Trump is healthy enough to serve effectively as president?
Would you say Joe Biden stands up for what he believes in?
Would you say Donald Trump stands up for what he believes in?
Would you describe your vote for president mainly as for your candidate or against his opponent?
How important is it to you for the next president to bring the country together?
How important is it to you for the next president to shake up the political system?
How important is it to you for the next president to look out for people like you?
Regardless of who you support, would you say Joe Biden or Donald Trump is better able to handle the economy?
Regardless of whom you support, would you say Joe Biden or Donald Trump is better able to handle the coronavirus pandemic?
Regardless of who you support, would you say Joe Biden or Donald Trump is better able to handle policing and criminal justice?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Joe Biden?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump? And Joe Biden?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Kamala Harris?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Mike Pence?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of the Republican Party?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Andrew Cuomo?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Andrew Cuomo?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Bill de Blasio?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Bill de Blasio?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez?
Do you think Donald Trump has changed the way Washington works for the better, for the worse or not at all?
More demographic questions
What is your age?
What is your age?
How old are you? And what is your gender?
How old are you? And what is your gender?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And what is your gender?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And what is your gender?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And how old are you?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And how old are you?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And how old are you?
What is your race, age and gender?
Which of the following best describes you and your family’s heritage?
Which of the following best describes you and your family’s heritage?
What is your present religion, if any?
What is your present religion, if any?
Would you describe yourself as a white evangelical or white born-again Christian?
How often, if at all, do you attend religious services?
How often, if at all, do you attend religious services?
Are you:
Are you married? What is your gender?
Are you the mother or father of any children under the age of 18?
Which best describes your level of education?
What is your gender and level of education?
What is your level of education and racial or ethnic heritage?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage and level of education?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage, level of education and gender?
What is your age and education level?
What was your total household income in 2019?
What was your total household income in 2019?
Which of the following best describes the area where you live?
What is your gender? And the size of the place where you live?
What is your racial or ethnic heritage? And the size of the place where you live?
What describes the area where you live? And what is your level of education?
Do you consider yourself to be a liberal, moderate, or conservative?
Which one of the following statements best describes you?
In the 2018 election for United States House of Representatives, did you vote for the Democratic candidate, the Republican candidate, or someone else?
Which one of the following statements best describes you?
What is your political party? (Leaners included.) Do you consider yourself to be a liberal, moderate, or conservative?
What is your political party? (Leaners included.) What is your gender?
Do you or does any other member of your household own a handgun, rifle, shotgun, or any other kind of firearm?
Do you or does any other member of your household own a handgun, rifle, shotgun, or any other kind of firearm?
Are you, or is anyone in your household, a member of a labor union?
Are you, or is anyone in your household, a member of a labor union?
Have you, or has any member of your household, ever served in the U.S. military?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Joe Biden? And the Democratic Party?
Do you have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump? And the Republican Party?
What are your views on the Republican and the Democratic parties?
More issues and attitudes
Which best describes your family's financial situation? Are you...
Do you think the condition of the nation’s economy is:
Do you think the coronavirus in the United States is:
Do you think the coronavirus in the United States is:
Do you favor or oppose requiring people to wear masks when around other people outside of their homes?
Overall, do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you were Supreme Court nominations?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you were protests over police violence?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you was the federal government’s response to the coronavirus?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you was the economic downturn?
Thinking about voting in this presidential election, how important to you was the economic downturn?
How serious a problem is racism in U.S. society?
How serious a problem is racism in U.S. society?
How serious a problem is racism in policing?
How serious a problem is racism in policing?
In general, would you say police in this country are too tough, not tough enough or about right in handling of crime?
Thinking about the criminal justice system in the United States, would you say it:
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that votes will be counted accurately?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that votes will be counted accurately?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are eligible will be allowed to vote?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are eligible will be allowed to vote?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are not eligible will not be allowed to vote?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are not eligible will not be allowed to vote?
Thinking about the presidential election in the U.S., how confident are you that people who are not eligible will not be allowed to vote?
How concerned are you that interference by foreign governments might affect the outcome of this election?
How concerned are you that interference by foreign governments might affect the outcome of this election?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Congress is handling its job?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Congress is handling its job?
Which best describes your feelings about the way the federal government is working?
Which best describes your feelings about the way the federal government is working?
Which comes closer to your views?
How important is it to you for the next president to bring the country together?
How important is it to you for the next president to shake up the political system?
How important is it to you for the next president to look out for people like you?
Do you favor or oppose increasing federal government spending on green and renewable energy?
Do you favor or oppose reducing government regulation of business?
Do you favor or oppose increasing taxes on goods imported to the U.S. from other countries?
Which of the following comes closest to what you would like to see lawmakers do with the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare?
How important to you were Supreme Court nominations in voting in this presidential election? And what would you like to see lawmakers do with the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare?
Do you favor or oppose changing the health care system so that any American can buy into a government-run health care plan if they want to?
Do you favor or oppose building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border?
Which of the following comes closer to your opinion? Should most immigrants who are living in the United States illegally be:
In general, how concerned are you about the effects of climate change?
Which comes closest to your opinion on abortion? Abortion should be:
What should the United States Supreme Court do about Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision on abortion: leave it as is or overturn it?
Should abortion be legal or illegal? And what should the Supreme Court do about Roe v. Wade?
How important to you were Supreme Court nominations in voting in this presidential election? And what should the Supreme Court do about Roe v. Wade?
Do you think the Trump administration has made the U.S. safer or less safe from terrorism, or hasn’t it made much difference?
Do you think the Trump administration has made the U.S. safer or less safe from crime, or hasn’t it made much difference?
Do you think the Trump administration has made the U.S. safer or less safe from cyberattacks, or hasnt it made much difference?
Do you think President Trump is too tough, not tough enough or about right in his approach to Russia?
Do you think President Trump is too tough, not tough enough or about right in his approach to China?
Do you think President Trump is too tough, not tough enough or about right in his approach to North Korea?
Do you think the United States should take a more or less active role solving the worlds problems, or is its current role about right?
Which best describes when you decided how you would vote?
How interested are you in the upcoming election?
How interested are you in the upcoming election?
Do you approve or disapprove of recent protests against police violence?
How confident are you that your state's economy will recover quickly after the pandemic?
How confident are you that your state's economy will recover quickly after the pandemic?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Andrew Cuomo has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Andrew Cuomo has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump has handled the coronavirus pandemic?
Would you say Joe Biden is too tolerant of extremist groups, or not?
Would you say Donald Trump is too tolerant of extremist groups, or not?
Do you think corruption in the U.S. government would be a major problem, a minor problem or not a problem if Joe Biden is elected president?
Do you think corruption in the U.S. government would be a major problem, a minor problem or not a problem if Joe Biden is elected president?
Do you think corruption in the U.S. government would be a major problem, a minor problem or not a problem if Donald Trump is re-elected president?
Do you think corruption in the U.S. government would be a major problem, a minor problem or not a problem if Donald Trump is re-elected president?
A.P. VoteCast is a survey of the American electorate conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago for The Associated Press.
The margin of sampling error for all voters is estimated to be plus or minus 2.8 percentage points. Potential sampling error is greater in the estimates for smaller subgroups. More details about A.P. VoteCast's methodology areavailable here.
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Associated Press
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
In the West, wildfires caused by lightning have been growing bigger and occurring more frequently. With climate change, other parts of the country may feel the effects, too. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/10/23/climate/west-lightning-wildfires.html | In the West, wildfires caused by lightning have been growing bigger and occurring more frequently. With climate change, other parts of the country may feel the effects, too. | Comments
In the West, Lightning Grows as a Cause of Damaging Fires
ByJohn SchwartzandVeronica PenneyOct. 23, 2020
Wildfires in the West caused by lightning have been growing bigger and occurring more frequently. If the weather extremes already brought by climate change are any indication, other parts of the country will start paying a price, too.
Seattle
Mont.
Wash.
Portland
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Denver
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
San Francisco
Calif.
Las Vegas
n.m.
Ariz.
Los Angeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Wash.
Mont.
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
Calif.
n.m.
Ariz.
Seattle
Mont.
Wash.
Portland
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Denver
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
San Francisco
Calif.
Las Vegas
n.m.
Ariz.
Los Angeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Wash.
Mont.
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
Calif.
n.m.
Ariz.
Seattle
Mont.
Wash.
Portland
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Denver
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
San Francisco
Calif.
Las Vegas
n.m.
Ariz.
Los Angeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Wash.
Mont.
Idaho
Ore.
Wyo.
Large lightning- caused fires
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
Calif.
n.m.
Ariz.
Wildfires have burned across much of the West in 2020, with enormous blazes raging across swaths ofCalifornia, Washington, Oregonand nowColorado. While this year’s intenselightning stormsin California could prove to be an anomaly, research suggests that lightning is an increasingly common cause of large blazes, and that climate change may cause an increase in lightning strikes over the continental United States in coming decades.
Human activity causes the majority of wildfires, whether through downed power lines, accidentally thrown sparks or arson, but by some measures, the effect of lightning on wildfires is disproportionately large. According to theU.S. Forest Service’s wildfire database, 44 percent of wildfires across the Western United States were triggered by lightning, but those were responsible for 71 percent of the area burned between 1992 and 2015, the most recent data available.
Park Williams, a fire expert at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, has found that between 1992 and 2015 there was a nearly fivefold increase in Western forest area burned after lightning started a fire, versus a twofold increase for fires started by humans. “The fires that have been getting bigger tend, more often than not, to be lightning-induced,” Dr. Williams said.
“Lightning fires, they can start anywhere,” said Tyree Zander, a spokesman for Cal Fire who has worked on the LNU Lightning Complex disaster. Lightning fire in particular, he said, “has its own little mind — it creates its own story.”
For one thing, wildfires caused by humans tend to happen close to where people live and can often be dealt with quickly. However, lightning-caused fires can strike in inaccessible wilderness areas and can spread rapidly before a strong response can be put in place.
Researchers and the public tend to focus more on fires caused by people. Lightning as a source “is being ignored in a lot of the public discourse on the topic right now,” said John Abatzoglou, an associate professor in management of complex systems at the University of California, Merced. “We want to personify these fires. We want to blame somebody. But lightning doesn’t have a face.”
Climate change is amajor factorin the growing impact of lightning strikes, because these areas of the West are becoming more dried out. A lightning fire that might not have spread so quickly decades ago leaps across the landscape of dry vegetation.
Number of large lightning-caused fires in the West
Acres burned by lightning-caused fires
140
2.0 million
120
100
1.5
80
1.0
60
40
0.5
20
2000
2000
1980
1990
2010
1980
1990
2010
Number of large lightning-caused fires in the West
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
2000
1980
2010
1990
Acres burned by lightning-caused fires
2.0 million
1.5
1.0
0.5
2000
1980
2010
1990
Number of large lightning-caused fires in the West
Acres burned by lightning-caused fires
140
2.0 million
120
100
1.5
80
1.0
60
40
0.5
20
2000
2000
1990
2010
2010
1980
1980
1990
Looking at the unusually hot weather in California and its effect on vegetation and burning, David Romps, a scientist at UC Berkeley, cited the burning of fossil fuels that is heating up the planet. “This is all, of course, because of global warming,” he said.
The electrical storms in California that sparked so many fires this summer involved what are known as “dry lightning,” arcs, accompanied by little to none of the rain that can help keep fires from getting out of hand. But even conventional, rainy thunderstorms can lead to fires, said Neil Lareau, a professor of physics at the University of Nevada, Reno. If the rain is brief, it “doesn’t do anything to really change the state of the vegetation,” he said.
Climate change may bring more lightning in coming decades. By the end of the century, if humanity doesn’t slash greenhouse gas emissions to fight climate change, “we might expect to get 50 percent more lightning,” said Dr. Romps, the director of the Berkeley Atmospheric Sciences Center, who publisheda paper on the topic in 2014. “We don’t necessarily know what that means for wildfire, but we can make an educated guess,” he said.
Dr. Romps stressed that 50 percent more lightning does not mean 50 percent more fire, since not all lightning strikes places that are prone to ignite. Still, he added, a warming world with so much flammable vegetation “makes it more likely for a fire to start, regardless of what the ignition source is, and that makes it easier for that fire to spread.”
Other researchers studying the potential effects of climate change on lightning and using different computer models have suggested a less dramatic future. A2018 papereven suggested a reduction of lightning by some 12 percent worldwide, with the greatest effect in the tropics. But even that research found a slight increase in lightning over the continental United States.
Getting a handle on what effect climate change might have on lightning is daunting and complex, said Lee T. Murray, an assistant professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Rochester. Some 10 to 20 different conditions that are currently correlated with lightning flashes could be expected to change in the future, he said, and climate change could affect any of them.
“At present we don’t know which will win out,” he said. But NASA satellites are now monitoring the flashes with precision, he added, and will be able to set the baseline for future observations. “This is going to be a game changer for understanding lightning variability going into the future.”
Whatever effect climate change has on the frequency of lightning, climate change will continue to load the dice for more fire in the West, said Nina S. Oakley, a research scientist at the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego.
“Even if there were no changes in lightning frequency, the impact of warmer and drier conditions associated with climate change help make lightning more effective at igniting wildfires,” she said. “With drier vegetation, there is a greater likelihood of a lightning strike igniting a fire, and greater opportunity for that fire to grow.”
And not just in the West. Warmer temperatures and drought are expected to reachother parts of the countryas warming continues. Recentresearch suggeststhat combinations of extreme heat and drought that could make lush forests more prone to fire are occurring together more frequently — not just in the American West, but also in the Northeastern and Southeastern United States, as well.
As Craig Allen, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, put it, wildfire could be “coming soon to a landscape near you. Wherever you are.” |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Archuleta County, Colorado | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/archuleta-colorado-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Archuleta County, Colorado | Covid-19Guidance
Archuleta County, Colorado Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Archuleta County, Colo.: Latest Map and Case Count
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3% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
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Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
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Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
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3% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
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About the data
In data for Colorado, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Prior to July 2021, it released new data daily. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Colorado, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Prior to July 2021, it released new data daily. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
A detailed county map shows the extent of the coronavirus outbreak, with tables of the number of cases by county. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/massachusetts-coronavirus-cases.html | A detailed county map shows the extent of the coronavirus outbreak, with tables of the number of cases by county. | Covid-19Guidance
Massachusetts Coronavirus Map and Case Count
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Massachusetts: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
Daily new hospital admissions by age in Massachusetts
This chart shows for each age group the number of people per 100,000 that were newly admitted to a hospital with Covid-19 each day, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dips and spikes could be due to inconsistent reporting by hospitals.
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Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
Reported cases, deaths and other trends by county
This table is sorted by places with the most cases per 100,000 residents in the last seven days. Statewide data often updates more frequently than county-level data, and may not equal the sum of county-level figures. Charts show change in daily averages and are each on their own scale. The state releases new data once a week. It released new data daily until July 2021 and on weekdays until July 2022.
How trends have changed in Massachusetts
Average cases per capita in Massachusetts
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
2021
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About the data
In data for Massachusetts, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state releases new data once a week. It released new data daily until July 2021 and on weekdays until July 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Massachusetts, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state releases new data once a week. It released new data daily until July 2021 and on weekdays until July 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany announced on Tuesday that the country would extend the nationwide lockdown until the end of January amid the surge of coronavirus cases and the fear that the more contagious variant of the virus could spread. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/world/europe/100000007534843/merkel-germany-coronavirus-lockdown.html | Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany announced on Tuesday that the country would extend the nationwide lockdown until the end of January amid the surge of coronavirus cases and the fear that the more contagious variant of the virus could spread. | new video loaded:Merkel Extends Coronavirus Lockdown in Germany
Merkel Extends Coronavirus Lockdown in Germany
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany announced on Tuesday that the country would extend the nationwide lockdown until the end of January amid the surge of coronavirus cases and the fear that the more contagious variant of the virus could spread.
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An 1880 brick rowhouse in Baltimore, a modern townhouse in Houston and a 1985 ranch house in Sarasota, Fla. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2019/12/25/realestate/what-you-get-for-799000.html | An 1880 brick rowhouse in Baltimore, a modern townhouse in Houston and a 1985 ranch house in Sarasota, Fla. | What You Get for $799,000
An 1880 brick rowhouse in downtown Baltimore is on the market for $799,000.
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An 1880 brick rowhouse in Baltimore, a modern townhouse in Houston and a 1985 ranch house in Sarasota, Fla.
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See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in South Dakota. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-south-dakota-president.html | See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in South Dakota. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
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Donald J. Trump wins South Dakota.
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Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
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Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
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Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
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By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
The number of homeless students has swelled by 70 percent over the past decade. For Darnell and Sandy, school is the only stable place they know. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/11/19/nyregion/student-homelessness-nyc.html | The number of homeless students has swelled by 70 percent over the past decade. For Darnell and Sandy, school is the only stable place they know. | The New York Times
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New York|114,000 Students in N.Y.C. Are Homeless. These Two Let Us Into Their Lives.
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114,000 Students in N.Y.C. Are Homeless. These Two Let Us Into Their Lives.
ByELIZA SHAPIROandBRITTAINY NEWMANNOV. 19, 2019
114,000 Students in N.Y.C. Are Homeless. These Two Let Us Into Their Lives.
Written byEliza Shapiro; Photographs byBrittainy Newman
Darnell, 8, lives in a homeless shelter and commutes 15 miles a day to school.
Sandivel shares a bedroom with her mother and four brothers. She is 10 and has moved seven times in the past five years.
The number of school-age children in New York City who live in shelters or “doubled up” in apartments with family or friends has swelled by 70 percent over the past decade — a crisis without precedent in the city’s history.
By day, New York’s 114,085 homeless students live in plain sight: They study on the subway and sprint through playgrounds. At night, these children sometimes sleep in squalid, unsafe rooms, often for just a few months until they move again. School is the only stable place they know.
The New York Times followed Darnell and Sandivel for one day, from sunrise to sunset, to capture how much effort, help and luck it takes for homeless children to have a shot at a decent education.
Morning
Sandivel gets up just before 6 a.m. She shares a bed with her mother, Maria, and youngest brother, Jonni; three other brothers sleep on a thin mattress on the ground. With no space for a nightstand, the cellphone that doubles as an alarm clock is stashed in the bed.
They have tried to make their space cheerful. The walls, which are painted to look like the sky on a summer day, are plastered with posters of Barack Obama and the Virgin Mary.
Two at a time, the children brush their teeth. Staggering is essential — the family shares the bathroom and the kitchen of the two-bedroom apartment with another family of four.
“I have a lot of people with me, but they comfort me,” says Sandivel, who goes by Sandy.
Sandy has a collection of hair bows lined up on a wall in the bedroom. She picks a different one each morning on her way out.
Maria packs Sandy’s lunch: a bag of cheese puffs, from a huge tub in the kitchen she bought on a recent Costco run. The children make the sign of the cross and head out the door. Ahead of them is an hour commute from Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, to the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
Sandy is one of over 73,000 homeless students who lived “doubled up” last year. In one place Sandy’s family used to live, a roommate tried to kill a neighbor. In another apartment, the family was barred from using the kitchen by their housemates and had to eat in the bedroom.
Her mother is supporting the family on meager savings and spends each day looking for a steady job, but she is running out of money. Rent for her room is about $700 a month.
Maria commutes with her children to and from school every day, which means she needs to find a job with predictable daytime hours.
On the subway, Sandy looks up from her book and notices an exhausted-looking child standing in front of her. She gives up her seat.
The children enrolled at Public School 188 after Maria fled a relationship she said was abusive and moved into a domestic violence shelter in the neighborhood. Sandy says there was “violence” at home. “We got through it,” she says, pointing her index finger forward, “and we forgot all about it.”
Across the city in Queens, Darnell opens his eyes and knows something is wrong as soon as he sees the brightening sky. It is not yet 6:30, but he is already late.
His mother, Sherine, shouts for the school bus driver to wait, but the driver does not hear. The children slept only a few hours. Sherine’s phone was stolen, and the family spent the evening in a police station. They collapsed into bed after midnight.
Darnell is dreading the 90-minute subway commute from his shelter in Jamaica, Queens, to his school in Harlem. He and his family rode the F train for the first month of school, because their legally mandated school bus didn’t show up.
The shelter is dingy and far away from anyone Darnell knows. But it is safer and more spacious than the cramped room he used to share with his siblings and mother at his grandmother’s house. Darnell, who is in fourth grade, has already shuffled through four schools.
Like her son, Sherine has never had a home to call her own for long. She was raised by her grandmother until she was 12, then lived in foster care. She entered a shelter when she was 18, and has been in and out of the shelter system ever since.
Sherine, 35, has eight children. The five eldest were removed from her care years ago when she was living with their father, who she says was abusive.
Sherine, who recently found work as a home health aide, is desperate to get her own place. “No kid should have to grow up in a shelter,” she says.
Afternoon
English class is a haven for Sandy. She adores her teacher, her notebooks are meticulous and she keeps a log of the books she has devoured. But even though Sandy seems to breeze through her days, the principal, Suany Ramos, still worries about her.
Ms. Ramos says she is frustrated that at a school where about half of the students are homeless, there is only one social worker. The school’s staff, she says, is overwhelmed by children in acute crisis.
“No one is going to look at Sandivel and say, ‘She needs help,’” Ms. Ramos says, adding that Sandy will eventually have to confront her trauma.
After prodding from activists, Mayor Bill de Blasio added 31 new social workers who specifically focus on homeless students to city schools this year. That brought the total of social workers to about 100 — all of whom were hired under Mr. de Blasio — at a cost of roughly $14 million a year. The Education Department’s annual budget is about $24 billion.
There have been flashes of bullying in Sandy’s homeroom, but she mostly floats above it.
She gives a high-five to a boy in her class even after it is established among her friends that boys have cooties.
On the playground, Sandy grows upset as she watches a friend of hers mock another girl.
“She’s my friend, but I don’t know if she should be or not,” Sandy says of the bully.
At the start of recess at Public School 76, Darnell grabs a football with one end split open amid yelps of “Hike!” from the boys he usually plays with.
Within minutes, there is a dispute over the rules of the game, and the boys end up in a circle, shoving one another. The principal, Charles DeBerry, tries to talk Darnell down.
Mr. DeBerry says he is grateful that students, including Darnell, feel comfortable coming to him with problems. But he wishes there were an additional guidance counselor to specifically help the roughly 30 percent of his students who are homeless.
During lunch, Darnell peels the cheese off a slice of pizza and eats it. Then, his day begins to unravel.
He snaps at a classmate in the hall, telling him to hurry up. The boy spins around and pushes Darnell, who falls on the cold linoleum floor. After the fight, Darnell’s teacher notices that he is crying in class and she summons the guidance counselor.
“I kept my hands to myself,” Darnell says. Eventually, both boys apologize in a near-whisper. Darnell tells the guidance counselor he is bored and doesn’t want to go back to class.
School can be dull for Darnell, a fourth grader, because he often finds it bewildering. He has a learning disability and struggles to read.
Over 70 percent of the city’s homeless students failed state English exams last year, and less than 60 percent of homeless children graduated from the city’s public high schools.
Darnell comes to life in computer class, where he shows off his agility at math, matching patterns and filling in multiplication tables. He whispers “Bam!” whenever he gets an answer right.
Darnell spends the rest of the afternoon teetering on the edge of another scuffle and fidgeting in his chair.
After classes are finished, Darnell spends another three hours in an after-school program. His eyes are glazed over, but football practice is still to come.
Evening
After school, Sandy’s 15-year-old brother, Jesus, begins a daily ritual: walking through P.S. 188’s cavernous gym, picking up his younger siblings and making sure they use the bathroom before the long commute home.
For them, the crosstown bus is a mobile library. The children pull out homework, and Sandy flips through her younger brother Giovanni’s assignments. “Pretty easy,” she concludes.
The children race to embrace their mother when they meet her in Union Square during the evening rush. On the crowded subway, Sandy helps Jonni unbutton his sweater so he can slide off his backpack. Maria passes around a king-sized Kit Kat bar and a bottle of Gatorade for all of them to share.
At 6 p.m., Darnell bounds into the school’s main office to get ready for football practice with his brother, Thomas. Practice helps Darnell stay focused. He worships his coach and listens intently for instructions before starting drills.
Sherine is a “football mom,” a crucial part of the team. She helps stretch the boys’ jerseys over their hulking shoulder pads and walks the players to a field a few blocks north.
Darnell zips down the field with his arms by his sides, his fists clenched, daring his teammates to tackle him.
After years of being bullied, Darnell has made his first group of friends through football. “It makes me feel good that he feels safe now,” Sherine says. But, she adds, “I want him to have his own spot and have his friends come over.”
Sherine’s voice breaks. “I feel like a failed parent,” she says, adding, “I should have been able to provide everything that they need.” She has just spent her entire day helping out at the school.
Sherine’s heartbreak reflects that of parents who cared for the 34,000 students sleeping in New York’s homeless shelters last year — enough children to fill a small city.
Sandy stands on her tiptoes and squints across the East River as the N train pulls onto the Manhattan Bridge. She watches the skyline until the train dips underground.
She hopes the family will gather in the bedroom to watch an episode of “Cake Boss” or “Tom and Jerry” on the small television that sits on top of two dressers.
By the end of football practice, Darnell and his siblings are exhausted and hungry. Sherine is making a mental inventory of what is left of the food at the shelter; she hopes they will eat some defrosted chicken by 10.
They will be up before the sun rises to do it all over again.
Additional reporting by Andrea Salcedo. Produced by Andrew Hinderaker and Meghan Louttit
An earlier version of this article misidentified the neighborhood where Public School 76 is located. It is in Harlem, not East Harlem.
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Known for her haunting blend of R&B and art-pop, the singer is already a singular presence, but remains unwavering in her pursuit of technical virtuosity. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/10/19/t-magazine/fka-twigs.html | Known for her haunting blend of R&B and art-pop, the singer is already a singular presence, but remains unwavering in her pursuit of technical virtuosity. | Comments
FKA Twigs Has Reached New Heights
ByEmily J. LordiOct. 19, 2020
FKATwigs
With her ethereal aesthetic, staggering performances and cerebral body of work that blends R&B and art-pop, the singer has charted a singular course for herself — and for the future of music.
By
Emily J. LordiPhotographs by
Liz Johnson Artur
“DIDN’T I DO it for you?” the Black British artistFKA Twigssings at the start of “Cellophane,” her voice bowing low over a spare piano interval. “Why don’t I do it for you?” Another piano sounds as if from underwater, and soft beat-boxing keeps the tempo like brushes on a drum. “Why won’t you do it for me, when all I do is for you?” The song, the lead single from Twigs’s 2019 album, “Magdalene,” is a quiet, searching response to rejection colored by disbelief: What begins as a relationship autopsy (“Didn’t I?”) turns subtly from past tense to present (“Why not?”). Twigs was crying when she recorded the song, which she did in the wake of her heavily publicized breakup with the British actorRobert Pattinson. (“All wrapped in cellophane, the feelings that we had,” she sings, an ostensible nod to the way the couple’s experience was packaged for tabloid consumption.) Still, the recording wassoabject, and in that way so different from her typical high-concept art-pop, that she had to laugh at herself. Envisioning the video, her first thought, she tells me, was: “I should just be a sad stripper.”
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In her Grammy-nominatedvideofor “Cellophane,” which came out in April 2019, she steps onto a dim stage wearing a mint, rose and gold bikini. The camera tracks her clear platform stilettos as she walks toward the audience and begins a slow pole dance, heels slicing the floor like an ice-skater’s blades. She folds herself into the pole, then turns upside down and stretches her legs out into a 180-degree split. The ceiling opens to reveal a masked phoenix whose face Twigs tries to kick away, but the creature nevertheless sucks her in and spins her, still posing, through space until she lands in a pit where crawling people tenderly smear her with mud. She looks at the camera, shivering. But there is no telling whether she is shaken by a profound rite of renewal — returned to clay, from which she will be reborn — or if she’s just cold.
Breakup aside, Twigs created “Magdalene,” her second full-length album, the first record she had released in three years and the most widely acclaimed of her career, in the midst of another personal crisis: her diagnosis with uterine fibroids — what she has called her “fruit bowl of pain.” Pole dancing is an unlikely discipline for someone recovering from uterine surgery, as it’s dependent on intense core strength and often expressive of sexual confidence. Yet Twigs’s Los Angeles-based pole choreographer and instructor,Kelly Yvonne, who worked with her on “Cellophane” and on her earlier pole routine for the rapperASAP Rocky’s 2018 video for “Fukk Sleep,” explains that the art form is not simply a tool of male gratification centered in strip clubs; pole classes have helped women to “regain their bodies, to regain their sexuality, to take that power back.” Viewed in this light, Twigs’s use of the pole tempers the song’s story of loss and rejection with a vision of strength and prowess. At the same time, her use of oddness and artifice (the theatrical setting, the phoenix, the mud) subverts the cultural expectation that a Black woman’s performance will be simple and transparent — a straightforward narrative of recovery, a diary, an open book.
THE NOTION THAT Black women’s music (like their bodies) should be readily available and accessible is a holdover from slavery that has shaped popular Western music ever since critics framed Black female blues songs of the 1920s as direct testimonies about the singers’ lives.James Baldwin, in his 1964 essay “The Uses of the Blues,” enforces that reductive equation, but he also offers an insight that anticipates Twigs’s ironic approach to pain in her work: “There’s always something a little funny in all our disasters, if one can face the disaster,” he writes. Indeed, Twigs, with her splendid pole dance, shows just how hard women try to “do it for you” — whether colloquially (to satiate your particular desire) or literally (to serve you, to do it so you don’t have to). And yet, when love fails, when the body fails, women assume they are insufficient. It’s a dynamic that Baldwin might have called disastrous, yet it’s also absurd. To ask how you fell short “whilst doing these amazing tricks on the pole,” Twigs has said, “to me, there’s almost something humorous about that.” When performing the song live, she tells me, she toys with melodrama and theatricality — removing one of her “stripper” heels and hurling it across the stage with a sort of campy excess that brings a glint and glitter to her seemingly transparent lament. Even the title of the song hints at that same sleight of hand: You can see through and peel off the layer of cellophane, but all you will find is more magazine gloss.
Twigs’s ascent to the stratosphere and descent to the mud pit in “Cellophane” also offers a metaphor for the extremes she navigates while sliding away from conventional, eye-level expectations: deflation and transcendence, personal humility and creative grandiosity, the blunt reality of physical work and its stunning payoff in performance. She is a singer, songwriter, dancer and producer with epic stamina, impeccable taste and a monastic devotion to training: In her version of working at home under quarantine, she regularly practiced routines on the pole installed in her living room. She is often compared toBjörk,David BowieandPrince, because she is a world-builder who is unafraid to be strange, even grotesque. In her self-directed 2015 video for “Pendulum,” long before the dreamscape of “Cellophane,” she was bound in ropes, in a Japanese bondage style known asshibari, then hung from the ceiling by her own hair; her 2013 video for “Water Me,” which the artistJesse Kandadirected, features a close-up of her face, which rocks like a bobblehead doll while her eyes and mouth slowly expand.
But in recent years, Twigs, now 32, has begun to harness her pursuit of avant-garde innovation and technical virtuosity toward a deeper exploration of pain and insecurity — to unite stage presence with soul. One can find analogues between her work and that of contemporary artists: the showmanship ofJanelle Monáe, the introspection ofFiona AppleandSolange, the vocal drama ofLana Del Rey. But Twigs is less earnest and more shape-shifting than those artists. Perhaps no other pop star delves inside as deeply while stretching so far out — plumbing the interior, sometimes from a wry distance, while making of her own body a spectacular work of art.
WHEN WE FIRST meet, over FaceTime, this past summer, she seems reflective, high-spirited but relaxed. She is recording a new album at a studio that is a short walk across a park near her home in East London. When working long hours in the studio, she says, she eats lots of cakes and messes with her collaborators by telling them the musical ideas they come up with will work best when discarded: “You know, that sound is going to be amazing … when it’s muted!” She feels a bit woozy just now, she admits, having spent too long on her pole that day. In the event that I’m able to travel overseas to visit, she suggests I try it out, and assures me I would find it easy, as I studied dance growing up: “You’ve already got the lines, so it’s just about building strength.” (“Don’t let her fool you!” counters Yvonne later on when I ask about this: “It was easy forher. But it’s not easy for the average person … I’ve coached over a hundred dancers and I’ve never seen anything like her.”)
Yvonne is one of several masters to whom Twigs has apprenticed herself. In recent years, her new skills have included vogueing, krumping, tap dancing andwushu, a Chinese martial art that involves sword fighting. Physically small (at 5-foot-3) but athletically ambitious, she is a child of the stage who remains an ardent mentee — “I love being a student to a mentor that I love,” she says. Growing up in Cheltenham, an uneventful, predominantly middle-class town in the southwest of England, she studied opera and ballet and performed in youth groups and dance competitions and jazz combos. She earned a scholarship to a private Catholic school, where she excelled despite and because of how acutely she felt her otherness, as a mixed-race kid in a very white area. (Her mother, a salsa teacher and costume designer, is English and Spanish; her biological father, a musician, is Jamaican.) She was raised in part by her stepfather, a man whose background she denotes as “English/Spanish/Jamaican/Egyptian,” and whose occupation, she says, involves a briefcase and a fondness for numbers. When Twigs was 7, he told her that she would need to be twice as good as the white girls in her class if she wanted to stand out. “If I wanted to win a [dance] competition, I couldn’t really afford to be good. I had to be excellent,” she remembers. “It had to be so obvious that I was going to win, that it would be ridiculous [if] I didn’t.” It’s a common refrain for parents and kids of color, but Twigs, ever the student, took it to heart: “I really heard that.”
Interviewers so often describe Twigs as being “surprisingly” engaging and fun, in contrast to her edgily glamorous persona, that I am determined to not be surprised by her personality when we speak. But I am nonetheless moved by her openness and candor; her speech is as detailed and direct as her song lyrics are oblique. When I ask how she develops the confidence to keep learning new skills, she says she has been thinking about that a lot while quarantining in the midst of theBlack Lives Matterprotests. She genuinely loves exploring new things, and “changing the cultural DNA” by highlighting aspects of culture (krumping, pole, opera) that others might wish to learn more about. But it saddens her to realize how intensely her efforts have been driven by her stepfather’s mandate, which is really the culture’s mandate, that she always be twice as good. Excellence for her has been a mode of survival, a way of securing a craft — several crafts — that no one can deny or take away from her. This is the bind of Black performance, especially for Black women: If you don’t excel at everything, they’ll say you don’t deserve to be here. If you do, they’ll say it must have been easy to do it all precisely becauseyouhave done it.
Twigs’s mastery of forms of movement, as well as her status as a fashion icon — with her septum ring, baby hairs and neo-gothic style — has at times outshone her music. But her work as a singer, songwriter and producer is her foundation. On three early EPs and her first album, “LP1,” released in 2014, she innovated the ’90s-era R&B slow jam by blending trip-hop’s glitchy timing and industrial distortion withKate Bush’s high-pitched pop. Her signature sound, in which ethereal vocal pointillism details the upper limits of sensual songs driven by bouncing beats, expresses Twigs’s embrace of embodiment as well as her penchant for the abstract. She is perhaps a literalist only when it comes to sex. Yet her unique brand of erotic excellence forgoes the braggadocio and realness popularized by female forerunners in hip-hop in exchange for an aestheticized play between dominance and submission: as sonically subtle asSadeand as lyrically explicit as Prince (at least until he became a Jehovah’s Witness in 2001). “My thighs are apart for when you’re ready to breathe in,” she quietly informs a would-be lover in 2014’s “Two Weeks.” The video for 2013’s “Papi Pacify” features a meticulously choreographed duet between Twigs and a man who keeps sliding his fingers into her mouth.
In time, the highly produced aesthetic of these early works came to seem, she has said, like an “ornate golden bird cage” — beautiful but restrictive. Twigs remains an unapologetic classicist, invested in balletic lines and intricate networks of sound; yet on “Magdalene,” she pulls back some of the veils and effects to reveal what she calls “a pure part of my soul talking.” The album’s layered sounds are equally organic and electronic, grounded as much in the piano as in the drum machine. The other crucial instrument is Twigs’s voice, which she has worked to develop so that it occupies the center of her music rather than its upper edge. Historically, smaller-voiced pop singers, fromDiana RosstoJanet Jackson, have distributed their creative energy across several realms (fashion, dance, film) rather than ask their music to carry the entire weight of their careers. It’s a wise bid for longevity in an industry that pushes singers known as “the voice” (Whitney Houston,Mariah Carey) to the point of burnout. Twigs seemed primed to follow these trends: She is, after all, a disciple of fashion and fine art, and she played a small but memorable role in the 2019Shia LaBeouffilm “Honey Boy.” But she chose instead to train under a vocal coach,Nadine Marshall-Smith, who helped her recover the chops she had developed as a younger singer performing with jazz bands and in cabarets; Twigs credits Marshall-Smith with helping release her voice after it “locked” following fibroid surgery. Marshall-Smith says she met with the singer two or three times a week for a year, guiding her through scales and occasionally having her run while singing to develop her confidence, nuance and power. The fruits of these labors are audible in the vocal arabesques and robust shadings Twigs performs on “Magdalene,” the album, Twigs says, on which she has learned to write for her voice.
The album’s exploration of the sacred and mundane is inspired by Mary Magdalene — a figure who, despite once being framed by the Church as a sinful prostitute, was, as Twigs learned, a healer. Twigs recorded the album’s title track, “Mary Magdalene,” at Electric Lady Studios in New York: She had been laboring over the song for months when, she told The Times in 2019,Nicolás Jaar, an experimental composer and D.J. with whom she co-produced several tracks on the album, finally got the right sound by finding “a hardness in air.” Earlier songs like 2013’s “Water Me,” where dry knocking drums cut through the ambience, display a similar effect; but in “Mary Magdalene,” the hardness is a tinny clatter that strikes through the static in the bridge of the song and grows louder, as if to overtake it. Up until this point, Twigs has petitioned the saint — “Come just a little bit closer to me / Step just a little bit closer to me” — but now the singer’s voice, zigzagged with distortion, seems possessed by her. The song is a musical séance; it recalls the traditional practice of using humble materials to invoke the supernatural, rapping on wood to call the spirits.
BORN TAHLIAH BARNETT, FKA Twigs was raised in suburban Cheltenham; her mother had moved there from Birmingham, a city in western England, to give her daughter a better, or at least a more pastoral, life. They ran low on food and didn’t always have heat, but her mother worked to make life special for Twigs, her only child. Instead of decorating Twigs’s room with the glow-in-the-dark stickers her friends had, she had her daughter’s ceiling painted dark blue and speckled with stars. When Twigs was 17, she moved with her mother to study dance at the BRIT School, an institution whose alumna includeAmy WinehouseandAdele, and which Twigs describes as “a bit of a hood performing-arts school in South London.” While there, she realized that her primary love was not dance but music, but she was rejected from the music program, so she left and went to nearby Croydon College to study fine art, literature and philosophy instead. For a time, she was a youth worker who helped traumatized kids create art, as well as a backup dancer in other artists’ music videos, but she lost her job when funding was cut for civic programs, and so she began to pursue her own music through the club and cabaret scenes. In her early 20s, she sang at the Box, a debauched though commercial London club where aerialists and fire-breathers performed for stars likeGeorge ClooneyandQueen Latifah, she recalls, and where she says she felt “like a lamb to the slaughter” but developed “nerves of steel onstage.” When I suggest that the move from studious, working-class striver to underground it-girl was not an intuitive arc, she challenges the terms of the question: “But striving to do what? Striving to sing and dance?” Those aspirations were themselves odd where she came from; and, despite her academic achievements, middle-class security was never her aim. What she wanted above all was to make things and live an interesting life.
She describes this as seeking “the world.” There is a story she sometimes tells from her teenage years in which her mother turned to her over a TV dinner one night and said, “Tahliah, you don’t want a normal life.” In this origin story, the dreamy counterpart to her stepfather’s pragmatic directive (“Be twice as good”), Twigs learns that the bleak routines of working-class life are not her birthright — she should escape them by exploring the world. But in the actual moment, Twigs tells me, “I’m just like, sitting in our council home in South London like, ‘But where is the world?’ And then I meet people and think, ‘Oh my gosh, that person might know[singsongy voice]where the world is!’ Or maybe this new music I’ve discovered that has this party —thatmight be the world.”
This is the bind of Black performance, especially for Black women: If you don’t excel at everything, they’ll say you don’t deserve to be here. If you do, they’ll say it must have been easy precisely becauseyouhave done it.
For Twigs, this search has often required following a path through the dark lit by powerful women. At the Box, a group of more seasoned dancers motivated her by appearing to be much cooler and more urbane than she was; Twigs was at once scared of them and driven to keep up. Later, she was guided by a group of Black women who hosted parties in clubs internationally (includingSharmadean Reid, the founder of the London beauty and culture hub WAH Nails, andIrene Agbontaen, a London-based fashion designer). When certain spots needed other young singers on the bill, “My girls would just be like, ‘Twigs should do it.’ … We would arrive in New York on a Tuesday and they’d be like, ‘You’re cool to perform on Friday, aren’t you?’ And I’d be like, ‘Yeah, yeah. I’ll perform on Friday.’” It was at one such club that Twigs met the English visual artistMatthew Stone, who told her he wanted to photograph her. “Everyone does,” she deftly replied.
In the years between 2012, when Stone’s photograph of her appeared on the cover of i-D magazine, and 2019, when she commissioned him to create her androgynous mixed-media portrait for the cover of “Magdalene,” Twigs became her own creative force, writing her own music and lyrics, co-producing her own songs and directing several of her own videos. She has always been mindful of money and respectful of contracts that regiment her productivity, yet her EPs, LPs and singles have not followed typical industry schedules; the risks she has taken have been thrilling to watch because they’ve seemed unmediated by label directives and prepackaged contemporary pop stardom. It seems unlikely that anyone advised her to make a video in which she hung from her hair, just as it’s hard to imagine the higher-ups applauding 2014’s “Video Girl,” a black-and-white art film disguised as a music video in which Twigs watches security-camera footage of herself dancing around a man in an execution chamber. Even the story behind her name encapsulates her seemingly unpremeditated, autonomous career moves, while also reflecting the tension between availability and evasion that animates her work. “Twigs,” a nickname she got as a teenager in dance class because her joints popped, is a nod toward the intimate — an inside joke about a bodily curiosity. She added the FKA (“formerly known as,” also “forever known as”) before her first U.S. tour in 2014 to avoid being sued by a band called the Twigs. But the prefix also appealed because it amped up the name’s androgyny and subverted a celebrity culture in which, as she says, the “one-name” female singer’s persona can override women’s “contribution to their art.” As she explains, “FKA Twigs felt like something to explore, rather than a female artist to become obsessed with.”
“PEOPLE ARE QUITE confused,” says Twigs’s trainerEfua Baker, “especially men,” by what Baker calls Twigs’s “two completely different energies.” On the one hand is her lovely demeanor and “childlike” tendency to lose herself in the act of creation; on the other is her almost scarily immovable will. Baker is one of a few tough-loving matriarchs (Marshall-Smith is another) who take a holistic interest in Twigs’s well-being — trying to ensure that she sleeps (a losing battle), eats properly and surrounds herself with the right people. Baker, a former model and dancer, while hardly shy herself, sometimes wishes Twigs would “just go along with” things even if they run counter to her vision. But she laughs when describing Twigs’s “fearlessness.” Once, when Twigs was directing a commercial shoot, she wanted a male athlete to unleash a primal scream of victory. The man hesitated. So, Baker recalls, “Twigs is like, ‘I’llshow you, so you’ll feel comfortable.’ … And this tiny little thing just gets on set and we’ve got, like, hundreds of people [there], and she goes into the middle of the set and justscreams, until you feel her neck is going to rip open! And then she’s just like[demure voice], ‘See?’”
Twigs’s collaborators often speak of her stamina and work ethic with mystified pride. Yvonne explains that the video shoot for “Cellophane” required Twigs to be on the pole for eight hours straight, whereas most other dancers might manage two. Imagine lifting your own body weight for that long, she says, while also dealing with the bruising and blisters that come with the pole dancer’s art.Theo Adams, who directed Twigs’s “Magdalene” tour in 2019, recalls the time when, because of an overlong video shoot in Los Angeles and an overloud seatmate on her flight, Twigs arrived in Berlin two hours before the first European show without having slept in 50 hours. In the concert, which brought together what Adams calls a series of nonhierarchical references, “from opera and commedia dell’arte to punk gigs and Parisian cabaret,” Twigs sang while executing tap, pole, wushu and several costume changes. As Adams wrote in an email, “[The show] is relentlessly taxing on both Twigs’s body and voice, and with such extreme sleep deprivation, I believed the task was practically impossible.” But she aced it. I ask her if she ever worries things might go wrong in live performance. No, she says, “because I will have practiced a not-OK amount.”
WHEN I SPEAK with Twigs a month later, via Zoom, she is tired. She has nearly completed her new album, slated to come out next year but for now shrouded in secrecy, and needs to deal with the life side of life. Because of Covid-19 restrictions, I won’t be able to travel to London to try out the pole in her home. Instead, we say things like, “Maybe we’ll meet at a show, if people ever play shows again.” What does it mean for Twigs to record music without knowing when she’ll be able to perform it live? It’s a major question for any touring musician in this age, but it’s especially salient for one whose stage roots run so deep. Describing the concept for the last tour, Adams told me that he and Twigs deliberately rejected the “industrial warehouses or vast gallery spaces” one might have expected from what he calls her “alien-like” persona: Instead, they developed the show at the Palace Theater in Los Angeles, a historic, proscenium arch theater with heavy red velvet curtains. The “Cellophane” video likewise reflects this embrace of the stage — the place where, historically, the talented entertainer and avant-garde artist have become one — not only in its basic conceit but in the click of Twigs’s heels on the floor. That sound, the weight of an actual body, while seldom heard in music videos, brings its own erotic charge.
Twigs’s video for her single “Sad Day,” which was released on Aug. 28 but was filmed before the pandemic hit, serves as a meta-commentary on the possible directions of her future work. It was directed byHiro Murai, the filmmaker best known for his inventive music videos and work onDonald Glover’s TV show “Atlanta,” and features the sword-fighting skills Twigs acquired for the stage but brings them to a late-night Chinese takeout spot and into a city apartment. In the restaurant, Twigs challenges a man to a lovers’ duel, then they fly home, where the man slices through Twigs’s face, cleaving the two halves of her body, between which something pink bubbles and blooms. The turn to the fantastic is signature Twigs, but the video’s everyday setting, and the presence of other people in the frame, reflect her desire to trade what she calls the “white space” of her earlier videos for something like the real world.
But reality is as much a hindrance as an inspiration. And notwithstanding Twigs’s inventive approach to the music video as a genre, the music industry has yet to figure out how to capitalize on the form other than by framing it as an advertisement for an artist’s album or tour. The fact that live performance is currently impossible — Twigs estimates she has lost a year’s worth of shows — thwarts her renewed devotion to the stage and the flesh-and-blood audience. It also deprives her of a major source of revenue. She admits to breaking down early on in the lockdown, falling to her knees and wondering, “Whatis going to happen?” She has always lived, calmly but fiercely, according to simple mottos, such as “Preparation plus opportunity equals success.” She says little about her new album except that it’s a “vibrant” work spurred on by another such maxim: “Keep the dream alive.”
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She takes heart in thinking about how the universe has always opened a way for her. If her life were a movie, it might be like the 1986 cult classic fantasy film “Labyrinth,” she says, where, at the most vexing of times, “a little creature comes up and it’s like, ‘Hey, come over here! It’s this way!’ And you’re, like, in a nightie” — she laughs, gaining momentum — “and you’re going through leaves and then a thing opens and you’re at a party, or — what’s it called? A banquet … and David Bowie’s there to take you to the weird staircase.” In other words, she believes in her “through line,” she adds, her ability to make it through the maze.
Of course, she has done so mainly by acquiring skills. As we speak, she moves nimbly from describing the wild, otherworldly labyrinth to making a pitch for the value of becoming good at things — and one can hear how she navigates the poles that are central to her life and work: the cosmic and the mundane. With the modesty of a true artisan, she tells me that when she has children, she will teach them that “skills can take you places”: “Just learn something — the violin or the oboe or play chess a lot — and you might get to go to Italy one day and do a chess tournament.” For now, she hopes to get good enough at martial arts to do something with it in China. She has seen a lot, and created a lot. But she’s still the young woman who wants to know where the world is.
Styled by Julia Sarr-Jamois. Hair by Rio Sreedharan at the Wall Group. Makeup by Lucy Burt at LGA Management using Pat McGrath Labs. Production: Yasser Abubeker. Manicure: Sylvie Macmillan at M&A World Group using Weleda. Photo assistant: Mathias Karl Gontard. Stylist’s assistants: Christina Smith and Giulia Bandioli. Tailor: Michelle Warner. |
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Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results and race calls from The Associated Press
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
An assignment for all of us to help capture an extraordinary time. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/05/15/arts/design/ivan-brunetti-diary-project.html | An assignment for all of us to help capture an extraordinary time. | How to Observe Planet Earth, Through Comics and Kafka
By Ivan BrunettiMay 14, 2020
Ivan Brunetti is an artist and the author of “Cartooning: Philosophy and Practice.”
The Diary Project is a weekly visual assignment series produced by Alicia DeSantis, Jennifer Ledbury, Lorne Manly and Josephine Sedgwick. |
President Trump on Friday signed a series of executive orders intended to lower the cost of prescription drugs in the United States. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007255909/trump-executive-order-prescription-drugs.html | President Trump on Friday signed a series of executive orders intended to lower the cost of prescription drugs in the United States. | new video loaded:Trump Signs Orders to Reduce Cost of Prescription Drugs
transcript
Trump Signs Orders to Reduce Cost of Prescription Drugs
President Trump on Friday signed a series of executive orders intended to lower the cost of prescription drugs in the United States.
For decades, our citizens have paid the highest prices for drugs, prescription drugs, anywhere in the world. And it’s not even close. We pay 80 percent more than nations like Germany, Canada and others for some of the most expensive medicines identical in all respects. As we take these historic actions, we’re joined today by Americans who have already benefited from the steps my administration has already taken to reduce the cost of health care. Thank you all.
Trump Signs Orders to Reduce Cost of Prescription Drugs
President Trump on Friday signed a series of executive orders intended to lower the cost of prescription drugs in the United States.
U.S. & Politics
Recent Episodes
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
Biden Condemns Shooting at Trump Rally
Biden Mixes Up Trump and Harris
Biden Calls Zelensky ‘Putin’ at NATO Event
Biden ‘Is a Fighter,’ Harris Says in North Carolina
Biden Tells Allies That NATO Is ‘More Powerful Than Ever’
Heated Exchange Over Biden’s Health at White House Briefing
Supreme Court’s Immunity Decision Sets ‘Dangerous Precedent,’ Biden Says
Boeing C.E.O. Apologizes to Families of Plane Crash Victims
Maryland Governor Issues Sweeping Pardons for Marijuana Convictions
Biden Talks About Gun Safety Hours After Son’s Firearms Conviction
Garland Says He ‘Will Not Be Intimidated’ by House Republicans
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
2:13
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
0:52
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
1:39
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
1:25
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
1:49
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
1:14
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
0:55
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
0:49
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
0:46
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
0:29
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear |
This week’s properties are in Windsor Terrace, Hudson Heights and in the East Village. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/07/09/realestate/on-the-market-in-new-york-city.html | This week’s properties are in Windsor Terrace, Hudson Heights and in the East Village. | On the Market in New York City
Windsor Terrace Co-op • $399,000• BROOKLYN • 47 Reeve Place, No. 17
A bright and airy, one-bedroom, one-bath, corner apartment with high ceilings, restored moldings, hardwood floors, two large closets, a dining nook and an enclosed kitchen, in a 17-unit, prewar building with basement storage and a large shared backyard. Kelsey Hall, 212-396-5828, Nadine Adamson, 212-452-4503, Brown Harris Stevens,bhsusa.com
On the Market in New York City
This week’s properties are in Windsor Terrace, Hudson Heights and in the East Village.
Slideshow controls |
President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris addressed the nation from Wilmington, Del. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007442826/biden-acceptance-speech-live.html | President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris addressed the nation from Wilmington, Del. | new video loaded:Watch: Biden Addressed Supporters, and the Nation
Watch: Biden Addressed Supporters, and the Nation
President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris addressed the nation from Wilmington, Del.
2020 Elections
Recent Episodes
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says
Trump’s Lawyers Were ‘Disorganized,’ Senator Cassidy Says
Highlights From Day 1 of Trump Impeachment Trial
Trump Lawyer Unsuccessfully Disputes Constitutionality of Impeachment
‘This Cannot Be the Future of America,’ Raskin Says
Buttigieg Is Sworn In as Transportation Secretary
Kamala Harris Celebrated In India
Biden Swears In Appointees in Virtual Ceremony
Kamala Harris Swears In New Democratic Senators
The Poet Amanda Gorman Says America Can Be the ‘Light’ It Needs
‘Democracy Has Prevailed’: Biden Calls for National Unity
Jennifer Lopez Sings at Biden Inauguration
The Trumps Arrive in Florida
1:53
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
1:21
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
2:19
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
0:40
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
1:06
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
2:52
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
1:06
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
1:06
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
1:32
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
8:54
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
0:45
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
1:19
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says |
This week’s properties include a five-bedroom in Great Neck, N.Y., and a three-bedroom in Fairfield, N.J. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/12/31/realestate/on-the-market-in-the-new-york-region.html | This week’s properties include a five-bedroom in Great Neck, N.Y., and a three-bedroom in Fairfield, N.J. | On the Market in the New York Region
Three-Bedroom in Fairfield • $799,000 • FAIRFIELD • 200 Reef Road
A three-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath, 1,750-square-foot house with hardwood floors, an eat-in kitchen with quartz counters and high-end appliances, a primary suite with a bath and walk-in closet, a sunroom, a smart home system, a back patio with a fireplace and a detached two-car garage, on 0.14 acres.
Cyd Hamer, William Pitt Sotheby’s International, 917-744-5089;williampitt.com
On the Market in the New York Region
This week’s properties include a five-bedroom in Great Neck, N.Y., and a three-bedroom in Fairfield, N.J.
Slideshow controls |
Michelle Obama, the night’s finale, and Eva Longoria, the host, spoke most at the Democrats’ first virtual convention. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/08/18/us/politics/speakers-dnc.html | Michelle Obama, the night’s finale, and Eva Longoria, the host, spoke most at the Democrats’ first virtual convention. | Comments
Who Spoke Most at the Democratic National Convention?
ByWeiyi CaiandReid J. EpsteinAug. 18, 2020
Democratic politician
Republican politician
Michelle Obama, whoanchored the Democrats’ first virtual conventionMonday night, spoke longest, followed by Eva Longoria, the actress who hosted the event.
Four Republicans who stepped up for Joseph R. Biden Jr. — including theformer Ohio governor John Kasich— spoke for a total of about five and a half minutes.
Monday’s lineup of speakers was intended to convey the broad ideological support for Mr. Biden — from Republicans like Mr. Kasich toSenator Bernie Sanders, the democratic socialist from Vermont, who placed second in the 2016 and 2020 Democratic presidential primaries.
How long each person spoke
Heading into thefour-day convention, the most closely guarded secret was how much time each speaker would get during the two-hour window each night.
Party officials said the average speech length would clock in at two minutes — after accounting for the five major addresses from the Obamas, the Bidens and Senator Kamala Harris, Mr. Biden’s running mate. Speakers spent recent weeks privately jockeying with convention organizers for extra time.
With so little time to divide among so many speakers representing the ideological, racial and geographic diversity of the party, convention planners have been careful not to advertise how much time each speaker received, to avoid causing hurt feelings in advance of the virtual event.
Here’s a list of the main speakers on Monday night:
Eva Longoria
Actress; Convention host
Gwen Moore
U.S. representative of Wisconsin
Muriel Bowser
Mayor, District of Columbia
James E. Clyburn
U.S. representative of South Carolina
Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor of New York
Sara Gideon
Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives
Gretchen Whitmer
Governor of Michigan
Christine Todd Whitman
Former Republican governor of New Jersey
Meg Whitman
C.E.O., Quibi; former Republican candidate for California governor
Susan Molinari
Former Republican U.S. representative of New York
John Kasich
Former governor of Ohio; 2016 Republican presidential candidate
Doug Jones
Senator of Alabama
Catherine Cortez Masto
Senator of Nevada
Amy Klobuchar
Senator of Minnesota; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate
Cedric Richmond
U.S. representative of Louisiana
Bernie Sanders
Senator of Vermont; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate
Michelle Obama
Former first lady
Kristin Urquiza
Lost her father to Covid-19
Philonise and Rodney Floyd
George Floyd’s brothers |
Tracking coronavirus growth rates in metro areas around the nation. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/03/upshot/coronavirus-metro-area-tracker.html | Tracking coronavirus growth rates in metro areas around the nation. | Comments
How Severe Are Coronavirus Outbreaks Across the U.S.? Look Up Any Metro Area
ByJosh KatzKevin QuealyandMargot Sanger-KatzUpdatedJune 1, 2020, 9:54 AM E.T.
These charts are no longer as useful for tracking the state of the pandemic. Here arefive other ways to monitor the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S.
The New York metropolitan area has becomethe epicenterof the coronavirus pandemic, but growth in cases and deaths has come to other parts of the United States.
The accompanying charts, which will be updated regularly usingdata collected by The New York Times, describe the outbreak for metro areas around the country. Metropolitan areas are helpful units because they reflect the places where people socialize, commute and share health care resources.
Cumulative Cases and Deaths by Metro Area
These charts show cumulative coronavirus cases and deaths for metropolitan areas over time. Use the search box to compare growth rates in an area near you.
What to look forFocus on the slope of the curve more than the absolute number of cases or deaths. Flatter is better.
The numbers are being measured on what’s called a logarithmic scale: A straight line means exponential growth, and the steeper a line, the faster the total number of confirmed coronavirus cases or deaths is doubling. New metropolitan areas will be added to these charts once they experience 200 confirmed cases or 100 deaths.
We are showing both case and death data because both have strengths and weaknesses. Cases give a better sense of what’s going on right now (deaths lag infections by weeks). But case counts are subject to variable rates of testing: Cases could fall in places simply because fewer tests are being done. Deaths from the virus are more likely to be counted.
In addition to metropolitan areas in the United States, we've included one foreign metropolitan area. The Lombardy region of Italy was an early and severe hot spot for the disease and may be helpful for comparison. Data thereis not perfecteither.
Daily Growth Rate
Another way of looking at how cases and deaths are changing in metropolitan areas is to plot the growth rates directly.
What to look forRoot for these to go to zero. Low-seeming numbers still mean a lot of growth: A 20 percent daily growth rate means cases or deaths will double in less than four days.
With epidemics, these rates are often more important than the current totals because they tell us whether things are getting better or worse. A reading of 40 percent on the charts above means that, on average, the number of deaths in a place has been increasing by 40 percent each day. A reading of 100 percent would mean that cases were doubling daily.
Growth Rates by Case Count
The charts below show the growth rate by the number of cases or deaths in a given metropolitan area.
What to look forHigh growth rates combined with a lot of confirmed cases is a bad combination.
Here, the growth rate is shown based not on how long an area has had coronavirus cases or deaths, but on how large its outbreak has become. If a line extends farther to the right, there’s a higher chance that people could become sick and die if the growth rate remains high.
New Cases and Deaths per 1,000 People
Instead of adding up all of the confirmed cases and deaths from the start of the epidemic, these charts focus on new cases in various places, adjusted according to the population size of that metro area.
What to look forIf the number of new cases starts to fall, the severity of the initial outbreak may have peaked.
This chart can make it easier to see places where the concentration of infections or deaths has waxed and waned. Places that are high on the right-hand side of the chart have experienced a lot of recent infections or deaths, relative to their populations. Places where the lines point down might have begun to flatten their local curves.
Maps of Metro Areas
These maps show the number of cases or deaths in all of the country’s metropolitan and micropolitan areas over the last four weeks.
Recent confirmed cases, last 4 weeks
Per thousand residents
Recent deaths, last 4 weeks
Per thousand residents (in places with 3 deaths or more)
Because some parts of the country are more densely populated than others, these numbers are all adjusted for how many people live in each area. The darker an area appears, the greater proportion of its population is infected. This map also shows the parts of the country that are not categorized as metropolitan or micropolitan areas by the U.S. Census Bureau; those are shaded in light gray. Places without substantial cases or deaths are shaded in dark gray. These measurements focus on recent cases and deaths to give a sense of where coronavirus infections are widespread now.
Tracking the Coronavirus
Countries
State by state
Source:New York Times databaseof reports from state and local health agencies and hospitals
Based on reporting by Mitch Smith, Karen Yourish, Sarah Almuhktar and Danielle Ivory. |
It takes only a few minutes, but cleaning high-traffic surfaces once a day can make a difference in preventing the spread of infection. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/well/100000007053729/coronavirus-cleaning-your-home.html | It takes only a few minutes, but cleaning high-traffic surfaces once a day can make a difference in preventing the spread of infection. | new video loaded:How to Clean Your Home for Coronavirus
How to Clean Your Home for Coronavirus
It takes only a few minutes, but cleaning high-traffic surfaces once a day can make a difference in preventing the spread of infection.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez symbolically nominated Bernie Sanders for president. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/elections/100000007295702/aoc-speech-dnc.html | On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez symbolically nominated Bernie Sanders for president. | new video loaded:‘A Better, More Just Future,’ Ocasio-Cortez Says
transcript
‘A Better, More Just Future,’ Ocasio-Cortez Says
On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez symbolically nominated Bernie Sanders for president.
Good evening, bienvenidos and thank you to everyone here today endeavoring towards a better, more just future for our country and our world. In fidelity and gratitude to a mass people’s movement working to establish 21st century social, economic and human rights, including guaranteed health care, higher education, living wages and labor rights for all people in the United States; a movement striving to recognize and repair the wounds of racial injustice, colonization, misogyny and homophobia, and to propose and build reimagined systems of immigration and foreign policy that turn away from the violence and xenophobia of our past; a movement that realizes the unsustainable brutality of an economy that rewards explosive inequalities of wealth for the few at the expense of long-term stability for the many; and who organized a historic, grass-roots campaign to reclaim our democracy. In a time when millions of people in the United States are looking for deep, systemic solutions to our crises of mass evictions, unemployment and lack of health care; en el espíritu del pueblo, and out of a love for all people, I hereby second the nomination of Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont for president of the United States of America.
‘A Better, More Just Future,’ Ocasio-Cortez Says
On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez symbolically nominated Bernie Sanders for president.
2020 Elections
Recent Episodes
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says
Trump’s Lawyers Were ‘Disorganized,’ Senator Cassidy Says
Highlights From Day 1 of Trump Impeachment Trial
Trump Lawyer Unsuccessfully Disputes Constitutionality of Impeachment
‘This Cannot Be the Future of America,’ Raskin Says
Buttigieg Is Sworn In as Transportation Secretary
Kamala Harris Celebrated In India
Biden Swears In Appointees in Virtual Ceremony
Kamala Harris Swears In New Democratic Senators
The Poet Amanda Gorman Says America Can Be the ‘Light’ It Needs
‘Democracy Has Prevailed’: Biden Calls for National Unity
Jennifer Lopez Sings at Biden Inauguration
The Trumps Arrive in Florida
1:53
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
1:21
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
2:19
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
0:40
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
1:06
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
2:52
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
1:06
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
1:06
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
1:32
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
8:54
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
0:45
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
1:19
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says |
President Trump returned to Wisconsin on Thursday and boasted about the economic benefits of a Navy contract at a shipyard on Lake Michigan. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007210940/trump-praises-navy-contract-at-wisconsin-shipyard.html | President Trump returned to Wisconsin on Thursday and boasted about the economic benefits of a Navy contract at a shipyard on Lake Michigan. | new video loaded:Trump Praises Navy Contract at Wisconsin Shipyard
transcript
Trump Praises Navy Contract at Wisconsin Shipyard
President Trump returned to Wisconsin on Thursday and boasted about the economic benefits of a Navy contract at a shipyard on Lake Michigan.
[The] massive deal is worth up to $5.5 billion. We’ll put the shipyard to work constructing some of the fastest, most advanced and most maneuverable combat ships anywhere in the ocean. This contract will support your 1,500 full time employees, and it will also enable you to hire another 1,000 people all across the shipyards in Wisconsin. An estimated 15,000 additional new jobs will be created through the Wisconsin supply chain. You notice that’s not a supply chain going through China and going through other countries. It’s called the Wisconsin — isn’t that nice? The Wisconsin supply chain. That’s been bugging me for about 25 years. I think that’s why I became president, you want to know the truth. What we’ve done with your — great deal, the U.S.M.C.A. — and Canada no longer takes advantage of us like they did.
Trump Praises Navy Contract at Wisconsin Shipyard
President Trump returned to Wisconsin on Thursday and boasted about the economic benefits of a Navy contract at a shipyard on Lake Michigan.
U.S. & Politics
Recent Episodes
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
Biden Condemns Shooting at Trump Rally
Biden Mixes Up Trump and Harris
Biden Calls Zelensky ‘Putin’ at NATO Event
Biden ‘Is a Fighter,’ Harris Says in North Carolina
Biden Tells Allies That NATO Is ‘More Powerful Than Ever’
Heated Exchange Over Biden’s Health at White House Briefing
Supreme Court’s Immunity Decision Sets ‘Dangerous Precedent,’ Biden Says
Boeing C.E.O. Apologizes to Families of Plane Crash Victims
Maryland Governor Issues Sweeping Pardons for Marijuana Convictions
Biden Talks About Gun Safety Hours After Son’s Firearms Conviction
Garland Says He ‘Will Not Be Intimidated’ by House Republicans
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
2:13
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
0:52
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
1:39
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
1:25
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
1:49
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
1:14
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
0:55
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
0:49
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
0:46
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
0:29
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear |
See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in Pennsylvania. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-pennsylvania-president.html | See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in Pennsylvania. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Pennsylvania Presidential Election Results
State Results
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Pennsylvania Presidential Election Results
Winner
Joseph R. Biden Jr. wins Pennsylvania.
Race called by The Associated Press.
* Incumbent
The vote count has been certified in Pennsylvania.
Results by county
Vote share
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Biden
Trump
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Tracking the vote count
See how the reported vote share changed over time.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
31% of counties (21 of 67) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Explore the exit poll
See which groups backed Mr. Trump or Mr. Biden for president.
These figures areestimates.
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The exit poll percentages shown here are estimates from exit polls. These estimates reflect the preferences
Source: Exit polls conducted by Edison Research for the National Election Pool
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
This week’s properties are in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Murray Hill and St. George, Staten Island. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/04/16/realestate/on-the-market-in-new-york-city.html | This week’s properties are in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Murray Hill and St. George, Staten Island. | On the Market in New York City
Crown Heights House • $1,625,000 • BROOKLYN • 1040 Sterling Place
A two-family, brick, 1905 townhouse built in the Arts and Crafts style, with a pair of three-bedroom, one-and-a-half-bath duplex apartments that have large living rooms, wood floors, separate entrances, foyers and a shared basement, on a picturesque block in a historic district. Stefania Cardinali, Corcoran, 516-443-0171;corcoran.com
On the Market in New York City
This week’s properties are in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Murray Hill and St. George, Staten Island.
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See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Fayette County, Alabama | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/fayette-alabama-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Fayette County, Alabama | Covid-19Guidance
Fayette County, Alabama Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Fayette County, Ala.: Latest Map and Case Count
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8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
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How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Fayette County
Average cases per capita in Fayette County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
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About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
This week’s properties are in Park Slope, Lenox Hill and Woodside. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/10/29/realestate/on-the-market-in-new-york-city.html | This week’s properties are in Park Slope, Lenox Hill and Woodside. | On the Market in New York City
Park Slope Co-op • $1,169,000 • BROOKLYN • 128 Sixth Avenue, No. 2
A one-bedroom, one-bath, parlor-floor apartment set in a corner of an 1876 brownstone, with 12-foot ceilings, nine large windows, two decorative fireplaces, quarter-sawn, six-inch-wide plank oak floors and a private deck overlooking Saint Augustine Church.
Kristina Leonetti, Compass, 917-856-0601;compass.com
On the Market in New York City
This week’s properties are in Park Slope, Lenox Hill and Woodside.
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Our columnists and contributors give their rankings. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/08/19/opinion/democratic-convention-best-worst-night-2.html | Our columnists and contributors give their rankings. | Comments
Democratic Convention: Best and Worst Moments of Night 2
ByThe New York Times OpinionAug. 19, 2020
Welcome to Opinion’s commentary for the second night of the Democratic National Convention. In this special feature, Times Opinion writers rank the evening on a scale of 1 to 10: 1 means the night was a disaster for Democrats; 10 means it could lead to a big polling bump for Biden-Harris. Here’s what our columnists and contributors thought of the event, which highlighted the roll call, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Bill Clinton and Jill Biden.
See rankings from the first night of the Democratic National Conventionhere.
Best moment
Wajahat AliDemocrats are making the case that they represent a majority, with a broad coalition of diverse communities, including life-long Republicans. Well, they showed it.
Jamelle BouieThe roll call! I am a sucker for earnest pride in one’s home and community, and I found it genuinely moving to see Americans of all colors and backgrounds speak to that pride and to their faith in this country. It is good stuff! Also, it should be a reminder that the United States owes its territories either independence or full voting rights and representation in Congress.
Frank BruniJoe Biden saying, with a Roman candle of a smile, “thank you, thank you, thank you,” when the nomination was finally and formally his. Gratitude, along with humility, is foreign to Donald Trump.
Gail CollinsHave to admit the virtual roll call was better than expected. Really thought I’d miss all those delegates howling commercials for their state from the convention floor. But actually seeing them on their home turf was nice.
Michelle CottleThis is how nominating roll calls should be conducted. Rather than focusing on spun-up delegates in daffy hats jammed into a convention hall, this vote looked outward at America, with on-site shots from every state and territory, starting from the Edmund Pettus bridge in Alabama.
Michelle GoldbergIn many ways, a virtual convention is a pale imitation of a real one, but the tour-of-America roll call vote, with its moving diversity, homespun production values and slightly uncanny masked tableaus, was a huge improvement over the usual procedure.
Nicole HemmerThe roll call. Over the past several months, many Americans have barely left their homes, much less their states, so that tour of the country felt a little like traveling. And it brought some kitschy fun to a convention woefully short on funny hats.
Liz MairIt was, by far, when Rhode Island used its roll-call vote to feature a man holding a platter of calamari — a prime-time earned media ad for “the calamari comeback state.” The video roll call was genuinely fun and gave a good glimpse of the breadth and depth of American culture.
Daniel McCarthyThe Biden family video humanized him well after his rather stiff acceptance of the nomination, and Jill Biden’s follow-up in the classroom was potent.
Melanye PriceThe delegate roll call. There is no way the Republican Party can match the Democrats when it comes to reflecting the diversity of America. Effective and uplifting!
Mimi SwartzJill Biden. Gee, it would be nice to have a real first lady again.
Héctor TobarThe world’s biggest Zoom conference call, i.e., the around-the-U.S.A. delegate vote. Great landscapes, and a wonderfully diverse sampling of young Democratic leaders, activists and citizens. It offered the viewer a real “proud to be an American” moment. Even the Fox News pundits liked it.
Peter WehnerNot any of the speeches, which were average at best, but two D.N.C. videos — one about Jill Biden and her relationship with Joe; the other on the “unlikely friendship” between Biden and John McCain. Honorable mention to the virtual roll call, which was better and more interesting than any in the past.
Worst moment
Wajahat AliTom Perez needs to stop trying so hard. As the party chairman, just come out and say it straight. Bill Clinton delivered, as he always does, but Democrats have to navigate their future without him and his scandals. The rising star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez needed more than 96 seconds.
Jamelle BouieI am finding it hard to identify a worst moment that isn’t just an ideological gripe on my part. (And on that point, the foreign policy segment wasn’t for me!) I suppose I would have loved to hear more from Representative Ocasio-Cortez, who is an extremely talented political communicator.
Frank BruniThe relay-race keynote speech. This gimmick meant the remarks had no shape, pacing or heft, and the swiftly changing faces and backdrops instilled motion sickness: Political bromides met “The Perfect Storm.” At one point 17 keynoters said, in unison, “That’s a big effing deal!” I effing cringed.
Gail CollinsSticking to a five-minute speech must have been hell for Bill Clinton, and he sounded sorta flat. And John Kerry — oh, wow, forgot what it was like to stare blankly at a screen when John Kerry was making an important address.
Michelle CottleAfter the roll call, the cameras lingered a bit too long on Joe and Jill standing around grinning awkwardly as people in masks threw streamers at them. The nominee looked happy — but also as though he wasn’t sure what to do. Wave? Dance? Hug Jill? Let’s keep it crisp, people!
Michelle GoldbergPost #MeToo, there was no reason to have Bill Clinton speak.
Nicole HemmerChuck Schumer kept gesturing meaningfully toward the Statue of Liberty during his speech, seemingly unaware that it was just a distant green smudge. You could spin that as symbolism — the erosion of liberty and all that — but it was just bad camera work for an otherwise forgettable speech.
Liz MairBoth parties desperately need a new inventory of celebratory music. Teeing up tunes that remind everyone of autumn 1980 isn’t a great way of projecting youth, vigor, stamina and a forward-facing outlook.
Daniel McCarthyColin Powell is an impressive man who put his prestige behind a needless and disastrous war in Iraq, which Biden backed, too. Powell and the videos before and after him were a reminder that Biden is the candidate of the war party.
Melanye PriceThe old guys in the middle. John Kerry, Colin Powell, Chuck Hagel and even Bill Clinton harkened back to a version of politics that is on life support. In a high-tech, diverse, increasingly progressive political moment, they seemed too stoic and out of place.
Mimi SwartzIt pains me to say this, but the scene of Joe Biden in the library after winning the nomination was underwhelming after the heroic buildup. Maybe anyone would long for the lift of a live crowd at that moment, but Biden looked like someone still waiting for his cue.
Héctor TobarChuck Schumer. A speech completely devoid of any original ideas, delivered with a stiff posture and wooden tone, with the Statue of Liberty in the background. Ugh. It was the one moment of the night that most resembled a “Saturday Night Live” sketch.
Peter WehnerAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s searing indictment of America, which fit in a lot in 96 seconds: racial injustice, colonization, misogyny, homophobia, the violence and xenophobia of our past, and the “unsustainable brutality” of our economy. Democrats should be glad she wasn’t granted more time.
What else mattered
Wajahat AliIt’s easy to forget Republicans remain committed to dismantling Obamacare. The Democrats put a human face on health care. Americans with disabilities shared their stories with Biden. He listened and cared. He showed us what’s at stake if Trump gets another term: the health of a nation.
Jamelle BouieThe showcase of young leaders. The next generation of Democratic Party leaders are here and working their way through the ranks and up the ladder. Seeing them was also a reminder of how America’s national leadership is in deep need of generational turnover.
Frank BruniJohn Kerry’s devastating review of Trump on the world stage (“when this president goes overseas, it isn’t a goodwill mission, it’s a blooper reel”), followed by testimonials from Marie Yovanovitch and Colin Powell, was a crucial reminder that foreign policy matters and that Trump’s stinks.
Gail CollinsIt would be pretty hard to come out of the night not liking Joe Biden at least a little bit. Or if you already did, a little bit more.
Michelle CottleThe group “keynote address” delivered by 17 Democratic up-and-comers — county commissioners, mayors, state legislators, etc. — helped focus attention on the party’s future leaders, not just its past ones. It was a risk, and a tech challenge, but it had great energy and flow. Having Stacey Abrams as the closer was an especially nice touch.
Michelle GoldbergThe people who put this thing together struck just the right tone, mixing grief-stricken sobriety with earnest hope. But while I understand why Biden’s team wants Republican validators, his campaign didn’t need to give more time to John McCain than to A.O.C. and Stacey Abrams combined.
Nicole HemmerJust eight years ago, Bill Clinton stole the convention with his lengthy prime-time speech. This year, his role shrank to five unexceptional minutes, making clear that the Party of Clinton has been fully eclipsed by the Party of Obama.
Liz MairBiden as listener and empathizer in chief works very well. Biden moderating panels with ordinary Americans on issues makes for some compelling and watchable content. But tonight’s session on health care — when he talked about his personal experiences and thoughts as Beau Biden lay dying of cancer — showcased what’s most appealing about him: his personality, as opposed to a set of policies or good soundbites, and the message that this is about you, not him.
Daniel McCarthyTrump is the overwhelmingly dominant theme of the convention so far — forward-looking hope and change have given way to anti-Trumpism and nostalgia.
Melanye PriceIt was crystal clear that the people who know Biden really like him. It’s less clear whether he can maintain the crisp and coherent narratives that have been so powerful here, as the campaign continues.
Mimi SwartzThe roll call worked in that hokey American way — the landscapes, the regional accents, the hopes and enthusiasms, and the kids holding up signs of what looked like Joe Biden’s sunglasses. Even Mayor Pete, on what looked like the movie set for “Delegates in Black.”
Héctor TobarThe storytelling discipline of the producers of this nightly infomercial is admirable. They’re hammering away relentlessly at two storylines: Joe Biden as the defender of common Americans, with a compassion born of personal suffering; and Trump as the nation’s callous divider in chief.
Peter WehnerDay 2 of the Democratic convention lacked the energy and galvanizing moments of the first day. But what came through to me is how effectively the convention is at humanizing Joe Biden. Personal tragedy and loss are central to his story, and so, too, is empathy, decency and healing. That doesn’t guarantee he’ll be a successful president, but those qualities mean something, especially in the age of Trump.
The Times is committed to publishinga diversity of lettersto the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are sometips. And here’s our email: [email protected].
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About the authors
Jamelle Bouie, Frank Bruni, Gail Collins and Michelle Goldberg are Times columnists.
Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) is a playwright, lawyer and contributing opinion writer.
Michelle Cottle (@mcottle) is a member of the Times editorial board.
Nicole Hemmer (@pastpunditry) is an associate research scholar at Columbia University and the author of “Messengers of the Right: Conservative Media and the Transformation of American Politics.”
Liz Mair (@LizMair), a strategist for campaigns by Scott Walker, Roy Blunt, Rand Paul, Carly Fiorina and Rick Perry, is the founder and president of Mair Strategies.
Daniel McCarthy (@ToryAnarchist) is the editor ofModern Age: A Conservative Quarterly.
Melanye Price (@ProfMTP), a professor of political science at Prairie View A&M University in Texas, is the author, most recently, of “The Race Whisperer: Barack Obama and the Political Uses of Race.”
Mimi Swartz (@mimiswartz), an executive editor at Texas Monthly, is a contributing opinion writer.
Héctor Tobar (@TobarWriter), an associate professor at the University of California, Irvine, is the author of “Deep Down Dark: The Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a Chilean Mine, and the Miracle That Set Them Free” and a contributing opinion writer.
Peter Wehner (@Peter_Wehner), a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, served in the previous three Republican administrations, is a contributing opinion writer and also the author of “The Death of Politics: How to Heal Our Frayed Republic After Trump.” |
Police officials say there were “isolated cases” of inappropriate force. But 64 videos show many attacks on protesters that appear unwarranted. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/07/14/nyregion/nypd-george-floyd-protests.html | Police officials say there were “isolated cases” of inappropriate force. But 64 videos show many attacks on protesters that appear unwarranted. | N.Y.P.D. Says It Used Restraint During Protests. Here’s What the Videos Show.
ByAllison McCannBlacki MigliozziAndy NewmanLarry BuchananandAaron ByrdJuly 14, 2020
ByAllison McCann,Blacki Migliozzi,Andy Newman,Larry BuchananandAaron ByrdJuly 14, 2020
It was two hours after curfew on the sixth night of protests against police brutality in New York City.
An officer in Brooklyn pushed a protester so hard that she fell backward on the pavement. Then he shoved someone on a bicycle and picked up and body-slammed a third person into the street.
Nearby, a man fell running from the police. Officers swarmed him and beat him with batons. A commanding officer, in his white-shirted uniform, joined the fray and stepped on the man’s neck.
All of it was caught on video. In fact, the New York Times found more than 60 videos that show the police using force on protesters during the first 10 days of demonstrations in the city after the death of George Floyd.
A review of the videos, shot by protesters and journalists, suggests that many of the police attacks, often led by high-ranking officers, were not warranted.
Some videos have been edited for length and clarity.See the full set of videos below.
A video of five or 10 or 30 seconds does not tell the whole story, of course. It does not depict what happened before the camera started rolling. It is unclear from the videos, for instance, what the officers’ intentions were or why protesters were being arrested or told to move.
But the Police Department’spatrol guidesays officers may use “only the reasonable force necessary to gain control or custody of a subject.” Force, policing experts say, must be proportionate to the threat or resistance at hand at the moment it is applied.
In instance after instance, the police are seen using force on people who do not appear to be resisting arrest or posing an immediate threat to anyone.
Officers attacked people who had their hands up.
They hit people who were walking away from them.
They grabbed people from behind.
And they repeatedly pummeled people who were already on the ground.
Police Commissioner Dermot F. Shea has maintained that misconduct during the protests was confined to “isolated cases” and that officers were confronted with violence by protesters.
He noted that during the first week of demonstrations, peoplelooted businesses,burned police carsandattacked officerswith bricks, bottles and in one casea fire extinguisher. The unrest prompted Mayor Bill de Blasio to impose an 8 p.m. curfew.
“I think the officers used an incredible amount of restraint in terms of allowing people to vent,” Commissioner Sheasaid on June 22. “I am proud of their performance in policing these protests, ending the riots and upholding the rule of law.”
Yet for just about each viral moment that emerged from the protests — officers violentlyshoving a woman to the groundorbeating a cyclistwho seemed to be doing nothing more than trying to cross the street — The Times turned up multiple examples of similar behavior.
The police responded to words with punches and pepper spray.
Officers charged into peaceful crowds and pushed people to the ground.
Sometimes, they appeared to lash out at random.
Devora Kaye, the Police Department’s assistant commissioner for public information, declined repeated requests to review the full set of videos provided by The Times and to explain the use of force in them.
She reiterated that “isolated incidents” of misconduct were being addressed, noted that four officers had already been disciplined, and said that the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau was investigating 51 cases of use of force during the protests.
“The N.Y.P.D. has zero tolerance for inappropriate or excessive use of force,” she wrote, “but it is also critical to review the totality of the circumstances that lead to interactions where force is used.”
The police said that nearly 400 officers were injured during the protests, and that 132 of the more than 2,500 people arrestedreported injuries, but that they did not have records of injured people who were not arrested. Protesters havedescribedand documented at least five broken or fractured bones and four concussions.
When presented with the videos collected by The Times, Kapil Longani, counsel to Mr. de Blasio, said, “These incidents are disturbing and New Yorkers deserve a full accounting of these matters and access to a transparent disciplinary process.”
But he cautioned that the police disciplinary system needed time to carry out thorough investigations.
“To conclude that these officers or any American committed a crime without due process is inconsistent with the fundamental fairness that underlies our judicial system,” Mr. Longani said.
The Police Benevolent Association, the union that represents most N.Y.P.D. officers, declined to comment on the videos.
The episodes in the videos The Times reviewed were spread across 15 neighborhoods in three boroughs. Several videos each were taken June 3 in Cadman Plaza in Brooklyn and on June 4 in Mott Haven in the Bronx, when officers “kettled” protesters into tight spaces and then beat them with batons.
Philip M. Stinson, a Bowling Green State University criminologist and former police officer who studies the use of force by the police, offered a blunt assessment of the behavior shown in these videos.
“A lot of this was ‘street justice,’” he said, “gratuitous acts of extrajudicial violence doled out by police officers on the street to teach somebody a lesson.”
Sometimes, the police went after people already in custody.
Sometimes officers went after people they did not appear interested in arresting at all.
Mr. Stinson said that in some of the videos, the police used force permissibly. He saw nothing inappropriate, for example, in this widely viewed video of officers using batons on people who appeared to be trying to evade arrest.
In many other videos, though, he said he believed that force had been applied without discipline or supervision.
“Some of the stuff that they do is so sloppy,” he said. “Some of it is just downright criminal.”
Scott Hechinger, a public defender for nearly a decade in Brooklyn, said he found it striking that being filmed by crowds of protesters did not seem to inhibit some officers’ conduct.
“That the police were able and willing to perform such brazen violence when surrounded by cellphone cameras and when the whole world was watching at this moment more than any other, underscores how police feel and know they will never be held to account in any meaningful way even for the most egregious acts of violence,” Mr. Hechinger said.
Many of the videos show violence led by officers in white shirts, signaling a rank of lieutenant or higher.
In Manhattan on June 2, one commander shoved a protester and another pulled her down by the hair.
A civil rights lawyer with the legal aid group the Bronx Defenders, Jenn Rolnick Borchetta, said she saw violations of constitutional rights in nearly all the videos, including the rights to free speech and due process.
“The primary question is whether the force is reasonable, but you have to remember, if they’re not arresting someone, they shouldn’t be using any force,” Ms. Borchetta said.
At several protests, the police used bicycles as weapons.
More often, they used their hands.
The protests, and the outcry over the policing of them, have already led to changes. State legislatorsoverturned a lawthat kept police discipline records secret and New York Citycut its police budgetandbroadened a ban on chokeholds. Last week, New York’s attorney general, Letitia James,called for an independent commissionto permanently oversee the Police Department.
But acts of force by the police arestill being caught on video, more than six weeks into the protests.
Axel Hernandez, a high school teacher in New York City who on June 3 filmed an officerthrowing someone down by the neck, said he felt it was important to continue to keep watch over the police.
“Part of the reason we’re out here is because they were on George Floyd’s neck,” said Mr. Hernandez, 30. “This is exactly why we are protesting in the first place.”
See the full set of videos.
The Times sought and verified videos of police use of force at protests in New York City from May 28 to June 6. The following videos were compiled from Times reporting and lists shared byT. Greg Doucette,Corin Faife, acrowd-sourced effortstarted on Reddit and public responses to requests by the New York attorney general’s office and the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board. Some are being made public for the first time. These videos are not an exhaustive accounting of police behavior at the protests. They have been edited for length and in some cases slowed down or annotated for clarity but are otherwise unaltered.
May 28
Union Square,Manhattan
An officer grabs someone by their backpack, and several officers engage in a struggle as other people join to pull the person away.
Source:NY1
Union Square,Manhattan
Two officers lift their bicycles and push them repeatedly into a group of people, knocking one person over.
Source:Requested anonymity
Union Square East and East 17th Street,Manhattan
An officer hits someone in the leg with a baton, and the baton breaks.
Source:Shimon Prokupecz
May 29
Tompkins and Lexington Avenues,Brooklyn
Two officers use a baton and hands to shove a person who falls backward to the pavement.
Source:@nycDSA
Classon and Putnam Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer shoves a person who falls backward into the street.
Source:Mia Stange
Classon and Lafayette Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer shoves at least three people, one of whom is also shoved in the chest by a white-shirted officer.
Source:John Philp
DeKalb and Classon Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer shoves two people, and one falls to the ground.
Source:Requested anonymity
67 Fifth Avenue,Brooklyn
An officer grabs someone from behind and throws the person into a parked car, where they appear to hit their head. Another officer steps over the person’s immobile body.
Source:Michael Thoreau
Greene and Classon Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer runs up and shoves someone several times, and then shoves a second and third person standing nearby.
Source:Zach Williams
Fifth Avenue and Bergen Street,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer shoves someone, who falls backward.
Source:@crankberries
Classon and Lafayette Avenues,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer running down the street shoves a person to the ground, and then keeps running.
Source:Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs/The New York Times
Flatbush Avenue and Pacific Street,Brooklyn
A video taken of a cracked cellphone screen shows someone approach an officer, who then strikes the first person in the face.
Source:Nate Schweber/The New York Times
Classon and Gates Avenues,Brooklyn
A passenger in a moving unmarked police car opens the car door to strike someone standing on the street.
Source:Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs/The New York Times
Barclays Center,Brooklyn
An officer shoves a protester, who falls to the ground.
Source:Whitney Hu
Barclays Center,Brooklyn
Officers repeatedly hit two people with batons. Another officer pushes someone to the ground.
Source:Jon Campbell
May 30
Broadway and East 14th Street,Manhattan
An officer shoves a person with a baton.
Source:Annika Schmidt
Flatbush Avenue Extension and DeKalb Avenue,Brooklyn
An officer hits a person in the face and knocks them down. The person gets up and moments later is pepper-sprayed and shoved again. Two more officers pepper-spray a crowd of people.
Source:Jean-Cosme Delaloye/JCDe Productions
Flatbush Avenue Extension and Willoughby Street,Brooklyn
An officer shoves someone, who pushes back, and a second officer shoves the person over.
Source:Donald Martell
Bedford and Tilden Avenues,Brooklyn
A person is being led away when an officer throws them to the ground.
Source:Lauren Mitchell
137 Fourth Avenue,Manhattan
An officer appears to use a baton to hit a person filming, and then shoves a second person, who is also carrying a camera. They can be heard saying they are press.
Source:Sami Disu
Church and Rogers Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer pepper-sprays a crowd after two people in the crowd throw things at a line of officers.
Source:P. Nick Curran
395 Flatbush Avenue Extension,Brooklyn
An officer runs up and shoves a person who is backing away, then chases the person down.
Source:Brandon Scott
Bedford and Tilden Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer shoves a protester twice.
Source:Sean Piccoli/The New York Times
Bedford and Tilden Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer pushes through a crowd and grabs a person by the neck to push them aside. Another officer knocks the person over, and the first officer throws the person down again when they try to get up.
Source:Doug Gordon
Bedford and Tilden Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer pulls down a protester’s mask and pepper-sprays the person’s face.
Source:Anju J. Rupchandani
Flatbush and St. Marks Avenues,Brooklyn
Protesters block the path of a police car and pelt it with garbage. Two police cars then drive into the crowd, knocking over several people.
Source:@pgarapon
May 31
Broadway and East 12th Street,Manhattan
An officer pepper-sprays a crowd, then knocks someone down with an elbow to the face.
Source:David Siffert
Barclays Center,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer pushes a protester backward with a baton.
Source:Jake Offenhartz/WNYC
Atlantic Center,Brooklyn
Someone runs toward a person who is on the ground being detained by officers, and several people in blue uniforms beat the person on the ground with batons.
Source:Noah Goldberg/The New York Daily News
Atlantic Terminal,Brooklyn
A group of officers hit a person who is on the ground numerous times with batons.
Source:Jake Offenhartz/WNYC
Fourth Avenue and Pacific Street,Brooklyn
An officer pushes a protester whose hands are up. The protester falls backward over a garbage bag.
Source:Andy Newman/The New York Times
F.D.R. Drive and Houston Street,Manhattan
An officer walks along a roadway pepper-spraying protesters.
Source:Carlos Polanco
Canal and Greene Streets,Manhattan
An officer shoves a protester with a riot shield, the protester shoves back, and a second officer hits the protester on the head with a baton.
Source:Gwynne Hogan/WNYC
Church and Canal Streets,Manhattan
Officers rush a crowd and knock down a protester whose hands are up. A white-shirted officer drags another protester on the asphalt.
Source:Nate Igor Smith
Barclays Center,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer shoves a protester with a baton and hits a protester in the face.
Source:Noah Goldberg/The New York Daily News
June 1
41 East 57th Street,Manhattan
An officer running by a group of bystanders pepper-sprays them and keeps running.
Source:Aaron Blanton
June 2
West and Rector Streets,Manhattan
An officer approaches someone with a bicycle, striking the person in the legs with a baton.
Source:Requested anonymity
17 Battery Place,Manhattan
A white-shirted officer pushes one person down, and then shoves another. A second officer grabs a protester by the hair to bring her to the ground.
Source:Brandon Remmert
West and Rector Streets,Manhattan
An officer orders someone to put down a bicycle. The protester is then shoved to the ground before another officer approaches and pushes the protester’s head toward the pavement.
Source:Requested anonymity
West and Morris Streets,Manhattan
A protester is on the ground surrounded by multiple officers. An officer then strikes the person in the legs with a baton.
Source:Ali Winston
60 West Street,Manhattan
An officer and a protester appear to bump into each other, and the officer punches the protester in the head.
Source:Ben Eustace
Fourth and Atlantic Avenues,Brooklyn
An officer shoves a protester to the ground and shoves a cyclist. The same officer then body-slams a third person to the pavement.
Source:Daniel Altschuler
Fourth and Atlantic Avenues,Brooklyn
Several officers chase down and beat a person with their batons. A white-shirted officer runs up and steps on the person’s neck.
Source:Allison McCann/The New York Times
Fifth Avenue and East 83rd Street,Manhattan
An officer walks into a crowd to grab someone from behind and pull them to the ground. A second officer throws a second person to the ground.
Source:Requested anonymity
June 3
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
An officer punches someone on the ground.
Source:Meghann Perez
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
An officer shoves someone on a bicycle. Another officer shoves someone from behind. A third officer shoves another person from behind.
Source:Casey Correa
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
An officer approaches a person walking with a bicycle, grabs the cyclist around the neck and pushes them to the ground.
Source:Axel Hernandez
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
Three officers use riot shields to shove a protester who is astride a bike, and the protester falls down.
Source:Axel Hernandez
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
An officer shoves a protester with a baton and the protester falls backward.
Source:Mattie Barber-Bockelman
Cadman Plaza,Brooklyn
A protester states that someone is injured. Officers shove their way through the group and push at least two people to the ground.
Source:Don P. Hooper
54th Street and Lexington Avenue,Manhattan
An officer tries to restrain a protester who is holding on to a bicycle. The officer drags the protester, and the bicycle, until both fall to the ground.
Source:Simran Jeet Singh
Third Avenue and 50th Street,Manhattan
Multiple officers, including one in a white shirt, hit a cyclist with their batons.
Source:Karla Moreno
June 4
Washington Avenue and Fulton Street,Brooklyn
An officer grabs someone, then shoves another person twice into a car.
Source:Axel Hernandez
Flushing and Marcy Avenues,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer shoves a person on a bicycle.
Source:David Colombini
East 136th Street and Brook Avenue,Bronx
Multiple officers strike a group of protesters with their batons.
Source:Jordan Jackson;
Daniel Maiuri
East 136th Street and Brook Avenue,Bronx
An officer throws a protester to the ground to arrest the protester. Another person then interferes with the arresting officer. The officer turns, hits the person and shoves him.
Source:Ray Mendez
East 136th Street and Brook Avenue,Bronx
A protester whose hands are up is saying something. An officer walks over and shoves the protester.
Source:Jake Offenhartz/WNYC
Lee Avenue and Heyward Street,Brooklyn
An officer punches a person on the ground several times.
Source:Oliver Rivard
East 136th Street and Brook Avenue,Bronx
Officers flip a legal observer for the National Lawyers Guild to the ground and arrest her.
Source:Shaquille Roberts and Conrad Blackburn
Washington Avenue and Fulton Street,Brooklyn
A white-shirted officer uses a baton to strike a person on a bike.
Source:John Knefel
Washington Avenue and Fulton Street,Brooklyn
Two white-shirted officers walking with a crowd grab and shove someone in the crowd.
Source:Noah Hurowitz
East 136th Street and Brook Avenue,Bronx
A person says something to a white-shirted officer. The officer shoves the person over with a baton.
Source:Andom Ghebreghiorgis
June 5
885 Nostrand Avenue,Brooklyn
An officer shoves someone on a bicycle, who falls over.
Source:Requested anonymity
June 6
Nassau and Gold Streets,Brooklyn
A person is tackled to the ground by a group of officers and punched in the head multiple times.
Source:Mike Hassell
Troy Closson contributed reporting.
Two captions in an earlier version of this article misstated the locations in Manhattan of two videos’ filming. One was at Fifth Avenue and East 83rd Street, not Bryant Park, and the other was at 41 East 57th Street, not West 57th Street and Sixth Avenue. |
A detailed county map shows the extent of the coronavirus outbreak, with tables of the number of cases by county. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/michigan-coronavirus-cases.html | A detailed county map shows the extent of the coronavirus outbreak, with tables of the number of cases by county. | Covid-19Guidance
Michigan Coronavirus Map and Case Count
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Michigan: Latest Map and Case Count
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Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
Daily new hospital admissions by age in Michigan
This chart shows for each age group the number of people per 100,000 that were newly admitted to a hospital with Covid-19 each day, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dips and spikes could be due to inconsistent reporting by hospitals.
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Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
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In data for Michigan, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data once a week, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. Michigan released new data daily until September 2020 and weekdays until July 2021, then on select weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence. The state also includes nonresidents diagnosed in the state, but The Times excludes this category since nonresidents are likely also counted in their home state.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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About the data
In data for Michigan, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data once a week, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. Michigan released new data daily until September 2020 and weekdays until July 2021, then on select weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence. The state also includes nonresidents diagnosed in the state, but The Times excludes this category since nonresidents are likely also counted in their home state.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
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New Jersey Election Results: 11th Congressional District
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Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
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Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
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Estimates from exit polls offer an initial indication of how groups voted on election night. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/exit-polls-florida.html | Estimates from exit polls offer an initial indication of how groups voted on election night. | Florida Exit Polls: How Different Groups Voted
UpdatedJune 1, 2021, 2:52 PM ET
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Florida Exit Polls: How Different Groups Voted
The numbers on this page areestimatesfrom exit polls conducted by Edison Research for the National Election Pool. These surveys interviewed voters outside of polling places or early voting sites, or by phone (to account for mail-in voters).
Results from interviews with 5,906 voters are shown below. These numbers have been adjusted to match the actual vote count.
While exit polls offer an initial indication of how groups voted on election night, they arenot perfect. The polls are not precise enough to distinguish between, say, 53 percent support or 50 percent support from a certain group. Like any survey, they are subject to sampling error, and they rely on estimates of how many people voted in each group.
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Are you male or female?
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Which one of these five issues mattered most in deciding how you voted for president?
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Who would better handle the coronavirus pandemic?
Who would better handle the economy?
Which is more important?
Do you think Donald Trump has the temperament to serve effectively as president?
Do you think Joe Biden has the temperament to serve effectively as president?
Was your vote for president mainly:
How do you feel about the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?
Is your opinion of Donald Trump:
Is your opinion of Joe Biden:
If Donald Trump is re-elected president, would you feel:
If Donald Trump is re-elected president, would you feel:
If Joe Biden is elected president, would you feel:
If Joe Biden is elected president, would you feel:
Do you think U.S. efforts to contain the coronavirus pandemic are going:
Do you think the condition of the nation's economy is:
Is racism in the U.S.:
Do you think climate change, also known as global warming, is a serious problem?
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When did you finally decide for whom to vote in the presidential election?
For which of the presidential candidates do you have a favorable opinion?
In the 2016 election for president, did you vote for:
More breakdowns
Which presidential candidate has the temperament to serve effectively as president?
How do you feel about the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?
Do you think U.S. efforts to contain the coronavirus pandemic are going:
Do you think the condition of the nation's economy is:
Is racism in the U.S.:
How confident are you that votes in your state will be counted accurately?
When did you finally decide for whom to vote in the presidential election?
Do you have any children under 18 living in your home? What is your gender?
What best describes your level of education?
How old are you?
How old are you?
Are you:
These estimates are subject to sampling error. The potential error is greater for smaller subgroups, or for characteristics that are concentrated in a few polling places. They are also subject to other types of errors, such as those that would arise if certain types of people were unwilling to talk to exit poll workers.
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Exit polls conducted by Edison Research for the National Election Pool
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Michigan election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-michigan-house-district-11.html | See full results and maps from the Michigan election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Michigan Election Results: 11th Congressional District
State Results
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Michigan Election Results: 11th Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Michigan.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Stevens
Esshaki
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
100% of counties (2 of 2) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
New fiction: “She used to tell me, ‘If he is going to imagine something, let him imagine his home country.’” From the magazine’s Decameron Project. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/07/07/magazine/dinaw-mengestu-short-story.html | New fiction: “She used to tell me, ‘If he is going to imagine something, let him imagine his home country.’” From the magazine’s Decameron Project. | Comments
The Decameron Project
Dinaw Mengestu: ‘How We Used to Play,’ a Short Story
ByDinaw MengestuJuly 7, 2020
The Decameron Project
New Fiction
Before the virus hit, my uncle drove his cab 10 to 12 hours a day, six days a week, for nearly two decades. He continued doing so even though every month he had fewer and fewer customers and sometimes spent hours idling outside one of the luxury hotels near the Capitol building waiting for a fare. He was still living in the same apartment he moved into when he first arrived in America, in 1978, and when I called to ask him how he was doing, he told me, more amused than alarmed, that until now, he had failed to consider the possibility that he might someday die in that building. “Why don’t they tell you this when you sign the lease? If you are over 70, it should be right there, at the very top. Be careful. This may be the last place you ever live.”
I assured him there was no chance of him dying, even though we both knew that wasn’t true. He was 72, and every morning before getting into his cab, he walked up and down the 12 stories of his apartment building to warm up his muscles before work.
“You’re the strongest man I know,” I told him. “It would take an alien virus to knock you out.”
Before getting off the phone I told him I was going to drive down from New York to see him. It was March 12, 2020, and the virus was about to lay siege to the city. “We’ll go to the grocery store,” I said. “And stuff your freezer so you can grow old and fat until the virus disappears.” I left New York early the next morning to find the highways between New York and D.C. already crowded with S.U.V.s. On his only visit to New York, my uncle asked me what happened to all the cars buried deep underground in expensive parking lots scattered throughout the city. Before buying his own cab, he had worked for 15 years in a parking garage three blocks from the White House, and he often said that he would never understand why Americans spent so much money to park big cars they never drove. As I passed my first hour in traffic, I thought of calling to tell him I finally had the answer to his question. For all the talk of American optimism, we were obsessed with apocalypse, and those big empty cars that now filled all four lanes of the highway had simply been waiting for the right explosion to hit the road.
When I finallyreached my uncle’s apartment, in a suburb just outside D.C., he was sitting on one of the concrete benches in front of his building, his palms pressed together with both elbows on his knees. He motioned with his hands for me to stay where I was and got into his cab, which was parked a few feet behind me. He sent me a text message: “Park. I am driving.”
We greeted each other awkwardly, a triple tap of shoulders rather than the customary kiss on the cheek. It had been six, maybe seven months since we had seen each other, and at least a decade since I had been in his cab. As we pulled away from his building, he said this trip reminded him of a game we used to play when I was a child and he would drive my mother and me to the grocery.
“Do you remember that?” he asked me. “Do you remember how we used to play?”
We turned right onto a wide four-lane road lined with shopping malls and car dealerships, none of which were there when I was growing up. For some reason, it seemed too much to respond to my uncle’s question with a simple answer like, Of course I remember those games; they were often my favorite part of the week. So instead I nodded and complained about the traffic building ahead of us. My uncle rubbed his hand affectionately across the back of my head and then turned the meter on. That was how the games we had played in his cab always began, with a flip of the meter and him turning toward the back seat to ask me, “Where would you like to go, sir?” Over the few months we played that game, we never repeated the same place twice. We started local — the Washington Monument, the museums along the Mall — but then quickly expanded to increasingly remote destinations: the Pacific Ocean, Disney World and Disneyland, Mount Rushmore and Yellowstone National Park, and then once I learned more about world history and geography, Egypt and the Great Wall of China, followed by Big Ben and the Colosseum in Rome.
“Your mother used to get mad at me for not telling you to choose Ethiopia,” he said. “She used to tell me, ‘If he is going to imagine something, let him imagine his home country.’ I tried to tell her you were a child. You were born in America. You didn’t have a country. The only thing you were loyal to was us.”
The light ahead of us turned red and then green three times before we finally moved forward, a pace that would have normally infuriated my uncle, who by his own admission had never been good at staying still. The last time we played that game my uncle argued with my mother about the futility of our fictional adventures. “We can’t afford to take him anywhere,” he said. “So let him see the world from the back seat of a taxi.”
The final trip we took was to Australia, and my mother let us take it on the condition that we never again played the game with her in the car. Once we agreed to her terms, my uncle turned the meter on, and for the next 15 minutes I told him everything I knew about the landscape and wildlife of Australia. I continued talking even after we arrived at the grocery store and my mother told me to get out of the car. I wasn’t prepared to see my trip end in a parking lot, and so my uncle waved my mother away and told me to keep talking. “Tell me everything you know about Australia,” he said, just as a deep tiredness came over me. I took my shoes off and stretched my legs out. I folded my legs underneath me as he placed a thick road map from the glove compartment under my head so my face wouldn’t stick to the vinyl seats.
“Sleep,” he told me. “Australia is very far away. You must be tired from the jet lag.”
I thought of asking my uncle what, if anything, he remembered of our final trip as we neared the grocery store. He was focused on trying to turn right into a parking lot already crowded with cars and what looked to be a half-dozen police cars angled around the entrance. We only had a few hundred feet left, but given the line of cars and the growing crowd waiting outside, carts in hand, it seemed increasingly unlikely that we would make it inside before the shelves were picked bare.
It must have taken us close to 20 minutes to make that final turn into the parking lot, a minor victory that my uncle acknowledged by tapping the meter twice with his index finger so I could take note of the fare.
“Finally,” he said. “After all these years in America, I’m rich.”
We inched our way toward the rear of the lot, where it seemed more likely we would find a place to park. When that failed, my uncle drove over a strip of grass into an adjacent restaurant lot that had customer-only parking signs pinned to the wall. I waited for him to turn off the engine, but he kept both hands on the steering wheel, his body pitched slightly forward as if he were preparing to drive away again but wasn’t sure which direction to turn toward. I thought briefly that I understood what was troubling him.
“You don’t have to go into the store,” I said. “You can wait here and pick me up when I come out.”
He turned to face me then. It was the first time we had looked directly at each other since I entered the cab.
“I don’t want to wait in a parking lot,” he said. “I do that every day.”
“Then what do you want?”
He switched the meter off, and then the engine, but left the key in the ignition.
“I want to go back home,” he said. “I want someone to tell me how to get out of here.”
How WeUsed —To Play
By
Dinaw Mengestu
A short story from The New York Times Magazine’s Decameron Project.
Spot illustrations and lettering bySophy Hollington
—
Dinaw Mengestuis the author of three novels, including most recently ‘‘All Our Names.’’ He is director of the Written Arts Program at Bard College in New York.
Sophy Hollingtonis a British artist and illustrator. She is known for her use of relief prints, created using the process of the linocut and inspired by meteoric folklore as well as alchemical symbolism.
Read More from the Decameron Project
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Credits
Additional design and development byShannon LinandJacky Myint.
The Decameron Project · |
See full results and maps from the Texas election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-texas-house-district-13.html | See full results and maps from the Texas election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Texas Election Results: 13th Congressional District
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Texas Election Results: 13th Congressional District
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Texas.
Results by county
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Jackson
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
98% of counties (40 of 41) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Connecticut election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-connecticut-house-district-4.html | See full results and maps from the Connecticut election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Connecticut Election Results: Fourth Congressional District
State Results
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Connecticut Election Results: Fourth Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Connecticut.
Results by town
Vote share
Leader
Himes
Riddle
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
50% of counties (1 of 2) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
A two-bedroom condominium in Savannah, Ga.; a Tudor Revival house in Cincinnati; and a Craftsman-influenced home in Charles Town, W.V. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/12/09/realestate/what-you-get-for-400000.html | A two-bedroom condominium in Savannah, Ga.; a Tudor Revival house in Cincinnati; and a Craftsman-influenced home in Charles Town, W.V. | What You Get for $400,000
A two-bedroom, one-bathroom condo in a 1900 building in the Victorian District of Savannah, Ga., is on the market for $375,000.
What You Get for $400,000
A two-bedroom condominium in Savannah, Ga.; a Tudor Revival house in Cincinnati; and a Craftsman-influenced home in Charles Town, W.V.
Slideshow controls |
See full results and maps from the Illinois election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-illinois-house-district-10.html | See full results and maps from the Illinois election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Illinois Election Results: 10th Congressional District
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Illinois Election Results: 10th Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Illinois.
Results by county
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Leader
Schneider
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
50% of counties (1 of 2) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in Connecticut. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-connecticut-president.html | See full results and maps for the 2020 presidential election in Connecticut. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Connecticut Presidential Election Results
State Results
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Connecticut Presidential Election Results
Winner
Joseph R. Biden Jr. wins Connecticut.
Race called by The Associated Press.
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Connecticut.
Results by town
Vote share
Leader
Biden
Trump
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Tracking the vote count
See how the reported vote share changed over time.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
38% of counties (3 of 8) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
A panel of experts recommended on Thursday that the Food and Drug Administration approve an emergency use authorization for the Moderna vaccine, which would make it easier to expand the country’s vaccination campaign to rural areas and smaller clinics. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007509969/moderna-coronavirus-vaccine-authorization.html | A panel of experts recommended on Thursday that the Food and Drug Administration approve an emergency use authorization for the Moderna vaccine, which would make it easier to expand the country’s vaccination campaign to rural areas and smaller clinics. | new video loaded:Moderna Coronavirus Vaccine Moves Closer to Authorization
transcript
Moderna Coronavirus Vaccine Moves Closer to Authorization
A panel of experts recommended on Thursday that the Food and Drug Administration approve an emergency use authorization for the Moderna vaccine, which would make it easier to expand the country’s vaccination campaign to rural areas and smaller clinics.
OK, our two minutes is up. So if we could go ahead and close the vote and broadcast the results. It looks like we have a favorable vote. So I will pass the floor back to Dr. Monto. Thank you, everybody. I’d just like to close by thanking the committee members, thanking F.D.A. for giving us an agenda, which allowed much more open discussion, which I think benefits all of us, including trying to advise F.D.A. on some of these very tough issues that we are facing. And congratulations to us all for achieving this emergency use authorization for a second vaccine, which, along with other events, will eventually and sooner, we hope, break the back of the pandemic.
Moderna Coronavirus Vaccine Moves Closer to Authorization
A panel of experts recommended on Thursday that the Food and Drug Administration approve an emergency use authorization for the Moderna vaccine, which would make it easier to expand the country’s vaccination campaign to rural areas and smaller clinics.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
See full results and maps from the Colorado election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-colorado-proposition-113-institute-a-national-popular-vote.html | See full results and maps from the Colorado election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Colorado Proposition 113 Election Results: Institute a National Popular Vote
State Results
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Colorado Proposition 113 Election Results: Institute a National Popular Vote
Colorado would enter the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, an interstate compact to award member states’ electoral votes to the presidential candidate that receives the most votes nationwide. The compact will go into effect only if states representing at least 270 Electoral College votes — the number required to win the presidency — adopt the legislation.
Results by county
Leader
Yes
No
Leader
Yes
No
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results and race calls from The Associated Press
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
You can still move during the coronavirus pandemic. Here are some notes on one person’s experience and what to expect. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/07/24/burst/pandemic-moving.html | You can still move during the coronavirus pandemic. Here are some notes on one person’s experience and what to expect. | How to Move During a Pandemic
ByHannah WiseJuly 24, 2020
How to Move During a Pandemic
How to Move During a Pandemic
Despite the pandemic, people are still moving — and I was one of them. A few weeks ago, I moved to Kansas City from Brooklyn to be closer to my family and better manage my autoimmune diseases. Here’s a look at what to expect if you are also planning to move →
How to Move During a Pandemic
Moving companies are essential businesses. Many have adjusted to socially distant methods of moving: The crew wears masks and customers stay at a distance or outside. You can expect to use video calls to answer questions.
How to Move During a Pandemic
Brünnhilde the cat was our intrepid co-pilot. Don’t forget to pack food and water in the car for your pets. Remember they need rest stops and exercise breaks too. For cats, I also recommend calming treats to help them enjoy the road.
How to Move During a Pandemic
After spending 100 days alone in my apartment, I was feeling stir crazy and ready for the 19 hour drive to see America.
How to Move During a Pandemic
Any stop we made along the way meant masks and gloves.
We stayed in a hotel for one night. If you need to use a hotel, make use of remote check in to avoid unnecessary interactions with people.
How to Move During a Pandemic
States are opening up at different rates. When you map your journey, check local regulations to see what businesses are open, and always wear a mask outside of your car.
Depending on the state, I was sometimes the only one wearing a mask. Generally people respected social distancing, but I did see some very crowded gas stations that I skipped.
How to Move During a Pandemic
My dad, David, flew to New York to then drive me back to the prairie. The man is a hero.
The move was difficult, but worth it. It has been refreshing to be back in the part of America that made me.
Read my F.A.Q. abouthow to safely and ethically move during the pandemic. |
This week’s properties are in Williamsburg, Morningside Heights and Forest Hills. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/11/19/realestate/on-the-market-in-new-york-city.html | This week’s properties are in Williamsburg, Morningside Heights and Forest Hills. | On the Market in New York City
Williamsburg Condo • $1,600,000 • BROOKLYN • 184 Kent Avenue, No. PHA702
A one-bedroom, one-bath, newly renovated, 725-square-foot corner penthouse with white oak floors, walls of casement windows and sliding French doors that open to a 500-square-foot private terrace overlooking the East River, in a 1915 warehouse converted to a full-service condo with a gym, co-working spaces and a garage.
Justin Stolarczyk, 212-906-0544, Brown Harris Stevens, 212-906-0544;bhsusa.com
On the Market in New York City
This week’s properties are in Williamsburg, Morningside Heights and Forest Hills.
Slideshow controls |
Eric M. Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles, said that he was considering cutting the power to homes and businesses which host parties or large gatherings despite public health guidelines. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007276385/la-mayor-electricity-house-parties.html | Eric M. Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles, said that he was considering cutting the power to homes and businesses which host parties or large gatherings despite public health guidelines. | new video loaded:L.A. Mayor Threatens Crackdown on House Parties
transcript
L.A. Mayor Threatens Crackdown on House Parties
Eric M. Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles, said that he was considering cutting the power to homes and businesses which host parties or large gatherings despite public health guidelines.
I spoke this morning with the county, and the city, as well as other cities about how do we have a mechanism for more joint enforcement. I know sheriffs have been called and L.A.P.D. have been called to parties where there’s dozens or hundreds of people — that’s a very tough assignment, which is why we looked for a mechanism that would shut these places down permanently. So I know that you probably had the question in before we made the announcement tonight. But by turning off that power, shutting down that water, we feel we can close these places down, which usually are not one-time offenders, but multiple offenders. The only thing that was a permanent solution was the threat of, and the execution in some cases of, actually turning off their water and power. Just as we can shut you down for breaking laws, there’s the alcohol laws to bars when they were open before this, or other things. This is rooted in strong law from city attorney. We have the opinion. We know we can do this. And it doesn’t just — we don’t show up and suddenly shut people’s water and power off. But the city provides that to places that are in criminal violation of public health orders. We have the right to be able to make sure that more lives are not lost.
L.A. Mayor Threatens Crackdown on House Parties
Eric M. Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles, said that he was considering cutting the power to homes and businesses which host parties or large gatherings despite public health guidelines.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
See full results and maps from the California election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-california-house-district-29.html | See full results and maps from the California election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
California Election Results: 29th Congressional District
State Results
Disabling auto-updates may improve reliability when using a screen reader or keyboard to navigate.
California Election Results: 29th Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in California.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Cardenas
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
100% of counties (1 of 1) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
An oral history of the 2010s | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/12/15/technology/decade-in-tech.html | An oral history of the 2010s | null |
See full results and maps from the New Jersey election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-new-jersey-house-district-2.html | See full results and maps from the New Jersey election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
New Jersey Election Results: Second Congressional District
State Results
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New Jersey Election Results: Second Congressional District
Jeff Van Drew, a Republican, is fighting to hold on to a seat that he won as a Democrat in 2018. Mr. Van Drew switched parties in 2019, saying he could not support the impeachment of President Trump and now faces Amy Kennedy, a Democrat and former schoolteacher who is married to former Representative Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island.
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in New Jersey.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Van Drew
Kennedy
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
75% of counties (6 of 8) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Nebraska election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-nebraska-house-district-2.html | See full results and maps from the Nebraska election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Nebraska Election Results: Second Congressional District
State Results
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Nebraska Election Results: Second Congressional District
It is theoretically possible that the presidential election will be decided by the one Electoral College vote held by Omaha and its suburbs, where polling has shown Joseph R. Biden Jr. with an edge. Representative Don Bacon, the Republican incumbent,defeated his Democratic opponent, Kara Eastman, by just two pointshere in 2018, and the rematch is expected to be competitive again.
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Nebraska.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Bacon
Eastman
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
0% of counties (0 of 2) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in the Chico area | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/butte-california-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in the Chico area | Covid-19Guidance
Butte County, California Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Butte County, Calif.: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Hospitals
Vaccinations
See more details ›
2% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
2% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Butte County
These are days with a reporting anomaly.
Read morehere.
Average cases per capita in Butte County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
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About the data
In data for California, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data on Tuesdays and Fridays, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. The state released new data on all weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths in some counties.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for California, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data on Tuesdays and Fridays, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. The state released new data on all weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths in some counties.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
Le Crocodile, in Brooklyn, is a modern take on the brasserie. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/03/03/dining/le-crocodile-wythe-hotel.html | Le Crocodile, in Brooklyn, is a modern take on the brasserie. | All the French Favorites
There are skinny fries on almost every table at Le Crocodile in Brooklyn, many of them in the company of fried chicken.
All the French Favorites
Le Crocodile, in Brooklyn, is a modern take on the brasserie.
Slideshow controls |
See full results and maps from the New Hampshire election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-new-hampshire-house-district-1.html | See full results and maps from the New Hampshire election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
New Hampshire Election Results: First Congressional District
State Results
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New Hampshire Election Results: First Congressional District
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Vote reporting is effectively complete in New Hampshire.
Results by town
Vote share
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Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
29% of counties (2 of 7) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
During Monday’s virus briefing, President Trump abruptly left the news conference and was escorted out by the Secret Service. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007282420/trump-walks-out-virus-briefing.html | During Monday’s virus briefing, President Trump abruptly left the news conference and was escorted out by the Secret Service. | new video loaded:Trump Abruptly Walks Out of Virus Briefing
transcript
Trump Abruptly Walks Out of Virus Briefing
During Monday’s virus briefing, President Trump abruptly left the news conference and was escorted out by the Secret Service.
The Nasdaq index continues to set new records. It’s been up over 14 times, new record. And Nasdaq and the S&P 500 and the Dow — Dow Jones — are going to be, I mean, the way they’re going, it looks like they’re just about going to be topping records, hopefully soon. Excuse me?
Trump Abruptly Walks Out of Virus Briefing
During Monday’s virus briefing, President Trump abruptly left the news conference and was escorted out by the Secret Service.
U.S. & Politics
Recent Episodes
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
Biden Condemns Shooting at Trump Rally
Biden Mixes Up Trump and Harris
Biden Calls Zelensky ‘Putin’ at NATO Event
Biden ‘Is a Fighter,’ Harris Says in North Carolina
Biden Tells Allies That NATO Is ‘More Powerful Than Ever’
Heated Exchange Over Biden’s Health at White House Briefing
Supreme Court’s Immunity Decision Sets ‘Dangerous Precedent,’ Biden Says
Boeing C.E.O. Apologizes to Families of Plane Crash Victims
Maryland Governor Issues Sweeping Pardons for Marijuana Convictions
Biden Talks About Gun Safety Hours After Son’s Firearms Conviction
Garland Says He ‘Will Not Be Intimidated’ by House Republicans
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
2:13
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
0:52
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
1:39
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
1:25
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
1:49
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
1:14
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
0:55
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
0:49
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
0:46
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
0:29
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear |
During the first presidential debate on Tuesday, President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. sparred over the integrity of the election and mail-in ballots. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/elections/100000007369669/trump-biden-debate-election-mail-in-ballots.html | During the first presidential debate on Tuesday, President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. sparred over the integrity of the election and mail-in ballots. | new video loaded:Biden Says Trump Is Trying to ‘Scare’ Voters
transcript
Biden Says Trump Is Trying to ‘Scare’ Voters
During the first presidential debate on Tuesday, President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. sparred over the integrity of the election and mail-in ballots.
“This is all about trying to dissuade people from voting because he’s trying to scare people into thinking that it’s not going to be legitimate. Show up and vote. You will determine the outcome of this election. Vote, vote, vote. And in terms of whether or not, when the votes are counted and they’re all counted, that will be accepted. If I win, that will be accepted. If I lose, that will be accepted. But by the way, if in fact he says he’s not sure what he’s going to accept, well let me tell you something, it doesn’t matter because if we get the votes, it’s going to be all over. He’s going to go. He can’t stay in power. It won’t happen.” “As far as the ballots are concerned, it’s a disaster. A solicited ballot — OK, solicited is OK. You’re soliciting, you’re asking. They send it back. You send it back. I did that. If you have an unsolicited — they’re sending millions of ballots all over the country. There’s fraud. They found them in creeks. They found some with the name Trump — just happened to have the name Trump — just the other day in a wastepaper basket. They’re being sent all over the place. They sent two in a Democrat area. They sent out 1,000 ballots — everybody got two ballots. This is going to be a fraud like you’ve never seen. I hope it’s going to be a fair election. If it’s a fair election, I am 100 percent on board. But if I see tens of thousands of ballots being manipulated, I can’t go along with that.” “The fact is I will accept it, and he will too you know why? Because once the winner is declared after all the ballots are counted, all the votes are counted, that will be the end of it.”
Biden Says Trump Is Trying to ‘Scare’ Voters
During the first presidential debate on Tuesday, President Trump and Joseph R. Biden Jr. sparred over the integrity of the election and mail-in ballots.
2020 Elections
Recent Episodes
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says
Trump’s Lawyers Were ‘Disorganized,’ Senator Cassidy Says
Highlights From Day 1 of Trump Impeachment Trial
Trump Lawyer Unsuccessfully Disputes Constitutionality of Impeachment
‘This Cannot Be the Future of America,’ Raskin Says
Buttigieg Is Sworn In as Transportation Secretary
Kamala Harris Celebrated In India
Biden Swears In Appointees in Virtual Ceremony
Kamala Harris Swears In New Democratic Senators
The Poet Amanda Gorman Says America Can Be the ‘Light’ It Needs
‘Democracy Has Prevailed’: Biden Calls for National Unity
Jennifer Lopez Sings at Biden Inauguration
The Trumps Arrive in Florida
1:53
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
1:21
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
2:19
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
0:40
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
1:06
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
2:52
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
1:06
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
1:06
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
1:32
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
8:54
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
0:45
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
1:19
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says |
Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced a public awareness campaign about the importance of wearing masks to flatten the curve of the coronavirus, and urged residents to refrain from large gatherings this holiday weekend. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007222192/newsom-urges-californians-to-avoid-large-holiday-events.html | Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced a public awareness campaign about the importance of wearing masks to flatten the curve of the coronavirus, and urged residents to refrain from large gatherings this holiday weekend. | new video loaded:Newsom Urges Californians to Avoid Large Holiday Events
transcript
Newsom Urges Californians to Avoid Large Holiday Events
Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced a public awareness campaign about the importance of wearing masks to flatten the curve of the coronavirus, and urged residents to refrain from large gatherings this holiday weekend.
The evidence is simply overwhelming: Masks keep Californians healthy. We are now launching a major public awareness campaign — announcing it formally today, launching it formally today — that is much more comprehensive, much more dynamic, we hope much more impactful, to encourage people to wear masks and mitigate the spread of this virus. Wearing a mask is foundational, and again, it’s mandatory here in the state of California. We don’t want to see you, a bunch of strangers, without being physically distanced and without wearing face coverings over the weekend, to the extent you can. That’s why we say avoid crowds and avoid going to large parades outside of your household.
Newsom Urges Californians to Avoid Large Holiday Events
Gov. Gavin Newsom introduced a public awareness campaign about the importance of wearing masks to flatten the curve of the coronavirus, and urged residents to refrain from large gatherings this holiday weekend.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
Videos show members of the right-wing paramilitary movement entering the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack. The Times tracked three of them amid the mob. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007560342/we-took-over-the-capitol-tracking-the-oath-keepers-charged-with-conspiracy.html | Videos show members of the right-wing paramilitary movement entering the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack. The Times tracked three of them amid the mob. | new video loaded:‘We Took Over the Capitol’: Tracking the Oath Keepers Charged With Conspiracy
transcript
‘We Took Over the Capitol’: Tracking the Oath Keepers Charged With Conspiracy
Videos show members of the right-wing paramilitary movement entering the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack. The Times tracked three of them amid the mob.
One of the more notorious videos from the siege on the Capitol on Jan. 6 was this one, showing members of a right-wing paramilitary group called the Oath Keepers ascending the east steps of the building, as if in military formation. Two of the people seen in this group, Donovan Crowl and Jessica Watkins, now face multiple federal charges. A third Oath Keeper, Thomas Caldwell, seen here earlier in the day, was also charged. The government alleges that the three conspired to break into the Capitol and prevent Congress from certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. They are among the small number of people who participated in the attack to now face conspiracy charges. The Times reviewed dozens of videos and tracked the Oath Keepers as they moved around the Capitol. At around 2:35 p.m., roughly 10 minutes after the first breach of the Capitol’s eastern doors, a group of Oath Keepers, including Watkins and Crowl, can be seen ascending the east stairs. A few moments later, Watkins, Crowl and several other apparent Oath Keepers can be seen filing through the mob toward the east door that the rioters have breached. Just a few minutes later, Crowl films himself and Watkins inside the Capitol Rotunda and also posts the footage on Parler. “Took over the Capitol, overran the Capitol!” “We’re in the [expletive] Capitol, bro!” By 3:14 p.m., the Oath Keepers appear to have left the Capitol via the same door. While Watkins and Crowl have been breaching the Capitol on the east side, Caldwell has been on the west, where he was briefly interviewed outside by Insider TV. “Every single [expletive] in there is a traitor, every single one.” The F.B.I. believes Caldwell is a leader in the Oath Keepers and alleges that two days after the attack, he sent Crowl a text message that read they had “stormed the gates of corruption together.” It’s unclear whether the government will charge more Oath Keepers in connection with the attack. But more than two dozen individuals can be seen in videos that day operating alongside known members or wearing the group’s insignia.
‘We Took Over the Capitol’: Tracking the Oath Keepers Charged With Conspiracy
Videos show members of the right-wing paramilitary movement entering the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack. The Times tracked three of them amid the mob.
Visual Investigations
Recent Episodes
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
‘We’re Aware of the Location’: Aid Groups in Gaza Coordinated With I.D.F. but Still Came Under Fire
I.D.F. Videos Add to Confusion Over Gazans Killed at Aid Site
Visual Evidence Shows Israel Dropped 2,000-Pound Bombs Where It Ordered Gaza’s Civilians to Move for Safety
‘Everyone Died’: How Gunmen Killed Dozens In Sderot
Caught on Camera, Traced by Phone: The Russian Military Unit That Killed Dozens in Bucha
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
China’s Surveillance State Is Growing. These Documents Reveal How.
How the Proud Boys Breached the Capitol on Jan. 6: Rile Up the Normies
Under Fire, Out of Fuel: What Intercepted Russian Radio Chatter Reveals
Tracking Russia’s Latest Military Movements Around Ukraine
Raw Footage of Lethal Aug. 29 Kabul Drone Strike
High-Resolution Drone Video Shows Closer Angle of Kabul Strike
New Video Shows Botched Kabul Drone Strike
Reconstructing the Rittenhouse Shootings: How Kenosha Echoed America’s Polarization
The U.S. Military Said It Was an ISIS Safe House. We Found an Afghan Family Home.
How a U.S. Drone Strike Killed the Wrong Person
Satellite Images Reveal Impact of European Floods
Alleged Assassins in Haiti Claimed to Be D.E.A.
Day of Rage: How Trump Supporters Took the U.S. Capitol
Gaza’s Deadly Night: How Israeli Airstrikes Killed 44 People
Militants Attacked a Key Town in Mozambique. Where Was the Government?
2:58
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
9:42
‘We’re Aware of the Location’: Aid Groups in Gaza Coordinated With I.D.F. but Still Came Under Fire
2:26
I.D.F. Videos Add to Confusion Over Gazans Killed at Aid Site
8:34
Visual Evidence Shows Israel Dropped 2,000-Pound Bombs Where It Ordered Gaza’s Civilians to Move for Safety
3:32
‘Everyone Died’: How Gunmen Killed Dozens In Sderot
28:50
Caught on Camera, Traced by Phone: The Russian Military Unit That Killed Dozens in Bucha
15:43
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
15:43
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
14:26
China’s Surveillance State Is Growing. These Documents Reveal How.
17:16
How the Proud Boys Breached the Capitol on Jan. 6: Rile Up the Normies
9:01
Under Fire, Out of Fuel: What Intercepted Russian Radio Chatter Reveals |
A midcentury-modern house in Lafayette, a remodeled 1967 home in Calabasas and a Victorian landmark in Nevada City. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/12/07/realestate/what-you-get-for-1-6-million-in-california.html | A midcentury-modern house in Lafayette, a remodeled 1967 home in Calabasas and a Victorian landmark in Nevada City. | What You Get for $1.6 Million in California
In Lafayette, a midcentury-modern house built in 1955, with four bedrooms and three bathrooms, is on the market for $1.595 million.
What You Get for $1.6 Million in California
A midcentury-modern house in Lafayette, a remodeled 1967 home in Calabasas and a Victorian landmark in Nevada City.
Slideshow controls |
The Flemish designer invites T into his home in Mexico City’s Centro Histórico. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/t-magazine/design/100000007344476/house-tour-dirk-jan-kinet.html | The Flemish designer invites T into his home in Mexico City’s Centro Histórico. | new video loaded:House Tour | Dirk-Jan Kinet
transcript
House Tour | Dirk-Jan Kinet
The Flemish designer invites T into his home in Mexico City’s Centro Histórico.
Hey, I’m Dirk. Welcome to my house in Mexico City. Please come up. [MUSIC] [SPEAKING SPANISH] We are literally smack-dab in the middle of the historic center of Mexico City. And I love to be in the chaos— in the middle of the bustle of the city. Chaos. Ah! My daughter, Balla. [SPANISH] Sculpture by Benito Martinez— [SPANISH] with a face mask. My favorite Pierre Frey wallpaper, and my favorite barbell. Murals painted by moi, moi, moi. Shoes by Vivienne Westwood. Fabric by my favorite designer, Kelly Wearstler. I think the house has 12 rooms. And this is my bedroom. My favorite architects. My private gym, and my interior magazine collection. And my secret garden. [SPEAKING SPANISH] My favorite general. Don’t smoke. I love vintage bowling pins. Thanks for coming. Toodle-oo.
House Tour | Dirk-Jan Kinet
The Flemish designer invites T into his home in Mexico City’s Centro Histórico.
T House Tours
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Housing sales are brisk in this western Queens neighborhood, thanks to leafy backyards and — for some lucky homeowners — access to a private park. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/11/18/realestate/living-in-sunnyside-queens.html | Housing sales are brisk in this western Queens neighborhood, thanks to leafy backyards and — for some lucky homeowners — access to a private park. | Living In ... Sunnyside, Queens
The Art Deco-style Sunnyside Arch, on 46th Street and Queens Boulevard, welcomes residents as they step off the No. 7 train at 46th Street.
Living In ... Sunnyside, Queens
Housing sales are brisk in this western Queens neighborhood, thanks to leafy backyards and — for some lucky homeowners — access to a private park.
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See full results and maps from the California election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-california-house-district-33.html | See full results and maps from the California election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
California Election Results: 33rd Congressional District
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California Election Results: 33rd Congressional District
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Lieu
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Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
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Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Mississippi election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-mississippi-statewide-measure-1b-allow-medical-marijuana.html | See full results and maps from the Mississippi election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Mississippi Statewide Measure 1B Election Results: Allow Medical Marijuana
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Mississippi Statewide Measure 1B Election Results: Allow Medical Marijuana
Medical marijuana would become legal for people with debilitating medical conditions. For the initiative to pass, it must receive a majority of the votes cast on the question and at least 40 percent of the total votes in the state’s biggest election, which would be the presidential race.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results and race calls from The Associated Press
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
As the U.S. reached a grim milestone in the outbreak, The New York Times gathered names of the dead and memories of their lives from obituaries across the country. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/05/24/us/us-coronavirus-deaths-100000.html | As the U.S. reached a grim milestone in the outbreak, The New York Times gathered names of the dead and memories of their lives from obituaries across the country. | Comments
Remembering the 100,000 Lives Lost to Coronavirus in America
ByDan BarryLarry BuchananClinton CargillAnnie DanielAlain DelaquérièreLazaro GamioGabriel GianordoliRichard HarrisBarbara HarveyJohn HaskinsJon HuangSimone LandonJuliette LoveGrace MaaloufAlex MatthewsFarah MohamedSteven MoityDestinée-Charisse RoyalMatt RubyandEden WeingartUpdatedUpdated May 27, 2020
As the U.S. reached a grim milestone in the outbreak, The New York Times gathered names of the dead and memories of their lives from obituaries across the country.
An Incalculable Loss
America has reached a grim milestone in the coronavirus outbreak — each figure here represents one of the 100,000 lives lost so far. But a count reveals only so much. Memories, gathered from obituaries across the country, help us to reckon with what was lost.
One hundred thousand.
Toward the end of May in the year 2020, the number of people in the United States who have died from the coronavirus passed 100,000 — almost all of them within a three-month span. An average of more than 1,100 deaths a day.
One hundred thousand.
A number is an imperfect measure when applied to the human condition. A number provides an answer to how many, but it can never convey the individual arcs of life, the 100,000 ways of greeting the morning and saying good night.
One hundred thousand.
The immensity of such a sudden toll taxes our ability to comprehend, to understand that each number adding up to 100,000 represents someone among us just yesterday. Who was the 1,233rd person to die? The 27,587th? The 98,431st?
She may have died in a jam-packed hospital, with no family member at her bedside to whisper a final thank you, Mom, I love you.
He may have died in a locked-down nursing home, his wife peering helplessly through a streaked window as a part of her slips away.
They may have died in subdivided city apartments, too sick or too scared to go to a hospital, their closest relatives a half-world away.
This highly contagious virus has forced us to suppress our nature as social creatures, for fear that we might infect or be infected. Among the many indignities, it has denied us the grace of being present for a loved one’s last moments. Age-old customs that lend meaning to existence have been upended, including the sacred rituals of how we mourn.
Before, we came together in halls and bars and places of worship to remember and honor the dead. We recited prayers or raised glasses or retold familiar stories so funny they left us nodding and crying through our laughter.
In these vital moments of communion, it could feel as though the departed were with us one last time, briefly resurrected by the sheer power of our collective love, to share that closing prayer, that parting glass, that final hug.
Even in the horrible times of wars and hurricanes and terrorist attacks that seemed to crumble the ground beneath our feet, we at least had time-tested ways of grieving that helped us take that first hesitant step forward.
Not now.
Now, for most of those who died in the past few months, there were no large gatherings of consolation and recited prayers for peaceful rest. The obituaries that filled our local newspapers and Facebook pages sometimes read like an unending roll call of the coronavirus dead.
Every death notice, virus-related or not, seemed to close with:Due to health concerns and restrictions on gatherings, there will be no funeral services at this time. A celebration of life will be held at a time to be announced.
A virtual memorial service was held instead, perhaps, with mourners praying into laptop screens. Followed by a burial, perhaps, with masked mourners watching from their cars as another coffin was received by the earth.
In a larger sense, the suspension of our familiar rituals of burial or cremation reflected what life in a pandemic has been like. The absence of any clear end.
Even the dead have to wait.
Why has this happened in the United States of 2020? Why has the virus claimed a disproportionately large number of black and Latino victims? Why were nursing homes so devastated? These questions of why and how and whom will be asked for decades to come.
For now, all we can do is hold our collective breath, inch toward some approximation of how things were — and try to process a loss of life greater than what the country incurred in several decades of war, from Vietnam to Iraq.
One hundred thousand.
A threshold number. It is the number celebrated when the family car’s odometer ticks once more to reach six digits. It is the number of residents that can make a place feel fully like a city: San Angelo, Texas; Kenosha, Wisconsin; Vacaville, California.
So imagine a city of 100,000 residents that was here for New Year’s Day but has now been wiped from the American map.
One hundred thousand.
Den mother for Cub Scout Pack 9. Manager of the produce department. Tavern owner. Nurse to the end.
Loved baseball. Loved playing euchre. Loved seeing the full moon rise above the ocean.
Man, could she cook.
Always first on the dance floor. Always ready to party. Always gave back.
Preferred bolo ties and suspenders.
Awarded the Bronze Star. Served in the Women’s Army Corps. Survived the sinking of the Andrea Doria. Competed in the Special Olympics. Immigrated to achieve the American dream.
Could quote Tennyson from memory.
A number is an imperfect measure when applied to the human condition.
One. Hundred. Thousand.
About this project
The descriptions of the lives of a thousand people in the United States who died because of the coronavirus were drawn from hundreds of obituaries, news articles and paid death notices that have appeared in newspapers and digital media over the past few months. They have been lightly edited for clarity.
They were compiled from the following publications:
Daily death data is froma New York Times databaseof reports from state and local health agencies.
ByDan Barry,Larry Buchanan, Clinton Cargill,Annie Daniel, Alain Delaquérière,Lazaro Gamio, Gabriel Gianordoli,Rich Harris, Barbara Harvey,John Haskins,Jon Huang, Simone Landon, Juliette Love, Grace Maalouf, Alex Leeds Matthews, Farah Mohamed, Steven Moity, Destinée-Charisse Royal,Matt RubyandEden Weingart.
Additional research by Yuriria Avila, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Penn Bullock, Sophia June,Lauren Leatherby, Alex Lemonides,Denise Lu, Aimee Ortiz,Anjali Singhviand Chi Zhang. Additional editing byJason Bailey, Eric Morse and Alison Peterson.
An earlier version of this article misstated Randall Clayton French’s age. He was 39, not 29. The article also misstated the profession of Sandra Piotrowski, who worked in the accounting departments of several manufacturing companies, not as a meat-cutter. Additionally, the article misstated the branch of the military where Irvin Herman served. He served in the Navy, not the Army.
An earlier version of this article misstated the age and city of Melita Baker. She was 86, not 89, and of Norwell, Mass., not Irvington, N.Y. |
See full results and maps from the California election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-california-house-district-11.html | See full results and maps from the California election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
California Election Results: 11th Congressional District
State Results
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California Election Results: 11th Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in California.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
DeSaulnier
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
100% of counties (1 of 1) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
It’s time to test your knowledge of American political news. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/11/27/opinion/trump-impeachment-politics-quiz.html | It’s time to test your knowledge of American political news. | The New York Times
Opinion|Your Thanksgiving Day Quiz
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Opinion|Op-Ed Columnist
Your Thanksgiving Day Quiz
ByGAIL COLLINSNOV. 27, 2019
Happy Thanksgiving! I know you’ve got a lot on the, um, table. Here’s a brief distraction — a quiz to see who’s been paying attention to the news this fall. Winner gets to pick the dinner conversation topic.
The Donald
At a rally, President Trump pointed to a prominent Hispanic supporter, Steve Cortes, and said Cortes …
“Has taught me a lot about Latin culture.”
“Recently promised to help me improve my Spanish.”
“Looks more like a WASP than I do.”
At another rally, Trump quoted Fox Business commentator Lou Dobbs as calling him …
“Good at math.”
“The greatest president in the history of our country, including George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.”
“A better-than-average golfer.”
Trump claimed that he would ruin Turkey’s economy if it did anything …
“To make Lindsey Graham cry.”
“That hurts business at Trump Towers Istanbul.”
“That I, in my great and unmatched wisdom, consider to be off limits.”
In an interview with Fox News, Trump talked about trying to get a wall built on the Mexican border. The problem, he said, involved “loopholes, and they’re called loopholes for a reason, because they’re …
“Loopholes.”
“An ambiguity in the law which my lawyers assure me is being overcome.”
“All the fault of stupid Nancy Pelosi and crying Chuck Schumer and probably Pocahontas.”
A reporter from The Guardian asked Rudy Giuliani whether Trump might throw him under the bus. Rudy said he …
Had “a better relationship with Donald than anyone since my second wife, Judi. No, Judi was third. …”
Had “insurance” that would protect him.
Never went near mass transit.
Energy Secretary Rick Perry recently said in a Fox News interview that he believes Trump is …
“Not the worst president ever — have I ever told you my theories about Franklin Pierce?”
“A real future contender for ‘Dancing With the Stars.’”
“The chosen one.”
Ukraine
When Mitt Romney called the Ukraine story “troubling,” Trump called Romney …
“The last person I’d want to offend.”
“A pompous ass.”
“A well-known dog abuser.”
Burisma is …
A popular vape flavor.
A natural gas producer.
A breed of retriever dog.
Trump said he didn’t like former Ukraine Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch because she …
Had an unsophisticated understanding of the history of Turkey-Ukraine relations.
Speaks too many languages.
Didn’t hang his picture in the embassy.
The top-ranking Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, Devin Nunes, said in his opening statements that the Democrats were …
“Saving all the comfortable chairs in the room for themselves.”
“Over-technical about parliamentary procedure.”
“Trying to obtain nude pictures of Trump.”
In their dealings with Ukraine, E.U. Ambassador Gordon Sondland, former Ukraine envoy Kurt Volker and Rick Perry were known as …
“Snap, Crackle and Flop.”
“The Three Amigos.”
“The Three Stooges.”
The Democrats
When a voter asked Joe Biden who he was thinking about for vice president, Biden offered several possibilities. All of them were women, but Biden took a little of the shine off his reply when he …
Included several members of his family.
Couldn’t remember any of their names.
Said whoever got the nod would be able to look forward to a lot of back rubs.
During the last debate, Biden was asked about violence against women and promised to …
“Keep punching.”
“Look into this real soon.”
“Hug every abused lady in the nation.”
When Iowa Democrats staged their fall party, the candidates vied to attract attention. Elizabeth Warren probably won when she …
Tossed 19-page copies of her health care plan from a helicopter and accidentally knocked out a senior citizen.
Arrived with a 25-foot inflatable balloon version of her golden retriever, Bailey.
Single-handedly ate a butter cow sculpture left over from the state fair.
If elected, Cory Booker would be the first president who’s …
Dating the star of a vampire movie.
A vegan.
Opposed to butter sculptures.
More on NYTimes.com |
See full results and maps from the Georgia election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-georgia-house-district-14.html | See full results and maps from the Georgia election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Georgia Election Results: 14th Congressional District
State Results
Disabling auto-updates may improve reliability when using a screen reader or keyboard to navigate.
Georgia Election Results: 14th Congressional District
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Georgia.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Greene
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
100% of counties (12 of 12) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
President Trump headlined the fourth and final night of the Republican convention. Our correspondents followed every revelation and provided live analysis and insights. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/08/27/us/politics/live-rnc-stream-analysis.html | President Trump headlined the fourth and final night of the Republican convention. Our correspondents followed every revelation and provided live analysis and insights. | Full Analysis: Final Night of the Republican National Convention
Aug 27, 2020
Full Analysis: Final Night of the Republican National Convention
President Trump headlined the fourth and final night of the Republican convention. Our correspondents followed every revelation and provided live analysis and insights.
Katherine Wu
Science Reporter
It really is quite the soundtrack tonight.
John Eligon
Domestic Correspondent
Who is this singing?
Elaina Plott
National Political Reporter
From Jeff Buckley to Lee Greenwood to this
Elaina Plott
National Political Reporter
The finale feels to me like a musical equivalent of Cheesecake Factory decor. It can’t decide what it wants to be.
Mike Isaac
Domestic Correspondent
Surreal finale.
Katie Glueck
National Politics Reporter
As we discussed earlier, there were a number of speakers whose remarks appeared designed to make moderates feel more comfortable with a decision to support Trump. But ultimately, many strategists in both parties believe this will ultimately come down to a referendum on the man himself.
Lisa Lerer
Host, “On Politics” Newsletter
Is this an operatic version of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah?
Nicholas Fandos
Congressional Correspondent
A second rendition?
Peter Baker
White House Correspondent
Chris Wallace noted that there were fireworks on the Mall but not in the speech.
Nicholas Fandos
Congressional Correspondent
I will point out it is nearing midnight here on the East Coast.
Lisa Lerer
Host, “On Politics” Newsletter
OK, on that note (see what I did there?) final thoughts?
Alan Rappeport
Economic Policy Reporter
Lisa, on the economy, Trump essentially vowed more or the same of his pre-pandemic policies to dig the U.S. out of recession and offered a caricature of Biden’s record. In general, Trump did not try to paint himself as a president for all Americans, as Biden did. Instead, he reaffirmed his view that anyone who opposes him lacks patriotism. Hyperpartisanship is what Trump sees as his path to another victory.
Nicholas Fandos
Congressional Correspondent
Oh my, here is Ave Maria.
Katherine Wu
Science Reporter
Seriously, who is DJing this show?
Peter Baker
White House Correspondent
Um, where’s the John Philips Sousa?
Katie Glueck
National Politics Reporter
This soundtrack is quite something! My big questions coming out of this are, how many wavering Republicans/center-right voters now decide to come “home” to the G.O.P., and which of the many arguments we saw laid out against Biden stick?
Katherine Wu
Science Reporter
Reflecting on the convention as a whole, perhaps the most common reference to the pandemic was a repetitive, accusatory condemnation of China foisting the coronavirus upon the rest of the world, with little attention paid to the virus’s rampage across the United States since it entered the country.
Mike Isaac
Domestic Correspondent
Just from my perspective, there was not a lot on tech specifically. Perhaps because it isn’t a core issue that either side is stumping on. I still imagine we’ll hear about conservatives being unfairly censored across social channels like Facebook and Twitter in the weeks ahead — a familiar refrain.
Lisa Lerer
Host, “On Politics” Newsletter
I’m tired guys. It’s late. And I’m calling it.
For the strong, the political junkies and the heavily caffeinated still with us, thanks for joining us tonight. And be sure to check out all our coverage of the convention onnytimes.com. We’ll have recaps, wrap-ups and tons of great reporting about what’s next for this most extraordinary of elections.
John Eligon
Domestic Correspondent
See you all in November! |
At least 62 members of the 117th Congress have reported positive coronavirus tests, many of them in recent weeks. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/01/13/us/congressional-members-with-coronavirus.html | At least 62 members of the 117th Congress have reported positive coronavirus tests, many of them in recent weeks. | Covid-19Guidance
Which Members of Congress Have Tested Positive for the Coronavirus
ByJohn KeefeUpdatedFeb. 8, 2021
At least 66 members of the 117th Congress — more than one in nine— have tested positive for the coronavirus or are believed to have had Covid-19 at some point since the pandemic began. The list includes 45 Republicans and 21 Democrats.
Those members include Representative Ron Wright, Republican of Texas, who had tested positive and died on Sunday. He had also been undergoing treatment for cancer.
The overall infection rate of the current Congress surpasses the national known infection rate of 8 percent, though many more cases have likely gone undetected in the general population.
Known Infections in the Senate and House
U.S. Senate
U.S. House of Representatives
Included is former senator Kelly Loeffler, Republican of Georgia, who tested positive and then negative in November and was a member of the 117th Congress before losing a runoff election in January. Also included is former Louisiana representative Cedric L. Richmond, a Democrat, who tested positive in December and later left Congress to join the Biden administration. Not included is Luke Letlow, a Republican who was elected in November to represent Louisiana's Fifth Congressional District but died of the illness before his term began.
Below is the list of members who have reported testing positive for the coronavirus at various points in the pandemic, with the most recent reports first:
The Latest
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. Stephen F. Lynch
Massachusetts
Jan. 29, 2021
Rep. Lori Trahan
Massachusetts
Jan. 28, 2021
Rep. Ron Wright
Texas
Jan. 21, 2021
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. Stephen F. Lynch, Mass.
1/29/2021
Rep. Lori Trahan, Mass.
1/28/2021
Rep. Ron Wright, Texas
1/21/2021
After the Capitol Attack
Eight members tested positive in the two weeksfollowing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, when many members were holed up in a secure location together and some refused to wear masks, angering several Democrats,includingRepresentative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, who later tested positive. Congress’s attending physician said it was possible members were exposed while sheltering from the siege and recommended they get tested.
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. Raul Ruiz
California
Jan. 19, 2021
Rep. J. Luis Correa
California
Jan. 15, 2021
Rep. Adriano Espaillat
New York
Jan. 14, 2021
Rep. Brad Schneider
Illinois
Jan. 12, 2021
Rep. Pramila Jayapal
Washington
Jan. 12, 2021
Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman
New Jersey
Jan. 11, 2021
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann
Tennessee
Jan. 10, 2021
Rep. Jake LaTurner
Kansas
Jan. 6, 2021
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. Raul Ruiz, Calif.
1/19/2021
Rep. J. Luis Correa, Calif.
1/15/2021
Rep. Adriano Espaillat, N.Y.
1/14/2021
Rep. Brad Schneider, Ill.
1/12/2021
Rep. Pramila Jayapal, Wash.
1/12/2021
Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, N.J.
1/11/2021
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, Tenn.
1/10/2021
Rep. Jake LaTurner, Kan.
1/6/2021
Representative Jake LaTurner, Republican of Kansas, received positive test results Jan. 6, after the attack on the Capitol that day.
Representative Gus Bilirakis of Florida and Representative Michelle Steel of California, both Republicans, were absent from the House floor when the mob entered the Capitol because they had both received positive coronavirus test results earlier that morning.
First Week on the Job
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. Gus Bilirakis
Florida
Jan. 6, 2021
Rep. Michelle Steel
California
Jan. 6, 2021
Rep. Kevin Brady
Texas
Jan. 5, 2021
Rep. Kay Granger
Texas
Jan. 4, 2021
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. Gus Bilirakis, Fla.
1/6/2021
Rep. Michelle Steel, Calif.
1/6/2021
Rep. Kevin Brady, Texas
1/5/2021
Rep. Kay Granger, Texas
1/4/2021
Following the Election
Most members who have tested positive have done so since the election in November, when coronavirus cases began to surge across the country.
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. David Valadao
California
Dec. 31, 2020
Rep. María Elvira Salazar
Florida
Dec. 31, 2020
Rep. Gwen Moore
Wisconsin
Dec. 28, 2020
Rep. Rick Larsen
Washington
Dec. 22, 2020
Rep. Mike D. Rogers
Alabama
Dec. 17, 2020
Rep. Cedric L. Richmond
Louisiana
Dec. 16, 2020
Rep. Joe Wilson
South Carolina
Dec. 16, 2020
Rep. Barry Loudermilk
Georgia
Dec. 15, 2020
Rep. Robert B. Aderholt
Alabama
Dec. 4, 2020
Rep. Ted Budd
North Carolina
Dec. 1, 2020
Rep. Austin Scott
Georgia
Nov. 30, 2020
Rep. Carlos Gimenez
Florida
Nov. 26, 2020
Rep. Susie Lee
Nevada
Nov. 25, 2020
Rep. Rick W. Allen
Georgia
Nov. 24, 2020
Rep. Joe Courtney
Connecticut
Nov. 22, 2020
Rep. Bryan Steil
Wisconsin
Nov. 22, 2020
Sen. Kelly Loeffler
Georgia
Nov. 20, 2020
Sen. Rick Scott
Florida
Nov. 20, 2020
Rep. Doug Lamborn
Colorado
Nov. 18, 2020
Rep. Dan Newhouse
Washington
Nov. 17, 2020
Rep. Ed Perlmutter
Colorado
Nov. 17, 2020
Sen. Charles E. Grassley
Iowa
Nov. 17, 2020
Rep. Cheri Bustos
Illinois
Nov. 16, 2020
Rep. Don Young
Alaska
Nov. 16, 2020
Rep. Tim Walberg
Michigan
Nov. 15, 2020
Rep. Ashley Hinson
Iowa
Nov. 11, 2020
Rep. Michael Waltz
Florida
Nov. 5, 2020
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. David Valadao, Calif.
12/31/2020
Rep. María Elvira Salazar, Fla.
12/31/2020
Rep. Gwen Moore, Wis.
12/28/2020
Rep. Rick Larsen, Wash.
12/22/2020
Rep. Mike D. Rogers, Ala.
12/17/2020
Rep. Cedric L. Richmond, La.
12/16/2020
Rep. Joe Wilson, S.C.
12/16/2020
Rep. Barry Loudermilk, Ga.
12/15/2020
Rep. Robert B. Aderholt, Ala.
12/4/2020
Rep. Ted Budd, N.C.
12/1/2020
Rep. Austin Scott, Ga.
11/30/2020
Rep. Carlos Gimenez, Fla.
11/26/2020
Rep. Susie Lee, Nev.
11/25/2020
Rep. Rick W. Allen, Ga.
11/24/2020
Rep. Joe Courtney, Conn.
11/22/2020
Rep. Bryan Steil, Wis.
11/22/2020
Sen. Kelly Loeffler, Ga.
11/20/2020
Sen. Rick Scott, Fla.
11/20/2020
Rep. Doug Lamborn, Colo.
11/18/2020
Rep. Dan Newhouse, Wash.
11/17/2020
Rep. Ed Perlmutter, Colo.
11/17/2020
Sen. Charles E. Grassley, Iowa
11/17/2020
Rep. Cheri Bustos, Ill.
11/16/2020
Rep. Don Young, Alaska
11/16/2020
Rep. Tim Walberg, Mich.
11/15/2020
Rep. Ashley Hinson, Iowa
11/11/2020
Rep. Michael Waltz, Fla.
11/5/2020
Over the Summer and Fall
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. Drew Ferguson
Georgia
Oct. 30, 2020
Rep. Bill Huizenga
Michigan
Oct. 14, 2020
Rep. Mike Bost
Illinois
Oct. 8, 2020
Rep. Salud Carbajal
California
Oct. 6, 2020
Sen. Ron Johnson
Wisconsin
Oct. 2, 2020
Sen. Mike Lee
Utah
Oct. 2, 2020
Sen. Thom Tillis
North Carolina
Oct. 2, 2020
Rep. Jahana Hayes
Connecticut
Sept. 20, 2020
Rep. Jenniffer González-Colón
Puerto Rico
Aug. 25, 2020
Rep. Dan Meuser
Pennsylvania
Aug. 22, 2020
Sen. Bill Cassidy
Louisiana
Aug. 20, 2020
Rep. Rodney Davis
Illinois
Aug. 5, 2020
Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva
Arizona
Aug. 1, 2020
Rep. Louie Gohmert
Texas
July 29, 2020
Rep. Morgan Griffith
Virginia
July 14, 2020
Rep. Nancy Mace
South Carolina
June 23, 2020
Rep. Tom Rice
South Carolina
June 15, 2020
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. Drew Ferguson, Ga.
10/30/2020
Rep. Bill Huizenga, Mich.
10/14/2020
Rep. Mike Bost, Ill.
10/8/2020
Rep. Salud Carbajal, Calif.
10/6/2020
Sen. Ron Johnson, Wis.
10/2/2020
Sen. Mike Lee, Utah
10/2/2020
Sen. Thom Tillis, N.C.
10/2/2020
Rep. Jahana Hayes, Conn.
9/20/2020
Rep. Jenniffer González-Colón, P.R.
8/25/2020
Rep. Dan Meuser, Pa.
8/22/2020
Sen. Bill Cassidy, La.
8/20/2020
Rep. Rodney Davis, Ill.
8/5/2020
Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva, Ariz.
8/1/2020
Rep. Louie Gohmert, Texas
7/29/2020
Rep. Morgan Griffith, Va.
7/14/2020
Rep. Nancy Mace, S.C.
6/23/2020
Rep. Tom Rice, S.C.
6/15/2020
Early in the Pandemic
Dot
Name
State
Reported Positive
Rep. Neal Dunn
Florida
April 9, 2020
Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez
New York
March 30, 2020
Rep. Mike Kelly
Pennsylvania
March 27, 2020
Sen. Rand Paul
Kentucky
March 22, 2020
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart
Florida
March 18, 2020
Sen. Robert P. Casey, Jr.
Pennsylvania
March 2020
Sen. Tim Kaine
Virginia
March 2020
Dot
Name
Reported Positive
Rep. Neal Dunn, Fla.
4/9/2020
Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez, N.Y.
3/30/2020
Rep. Mike Kelly, Pa.
3/27/2020
Sen. Rand Paul, Ky.
3/22/2020
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, Fla.
3/18/2020
Sen. Robert P. Casey, Jr., Pa.
March 2020
Sen. Tim Kaine, Va.
March 2020
Sources: New York Times reporting, public statements, GovTrack.us, Ballotpedia
An earlier version of this article misspelled the surname of a senator from Virginia. He is Tim Kaine, not Kane.
An earlier version of this article displayed incorrect values for the number of positive test results among sitting members of Congress and sitting Democrats. The numbers included Representative Cedric L. Richmond, who left Congress on Jan. 15. |
I’ve worn my hair in the same exact style for six years. Learning to style it myself has brought some comfort of normalcy. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/05/16/magazine/covid-quarantine-hair-braids.html | I’ve worn my hair in the same exact style for six years. Learning to style it myself has brought some comfort of normalcy. | null |
Jérôme Salomon, a French health official, said on Monday that new daily infections were no longer decreasing and remain particularly high among people older than 75. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/world/europe/100000007491306/france-coronavirus-case-numbers.html | Jérôme Salomon, a French health official, said on Monday that new daily infections were no longer decreasing and remain particularly high among people older than 75. | new video loaded:France Infection Rate Above Target for Holiday Season
France Infection Rate Above Target for Holiday Season
Jérôme Salomon, a French health official, said on Monday that new daily infections were no longer decreasing and remain particularly high among people older than 75.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
In Bay Ridge, a new restaurant, Ayat, presents Palestinian family recipes alongside street food like shawarma. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/12/01/dining/palestinian-food-nyc-ayat.html | In Bay Ridge, a new restaurant, Ayat, presents Palestinian family recipes alongside street food like shawarma. | A Palestinian Feast in Brooklyn
Ayat, a new restaurant in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, specializes in Palestinian dishes such as mussakhan, center.
A Palestinian Feast in Brooklyn
In Bay Ridge, a new restaurant, Ayat, presents Palestinian family recipes alongside street food like shawarma.
Slideshow controls |
The virus has devastated residents and staff members in more than 23,000 long-term care facilities across the country. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/coronavirus-nursing-homes.html | The virus has devastated residents and staff members in more than 23,000 long-term care facilities across the country. | Covid-19Guidance
Nearly One-Third of U.S. Coronavirus Deaths Are Linked to Nursing Homes
ByThe New York TimesUpdatedJune 1, 2021
As of June 1, 2021, this page is no longer being updated with the latest data. Please visit theU.S. coronavirus pageto get the latest information about cases and deaths at the county level.
184,000+
1,383,000+
At least 184,000 coronavirus deaths have been reported among residents and employees of nursing homes and other long-term care facilities for older adults in the United States, according to a New York Times database. As of June 1, the virus has infected more than 1,383,000 people at some 32,000 facilities.
Nursing home populations are at a high risk of being infected by — and dying from — the coronavirus, according to theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention. Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, is known to be particularly lethal to adults in their 60s and older who have underlying health conditions. And it canspread more easilythrough congregate facilities, where many people live in a confined environment and workers move from room to room.
While 4 percent of the country’s cases have occurred in long-term care facilities, deaths related to Covid-19 in these facilities account for about 31 percent of the country’s pandemic fatalities. Deaths in long-term care facilities accounted for more than a third of all Covid-19 deaths in the United States for much of the pandemic — at one point, rising to about 43 percent of all coronavirus deaths — but this numberhas declinedsince the vaccination rollout began.
In 5 states, at least half of deaths are linked to nursing homes.
Share of state’s deaths linked to long-term care facilities
0
25
50
75
100%
Insufficient data
Cases and deaths in long-term care facilities, by state
The share of deaths linked to long-term care facilities for older adults is even starker at the state level. In 5 states, the number of residents and workers who have died accounts for either half or more than half of all deaths from the virus.
Infected people linked to nursing homes also die at a higher rate than the general population. The median case fatality rate — the number of deaths divided by the number of cases — at facilities with reliable data is 10 percent, significantly higher than the 2 percent case fatality rate nationwide.
Facility fatality rates are much higher than the national average
Number of long-term care facilities by case fatality rate
In the absence of comprehensive data from some states and the federal government, The Times has been assembling its own database of coronavirus cases and deaths at long-term care facilities for older adults. These include nursing homes, assisted-living facilities, memory care facilities, retirement and senior communities and rehabilitation facilities. Some states, including Colorado, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey and South Carolina, regularly release cumulative data on cases and deaths at specific facilities. Some provide some details on the number of cases at specific facilities — but not on deaths. And in New York, where Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s administration was accused ofcovering upthousands of nursing home deaths, state officials do not include staff cases or deaths in their reports. Other states report aggregate totals for their states but provide no information on where the infections or deaths have occurred. Some report very little or nothing at all.
The map and table below showing coronavirus cases at individual nursing homes were last updated as recently as Jan. 12, 2021.
There are at least 32,000 long-term care facilities with one or more coronavirus case
States that provide some facility data
States that provide no facility data
The Times’s numbers are based on official confirmations from states, counties and the facilities themselves, as well as some data provided by the federal government. They include residents and, in cases in which reporting is available, employees of the facilities. Given the wide variability in the type of information available, the totals shown here almost certainly represent an undercount of the true toll.
The New York Times is tracking the coronavirus at nursing homes and long-term care centers. Do you or a family member live or work in one of these facilities? If so,we would like to hear from you.
Here is a list of cases and deaths at long-term care facilities that have had at least 50 cases.
Cases and deaths, by facility
Tracking the Coronavirus
United States
Latest Maps and Data
Vaccinations
Your Places
Your County’s Risk
States Reopening
Nursing Homes
Hospitals Near You
Deaths Above Normal
Colleges and Universities
World
Latest Maps and Data
Global Vaccinations
Deaths Above Normal
Health
Vaccines
Treatments
Countries
States, Territories and Cities
Data
Long-term care data is as of June 1. The New York Times's data is based on confirmed reports from federal, state and local government sources, as well as facilities themselves, and may lag. The data may not match the numbers reported by any one federal, state or local agency. The federal government, states, counties and facilities report different portions of long-term care data, so exercise caution when comparing facilities or aggregated data in different states. The federal government and states frequently revise their long-term care data up and down, for a variety of reasons.
By Matthew Conlen, Danielle Ivory, Karen Yourish, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Adeel Hassan, Julia Calderone, Mitch Smith, Jon Huang, Alex Lemonides, Jordan Allen, Samone Blair, Brillian Bao, Maddie Burakoff, Sarah Cahalan, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brandon Dupré, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Grace Gorenflo, Lauryn Higgins, Jake Holland, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Ashlyn O’Hara, Miles McKinley, Lauren Messman, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Cierra S. Queen, Thomas Rivas, Alison Saldanha, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Sarena Snider, Alex Traub, Brandon Thorp, Alyssa Burr, Chloe Reynolds, Natasha Rodriguez, Kristine White, Benjamin Guggenheim, Tiffany Wong, Bonnie G. Wong, Jess Ruderman, Laney Pope, John Yoon, Alex Leeds Matthews and Barbara Harvey
An earlier version of this article misstated the formula for case fatality rate. It is the number of deaths divided by the number of cases, not the number of cases divided by the number of deaths.
An earlier version of this article transposed the national case fatality rate and the median case fatality rate in nursing homes. As of July 8, the national case fatality rate was 4 percent and the median case fatality rate in nursing homes was 17 percent, not the other way around. |
See full results and maps from the Texas election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-texas-house-district-25.html | See full results and maps from the Texas election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Texas Election Results: 25th Congressional District
State Results
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Texas Election Results: 25th Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Texas.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Williams
Oliver
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
100% of counties (13 of 13) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in the Napa area | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/napa-california-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in the Napa area | Covid-19Guidance
Napa County, California Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Napa County, Calif.: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Hospitals
Vaccinations
See more details ›
2% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
2% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Napa County
These are days with a reporting anomaly.
Read morehere.
Average cases per capita in Napa County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
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2022
About the data
In data for California, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data on Tuesdays and Fridays, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. The state released new data on all weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths in some counties.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
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By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for California, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state releases new data on Tuesdays and Fridays, though some counties may still report new data more frequently. The state released new data on all weekdays until April 2022. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths in some counties.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
During a news conference on Monday, President Trump set a deadline for the social media app TikTok to be sold to a U.S. company or risk being shut down. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007270771/trump-tiktok-shutdown-microsoft.html | During a news conference on Monday, President Trump set a deadline for the social media app TikTok to be sold to a U.S. company or risk being shut down. | new video loaded:TikTok Must Be Sold or Risk Being Shutdown, Trump Says
transcript
TikTok Must Be Sold or Risk Being Shutdown, Trump Says
During a news conference on Monday, President Trump set a deadline for the social media app TikTok to be sold to a U.S. company or risk being shut down.
He called me to see whether or not — how I felt about it. And I said, “Look it can’t be controlled for security reasons by China — too big, too invasive, and it can’t be. And here’s the deal: I don’t mind if — whether it’s Microsoft or somebody else, a big company, a secure company, a very, very American company buy it. It’s probably easier to buy the whole thing then to by 30 percent of it. I think buying 30 percent is complicated. And I suggested that he can go ahead. He can try, we set a date — I set a date of around Sept. 15, at which point it’s going to be out of business in the United States. But if somebody, and whether it’s Microsoft or somebody else buys it, that’ll be interesting. If you buy it, whatever the price is that goes to whoever owns it, because I guess it’s China essentially. But more than anything else, I said a very substantial portion of that price is going to have to come into the treasury of the United States because we’re making it possible for this deal to happen.
TikTok Must Be Sold or Risk Being Shutdown, Trump Says
During a news conference on Monday, President Trump set a deadline for the social media app TikTok to be sold to a U.S. company or risk being shut down.
U.S.
Recent Episodes
‘Look at That Thing’: Footage Shows Pilots Spotting Unknown Object
Why U.S. Weapons Sold to the Saudis Are Hitting Hospitals in Yemen
Biden and Harris Greet Americans Released From Russia
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Russian Plane Lands in Turkey Amid Prisoner Swap
Flood in Vermont Destroys Homes
Rate Cut ‘Could Be on the Table’ at Next Fed Meeting, Powell Says
Biden Calls for Supreme Court Reforms
Wildfires Spread in Northern California and Western Canada
Wildfires Burn Across Western Canada
Biden Says It’s Time to ‘Pass the Torch’ to a New Generation
Smoke Fills Terminal at Kennedy Airport
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Humpback Whale Causes Boat to Capsize Near New Hampshire
Harris Holds First Rally as the Likely Democratic Nominee
Transportation Department to Investigate Delta Air Lines
Harris Uses Popular Beyoncé Song During First Campaign Event
Kamala Harris Speaks at First Campaign Event
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Wildfires Burn More Than 620,000 Acres in Oregon and Washington
Fire Engulfs Landmark Church in Downtown Dallas
Tech Outage Disrupts Flights and Businesses Worldwide
Trump Accepts the Republican Nomination
Hulk Hogan Rips Shirt Off During R.N.C. Speech
1:08
‘Look at That Thing’: Footage Shows Pilots Spotting Unknown Object
10:45
Why U.S. Weapons Sold to the Saudis Are Hitting Hospitals in Yemen
0:48
Biden and Harris Greet Americans Released From Russia
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
0:20
Russian Plane Lands in Turkey Amid Prisoner Swap
0:36
Flood in Vermont Destroys Homes
0:39
Rate Cut ‘Could Be on the Table’ at Next Fed Meeting, Powell Says
0:56
Biden Calls for Supreme Court Reforms
0:40
Wildfires Spread in Northern California and Western Canada
0:32
Wildfires Burn Across Western Canada
1:56
Biden Says It’s Time to ‘Pass the Torch’ to a New Generation
0:32
Smoke Fills Terminal at Kennedy Airport |
An Art Deco condominium in Miami Beach, Fla.; an 1802 village house in Wiscasset, Maine; and a two-story cottage in Charlottesville, Va. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/03/11/realestate/what-you-get-for-300000.html | An Art Deco condominium in Miami Beach, Fla.; an 1802 village house in Wiscasset, Maine; and a two-story cottage in Charlottesville, Va. | What You Get for $300,000
A one-bedroom, one-bathroom condo in the South Beach district of Miami Beach is on the market for $299,000.
What You Get for $300,000
An Art Deco condominium in Miami Beach, Fla.; an 1802 village house in Wiscasset, Maine; and a two-story cottage in Charlottesville, Va.
Slideshow controls |
See full results and maps from the Kentucky election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-kentucky-house-district-5.html | See full results and maps from the Kentucky election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Kentucky Election Results: Fifth Congressional District
State Results
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Kentucky Election Results: Fifth Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Kentucky.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Rogers
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
37% of counties (11 of 30) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Kentucky election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-kentucky-house-district-3.html | See full results and maps from the Kentucky election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Kentucky Election Results: Third Congressional District
State Results
Disabling auto-updates may improve reliability when using a screen reader or keyboard to navigate.
Kentucky Election Results: Third Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Kentucky.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Yarmuth
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
0% of counties (0 of 1) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
We use them to grip, to hold, to guide. A photo essay in honor of the American worker. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/09/06/opinion/inequality-worker-hand-photos.html | We use them to grip, to hold, to guide. A photo essay in honor of the American worker. | Can a Person's Hands Reveal Their Job?
ByBinyamin Appelbaumandphotographs by Damon WinterSept. 6, 2020
Helen Keller was a careful student of hands.Blind and deaf, she apprehended the world through her hands, and she took the measure of other people through their hands. She read in hands what others read in faces.
Mark Twain’s hand,she wrote in 1905, “is full of whimsies and the drollest humors.” Other hands were more surprising: “A bishop with a jocose hand; a humorist with a hand of leaden gravity; a man of pretentious valor with a timorous hand.”
Indeed, Keller said hands were more honest than faces: We may compose our faces, but our hands speak open and unconscious truths. Keller could feel the differences others see, as between the soft, lacquer-tipped hands of a banker and the rough, oil-stained hands of a mechanic. But she found deeper manifestations of character in the movement of hands. “I have clasped the hands of some rich people that spin not and toil not, and yet are not beautiful,” she wrote. “Beneath their soft, smooth roundness what a chaos of undeveloped character.” Hands were windows on the soul.
The hands here tell the stories of American workers. We see both commonality and diversity. Everyone works with their hands, and their hands testify to the nature of their labors.
Valerie Wilsonis a registered nurse and clinical coordinator at Cayuga Medical Center in Ithaca, N.Y., where she has worked for 21 years.See More
Valerie Wilson
Nurse,21 years
Valerie Wilsonis a registered nurse and clinical coordinator at Cayuga Medical Center in Ithaca, N.Y., where she has worked for 21 years.
Vasily Livitskiyhas worked finishing furniture at the Stickley furniture factory in Manlius, N.Y., for 27 years.
Vasily Livitskiy
Furniture finisher,27 years
Vasily Livitskiyhas worked finishing furniture at the Stickley furniture factory in Manlius, N.Y., for 27 years.
Lisa Heidelbergis the head chef for a personal chef and catering service that she has owned and operated for almost six years. Ms. Heidelberg has been cooking for her family as a single mother for over 20 years.See More
Lisa Heidelberg
Chef,6 years
Lisa Heidelbergis the head chef for a personal chef and catering service that she has owned and operated for almost six years. Ms. Heidelberg has been cooking for her family as a single mother for over 20 years.
James Russellhas been working at an Amazon distribution center as a trainer/specialist and industrial vehicle operator for three months. He has operated industrial equipment such as forklifts for the past 15 years, most recently for DHL and The Limited.See More
James Russell
Equipment operator,15 years
James Russellhas been working at an Amazon distribution center as a trainer/specialist and industrial vehicle operator for three months. He has operated industrial equipment such as forklifts for the past 15 years, most recently for DHL and The Limited.
Craig Odellhas owned and operated Total Auto Care in Homer, N.Y., for 45 years. He does much of the mechanical work himself.See More
Craig Odell
Auto mechanic,45 years
Craig Odellhas owned and operated Total Auto Care in Homer, N.Y., for 45 years. He does much of the mechanical work himself.
Maria Buckhas been working as a housekeeper at the Holiday Inn in Binghamton, N.Y., for three years.
Maria Buck
Housekeeper,3 years
Maria Buckhas been working as a housekeeper at the Holiday Inn in Binghamton, N.Y., for three years.
Justine Bakerhas been in banking for 22 years and recently began working as vice president of Ohio State Bank, a new financial institution in Ohio.See More
Justine Baker
Banker,22 years
Justine Bakerhas been in banking for 22 years and recently began working as vice president of Ohio State Bank, a new financial institution in Ohio.
Quhan Knightwas in his first year at Pittsburgh Technical College studying design when his school closed because of the pandemic. He has transferred to the Erie Institute of Technology and is starting his own business doing graphic design, music videos and photography.See More
Quhan Knight
Designer and student,1 year
Quhan Knightwas in his first year at Pittsburgh Technical College studying design when his school closed because of the pandemic. He has transferred to the Erie Institute of Technology and is starting his own business doing graphic design, music videos and photography.
Devon Luomahas been working at the Cargill Salt Mine in Lansing, N.Y., for four years. He is on the crew that maintains the mine shafts, including a nearly 100-year-old timber-supported shaft.
Devon Luoma
Salt miner,4 years
Devon Luomahas been working at the Cargill Salt Mine in Lansing, N.Y., for four years. He is on the crew that maintains the mine shafts, including a nearly 100-year-old timber-supported shaft.
Ron Salazarreceived fourth-degree burns on his right hand, chest and leg in an accident while cleaning a coke oven door at the U.S. Steel plant in Clairton, Ohio, in 2017. He has gone through several rounds of surgery and has been on disability for over three years. Mr. Salazar worked for U.S. Steel for 11 years.
Ron Salazar
Steelworker,11 years
Ron Salazarreceived fourth-degree burns on his right hand, chest and leg in an accident while cleaning a coke oven door at the U.S. Steel plant in Clairton, Ohio, in 2017. He has gone through several rounds of surgery and has been on disability for over three years. Mr. Salazar worked for U.S. Steel for 11 years.
Robert Mitchell Jr.worked at the General Electric factory in Erie, Pa., for five years before he was laid off. He worked as a casino slot machine technician and then a car wash maintenance technician. He fell and injured his ankle and has been on disability for over a year.See More
Robert Mitchell Jr.
Technician,5 years
Robert Mitchell Jr.worked at the General Electric factory in Erie, Pa., for five years before he was laid off. He worked as a casino slot machine technician and then a car wash maintenance technician. He fell and injured his ankle and has been on disability for over a year.
Onna Jean Votrahas worked as a bus driver for the Homer Central School District in New York for 14 years. She has also run a custom embroidery business.
Onna Jean Votra
School bus driver,14 years
Onna Jean Votrahas worked as a bus driver for the Homer Central School District in New York for 14 years. She has also run a custom embroidery business.
Resean Hueshas been working for two years as a painter with Flatiron Management in Ithaca, N.Y. He has been painting since he was 15 years old.
Resean Hues
Painter,36 years
Resean Hueshas been working for two years as a painter with Flatiron Management in Ithaca, N.Y. He has been painting since he was 15 years old.
Musa Petersonhas been cutting hair for 47 years. He recently started working at Supreme Cuts in Ithaca, N.Y.
Musa Peterson
Barber,47 years
Musa Petersonhas been cutting hair for 47 years. He recently started working at Supreme Cuts in Ithaca, N.Y.
Larry Brannonbought the Owasco Meat Company in Moravia, N.Y., in 1974 when he was 26 years old after graduating from Cornell University’s agriculture school. He has been packing meat there for 46 years. Mr. Brannon handles retail meat packing as well as slaughter and processing services for area farms.See More
Larry Brannon
Meatpacker,46 years
Larry Brannonbought the Owasco Meat Company in Moravia, N.Y., in 1974 when he was 26 years old after graduating from Cornell University’s agriculture school. He has been packing meat there for 46 years. Mr. Brannon handles retail meat packing as well as slaughter and processing services for area farms.
Mikel-Bryan Ottis unemployed. He was in his freshman year at Gannon University, studying accounting and sports management, when the pandemic closed the university.See More
Mikel-Bryan Ott
Unemployed,1 year
Mikel-Bryan Ottis unemployed. He was in his freshman year at Gannon University, studying accounting and sports management, when the pandemic closed the university.
Jeffrey Madisonhas worked for 20 years for Remington Arms, a gun manufacturer in Ilion, N.Y. He started as a machinist and has worked for the past 13 years as a toolmaker, making the fixtures and gauges used in the manufacturing of intricate parts.
Jeffrey Madison
Gun toolmaker,13 years
Jeffrey Madisonhas worked for 20 years for Remington Arms, a gun manufacturer in Ilion, N.Y. He started as a machinist and has worked for the past 13 years as a toolmaker, making the fixtures and gauges used in the manufacturing of intricate parts.
Jason Wileyhas been a member of the Indiana/Kentucky/Ohio Regional Council of Carpenters for 21 years and has been pouring concrete since he was 13 years old. He teaches concrete form construction at a training center in Columbus, Ohio.See More
Jason Wiley
Carpenter,21 years
Jason Wileyhas been a member of the Indiana/Kentucky/Ohio Regional Council of Carpenters for 21 years and has been pouring concrete since he was 13 years old. He teaches concrete form construction at a training center in Columbus, Ohio.
Mike Kentis the knife and tool sharpener at River’s Edge Cutlery in Hilliard, Ohio, which he has owned and operated for 17 years.See More
Mike Kent
Sharpener,17 years
Mike Kentis the knife and tool sharpener at River’s Edge Cutlery in Hilliard, Ohio, which he has owned and operated for 17 years.
Chuck Burgesshas worked as a coal miner for 27 years, doing almost every job at the mine over the years. He currently works as a mechanic for Cumberland Coal Resources in western Pennsylvania, his employer of 11 years.See More
Chuck Burgess
Coal miner,27 years
Chuck Burgesshas worked as a coal miner for 27 years, doing almost every job at the mine over the years. He currently works as a mechanic for Cumberland Coal Resources in western Pennsylvania, his employer of 11 years.
Fredy Velasquezhas been working as a farmhand at Fouts Farm, a dairy farm in Cortland, N.Y., for nine years.See More
Fredy Velasquez
Farmhand,9 years
Fredy Velasquezhas been working as a farmhand at Fouts Farm, a dairy farm in Cortland, N.Y., for nine years.
Paul Foutsis the third-generation owner and operator of Fouts Farm, a dairy farm in Cortland, N.Y. He joined a partnership with his parents as a co-owner in 1995.See More
Paul Fouts
Farm owner,25 years
Paul Foutsis the third-generation owner and operator of Fouts Farm, a dairy farm in Cortland, N.Y. He joined a partnership with his parents as a co-owner in 1995.
Donte Allenhas worked as a courier and assistant manager with Fedex for the past 15 years. In normal times he works three other jobs: as an English teacher at a Chinese school, a charcuterie chef at a farm-to-table restaurant and a logistics manager at a Japanese electronics company.See More
Donte Allen
Courier,15 years
Donte Allenhas worked as a courier and assistant manager with Fedex for the past 15 years. In normal times he works three other jobs: as an English teacher at a Chinese school, a charcuterie chef at a farm-to-table restaurant and a logistics manager at a Japanese electronics company.
Purba Majumderhas been a software professional for 25 years and has been the president of Cybervation Inc., a software development, I.T. and medical staffing company, for 10 years. She is the founder of CoolTechGirls, a nonprofit that encourages girls to pursue interests and careers in science, technology, engineering and math.See More
Purba Majumder
Software professional,25 years
Purba Majumderhas been a software professional for 25 years and has been the president of Cybervation Inc., a software development, I.T. and medical staffing company, for 10 years. She is the founder of CoolTechGirls, a nonprofit that encourages girls to pursue interests and careers in science, technology, engineering and math.
Sarah Jones, a mother of four children, has been working as a licensed massage therapist at Rasa Spa in Ithaca, N.Y., for over four years.See More
Sarah Jones
Massage therapist,4 years
Sarah Jones, a mother of four children, has been working as a licensed massage therapist at Rasa Spa in Ithaca, N.Y., for over four years.
Josh Warrenis in the first year of his four-year carpenter apprenticeship through the Indiana/Kentucky/Ohio Regional Council of Carpenters. Mr. Warren entered the program straight out of high school and specializes in concrete form construction.See More
Josh Warren
Apprentice carpenter,1 year
Josh Warrenis in the first year of his four-year carpenter apprenticeship through the Indiana/Kentucky/Ohio Regional Council of Carpenters. Mr. Warren entered the program straight out of high school and specializes in concrete form construction.
Thao Ly Phamhas been working as a cosmetologist for 16 years and currently works at a nail salon in Canandaigua, N.Y. She also travels around the country teaching nail care techniques.See More
Thao Ly Pham
Cosmetologist,16 years
Thao Ly Phamhas been working as a cosmetologist for 16 years and currently works at a nail salon in Canandaigua, N.Y. She also travels around the country teaching nail care techniques.
Damon Winter is a staff photographer on assignment in Opinion.Designed and Developed by Eleni Agapis |
Britsh Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a new three-tiered coronavirus restriction system where areas will be subject to escalating levels of lockdown measures depending on the severity of outbreaks. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/world/europe/100000007391187/boris-johnson-tiered-cotronavirus-lockdown.html | Britsh Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a new three-tiered coronavirus restriction system where areas will be subject to escalating levels of lockdown measures depending on the severity of outbreaks. | new video loaded:Boris Johnson Announces Three-Tier Coronavirus Alert System
transcript
Boris Johnson Announces Three-Tier Coronavirus Alert System
Britsh Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a new three-tiered coronavirus restriction system where areas will be subject to escalating levels of lockdown measures depending on the severity of outbreaks.
We’re entering a new and crucial phase in our fight against coronavirus because the number of cases has gone up four times in four weeks, and it’s once again spreading among the elderly and vulnerable. There are already more Covid patients in U.K. hospitals today than there were on the 23rd of March, when the whole country went into lockdown and deaths, alas, are also rising once again. So we can squash this virus wherever it appears, we are today simplifying, standardizing, and in some places, toughening local rules in England by introducing three levels of Covid alert. Medium, with existing national measures, such as the Rule of 6 and the closure of hospitality at 10 p.m. High, with extra measures, including a ban on indoor social mixing between households or support bubbles. And Very High, for places where without further action, the N.H.S. will swiftly be under intolerable pressure. Areas within the Very High Alert category will be reviewed every four weeks, and nowhere will be shut down indefinitely. At a minimum, they will sadly include a ban on all social mixing between households in private places, including gardens. And pubs and bars must close, unless they can operate solely as a restaurant serving alcohol only as part of a main meal. We will also ask people not to travel into and out of Very High Alert-level areas.
Boris Johnson Announces Three-Tier Coronavirus Alert System
Britsh Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a new three-tiered coronavirus restriction system where areas will be subject to escalating levels of lockdown measures depending on the severity of outbreaks.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
3:28
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
See full results and maps from the New York election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-new-york-house-district-6.html | See full results and maps from the New York election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
New York Election Results: Sixth Congressional District
State Results
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New York Election Results: Sixth Congressional District
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Results by county
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Leader
Meng
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
0% of counties (0 of 1) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
If you live in a region where the leaves are beginning to turn and the days are getting crisp, it’s time to start preparing your house for cooler weather. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/09/18/smarter-living/home-preparations-winter.html | If you live in a region where the leaves are beginning to turn and the days are getting crisp, it’s time to start preparing your house for cooler weather. | How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
ByRonda KaysenSept. 18, 2020
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
If you live in a region where the leaves are beginning to turn and the days are getting crisp, it’s time to start preparing your house for cooler weather.Here’s how →
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Plant for spring.
It’s a great time to plant perennials, like peonies or hydrangea, or new trees and shrubs. You can also plant bulbs such as tulips and daffodils before the ground freezes to be rewarded with beautiful blooms come spring.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Clear (most of) the leaves.
A thick bed of leaves on top of your grass could smother your lawn and lead to mold growth.
But a light layer under your shrubs and trees provides a natural mulch, which protects the roots through the winter.
Know that there are alternatives to raking. Researchers at Michigan State University have found that simply mowing over leaves once a week breaks them down enough for most lawns.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Clean your gutters.
Once the majority of the leaves fall, call your gutter company to get those gutters cleaned and inspected. (The bravest can do this themselves). Any repairs should happen before winter sets in.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Prep your heating and air conditioning.
Window A.C. units can stay in year-round if they are sealed with no gaps. Cover the inside and the outside of the appliance to protect them from the elements and prevent drafts.
Get your central air, furnace and ductwork serviced. Replace air filters as necessary. Make sure heating vents are open.
Boilers and radiators can be checked by a plumber.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Protect outside pipes against freezing.
Drain and shut off your outdoor faucets. Roll all hoses and store them for winter.
If you have underground sprinklers, shut and drain your system to protect it from harsh weather.
Now is also the time to accept the fact that pool season is over. Clean, close and cover your pool, or call your pool maintenance company to do the job for you.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Keep the heat in.
Walk around your home and check the windows and doors for drafts. Caulk door and window frames where necessary.
How to Get Your Home Ready for the Change in Seasons
Do a safety check.
If you did not get your chimney cleaned and inspected in the spring, call a chimney sweep before you start using your fireplace or your furnace.
Change the batteries in your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors.
Have your dryer vent inspected and cleaned annually. Clothes dryers cause 2,900 fires a year — many in the fall and winter — according to the U. S. Fire Administration.
Learn more aboutkeeping your home properly maintained. |
At Wednesday night’s debate, Senator Kamala Harris called President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus a cover-up and said he should have acted earlier. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/elections/100000007383951/debate-kamala-trump-coronavirus.html | At Wednesday night’s debate, Senator Kamala Harris called President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus a cover-up and said he should have acted earlier. | new video loaded:‘Greatest Failure,’ Harris Calls Trump’s Coronavirus Response
transcript
‘Greatest Failure,’ Harris Calls Trump’s Coronavirus Response
At Wednesday night’s debate, Senator Kamala Harris called President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus a cover-up and said he should have acted earlier.
Well, the American people have witnessed what is the greatest failure of any presidential administration in the history of our country. And here are the facts: 210,000 dead people in our country in just the last several months. Over 7 million people who have contracted this disease. One in five businesses closed. We’re looking at frontline workers who have been treated like sacrificial workers. We are looking at over 30 million people who in the last several months had to file for unemployment. And here’s the thing: On Jan. 28, the vice president and the president were informed about the nature of this pandemic. They were informed that it’s lethal in consequence, that it is airborne, that it will affect young people, and that it would be contracted because it is airborne. And they knew what was happening and they didn’t tell you. Can you imagine if you knew on Jan. 28 as opposed to March 13 what they knew, what you might have done to prepare? They knew and they covered it up.
‘Greatest Failure,’ Harris Calls Trump’s Coronavirus Response
At Wednesday night’s debate, Senator Kamala Harris called President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus a cover-up and said he should have acted earlier.
2020 Elections
Recent Episodes
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says
Trump’s Lawyers Were ‘Disorganized,’ Senator Cassidy Says
Highlights From Day 1 of Trump Impeachment Trial
Trump Lawyer Unsuccessfully Disputes Constitutionality of Impeachment
‘This Cannot Be the Future of America,’ Raskin Says
Buttigieg Is Sworn In as Transportation Secretary
Kamala Harris Celebrated In India
Biden Swears In Appointees in Virtual Ceremony
Kamala Harris Swears In New Democratic Senators
The Poet Amanda Gorman Says America Can Be the ‘Light’ It Needs
‘Democracy Has Prevailed’: Biden Calls for National Unity
Jennifer Lopez Sings at Biden Inauguration
The Trumps Arrive in Florida
1:53
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
1:21
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
2:19
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
0:40
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
1:06
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
2:52
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
1:06
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
1:06
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
1:32
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
8:54
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
0:45
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
1:19
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Washington County, Alabama | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/washington-alabama-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Washington County, Alabama | Covid-19Guidance
Washington County, Alabama Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Washington County, Ala.: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Hospitals
Vaccinations
See more details ›
8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Washington County
Average cases per capita in Washington County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
2021
2022
About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
Tracking the Coronavirus
United States
Latest Maps and Data
Vaccinations
Your Places
Hospitals Near You
World
Global Vaccinations
Previous Projects
Latest Maps and Data
Vaccines
Treatments
Mask Mandates
Your County’s Risk
Nursing Homes
Colleges and Universities
Deaths Above Normal
Deaths Above Normal
Early Coronavirus Outbreaks
Countries
States, Territories and Cities
Data
Credits
By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Lowndes County, Alabama | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/lowndes-alabama-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Lowndes County, Alabama | Covid-19Guidance
Lowndes County, Alabama Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Lowndes County, Ala.: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Hospitals
Vaccinations
See more details ›
8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
8% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Lowndes County
Average cases per capita in Lowndes County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
2021
2022
About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
Tracking the Coronavirus
United States
Latest Maps and Data
Vaccinations
Your Places
Hospitals Near You
World
Global Vaccinations
Previous Projects
Latest Maps and Data
Vaccines
Treatments
Mask Mandates
Your County’s Risk
Nursing Homes
Colleges and Universities
Deaths Above Normal
Deaths Above Normal
Early Coronavirus Outbreaks
Countries
States, Territories and Cities
Data
Credits
By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Alabama, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Until March 2022, the state typically released new data daily. During June 2021, the state released new data on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |
See full results and maps from the New Hampshire election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-new-hampshire-senate.html | See full results and maps from the New Hampshire election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
New Hampshire U.S. Senate Election Results
State Results
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New Hampshire U.S. Senate Election Results
Winner
Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat, wins re-election to the U.S. Senate in New Hampshire.
Race called by The Associated Press.
* Incumbent
Nearly all of the estimated vote total has been reported.
Results by town
Vote share
Leader
Shaheen
Messner
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
50% of counties (5 of 10) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
President Trump’s refusal to explicitly condemn white supremacy during the first presidential debate drew muted concern from some Republicans on Capitol Hill, while others defended his remarks. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/elections/100000007370557/republicans-trump-condemn-white-supremacy.html | President Trump’s refusal to explicitly condemn white supremacy during the first presidential debate drew muted concern from some Republicans on Capitol Hill, while others defended his remarks. | new video loaded:Republicans’ Mixed Reviews on Trump’s Refusal to Condemn White Supremacy
transcript
Republicans’ Mixed Reviews on Trump’s Refusal to Condemn White Supremacy
President Trump’s refusal to explicitly condemn white supremacy during the first presidential debate drew muted concern from some Republicans on Capitol Hill, while others defended his remarks.
Reporter: “Do you find that concerning, the president’s refusal last night during the debate, to condemn white supremacist groups?” “I think he misspoke in response to Chris Wallace’s comment. He was asking Chris what he wanted to say. I think he misspoke. I think he should correct it. If he doesn’t correct it, I guess he didn’t misspeak. Thank you.” Reporter: “He was asked about condemning white supremacy —” “He should have been very clear, and he should have made it very clear, that there is no room for people on the far-left or the far, far-right — when it comes to either antifa or these white supremacist groups. He should have been very clear.” Reporter: “So were you a little disturbed by that?” “Well, today I, like I said, I saw it afterwards. I was hoping for more clarity.” “You know, we didn’t get great clarity from the debate last night about the differences in vision for the future of this country, and I did think that that was unfortunate.”
Republicans’ Mixed Reviews on Trump’s Refusal to Condemn White Supremacy
President Trump’s refusal to explicitly condemn white supremacy during the first presidential debate drew muted concern from some Republicans on Capitol Hill, while others defended his remarks.
2020 Elections
Recent Episodes
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
Arizona Republican Leaders Criticize Election Audit
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says
Trump’s Lawyers Were ‘Disorganized,’ Senator Cassidy Says
Highlights From Day 1 of Trump Impeachment Trial
Trump Lawyer Unsuccessfully Disputes Constitutionality of Impeachment
‘This Cannot Be the Future of America,’ Raskin Says
Buttigieg Is Sworn In as Transportation Secretary
Kamala Harris Celebrated In India
Biden Swears In Appointees in Virtual Ceremony
Kamala Harris Swears In New Democratic Senators
The Poet Amanda Gorman Says America Can Be the ‘Light’ It Needs
‘Democracy Has Prevailed’: Biden Calls for National Unity
Jennifer Lopez Sings at Biden Inauguration
The Trumps Arrive in Florida
1:53
Biden Speaks to Black Voters in South Carolina
1:21
Fulton County D.A. Indicts Trump and 18 Others
2:19
Rusty Bowers Recalls Harassment After Rejecting 2020 Fraud Claims
0:40
Pence Rejects Trump’s Claim That He Could Overturn the Election
1:06
Biden Campaigns for Newsom in California
2:52
‘Telling the Truth Shouldn’t Be Hard’: Officers Testify About Jan. 6 Riot
1:06
Pence Says He May Never See Trump ‘Eye to Eye’ on Capitol Riot
1:06
Family of Fallen Officer Urges Senators to Back Jan. 6 Investigation
1:32
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8:54
‘We’ve Lost the Line!’: Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
0:45
CPAC Crowd Cheers Josh Hawley’s Vote Against Election Results
1:19
Donald Trump ‘Lit the Flame,’ Rep. Castro Says |
Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong turned out on Sunday for the largest march in weeks. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/world/asia/100000006864463/hong-kong-protests-video.html | Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong turned out on Sunday for the largest march in weeks. | new video loaded:Hundreds of Thousands March in Hong Kong
Hundreds of Thousands March in Hong Kong
Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong turned out on Sunday for the largest march in weeks.
Hong Kong Protests
Recent Episodes
Hong Kong Police Arrest Students Over ‘Advocating Terrorism’
Crowds Gather in Hong Kong to Remember Tiananmen Massacre
Hong Kong Court Charges 47 Pro-Democracy Activists
‘A Clear and Serious Violation,’ Top British Diplomat Says of China
‘We Have to Act Out Our Freedom’: Protesters Hit Streets in Hong Kong
Thousands in Hong Kong Defy Ban to Attend Tiananmen Vigil
Hong Kong Protesters Swarm Streets to Oppose China’s New Security Law
Hundreds of Thousands March in Hong Kong
Hong Kong Police Surround Protesters: ‘We Cannot Find a Way Out’
Hong Kong Protests Damage Office of China’s State-Run News Agency
‘I’m Worried That I Will Die:’ Hong Kong Protesters Write Final Goodbyes
‘It’s Unfortunate,’ Adam Silver Says of China’s Backlash Against N.B.A.
‘We Love China,’ James Harden Says After Houston General Manager’s Tweet Backing Hong Kong Protesters
More Unrest as Hong Kong Protesters Defy Mask Ban
Hong Kong Police Shot a Protester at Point-Blank Range. We Break Down What Happened.
Celebrations in Beijing, Violence in Hong Kong: 2 Very Different Scenes
Scenes of Violence in Hong Kong on China’s National Day
‘I Was Begging for Mercy’: How Undercover Officers in Hong Kong Launched a Bloody Crackdown
‘The Government Will Formally Withdraw the Bill,’ Hong Kong Leader Says
She’s a Protester, He’s a Police Officer: In Hong Kong, Spouses Spar Too
Chaos as Hong Kong Protesters Face Off With Police
‘We Shall Not Surrender,’ Says Hong Kong Activist After Arrest
Chinese Military Rotates New Troops Into Hong Kong
Tensions Rise at Hong Kong Protests
0:35
Hong Kong Police Arrest Students Over ‘Advocating Terrorism’
1:09
Crowds Gather in Hong Kong to Remember Tiananmen Massacre
0:59
Hong Kong Court Charges 47 Pro-Democracy Activists
1:28
‘A Clear and Serious Violation,’ Top British Diplomat Says of China
2:02
‘We Have to Act Out Our Freedom’: Protesters Hit Streets in Hong Kong
1:02
Thousands in Hong Kong Defy Ban to Attend Tiananmen Vigil
0:52
Hong Kong Protesters Swarm Streets to Oppose China’s New Security Law
NOW PLAYING
Hundreds of Thousands March in Hong Kong
1:41
Hong Kong Police Surround Protesters: ‘We Cannot Find a Way Out’
0:42
Hong Kong Protests Damage Office of China’s State-Run News Agency
3:09
‘I’m Worried That I Will Die:’ Hong Kong Protesters Write Final Goodbyes
1:02
‘It’s Unfortunate,’ Adam Silver Says of China’s Backlash Against N.B.A. |
Gov. Steve Bullock of Montana discussed the difficulty of getting access to coronavirus tests on a conference call with President Trump and other governors. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007062835/coronavirus-test-kits.html | Gov. Steve Bullock of Montana discussed the difficulty of getting access to coronavirus tests on a conference call with President Trump and other governors. | new video loaded:Listen to the Call: Bullock and Trump Discuss Testing
transcript
Listen to the Call: Bullock and Trump Discuss Testing
Gov. Steve Bullock of Montana discussed the difficulty of getting access to coronavirus tests on a conference call with President Trump and other governors.
“Literally, we are one day away if we don’t get test kits from the C.D.C. Then we wouldn’t be able to be tested in Montana. We have gone, time and time again, to the private side of this. The private market, in where the private market is telling us that it’s a national resource that are then taking our orders apart. Basically, we’re getting our orders canceled. And that’s for PPE. That’s for testing supplies. That’s for testing equipment. So, while we’re trying to do all the contact tracing, we don’t have adequate tests to necessarily do it. We don’t have the [inaudible] along the way, and we’re not finding markets to be able to do that. Along the way are private suppliers. So we do have to rely on a national chain of distribution or we’re not going to get it. But we are doing our best to try to do exactly that. Like, Gallatin County would be an example where we have almost half of our overall state’s — those are the positives. We’re trying to shift the supply to really isolate that and do the contact tracing, but we just don’t have enough supplies to even do the testing.” “Right. Tony, uh, you can answer it if you want, but I haven’t heard about testing in weeks. We’ve tested more now than any nation in the world. We’ve got these great tests, and we come out with another one tomorrow where, you know, it’s almost instantaneous testing. But I haven’t heard about testing being a problem.”
Listen to the Call: Bullock and Trump Discuss Testing
Gov. Steve Bullock of Montana discussed the difficulty of getting access to coronavirus tests on a conference call with President Trump and other governors.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Latest Updates
Recent Episodes
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions
Videos Show Heavy Police Presence in Response to Protests in China
Footage Shows Protests Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Protests Flare Across China Over Covid Restrictions
Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence
视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻
In-Person School Restarts in the Philippines After More Than 2 Years
Biden Ends Isolation After Testing Negative for Covid
Biden Says He’s on His Way to a ‘Full, Total Recovery’ from Covid
Biden Is ‘Doing Better,’ Says White House Official
President Biden Tests Positive for the Coronavirus
First American to Get Covid Vaccine Is Awarded Medal of Freedom
N.Y.C. Becomes First to Offer Paxlovid at Mobile Testing Sites
5:10
Low Pay, High Risk: Nursing Home Workers Confront Coronavirus Dilemma
5:05
‘Health Care Kamikazes’: How Spain’s Workers Are Battling Coronavirus, Unprotected
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She’s an Honors Student. And Homeless. Will the Virtual Classroom Reach Her?
5:32
‘People Are Dying’: 72 Hours Inside a N.Y.C. Hospital Battling Coronavirus
6:23
Coronavirus Has Hospitals in Desperate Need of Equipment. These Innovators Are Racing to Help.
3:38
As the Coronavirus Approaches, Mexico Looks the Other Way
4:38
‘Brace Yourself’: How Doctors in Italy Responded to Coronavirus
7:28
‘Everything Is Uncharted’: New Yorkers Confront Life Amid a Coronavirus Shutdown
3:33
How China Is Reshaping the Coronavirus Narrative
1:22
House Panel Holds Hearing on Covid Origins
0:57
China Drops Its Covid Quarantine Requirements for Incoming Travelers
1:11
China Begins to Ease Harsh Coronavirus Restrictions |
Republicans are looking into the next round of virus relief, which could include money for schools, funding for the federal loan program for small businesses and direct payments to families. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000007250230/mcconnell-proposal-relief-package.html | Republicans are looking into the next round of virus relief, which could include money for schools, funding for the federal loan program for small businesses and direct payments to families. | new video loaded:McConnell Lays Out Proposal for Next Stimulus Bill
transcript
McConnell Lays Out Proposal for Next Stimulus Bill
Republicans are looking into the next round of virus relief, which could include money for schools, funding for the federal loan program for small businesses and direct payments to families.
If you’re looking for a theme, I won’t put a bill on the floor that doesn’t have liability protection in it. Don’t mischaracterize what this is about. This is not just for businesses. For hospitals, doctors, nurses — yes, businesses — but also colleges, universities, K through 12. In fact, everybody trying to grapple with this new disease that we didn’t fully understand. Yeah, we’ll lay out the specifics. I’m going to introduce a bill in the next few days that is a starting place that enjoys fairly significant support among Republican senators — probably not everyone — and at that point, we’ll be more specific about how to allocate, but we do envision direct checks again.
McConnell Lays Out Proposal for Next Stimulus Bill
Republicans are looking into the next round of virus relief, which could include money for schools, funding for the federal loan program for small businesses and direct payments to families.
U.S. & Politics
Recent Episodes
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
Biden Condemns Shooting at Trump Rally
Biden Mixes Up Trump and Harris
Biden Calls Zelensky ‘Putin’ at NATO Event
Biden ‘Is a Fighter,’ Harris Says in North Carolina
Biden Tells Allies That NATO Is ‘More Powerful Than Ever’
Heated Exchange Over Biden’s Health at White House Briefing
Supreme Court’s Immunity Decision Sets ‘Dangerous Precedent,’ Biden Says
Boeing C.E.O. Apologizes to Families of Plane Crash Victims
Maryland Governor Issues Sweeping Pardons for Marijuana Convictions
Biden Talks About Gun Safety Hours After Son’s Firearms Conviction
Garland Says He ‘Will Not Be Intimidated’ by House Republicans
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
2:13
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
0:52
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
1:39
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
1:25
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
1:49
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
1:14
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
0:55
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
0:49
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
0:46
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
0:29
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear |
After Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader, tried to force an immediate vote on increasing the size of the stimulus checks, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, blocked the measure, leaving its fate unclear. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007525489/mcconnell-blocks-coronavirus-stimulus-checks.html | After Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader, tried to force an immediate vote on increasing the size of the stimulus checks, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, blocked the measure, leaving its fate unclear. | new video loaded:McConnell Blocks Vote on $2,000 Stimulus Checks
transcript
McConnell Blocks Vote on $2,000 Stimulus Checks
After Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader, tried to force an immediate vote on increasing the size of the stimulus checks, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, blocked the measure, leaving its fate unclear.
“A vast majority of the public, Republican and Democrat, strongly support $2,000 checks. An overwhelming bipartisan majority in the House supports $2,000 checks. Senate Democrats strongly support $2,000 checks. Even President Trump supports $2,000 checks. There’s one question left today: Do Senate Republicans join with the rest of America in supporting $2,000 checks? Would the senator modify his request to include a unanimous consent request that the Senate — to include unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the immediate consideration of H.R. 9051, a bill received from the House to increase recovery rebate amounts to $2,000 per individual, that the bill be read a third time and passed, the motion to reconsider be considered made, laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate?” “Is there objection to the modification?” Sen. McConnell: “I object.” “Objection is heard.”
McConnell Blocks Vote on $2,000 Stimulus Checks
After Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader, tried to force an immediate vote on increasing the size of the stimulus checks, Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, blocked the measure, leaving its fate unclear.
U.S. & Politics
Recent Episodes
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
How Trump’s Security Failed to Stop an Assassination Attempt
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear
How the Assassination Attempt on Trump Unfolded
Biden Condemns Shooting at Trump Rally
Biden Mixes Up Trump and Harris
Biden Calls Zelensky ‘Putin’ at NATO Event
Biden ‘Is a Fighter,’ Harris Says in North Carolina
Biden Tells Allies That NATO Is ‘More Powerful Than Ever’
Heated Exchange Over Biden’s Health at White House Briefing
Supreme Court’s Immunity Decision Sets ‘Dangerous Precedent,’ Biden Says
Boeing C.E.O. Apologizes to Families of Plane Crash Victims
Maryland Governor Issues Sweeping Pardons for Marijuana Convictions
Biden Talks About Gun Safety Hours After Son’s Firearms Conviction
Garland Says He ‘Will Not Be Intimidated’ by House Republicans
1:06
Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee
2:13
Trump Questions Harris’s Racial Identity at NABJ Conference
0:52
Trump Downplays Importance of Choosing a Running Mate
1:39
Secret Service Acting Director Testifies on ‘Failure of Imagination’
1:25
Thousands Protest Netanyahu’s Address to Congress
1:49
Secret Service Director Faces Bipartisan Calls to Resign
1:14
Harris Commends Biden’s Record at N.C.A.A. White House Event
0:55
Nikki Haley Says Trump Has Her ‘Strong Endorsement’ for President
0:49
West Virginia Governor Brings His Dog Onstage at R.N.C.
0:46
Menendez ‘Deeply Disappointed’ With Guilty Verdict
0:29
Trump Makes R.N.C. Entrance With Bandaged Ear |
Ballots are broken. So we redesigned them. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/10/29/opinion/election-voting-mail-ballot-design.html | Ballots are broken. So we redesigned them. | Good Design Is the Secret to Better Democracy
ByWhitney QuesenberyOct. 29, 2020
Opinion
Good Design Is the Secret to Better Democracy
Part of a visual series from Opinion on how the election could go wrong.
|
A slide show including some of our favorite graphs from our weekly “What’s Going On in This Graph?” activity. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/06/10/learning/graphs-charts-and-maps-from-three-years-of-whats-going-on-in-this-graph.html | A slide show including some of our favorite graphs from our weekly “What’s Going On in This Graph?” activity. | Graphs, Charts and Maps From Three Years of “What’s Going On in This Graph?”
Each of the graphs in this slide show was featured in one of our weekly “What’s Going On in This Graph?” discussions from 2017-2020. To learn more about a graph, including source information and related statistical concepts, visit the accompanying link.
Inside Footballs’ Campaign to Save the Game
Graphs, Charts and Maps From Three Years of “What’s Going On in This Graph?”
A slide show including some of our favorite graphs from our weekly “What’s Going On in This Graph?” activity.
Slideshow controls |
Facing the threat of the coronavirus, schools around the country are trying a new experiment in distance learning on a mass scale. We followed one family through the experience. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/03/10/us/covid-19-seattle-washington-home-schooling-remote.html | Facing the threat of the coronavirus, schools around the country are trying a new experiment in distance learning on a mass scale. We followed one family through the experience. | Remote Learning Comes to America as Coronavirus Shuts Schools
By Karen WeisePhotographs by Christian Sorensen HansenMarch 10, 2020
Facing the threat of the coronavirus, schools across the country are trying a new experiment in distance learning on a massive scale.
In the Seattle area, which has become the center of a major outbreak, the suburban Northshore School District on Monday became the first in the region to move all of its classes online.
Many of the district’s more than 23,000 students logged in at 8:30 a.m. to a new educational reality that school officials said could last two weeks or more.
Erin Peistrup and her two sons, Nils, 12, and Anders, 7 (“and a half”), woke up, had breakfast and got ready for class.
Teachers sent around schedules, with worksheets, live video chat links and prerecorded videos for lessons.
“Oh my God, we have no classes on Wednesdays?” Ms. Peistrup said. The day will be set aside for teacher office hours and independent work.
The district provided laptops and internet hot spots to students who needed them, preparations that were accelerated after a measles outbreak last year forced a closure.
Anders, a second grader at Westhill Elementary, worked from a card table in his bedroom. The second-grade teachers taught their lesson plan together as a group.
Anders's mother sat with him for much of the morning, helping navigate the online systems so that he could submit answers.
“When you are in second grade and still learning how to spell, it just took him awhile to type his stuff on the computer,” she said.
Parents in the neighborhood even organized a recess period.
“Instead of herding cats for an hour, now it’s an all-day thing,” Ms. Peistrup said of supervising her children throughout the school day. She took breaks when she could.
Nils, a sixth grader at Canyon Park Middle School, liked the video calls with his teachers. His classmates waved and made faces at each other.
Many forgot to hit mute when their teachers were talking, making things a bit chaotic at first.
The district said 98 percent of its students showed up for online classes. Meal pickup was ready at 22 locations for students who receive free- and reduced-cost lunches.
The district has been working to provide child care for about 280 students whose parents have asked for help.
At the Peistrup house, the boys finally got into a groove. Ms. Peistrup was able to put away dishes, fold laundry and work through emails for the local Little League she leads.
“I feel so fortunate that I don’t work,” Ms. Peistrup said. “I can’t imagine what it’s like for moms that do.”
The Little League is continuing to operate, despite the virus concerns.
“The parents I have talked to are really appreciative,” she said. “It is literally the only thing in our lives right now that is not canceled.”
Across the country, more than 500 schools with some 360,000 students have closed or are planning to suspend in-person classes, according to Education Week.
Those American students join almost 300 million globally whose education has been disrupted because of the virus.
Karen Weise is a technology correspondent based in Seattle, covering Amazon, Microsoft and the region's tech scene.
Photographs and Video by Christian Sorensen Hansen
Produced by Elijah Walker and Clinton Cargill |
Family and members of Congress paid their respects to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during an intimate ceremony in Statuary Hall. | https://www.nytimes.com/video/us/politics/100000007359929/live-ginsburg-capitol-funeral.html | Family and members of Congress paid their respects to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during an intimate ceremony in Statuary Hall. | new video loaded:Full Video: Justice Ginsburg Is First Woman to Lie in State at the Capitol
Full Video: Justice Ginsburg Is First Woman to Lie in State at the Capitol
Family and members of Congress paid their respects to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during an intimate ceremony in Statuary Hall.
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See full results and maps from the Minnesota election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-minnesota-house-district-2.html | See full results and maps from the Minnesota election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
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Minnesota Election Results: Second Congressional District
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2020 Election Results
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Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Louisiana election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-louisiana-house-district-5.html | See full results and maps from the Louisiana election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
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Louisiana Election Results: Fifth Congressional District
See full results from theDec. 5 runoffbetween Republicans Luke Letlow and Lance Harris.
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Vote reporting is effectively complete in Louisiana.
Letlow is currently up by 51,293 votes.
Results by parish
Vote share
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Letlow
Harris
Lemelle
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
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100% of parishes (24 of 24) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
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2020 Election Results
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Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
New Yorkers seeking respite from the city have long gravitated to Connecticut’s easternmost shoreline town, with its 18th- and 19th-century homes. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/04/22/realestate/living-in-stonington-conn.html | New Yorkers seeking respite from the city have long gravitated to Connecticut’s easternmost shoreline town, with its 18th- and 19th-century homes. | Living In ... Stonington, Conn.
The popular Noah’s Restaurant, on the retail strip in Stonington Borough, is closed at the moment, but a sign in the window assures passersby “we will be here waiting for you” when the coronavirus shutdown ends.
Living In ... Stonington, Conn.
New Yorkers seeking respite from the city have long gravitated to Connecticut’s easternmost shoreline town, with its 18th- and 19th-century homes.
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What “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” really means. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/12/08/us/politics/trump-impeachable-offenses.html | What “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” really means. | How the Constitution Defines Impeachable, Word by Word
ByAlicia ParlapianoDec. 8, 2019
“The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors,”according to the U.S. Constitution. Here’s how experts interpret those final eight words:
“Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors”
Treason is defined in the Constitution.
“Treason against the United States shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort,”it says in Article III.
“Treason,Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors”
Bribery is not defined in the Constitution.
United States criminal statutes say thatbribery occurswhen a public official solicits or accepts something of “value” in exchange for an “official act.” But these statutes were written long after the word was added to the Constitution.
Pamela S. Karlan, a Stanford professor asked by Democrats totestify before the House Judiciary Committeeon Wednesday, said the framers of the U.S. Constitution would have understood the term broadly.
“When you took private benefits, or when you asked for private benefits in return for an official act, or somebody gave them to you to influence an official act, that was bribery,” she said.
Ms. Karlan, along with two other scholars called by Democrats who testified Wednesday, said that if President Trump did what Democrats have accused him of doing — soliciting an announcement of investigations for political reasons — that would qualify as bribery.
But a witness invited by Republicans, the George Washington University professorJonathan Turley,disagreed. He said a White House meeting did not amount to an “official act,” and questioned whether the delayed release of aid would qualify. In any case, he said, proof of corrupt intent was lacking.
“Treason, Bribery,or otherhigh Crimes and Misdemeanors”
Experts have interpreted “other” to mean an offense of equal seriousness to, and of a similar character as, treason or bribery.
“Treason, Bribery, or otherhighCrimes and Misdemeanors”
Scholars agree that “high” refers to something done by a person in public office.
In 1788, as supporters of the Constitution were urging states to ratify the document, Alexander Hamilton described impeachable crimes inone of the Federalist Papersas “those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust. They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”
“Treason, Bribery, or other highCrimesand Misdemeanors”
There is broad agreement that an offense does not need to violate a criminal statute to be impeachable.
In hishandbook on impeachment, the late constitutional scholar Charles L. Black Jr. wrote that “the limitation of impeachable offenses to those offenses made generally criminal by statute is unwarranted — even absurd.”
“But it remains true that the House of Representatives and the Senate must feel more comfortable when dealing with conduct clearly criminal in the ordinary sense,” he wrote. “For as one gets further from that area it becomes progressively more difficult to be certain, as to any particular offense, that it is impeachable."
“Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes andMisdemeanors”
This isn’t referring to a minor crime, but to offenses.
“High misdemeanors” historically referred to “offenses that subverted the system of government,” according to a1974 memoproduced by the House Judiciary Committee as it weighed impeaching President Richard Nixon.
“Treason, Bribery, or otherhigh Crimes and Misdemeanors”
The framers wanted to leave Congress options — but not too many options.
The framers debated how to describe impeachable offenses other than treason and bribery. The word “maladministration” was suggested, but James Madison argued that it would give Congress too much leeway.
“Whatever may be the grounds for impeachment and removal, dislike of a president's policy is definitely not one of them,” wrote Mr. Black.
The framers opted for “high crimes and misdemeanors,” a phrase that had been used for hundreds of years during impeachment proceedings in the English Parliament.
According to the1974 memo, the offenses could take several forms, including “misapplication of funds, abuse of official power, neglect of duty, encroachment on Parliament’s prerogatives, corruption, and betrayal of trust.”
On Saturday, Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committeereleased a reporton the constitutional grounds for impeachment that they said was meant to update earlier memos with today’s “best available learning.”
The report echoes allegations that Democrats have made about Mr. Trump’s actions.
“A president who perverts his role as chief diplomat to serve private rather than public ends has unquestionably engaged in ‘high crimes and misdemeanors’— especially if he invited, rather than opposed, foreign interference in our politics,” the report says.
“Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors”
Ultimately, it’s up to Congress.
“The longing for precise criteria is understandable,” the1974 memosays. “The crucial factor is not the intrinsic quality of behavior but the significance of its effect upon our constitutional system or the functioning of our government.”
In 1868, the House adopted 11 articles of impeachment against President Andrew Johnson. Some of the articles were constitutionally dubious, according to scholars, including the 10th. It alleged that he:
“... did attempt to bring into disgrace, ridicule, hatred, contempt and reproach, the Congress of the United States.”
“A ridiculous charge,” wrote Mr. Black.
Democratic leadersresisted calls for Mr. Trump’s impeachmentuntil they had come to believe that they had a strong case. The articles of impeachment they are drafting could include several charges discussed inWednesday’s hearings.
“The record compiled thus far shows that the president has committed several impeachable offenses, including bribery, abuse of power in soliciting a personal favor from a foreign leader to benefit his political campaign, obstructing Congress, and obstructing justice,” testifiedMichael Gerhardt, a University of North Carolina professor invited by Democrats.
Mr. Turley, the Republican-selected witness, testified that “a quid pro quo to force the investigation of a political rival in exchange for military aid can be impeachable, if proven.” But he said that the evidence in Mr. Trump’s case fell short, and that “there remain core witnesses and documents that have not been sought through the courts.”
“If the House proceeds solely on the Ukrainian allegations, this impeachment would stand out among modern impeachments as the shortest proceeding, with the thinnest evidentiary record, and the narrowest grounds ever used to impeach a president,” Mr. Turley warned. |
Newcomers are attracted by the close-knit community and affordable homes — never mind that the borough’s biggest landmark is a century-old cemetery. | https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2020/03/25/realestate/living-in-north-arlington-nj.html | Newcomers are attracted by the close-knit community and affordable homes — never mind that the borough’s biggest landmark is a century-old cemetery. | Living In ... North Arlington, N.J.
The spire of Queen of Peace Roman Catholic Church is a landmark along Ridge Road, North Arlington’s commercial thoroughfare.
Living In ... North Arlington, N.J.
Newcomers are attracted by the close-knit community and affordable homes — never mind that the borough’s biggest landmark is a century-old cemetery.
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See full results and maps from the Louisiana election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-louisiana-senate.html | See full results and maps from the Louisiana election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Louisiana U.S. Senate Election Results
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Louisiana U.S. Senate Election Results
Winner
Bill Cassidy, Republican, wins re-election to the U.S. Senate in Louisiana.
Race called by The Associated Press.
* Incumbent
96% of the estimated vote total has been reported.
Results by parish
Vote share
Leader
Cassidy
Perkins
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
0% of parishes (0 of 64) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
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Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
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Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the California election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-california-proposition-17-give-vote-to-felons-on-parole.html | See full results and maps from the California election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
California Proposition 17 Election Results: Give Vote to Felons on Parole
State Results
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California Proposition 17 Election Results: Give Vote to Felons on Parole
People on parole for felony convictions would be allowed to vote before completing their sentences.
Results by county
Leader
Yes
No
Leader
Yes
No
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results and race calls from The Associated Press
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See full results and maps from the Nebraska election. | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/11/03/us/elections/results-nebraska-house-district-1.html | See full results and maps from the Nebraska election. | Visit Our2024 Super TuesdayCoverage
Nebraska Election Results: First Congressional District
State Results
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Nebraska Election Results: First Congressional District
* Incumbent
Vote reporting is effectively complete in Nebraska.
Results by county
Vote share
Leader
Fortenberry
Bolz
Note: Absentee vote data may not be available in some places.
Absentee votes by candidate
Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.
22% of counties (4 of 18) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.
Latest updates
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Read our analysis of the vote
Latest updates
Nicholas Fandos, in Washington
Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump.Read more ›
Maggie AstorJan. 7, 2021
Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.
Astead Herndon, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol.Read more ›
Jonathan Martin, in AtlantaJan. 6, 2021
Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler.See live results ›
The New York TimesJan. 6, 2021
A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Read more ›
Trip GabrielDec. 14, 2020
Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution.Read more ›
Isabella Grullón PazDec. 14, 2020
The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory.Track the Electoral College results ›
The New York TimesDec. 5, 2020
California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president.Read more ›
Reid Epstein, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago.Read more ›
Glenn Thrush, in WashingtonNov. 30, 2020
Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute.Read more ›
Michael D. Shear, in WashingtonNov. 23, 2020
President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration.Read more ›
2020 Election Results
Past Election Results
Source: Election results from National Election Pool/Edison Research
By Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Gray Beltran, Matthew Bloch, Larry Buchanan, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Matthew Conlen, Annie Daniel, Asmaa Elkeurti, Andrew Fischer, Josh Holder, Will Houp, Jonathan Huang, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Jaymin Patel, Charlie Smart, Ben Smithgall, Umi Syam, Rumsey Taylor, Miles Watkins and Isaac WhiteAdditional data collection by Alice Park, Rachel Shorey, Thu Trinh and Quoctrung BuiCandidate photo research and production by Earl Wilson, Alana Celii, Lalena Fisher, Yuriria Avila, Amanda Cordero, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Andy Chen, Chris O'Brien, Jim DeMaria, Dave Braun and Jessica WhiteReporting contributed by Alicia Parlapiano |
See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Rio Grande County, Colorado | https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/rio-grande-colorado-covid-cases.html | See the latest charts and maps of coronavirus cases, deaths and hospitalizations in Rio Grande County, Colorado | Covid-19Guidance
Rio Grande County, Colorado Covid Case and Risk Tracker
The New York TimesUpdatedMarch 23, 2023
Tracking Coronavirus in Rio Grande County, Colo.: Latest Map and Case Count
New reported cases
Test positivity rate
Hospitalized
Deaths
Hospitals
Vaccinations
See more details ›
3% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Latest trends
How to read Covid data now
Higher test positivity rates are a sign that many infections are not reported — even if they are tested for at home. This results in a more severe undercount of cases. The number of hospitalized patients with Covid is a more reliable measure because testing is more consistent in hospitals.Read more about the data.
See data for another county
Vaccinations
See more details ›
3% of vaccinations statewide did not specify the person’s home county.
How trends have changed in Rio Grande County
Average cases per capita in Rio Grande County
This calendar shows data through 2022 and will no longer be updated in 2023. The Times will continue to report the data for other displays on this page.
2020
2021
2022
About the data
In data for Colorado, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Prior to July 2021, it released new data daily. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities.
Tracking the Coronavirus
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Credits
By Jordan Allen,Sarah Almukhtar,Aliza Aufrichtig, Anne Barnard,Matthew Bloch, Penn Bullock, Sarah Cahalan, Weiyi Cai, Julia Calderone,Keith Collins, Matthew Conlen, Lindsey Cook,Gabriel Gianordoli,Amy Harmon,Rich Harris,Adeel Hassan,Jon Huang, Danya Issawi,Danielle Ivory,K.K. Rebecca Lai, Alex Lemonides,Eleanor Lutz,Allison McCann,Richard A. Oppel Jr.,Jugal K. Patel, Alison Saldanha, Kirk Semple, Shelly Seroussi, Julie Walton Shaver,Amy Schoenfeld Walker,Anjali Singhvi,Charlie Smart,Mitch Smith,Albert Sun,Rumsey Taylor, Lisa Waananen Jones,Derek Watkins,Timothy Williams,Jin WuandKaren Yourish. · Reporting was contributed by Jeff Arnold,Ian Austen,Mike Baker, Brillian Bao,Ellen Barry,Shashank Bengali, Samone Blair, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Aurelien Breeden, Elisha Brown, Emma Bubola, Maddie Burakoff, Alyssa Burr, Christopher Calabrese, Julia Carmel, Zak Cassel, Robert Chiarito, Izzy Colón, Matt Craig, Yves De Jesus, Brendon Derr, Brandon Dupré, Melissa Eddy, John Eligon, Timmy Facciola, Bianca Fortis, Jake Frankenfield, Matt Furber, Robert Gebeloff, Thomas Gibbons-Neff,Matthew Goldstein, Grace Gorenflo, Rebecca Griesbach, Benjamin Guggenheim, Barbara Harvey, Lauryn Higgins, Josh Holder, Jake Holland, Anna Joyce,John Keefe, Ann Hinga Klein, Jacob LaGesse, Alex Lim, Alex Matthews, Patricia Mazzei, Jesse McKinley, Miles McKinley, K.B. Mensah, Sarah Mervosh, Jacob Meschke, Lauren Messman, Andrea Michelson, Jaylynn Moffat-Mowatt, Steven Moity, Paul Moon, Derek M. Norman, Anahad O’Connor, Ashlyn O’Hara, Azi Paybarah, Elian Peltier,Richard Pérez-Peña, Sean Plambeck, Laney Pope, Elisabetta Povoledo, Cierra S. Queen, Savannah Redl,Scott Reinhard, Chloe Reynolds, Thomas Rivas, Frances Robles, Natasha Rodriguez, Jess Ruderman,Kai Schultz, Alex Schwartz, Emily Schwing, Libby Seline, Rachel Sherman, Sarena Snider, Brandon Thorp, Alex Traub, Maura Turcotte, Tracey Tully,Jeremy White, Kristine White, Bonnie G. Wong, Tiffany Wong,Sameer Yasirand John Yoon. · Data acquisition and additional work contributed by Will Houp, Andrew Chavez, Michael Strickland, Tiff Fehr, Miles Watkins,Josh Williams, Nina Pavlich, Carmen Cincotti, Ben Smithgall, Andrew Fischer,Rachel Shorey,Blacki Migliozzi, Alastair Coote, Jaymin Patel, John-Michael Murphy, Isaac White, Steven Speicher, Hugh Mandeville, Robin Berjon, Thu Trinh, Carolyn Price, James G. Robinson, Phil Wells, Yanxing Yang, Michael Beswetherick, Michael Robles, Nikhil Baradwaj, Ariana Giorgi, Bella Virgilio, Dylan Momplaisir, Avery Dews, Bea Malsky, Ilana Marcus, Sean Cataguni andJason Kao.
About the data
In data for Colorado, The Times primarily relies on reports from the state, as well as health districts or county governments that often report ahead of the state. The state does not update its data on weekends. Prior to July 2021, it released new data daily. The state reports cases and deaths based on a person’s permanent or usual residence.
The Times has identified reporting anomalies or methodology changes in the data.
The tallies on this page include probable and confirmed cases and deaths.
Confirmed cases and deaths, which are widely considered to be an undercount of the true toll, are counts of individuals whose coronavirus infections were confirmed by a molecular laboratory test.Probable cases and deathscount individuals who meet criteria for other types of testing, symptoms and exposure, as developed by national and local governments.
Governments often revise data or report a single-day large increase in cases or deaths from unspecified days without historical revisions, which can cause an irregular pattern in the daily reported figures. The Times is excluding these anomalies from seven-day averages when possible. For agencies that do not report data every day, variation in the schedule on which cases or deaths are reported, such as around holidays, can also cause an irregular pattern in averages. The Times uses anadjustment methodto vary the number of days included in an average to remove these irregularities. |