Your Tuesday Evening Briefing |
Good evening. Here's the latest. |
| Erin Schaff/The New York Times |
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1. The Capitol Police knew of a "strong potential for violence" ahead of the Jan. 6 mob attack but failed to take adequate steps to prevent the riot, the department's acting police chief said. |
In a closed-door briefing with lawmakers, Yogananda Pittman, who was not the acting chief at the time of the siege, apologized for the security failures, including a delay in approving pleas for National Guard assistance. She described the riot as a "terrorist attack." |
We also listened in as a group of Trump supporters and QAnon believers swapped audio messages in a public online forum for the past three weeks. This is what we heard. |
| Doug Mills/The New York Times |
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2. President Biden is plowing ahead with his agenda. |
Mr. Biden announced new actions targeting racial inequality and police violence against Black people. Among the executive actions are steps to address prison reform, discriminatory housing policies and police reform. |
| Andrew Seng for The New York Times |
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3. Open schools. Close indoor dining, bars and poorly ventilated gyms. |
| Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times |
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4. The world surpassed 100 million known coronavirus cases, a staggering milestone for a crisis entering a phase of both hope and deep concern. |
Around the world, borders are being tightened amid the threat of more contagious virus variants. As of today, the U.S. will require a negative virus test from all arriving international air travelers. France and Britain are considering stricter measures, and New Zealand said borders would remain closed until the population was vaccinated. |
We also took a closer look at Hong Kong, above, where the pandemic has brought the city's huge inequalities into the open. After an outbreak in the neighborhood of Jordan, officials locked down 10,000 residents over the weekend, most of whom live in tenement apartments, where spaces are so tiny and restrictive that they are called cages or coffins. |
| Altaf Qadri/Associated Press |
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5. Thousands of farmers poured into New Delhi to protest new farming laws, using their tractors to pull barricades apart and prompting police to use tear gas. |
Prime Minister Narendra Modi was overseeing a lavish parade and saluting military officers as chaos broke out in several parts of the capital just a few miles away. At least one person died, and our reporters in the area saw wounded people being carried away after a tractor tipped over. |
| Filippo Monteforte/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
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6. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte of Italy resigned, triggering the collapse of the government as the country faces a still serious coronavirus outbreak and halting vaccine rollout. |
President Sergio Mattarella was holding talks with parliamentary leaders to determine whether Mr. Conte, above, or someone else could garner enough support to govern, or if a limited technocratic government was a better option. If not, early elections might be necessary. |
Last week, Matteo Renzi, a wily former prime minister and critic of Mr. Conte, unexpectedly pulled his small center-left party out of the government in protest of Mr. Conte's handling of the pandemic, depriving him of majority support in the Senate. |
| Christian Monterrosa for The New York Times |
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7. Firefighters are battling an unseen hazard: Their gear could be toxic. |
Over the past three decades, cancer has emerged as the leading cause of death for firefighters across the county, making up 75 percent of active-duty firefighter deaths in 2019. |
"It's a new kind of line-of-duty death," one firefighter said. "It's still the job that kills us. It's just we die with our boots off." |
| Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times |
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8. There are no tourists or selfie sticks in the Louvre, but the halls are abuzz: The world's most-visited museum is getting a makeover. |
During the museum's longest closure since World War II, hundreds of experts are working on renovations. Some of the work is relatively simple, like dusting the frames of nearly 4,500 paintings. Some is herculean, like makeovers in the Egyptian antiquities hall and the Sully Wing. |
"Despite Covid, we continue to work as always," one curator said. "We must be ready to welcome back the public." |
| Norm Hall/Getty Images |
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9. Pitchers and catchers are scheduled to report for spring training in three weeks — even though one state does not want them quite yet. |
The players are eager to hold a regular 162-game schedule, after earning only 37 percent of their 2020 salaries in a 60-game season. Any delay could potentially threaten a schedule that is on track to begin April 1. |
| CBS |
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10. And finally, boldly going where no lexicographer has gone before. |
The origins of "transporter," "moon base" and "deep space" similarly go back further. Created by a former editor at large at the Oxford English Dictionary, the dictionary includes some 1,800 separate entries, from "actifan" and "aerocar" to "zero-gravity" and "zine." The dictionary also features a new typeface — Sagittarius. |
Have an out-of-this-world evening. |
Your Evening Briefing is posted at 6 p.m. Eastern. |
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