The New York Times Coverage Digest: A Week of War Diplomacy, Presidential Wealth and an Insurgent Left

Over the past week The New York Times has trained much of its firepower on the aftermath of the U.S.-Iran war, tracing both the fragile diplomacy now shaping the Persian Gulf and the political currents rippling through Washington. Alongside that foreign-policy throughline, the paper documented an extraordinary accounting of presidential wealth, a softening labor market, and a restive Democratic base flexing against its own incumbents. The result is a portrait of an America absorbing the consequences of a short, consequential war while its domestic politics grow more volatile.

U.S. Feared Israel Was Plotting to Kill Iran’s Negotiators

The New York Times reports that American officials believed Israel was preparing to assassinate Iran’s top negotiators, including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, during the delicate talks to end the war, and that Washington quietly warned Tehran through intermediaries. The paper frames the episode as evidence of the friction between the U.S. and Israel even as the cease-fire held. Independent outlets including CNN and The Times of Israel confirmed the reporting, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office dismissed the account as “fake news.”

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Oman Floats a Fee Plan for the Strait of Hormuz

The New York Times reports that, in the wake of the war, Oman has proposed a system for jointly administering the Strait of Hormuz that could include voluntary transit fees collected with Iran, modeled loosely on arrangements in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore. The plan follows a memorandum under which the U.S. and Iran agreed to keep the waterway open while its long-term governance is negotiated. NBC News and Business Standard corroborate the proposal, noting a key rift: Muscat wants the fees voluntary while Tehran insists they be compulsory, with Iran eyeing revenues as high as $40 billion a year.

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Trump Reported at Least $2 Billion in Personal Gains

The New York Times reports that President Trump pulled in at least $2 billion after returning to the White House, driven heavily by crypto ventures including meme coins tied to his image and stakes in World Liberty Financial, alongside branded phones, Bibles and watches. The paper characterizes the scale of the gains as without modern presidential precedent. The Washington Post and Deadline independently pegged the figure at roughly $2.2 billion, drawing on a federal government-ethics disclosure.

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Jobs Report Signals a Cooling, Not Overheating, Labor Market

The New York Times reports that the latest jobs report shows the labor market is not a source of inflationary pressure, easing one argument for the Federal Reserve to tighten policy. The paper reads the data as a market losing momentum rather than fueling price growth. That reading is broadly consistent with independent coverage from CNBC and Kiplinger, which noted payrolls rose just 57,000 in June, well below expectations, with unemployment at 4.2%.

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A Left-Wing Insurgent Ousts a 15-Term Democrat in Colorado

The New York Times reports that a left-wing insurgent unseated a 15-term congresswoman in a Colorado Democratic primary, the latest sign of the party’s restive progressive base overturning entrenched incumbents. The paper places the upset within a broader wave of insurgent challenges to the Democratic establishment. NBC News and Roll Call identified the winner as 29-year-old democratic socialist Melat Kiros, who defeated Rep. Diana DeGette by nearly 10 points after centering her campaign on opposition to the war in Gaza.

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Sixteen Children Found in Squalor in Rural Ohio

The New York Times reports that adults were arrested after 16 children were found living in squalor in rural Ohio, a case that has shocked the small community where it unfolded. The paper describes deplorable conditions and multiple arrests tied to the household. NBC News and PBS corroborate the account, reporting that four members of the Siders family were charged with felony child endangerment in Vinton County after children were allegedly confined for years in a single room, with several hospitalized.

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Taken together, the week’s coverage shows The New York Times moving between the high diplomacy of a post-war Middle East and the granular consequences of American politics and daily life. The connecting thread is a country reckoning with power, its uses and its abuses, from the Strait of Hormuz to a Colorado primary to a farmhouse in Vinton County.

This is an automated coverage digest aggregating The New York Times’s public reporting via Google News, cross-checked against independent web sources; links point to the originals. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by The New York Times. Dated July 3, 2026.