The national museum was born thanks to a collector’s donation of 12,000 works. An exhibition of its treasures celebrates the anniversary of its Washington D.C. location, an icon of Brutalist architecture
The state government has been transferring the death row population in the infamous San Quentin prison to dozens of penitentiaries across California. EL PAÍS visited Kevin Cooper, who has been awaiting execution for 39 years for a crime he maintains he didn’t commit
The high court overturns the decision of a lower court that restricted nationwide access to mifepristone, which is used in 63% of pregnancy terminations
In the 2024 elections, Hispanic Americans will be — more than ever — the quiet force that will define the results. And, according to the polls, for the first time in history, Latino support for the Republican Party has surpassed this community’s intention to vote for the Democrats
Senator Marco Rubio and Governor Doug Burgum are the favorites. The running mate he picks may help him win over women, young people or voters in swing states
The president has called on the Republican to debate him in June and September, instead of sticking to the traditional schedule of three events in fall
The pioneering legislation, which still needs to be signed by the governor, aims to set a precedent in the United States: four states are processing similar initiatives
The Republican candidate took advantage of a break in the Stormy Daniels trial to stage rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan, decisive states in the November election
A recording of a previously unreleased concert by the pianist at Carnegie Hall, made at the time when she found her sound, marks the beginning of a year filled with tributes to the widow of John Coltrane
The legend of American art, famous for his oversized yet minimalist metal works, embodied the idealized notion of the artist with a transcendental mission for whom both life and work are expressions of the same epic endeavor
At the oral arguments in the mifepristone case, a majority of justices appeared skeptical about the legal standing of a Christian doctors’ association to sue the Food and Drug Administration
The journalist from ‘The New Yorker’ reflects on loss and discovery in ‘Lost & Found,’ a memoir based on the experience of falling in love while mourning the death of her father
The verdict against the parents, who ignored their 15-year-old son’s calls for help and gave him a gun that he used to kill four students in Michigan, sets a legal precedent that has experts worried
Users of the video-editing app are on the warpath after the House of Representatives approved a bill that would force ByteDance to sell the social network to a U.S. company
The bill, supported by Republicans and Democrats and which now faces the Senate, would force ByteDance, the company that owns the Chinese video social network, to divest its stakes
They identify as neither Republicans nor Democrats and represent almost half of the electorate, a percentage that is growing steadily; in the November elections, they will be more crucial than ever