Editor Picks
Tokyo vs. New York: Why Japan’s Public Transit Outranks the U.S.
Japan’s train system is ranked the most efficient in the world, according to Statista. The U.S. is tied with Azerbaijan for 11th. Here’s how Japan got so far ahead. Photo Illustrator: Robert Sommerlad
Russia Claims Control of Bakhmut: The Bloodiest Battle of the Ukraine War
Debt Ceiling Deadline, Housing and Business Surveys: What to Watch
'Political Earthquake': Greece's Prime Minister Hails Election Victory
Bob Lee Murder: The Story of the Cash App Founder and His Alleged Killer
Disney Scraps Florida Campus Plans, Shutters Hotel Amid DeSantis Feud
Walt Disney Co. is reversing course on a nearly $900 million corporate campus and shutting down a costly new hotel amid growing tensions with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. WSJ’s Jacob Passy explains the company’s decisions. Photo: Octavio Jones/Reuters
Elon Musk Picks NBCU’s Linda Yaccarino to Lead Twitter. Here’s Why
Daniel Penny Released on Bail, Charged in Jordan Neely Chokehold Death
Title 42: What Its End Means for Immigration and the Southern Border
George Santos Indicted: What the Charges Mean for the Congressman
WSJ Opinion: Hits and Misses of the Week
Journal Editorial Report: The week's worst and best from Kim Strassel, Bill McGurn and Dan Henninger. Images: Reuters/AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly
Watch: Biden Addresses the Debt Ceiling at G-7 Summit
The Science Behind Controversial New Weight Loss Drugs Like Ozempic
WSJ Opinion: Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Develops a Counter-Movement
WSJ Opinion: The Real Meaning of the Durham Report
Biden ‘Optimistic’ About Debt-Ceiling Talks With McCarthy
Speaking ahead of debt-ceiling talks at the White House Monday, President Biden said ”I think we may be able to get where we have to go,“ while House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said he thinks they can “find common ground.” Photo: Leah Millis/Reuters
Watch: Tim Scott Announces 2024 White House Bid
Biden Won’t Accept Work Requirements of ‘Any Consequence’ in Debt Talks
Watch: Donald Trump, Anchor Kaitlan Collins Spar at CNN Town Hall
Watch: Trump Says as President He’d Settle Ukraine War Within 24 Hours
The Executive Keeping Tesla Rolling Isn’t Elon Musk
Tesla’s CFO Zach Kirkhorn has a reputation for working quietly behind the scenes to execute Elon Musk’s vision for the electric car maker. But as Musk’s attention gets pulled in several different directions, investors are focusing more on Kirkhorn and how he’s helping run the company. WSJ Tesla reporter Rebecca Elliott joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss. PHOTO: TESLA
Titanic Wreckage Visualized in Unique 3-D View
Will the Apple Headset Blow Up? The iPhone, iPod, Apple Watch Give Us Clues
ChatGPT’s Sam Altman: AI Will Be Like Photoshop ‘on Steroids’
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video Meeting
Inside the Writers Strike: Negotiators Explain Where Talks Broke Down
WSJ sat down for exclusive interviews with the showrunners of “Abbott Elementary” and “The Handmaid’s Tale” to understand the key sticking points that led to the writers’ strike and what’s next for the industry. Photo Illustration: Amber Bragdon/Getty Images
How the U.S. Is Trying to Block China's Control of Ports Around the Globe
The Wealth of King Charles III, Explained
How Elon Musk’s Net Worth Wavers Thanks to Tesla and Twitter Volatility
India’s Population Surpasses China, Shifting Global Order
WSJ Opinion: Regulating Artificial Intelligence
Speaking to a Senate subcommittee on May 16, 2023, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, IBM chief privacy officer Christina Montgomery and NYU professor emeritus Gary Marcus gave suggestions for regulating the AI industry—and highlighted the associated perils. Images: AFP/Getty Images/Reuters Composite: Mark Kelly
WSJ Opinion: The Revolt Against Woke Corporations
WSJ Opinion: Charging Daniel Penny, the Subway Samaritan
WSJ Opinion: Will California Commit to Racial Reparations?
WSJ Opinion: The Biden Family's Foreign Business Ties
More Wives Who Outearn Their Husbands, Now Less Likely to Divorce
The share of marriage with women earning more than their husbands has tripled over the past 50 years. WSJ personal-finance reporter Julia Carpenter joins host J.R. Whalen to discuss what has changed.
Ancient Hebrew Bible Sold at Auction for $38.1 Million
How to Get Insurers to Pay for Ozempic and Other Weight-Loss Drugs
Traveling Internationally? How to Avoid Long Delays for a Passport
Watch: Ed Sheeran Cites ‘Creative Freedom’ After Jury Verdict
Why Health Savings Accounts Are Both Misunderstood and Underused
The amount Americans can contribute to a health savings account will rise to the largest-ever increase on record next year. WSJ personal-finance reporter Ashlea Ebeling joins host J.R. Whalen to discuss what you should know about HSAs. Photo: Getty
Elon Musk: Tesla ‘Not Immune’ to Global Economic Environment
What the April U.S. Retail Sales Report Means for Inflation
Elon Musk Is Running Twitter Like SpaceX. Will It Work?
Retail Sales, Housing Data and Q1 Earnings Reports: 3 Things to Watch
Leveraging Partnerships and Platforms to Address Financial Crime
The Ever-Changing World Of Digital Assets: Regulation and Compliance
Reimagining Risk: The Evolution from Reaction to Prevention
Transforming Business: Strategies For Growth And Sustainability
Designing for the Future: The Role of Design in an AI World
The Looming Debt-Limit Deadline
The deadline to raise the debt ceiling and avoid default is rapidly approaching, but the congressional calendar is making things even more complicated than they already are.