We’re covering President Trump’s State of the Union address and Iowa’s Democratic caucus debacle. We’re also looking ahead to the expected end of the impeachment trial today. | | By Chris Stanford | | The president's speech on Tuesday ended with Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripping up her copy. Erin Schaff/The New York Times | | “In just three short years, we have shattered the mentality of American decline and we have rejected the downsizing of America’s destiny,” Mr. Trump said. Here are six takeaways from the 78-minute speech. | | News analysis: “Mr. Trump moved past preserving his first term and focused on securing a second with an argument aimed at both his political base and dubious suburban voters,” our chief White House correspondent writes. | | What’s next: Mr. Trump didn’t mention his impeachment trial, which is expected to end today with a vote in the Senate to acquit him. Here’s what to watch for before the vote around 4 p.m. Eastern. | | With 71 percent of precincts counted, here’s where the delayed results from Iowa’s Democratic caucuses stand: | | ■ Pete Buttigieg has 26.8 percent of state delegate equivalents, followed by Bernie Sanders, with 25.2 percent. | | ■ Elizabeth Warren (18.4 percent), Joe Biden (15.4 percent) and Amy Klobuchar (12.6 percent) round out the top of the field. | | Go deeper: The app for reporting results was built in less than two months by Shadow Inc., a company founded by veterans of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. The technology was part of Democrats’ broader efforts to match Republicans’ digital prowess. | | Related: Tom Perez, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, said on Tuesday that “what happened last night should never happen again.” The confusion has revived calls for Iowa to lose its longtime place at the front of the presidential nominating process. | | A convention center in Wuhan, China, on Tuesday. The building has been converted into a temporary hospital. Chinatopix, via Associated Press | | Chinese health officials today raised the death toll from the monthlong outbreak to 490, a day after 65 people in the country died from the virus. Here are the latest updates. | | Health experts are still unable to say definitively how lethal the virus is, but the mortality rate so far — about 2 percent — is lower than that of SARS, which is about 10 percent. | | Go deeper: China’s response to the crisis has offered its 1.4 billion people a rare glimpse of how a “giant, opaque bureaucratic system works — or, rather, how it fails to work,” our columnist writes. | | Edu Bayer for The New York Times | | In the decades after World War II, large areas of Europe went from being cropland to woods, and the Continent is now one of the most forest-rich regions in the world. That also means it’s ripe for wildfires. Above, hillsides scorched last year in the Spanish region of Catalonia. | | Our reporter traveled to Catalonia to learn more about managing woodlands in a hotter, drier climate. “Climate change is changing everything,” a fire analyst said. “We’re trying to build some vaccination into the landscape.” | | PAID POST: A Message From XBrand | Renewable Energy in Today's Age | Look around you...All of the things that you love about this planet can be used to power it. the sun, rain, wind, tides and waves. We are creating renewable enery that benefits you and our planet, more efficiently and inexpensively. Recharge today with something different. | | Learn More | | | Jason Henry for The New York Times | | What we’re reading: This piece from Stat, the health news site. Our Interpreter columnist Max Fisher says it’s “enormously helpful and illuminating” in describing possible long-term scenarios for the coronavirus. | | Jim Wilson/The New York Times | | Cook: This chocolate caramel tart comes from the dawn of the salty-dessert trend, and it shows why the pairing works. | | Australia’s bush fires have brought pain and destruction to land, wildlife and property, but they have also highlighted the camaraderie and support that Australians call “mateship.” Damien Cave, our Australia bureau chief, experienced it while reporting on volunteer firefighters. This is his account. | | We had just finished interviewing a group of firefighters trying to contain a sprawling blaze, and after bouncing down rocky roads for a few miles, we hit pavement. | | That’s when I heard the familiar thump, thump, thump. I turned to Matthew Abbott, the photographer who was driving. “I think we’ve got a flat,” I said. | | The back left tire on his Toyota pickup was hissing like a snake. The jack he had was built for a smaller car. | | Members of the Australian Army greeted volunteer firefighters last month. Matthew Abbott for The New York Times | | While we searched for rocks to prop it up, an S.U.V. pulled over. “Need any help?” the older man behind the wheel asked. | | Then a truck driver pulling a load of timber stopped, and a man with tattoos on his arms and legs hopped out. | | Within minutes, he’d found a better place for the jack, lying on the ground to push it into place. | | Three or four other cars drove down the small country road while we were stuck. Every driver stopped to offer assistance. | | Such kindness is no panacea for climate change or mega-blazes, but it does show that Australia has depths of something it will need to recover from this horrific fire season: thoughtfulness and empathy. | | That’s it for this briefing. See you next time. | | Thank you Mark Josephson and Eleanor Stanford provided the break from the news. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com. | | Were you sent this briefing by a friend? Sign up here to get the Morning Briefing. | | |