
Jack Healy
Correspondent at The New York Times
Once in Baghdad, now Rocky Mountain correspondent for The New York Times. Total sucker for one adopted Iraqi kitten. Write: [email protected].
Articles
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6 days ago |
nytimes.com | Jack Healy |Julie Bosman |Kate Selig
Across the country, Catholics and non-Catholics alike greeted Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV with reverence and satisfaction. The election of a Chicago-born cardinal as the first American pope on Thursday astonished Catholics and non-Catholics alike across the United States. Some felt a burst of patriotic pride that a 2,000-year-old institution had chosen its new leader, Leo XIV, from a country that is about to celebrate its 250th birthday.
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Jack Healy
A raid on a largely Hispanic nightclub last weekend highlighted the wrenching choices mayors face between anti-Trump constituents and federal pressure for police cooperation. "I know there's a bigger immigration story going on, but this is about criminal behavior," Mayor Yemi Mobolade of Colorado Springs said. Credit...
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2 weeks ago |
ourcommunitynow.com | Jack Healy
Share To critics, President Trump’s threat to deploy the military to fight crime and unrest in America’s cities is a nightmare scenario, a pretext for martial law and a potential assault on democracy.But starting next month, dozens of National Guard troops will be on the streets of a deeply Democratic city, Albuquerque, in a deeply Democratic state, New Mexico. And they are being deployed by the state’s governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat.
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2 weeks ago |
nytimes.com | Jack Healy
New Mexico's governor said the troops are needed to help quell violence. But in the deeply blue city, the plan to deploy them has drawn uneasy comparisons to the talk of President Trump. To critics, President Trump's threat to deploy the military to fight crime and unrest in America's cities is a nightmare scenario, a pretext for martial law and a potential assault on democracy.
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1 month ago |
pressdemocrat.com | Jack Healy |Alexandra Berzon |Tara Siegel Bernard
GLENDALE, Ariz. — The line started forming outside the Social Security office in suburban Glendale, Arizona, not long after sunrise, dozens of retirees and people with disabilities, shuffling papers, some leaning on walkers, all anxious to know whether President Donald Trump’s government overhaul had put their safety nets at risk. When 9 a.m. came, an employee emerged from the building with flyers asking the crowd to come back — once they had scheduled an appointment.
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RT @jonathanweisman: Black history sites around the country are living with the uncertainty of Trump's order to combat "improper ideology,"…

Journalists are more obsessed than butlers about whether things are on the table or off the table

'Everything is on the table' on DOJ purge of Trump haters, AG Pam Bondi says https://t.co/cP17THMotj via @usatoday

“DEFCON 5 is ‘peacetime normal,’.” — says https://t.co/ffRQYbAcT0.

Rep. Jared Golden: "I don’t think that it’s been very effective, the Dem response, so far. In fact, I’m frustrated by it. If you make everything Defcon 5, then eventually nothing is Defcon 5, you know what I mean?" https://t.co/7lRxRN2l3p