Women in India, Tell Us How You Voted in This Election and Why
Help us understand the concerns that drove a wave of women to the polls in the world’s biggest election.

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Help us understand the concerns that drove a wave of women to the polls in the world’s biggest election.
By SUHASINI RAJ and JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
And tell us the meaning behind them.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Anne Barnard, our former Beirut bureau chief, took to Reddit to share additional insights into her Times investigation of the cruel tactics President Bashar al-Assad uses to crack down on opposition.
By KASIA PILAT
Do you have a story idea, a question for our newsroom or feedback on our coverage? Please let us know.
Me Time, my column in Styles, has taken me to crystal healers, ballet classes, minus-230-degree chambers and a snake masseuse.
By Marisa Meltzer
It took a year, 450 interviews and a database built from scratch to answer a simple question: Why had anyone ever agreed to pay $1 million for the right to drive a yellow cab?
By Brian M. Rosenthal
In jailhouse interviews before and after her sentencing, the woman who became infamous for bilking banks and friends out of $200,000 was mischievous — and unrepentant.
By Emily Palmer
Anne Barnard spent years collecting documents and interviewing survivors to show the scope of President Bashar al-Assad’s chief instrument of fear.
By Anne Barnard
As a national political reporter, I get the opportunity to hear some of America’s most powerful people speak dozens of times.
By Astead W. Herndon
As we mark World Press Freedom Day, our international editor asks each of us to imagine what would happen around the world if journalists, and the public, were not watching.
By Michael Slackman
Here’s the letter our publisher, A.G. Sulzberger, wrote to Times employees concerning last week’s publication of an offensive cartoon.
By The New York Times
The change comes after two syndicated cartoons published in The New York Times International Edition were condemned as anti-Semitic.
By The New York Times
Our journalists in Washington discuss what the report means and what may come next.
By The New York Times
Maggie Haberman, Michael Schmidt, Mark Mazzetti and more of our journalists explained what the submission of the full report means and what may come next.
By The New York Times
Rebecca Corbett and Dean Murphy, who lead our investigations team, answer questions about how they decide which projects to pursue, where they get tips and whether their jobs are as thrilling as the movies make them out to be.
By Katie Van Syckle
The New York Times crossword editors reveal their process for evaluating and editing a puzzle submission.
By Will Shortz and Joel Fagliano
The Times’s fashion director and chief fashion critic reflects on what makes haute couture relevant.
By Vanessa Friedman
How we call the hits — and limit our misses — on the culture beat.
By A.O. Scott
In Times v. Sullivan, the Supreme Court ruled that public officials had to show not just that a story was inaccurate and hurt their reputation, but also that the publisher acted with “actual malice” — with reckless disregard for the truth.
By David McCraw
Tell us how your community is coping with the disease.
By Lara Takenaga
Help us understand how students in your country finance higher education and start their careers.
By The New York Times
Men in Japan do fewer hours of domestic work than in any other wealthy nation. Mothers and fathers there told us how they’ve managed to buck the norm.
By Lara Takenaga
Many see Tuesday’s election as a referendum on Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been prime minister for the last decade and is facing likely indictment for fraud.
By Lara Takenaga
Times readers debate how the former vice president has interacted with women.
By Lisa Lerer and Lela Moore
