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Australia Raises Key Rate, Reiterates Further Tightening to Come
Indonesia Maps Out a Digital Rupiah as a ‘Tool of the Future’
Cooling Prices Give India Space to Slow Interest-Rate Hikes
Colombia Inflation Jumps More Than Forecast to Highest Since 1999
ECB Likely to Hike by Half-Point in December, Makhlouf Says
NYC Spars With Hosts Over New Airbnb Rental Laws
MercadoLibre Files Complaint Against Apple in Brazil, Mexico
Macquarie-Backed Data Center Company Aligned in Talks for $1.8 Billion Odata Deal
Apple Sued by Women Over ‘Dangerous’ AirTag Stalking by Exes
Intel Says It’s on Course to Regain Chip Production Leadership
Japan’s Kishida Hikes 5-Year Defense Spend to About $315 Billion
Ex-Miami Congressman Arrested Over Venezuelan Consulting Deal
SL Green Pursues Tallest Tower, 3D Ads at Times Square Casino
Beauty Products Make Female Scientist China’s Newest Billionaire
New This Week: Will Smith, ‘Pinocchio’ And ‘George & Tammy’
How a Family of Accidental Beekeepers Created a Hit Honey Company
Attacks on Russia Test the Limits of US-Ukraine Alliance
There Are Scary Downsides to Xi Ditching Covid Zero
Drone Strikes Show Putin His Homeland Isn’t Safe
The Club With a 60,000-Woman Waitlist
The Biggest Black-Owned Vintner Wants to Help More Women Break the (Wine) Glass Ceiling
How to Cash Out of a Small Business Without Selling Out
Indonesia Bill Barring Extramarital Sex Gets Renewed Debate
Read the Supreme Court Arguments on the Wedding Web Designer Shunning Same-Sex Couples
JPMorgan Says CO2 Greenwashers Face Worst Purge: ESG Regulations
US, EU Weigh Climate-Based Tariffs on Chinese Steel and Aluminum
10 Years Later, a Return Trip to ‘Walkable City’
A Swiss Mission for Architects: Hide That Housing Complex
Flu Hospitalizations Nearly Double Over the Last Week in the US
What Does Political Giving Look Like for Crypto After the Downfall of FTX? (Podcast)
How Two Crypto Hedge Funds Dodged the Market Collapse
Crypto Exchange Bybit to Cut 30% of Jobs in ‘Deepening Bear Market’
An election worker organizes ballots to be counted in Pennsylvania.
Ryan Teague Beckwith and
Sarah Holder
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Some local officials in the battleground states of Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania defied state elections laws as they pushed debunked claims about the November midterms, a disturbing trend that could spell trouble in 2024.
The incidents, most of which were rebuffed or ended when the officials backed down, show that despite losses for dozens of candidates who worked to overturn President Joe Biden’s victory, GOP officials are still trying to toy with electoral defeats.