friday-briefing

Friday Briefing

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Two New York City police officers, wearing blue jackets, walk on a sidewalk.
Investigators have not established a motive in the shooting.Credit…Caitlin Ochs for The New York Times

A day after a health care executive was assassinated outside a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, a frantic manhunt for the gunman continued. The authorities released two images that they said showed the face of the suspect, and a senior law enforcement official said he used a fake New Jersey identification to book a room at a hostel the night before the killing.

The man arrived in New York on a bus from somewhere south of the city on Nov. 24, the official said, and checked into the hostel on the Upper West Side. He checked out on Nov. 29, and checked back in the next day, the official added. See a visual timeline of the shooting.

Investigators have not established a motive in the shooting, but the authorities have said that the gunman appeared to have targeted the executive, Brian Thompson, 50, of UnitedHealthcare, by waiting for him early Wednesday morning. The gunman fired several shots that left Thompson crumpled and dying on the pavement.

Details: Bullet casings found near the scene were inscribed with the words “deny” and “delay” — possible references to ways that insurance companies seek to avoid paying patients’ medical claims.

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French President Emmanuel Macron in a televised address yesterday.Credit…Christian Hartmann/Reuters

A day after his government fell in a no-confidence vote, forcing the prime minister to resign, President Emmanuel Macron of France lashed out at his political opponents and declared that he would not step down.

Macron attempted to calm the country and sketch a way out of the chaos created by a deadlocked, angry lower house of Parliament. He promised to appoint a new prime minister in the coming days who could form a government that reflected a broad cross-section of parties, and who could pass an emergency budget to avoid a shutdown of essential state services.

Many blame Macron for France’s political turmoil — first for unbridled government spending since the Covid lockdowns, and then for calling a snap election last summer that resulted in a divided Parliament, with no clear majority. He has flatly refused to take the blame for the current chaos.

Quotable: “A new era must start, in which everyone must work for France and where new compromises must be built,” Macron said in a 10-minute televised address. “We can’t afford divisions or inaction.”


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Syrian rebels on the streets of Hama yesterday.Credit…Abdulaziz Ketaz/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Syrian rebels stormed into the city of Hama yesterday as government forces withdrew, in another stunning setback for President Bashar al-Assad. A rebel commander said on social media that their adversaries were in “a significant state of confusion,” with government soldiers and commanders abandoning their posts.

The advance on Hama comes just days after the rebels seized Aleppo, a major hub in the north. It has also shifted the front lines for the first time in years in the 13-year civil war, which has ravaged Syria and created a refugee crisis for many of its neighbors.

What’s next: In a video circulated by the rebel group leading the offensive, its leader, Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, called for a push toward other cities, including the capital, Damascus. Read more about the rebels leading the offensive.

Context: Analysts attribute the rebels’ shocking success to the attrition of the civil war on al-Assad’s forces. In addition, the allies who have supported Syria — notably Russia, Iran and Hezbollah — are now preoccupied with their own crises.

In other news from the region:

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Credit…Loren Elliott for The New York Times

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Credit…Paul Natkin/Getty Images

The year 1984 was a watershed in pop music, as the 1970s rockers who’d made it big the previous decade had to embrace new instruments and MTV — or risk being left behind.

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Credit…The New York Times

In an election year, an Olympic year, a year of brats and cowboys, witches and swans, a few fashionable people, characters and things stood out.

Our Styles desk made a list of the 63 people whose sartorial choices encapsulated 2024. The list includes Kim Yeji, the South Korean sharpshooter who came to the Olympics with a stuffed elephant and eyewear out of “Mad Max,” as well as the “Wicked” stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, who raised the bar for dressing the part with their steadfast commitment to wearing pink and green.

Everyone — or everything — on the list made us look, think and talk about the clothes we wear, the ways we live or the approaches we take to personal style and self-expression.

Check out the full list here.

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Credit…Christopher Testani for The New York Times

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