For the Senators Who Will Judge Trump, an Incomplete Story to Consider
| By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and NICHOLAS FANDOS The chief justice was sworn in as the presiding officer and senators swore to do "impartial justice," as the Senate opened only the third presidential impeachment trial in U.S. history. | | | News Analysis By PETER BAKER Recent interviews by Lev Parnas, an associate of the president's personal lawyer, as well as documents released by House investigators, reinforced that there is more still to be learned. | | | By ADAM GOLDMAN An inquiry into years-old disclosures of classified information is highly unusual and leaves law enforcement officials open to accusations of politicizing their work. | | |
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| World By THOMAS FULLER and MATTHEW ABBOTT As blazes rage in southern Australia, Indigenous fire-prevention techniques that have sharply cut destructive bushfires in the north are drawing new attention. | | | Opinion By THE EDITORIAL BOARD Mr. Buttigieg interviews for The New York Times's endorsement. | | |
| By THE EDITORIAL BOARD Nancy Pelosi's decision to delay transmitting the impeachment articles allowed significant new information to come to light. | | | By THE EDITORIAL BOARD The cost of President Trump's China strategy continues to grow. He has yet to show that the benefits are worth it. | | | By SHAMIRA IBRAHIM The daytime co-hosts' heated bipartisan debates are played down as disagreement among friends. But the strain for "civility" is tiring. | | | By JESSICA STERN My 48 hours alone with Radovan Karadzic. | | | By PAUL KRUGMAN Reasons child care should be a key election issue. | | | By MATTI FRIEDMAN Following the dead tracks around Israel brings a forgotten Middle East back to life. | | |
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