House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, center, and the Republican leadership at a news conference on Tuesday in Washington.Credit...Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times WASHINGTON — President Trump made clear in his fiery inaugural speech that he was going to challenge the Washington establishment. Now the establishment is quickly pushing back, creating a palpable air of uncertainty and chaos in the open
A brokerage house in Shanghai in November. China’s stock market crashed last year, and its $9 trillion bond market is showing signs of distress.Credit...Aly Song/Reuters SHANGHAI — Chinese officials cheered on the country’s stock market when it reached heady new highs, offering hope that it could become a new source of money to fix China’s economic problems. Then, last year, the market crashed. No
Older homes on Lufeng Road, including Zheng Ruizhen’s house. New apartment towers loom in the background.Credit...Yuyang Liu for The New York Times SHANGHAI — Zheng Ruizhen counted herself among the last holdouts on Lufeng Road. Even as high-rises sprang up in recent years to surround her dilapidated home, Ms. Zheng, a 50-year-old schoolteacher, and her husband, Sun Guojian, held firm. He grew up
Halie Ariza, 6, waiting to receive school supplies in Los Angeles. America has one of the highest child poverty rates among advanced nations.Credit...Lucy Nicholson/Reuters How can it be that the United States spends so much money fighting poverty and still suffers one of the highest child poverty rates among advanced nations? One in five American children is poor by the count of LIS, a data archi
Poll Finds Deep Split on Climate Change. Party Allegiance Is a Big Factor. A coal-fired power plant in Juliette, Ga., in 2007. Roughly half of Americans say steps like restricting power plant emissions and improving vehicle fuel efficiency could make a big difference in combating climate change, a Pew Research Center poll found.Credit...Gene Blythe/Associated Press Americans are deeply divided on
A diner reading a newspaper with coverage of Monday’s presidential debate at a restaurant in the Chinatown neighborhood of Las Vegas.Credit...Isaac Brekken for The New York Times LAS VEGAS — On paper at least, Asian-Americans seem like perfect Republicans. Many are small-business owners. Their communities tend to be more culturally conservative. And a lot of them, having fled oppressive Communist
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