Democrats Face a Dilemma on Voting: Compromise or Keep Pressing?
Saturday, January 15, 2022 | |
| By David E. Sanger The Biden administration said the operatives were trained in urban warfare and explosives and could try to stage an incident. | | | By Jonathan Weisman With their broad voting rights push nearing a dead end, Democrats must soon decide whether to embrace a far narrower bipartisan effort to protect vote counting and administration. | | | By J. David Goodman and Giulia Heyward Facing an uncontrolled surge of virus cases, parents of young children are again forced to wrestle with child care crises as the rest of the world appears eager to move on. | | |
| Business By Charles McDermid Under a new decree, all web traffic will be routed through a government portal. Rights groups say a crackdown on digital expression is about to get worse. | | | Opinion | Guest Essay By Vanessa Veselka and Clayton Cotterell After a spate of deaths, a group of health care workers in Oregon decided that to save lives, they needed a union. | | |
| By Dakota santiago For The New York Times Crews battled a fire at a chemical plant in Passaic, N.J. No major injuries were reported. | | | By Reuters John F. Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said U.S. intelligence indicated that Russia was actively working to create a pretext to invade Ukraine. He called the information "very credible" but did not provide details. | | | By The Associated Press Mayor Eric Adams of New York City said his administration would continue to push for in-person learning, but would also consider a temporary remote option for students. | | |
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