The DayThe Day: Thursday, June 26, 2026 (#65)
Venezuela's death toll climbs as international rescue teams arrive. A federal judge blocks the president's mail voting order. And a birding piece that will make you want to go outside.
The DayVenezuela's death toll climbs as international rescue teams arrive. A federal judge blocks the president's mail voting order. And a birding piece that will make you want to go outside.
The DayTwin earthquakes devastate Venezuela in the country's worst seismic event in more than a century. The Senate's war powers rebuke gets complicated. The IAEA and Iran disagree about what their deal says.
The DayTrump formally declares the Iran ceasefire. France records its hottest day in history. The House passes the housing bill, sending it to the president's desk.
The DayBritain's prime minister resigns. The United States and Iran complete their first day of nuclear talks in Switzerland. Alan Greenspan, who ran the Federal Reserve for nineteen years, dies at 100.
The DayThe Switzerland nuclear talks are called off on their opening day. Israel and Hezbollah agree to a new ceasefire. The Senate moves toward housing affordability legislation.
The DayThe US and Iran sign a peace agreement in Switzerland. Tornadoes cut through the Midwest. The Obama Presidential Center opens on Juneteenth.
The DayFive charged in a White House drone plot. The Pentagon names eight. England opens the World Cup.
The DaySwitzerland sets the signing for Friday. The Fed holds. Georgia picks a Senate nominee.
The DayShips are moving through the Strait of Hormuz for the first time in weeks. The Federal Reserve begins its June meeting. The World Cup plays on.
The DayPakistan says the Iran-US peace text is final; Belfast's anti-immigrant violence enters its fifth day; the US men's team opens the home World Cup with a record 4-1 win.
The DayA surveillance program set to lapse for the first time in its history, the Iran war's reach into the economy, and a guilty plea in a politically motivated killing.
The DayIran declares the April ceasefire meaningless after new overnight strikes. The World Cup opens in Mexico City. The Senate blocks the voter ID bill for the third time.
The DayThe Pentagon confirms an Iranian drone downed an American helicopter. US and Iran trade direct strikes on each other's military assets. The House funds border enforcement for three years. Belfast burns. Congress holds a rare hearing on the Colorado River's uncertain future.
The DayIsrael and Iran pull back from direct strikes. Global conflicts at their highest level since World War II. A federal judge throws out a $100,000 visa fee. Sweden takes phones away from students.
The DayEighty-two years since the beaches of Normandy; Ukraine hits Russia's naval heartland; Iran suspends talks after Kuwait airport attack; a UN peacekeeper killed in Lebanon; and the May jobs number lands.
The DayThe IAEA wants into Iran's nuclear sites; Ukraine's drone factories are running at scale; the World Cup is six days away.
The DayDiplomatic talks with Iran continue as the 60-day War Powers clock runs; China marks June 4 by declining two requests for accountability at once.
The DayIran fires missiles at Kuwait's airport and Bahrain; the Supreme Court allows Alabama's redistricting map; Iowa's primary produces a surprise.
The DayU.S. airstrikes hit Iranian radar and drone sites after Iran shoots down an American drone. Iran answers with missiles at Kuwait.
The DayTrump says he'll make a final determination on Iran. A federal judge orders his name off the Kennedy Center. And 70,000 Massachusetts ride-share drivers certify the biggest union vote since 1941.
The DayUS and Iran have the makings of a deal but neither side has signed it, and a Russian drone struck a NATO apartment building in Romania overnight.
The DayIsrael struck more than 100 Hezbollah sites overnight as the April ceasefire holds only on paper and direct peace talks are two weeks away.
The DayRussia warns diplomats to leave Kyiv as Moscow prepares a new wave of strikes following the weekend's hypersonic missile attack.
The DayThe country pauses for Memorial Day at Arlington as US strikes in the Strait of Hormuz test a fragile Iran ceasefire.
The DayIranian missiles over Fujairah, a Palestinian diplomat under pressure, Cuba goes dark, and a global Ebola emergency.
The DayTrump gives Iran one last shot. Barney Frank dies at 86. Capitol officers sue to block a DOJ fund. California burns. The Ebola emergency widens.
The DayPutin visits Xi in Beijing days after Trump's summit. A wildfire forces 43,700 from Simi Valley. Trump backs Ken Paxton to unseat a sitting senator in Texas.
The DayTrump calls off an Iran strike and says he can restart it 'at any moment.' Four Navy pilots survive an Idaho air show collision. And Alzheimer's researchers report the biggest expansion of the treatment pipeline in a decade.
The DayDrone strikes a Gulf nuclear plant, Ukraine hits Moscow, and Amnesty reports the world executed more people last year than in any year since 1981.
The DayTrump and Xi close a summit with a framework but few signatures. Russia launches the war's largest drone barrage. Snack bags in Japan lose their color.
The DayXi quotes Thucydides in the Great Hall of the People. A classified report measures what China has gained from the Iran war. South Carolina empties a murder verdict. The Senate opens a 309-page cryptocurrency bill.
The DayTrump lands in Beijing for his first China visit since 2017. Inflation hits 3.8 percent. The Senate clears the next Fed chair. The FDA commissioner resigns over flavored vapes.
The DayTrump says the Iran ceasefire has a one percent chance. Hungary hangs the EU flag back up. A three-digit phone number is saving lives.
The DayTennessee splits Memphis into three districts eight days after the Supreme Court weakened the Voting Rights Act. David Attenborough turns one hundred.
The DayA one-page memo could end the war with Iran. Ted Turner, who built a network for moments like this, is dead at eighty-seven.
The DayUkraine's ceasefire begins at midnight. Russia struck its power grid hours before.
The DayTwo U.S. Navy destroyers transit the Strait of Hormuz under Iranian fire. Neither is struck.
The DayThe U.S. military begins guiding commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz. The last time America tried this, it was 1987.
The DayThe Iran war crosses the War Powers Act's 60-day threshold. Congress left town without acting.
The DayThe Supreme Court narrows the Voting Rights Act in a 6-3 ruling that reshapes redistricting law.
The DayThe UAE leaves OPEC after fifty-nine years of membership, effective May 1.
What happened today, in context.
The DayWhat happened today, in context.
The DayWhat happened today, in context.
The DayWhat happened today, in context.
The DayThe blockade is eight days old. China has entered the conversation. And in the Coral Sea, scientists found more than a hundred species nobody knew existed.
The DayThe U.S. Navy is blockading Iranian ports. Both sides are heading back to Islamabad. The ceasefire expires tomorrow.
The DayThe Islamabad talks enter their second week. The ceasefire expires in five days. The last time American and Iranian officials sat across from each other was 1981.
The DayIran mined the Strait of Hormuz and then lost track of where it put the mines. The ceasefire demands their removal. Six days remain.
The DayThe Iran ceasefire reaches its halfway point. The Strait of Hormuz hasn't reopened. At the pump, the war costs four dollars and sixteen cents a gallon.
The DayIsraeli and Lebanese ambassadors sit down at the State Department. In Islamabad, the clock on a two-week ceasefire keeps ticking.
The DayThe United States and Iran held their first direct, face-to-face talks since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The ceasefire expires April 21.
The DayFour astronauts aboard Artemis II are approaching the moon on day five of their mission, the first humans to travel this far from Earth since Gene Cernan left the lunar surface in December 1972.
The DayThe Supreme Court strikes down Colorado's ban on conversion therapy, ruling the law regulates speech based on viewpoint, in a decision that could undo similar bans in more than twenty states.
The DayIran strikes a Kuwaiti oil tanker off Dubai as the war expands into the shipping lanes of America's Gulf allies, and the price of the conflict arrives at the gas pump.
The DayThe Supreme Court hears oral arguments on whether all children born in the United States are citizens, the first time the justices have taken up the question in 128 years.
The DayOil hits $116 a barrel after President Trump tells the Financial Times the United States could seize Iran's Kharg Island oil terminal.
The DayPakistan offers to host direct talks between Washington and Tehran, but nobody has confirmed they're coming. The DHS shutdown hits day 45. A California law on corn tortillas could prevent birth defects.
The DayDiplomats gather in Pakistan to discuss ending the war in Iran while the fighting continues, the DHS shutdown breaks the American record, and students in Amsterdam study to Pachelbel.
The DayThe Houthis fire their first missiles at Israel, the Iran war marks one month with objectives unfulfilled, and the DHS shutdown becomes the longest in American history.
The DayAn Iranian missile wounds American troops at a Saudi base, Tehran formalizes its grip on the Strait of Hormuz, and markets close their worst week since the war began.
The DayIsrael says it killed Iran's naval commander as the war enters a new phase and diplomacy runs on a parallel track.