The Evening: Trump named in Epstein emails
Also, the penny was officially retired.
The Evening
November 12, 2025

Good evening. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.

  • Congress releases Epstein emails
  • The penny retires
  • Plus, a bullfighting star says farewell
An image displaying a redacted email excerpt from Jeffrey Epstein to Ghislaine Maxwell.

Jeffrey Epstein discussed Trump in newly released emails

Democrats in Congress released three emails this morning in which Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender, suggested that President Trump knew more about his abuse than Trump has acknowledged. In one of the messages, which you can read here, Epstein wrote that Trump had “spent hours at my house” with one of Epstein’s victims.

House Republicans responded about two hours later by releasing the rest of the material Congress had obtained from the Epstein estate — roughly 20,000 documents in all — and condemned Democrats for cherry-picking emails that mentioned Trump. My colleagues and I spent much of the day reviewing the trove. We’re updating what we’ve learned so far here.

The trove of Epstein emails includes several references to Trump, including one in which Epstein described the president as “borderline insane.” In another, he asserted that Trump “knew about the girls,” many of whom were later found by investigators to have been underage. Many of the other emails were innocuous.

Trump has emphatically denied any involvement in or knowledge of Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation. He has said that he and Epstein, the disgraced financier who died by suicide in federal prison in 2019, were once friendly but had a falling out. He accused Democrats of releasing the emails to distract from the government shutdown.

Still, the White House appeared to be rushing to prevent additional revelations. Senior Trump aides met in the White House Situation Room today with Representative Lauren Boebert, a Colorado Republican who is backing an effort to force a House vote on whether to demand the release of more files related to Epstein.

In other Trump administration news:

A security officer stands on the steps leading up to the U.S. Capitol building’s massive, columned facade under a blue, cloudy sky.
Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

The House returned to reopen the government

Members of the House of Representatives returned to Washington today for their first session in 54 days. They are tasked with approving a Senate bill to end the longest government shutdown in American history. The vote is likely to be tight, but the chamber’s Republican leadership is expected to get it passed.

Democrats are still fighting over the deal that a small group of them made to end the shutdown. Many in the party are unhappy that they were unable to secure the extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, but some believe the fight effectively highlighted issues like health care and food aid that could benefit them come election time.

For more: We asked five Democratic voters to weigh in on the shutdown-ending deal.

The front of a U.S. penny from 2006.
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

Today, the penny died

The American penny, which came to life 232 years ago under the oversight of Alexander Hamilton, was officially retired this afternoon. The final pennies, minted in front of top Treasury officials in Philadelphia, each cost some 3 cents to make — a financial absurdity that doomed the coin.

Fear not, the penny will not vanish just yet. There are still roughly 250 billion of them in circulation, and they are very, very rarely used to help pay for something.

Students gathered at desks work on computers.
Sixth graders learning math in San Luis, Ariz. Ariana Drehsler for The New York Times

Screens have transformed the classroom

Most students now use computers or tablets during the school day. In a survey of 350 pre-K through 12th-grade teachers conducted by my colleagues, 99 percent of teachers said their school provided devices for use in class. Only about a third of teachers said that was the case before the pandemic.

See what teachers told us about the benefits and drawbacks of in-school technology.

More top news

THE EVENING QUIZ

Today, I wanted to introduce a new game that you’ll see in this newsletter from time to time: The Evening Quiz. The questions will come from recent editions of the newsletter. Click an answer to see if you’re right. (The link is free.)

When the N.F.L.’s Washington Commanders return to D.C. after three decades in Maryland, Trump wants their new stadium named after him. Which political figure was the team’s old D.C. stadium named after?

TIME TO UNWIND

A makeup artist applies product to Michelle Obama’s face as she sits in a geometric dress outdoors.
Michelle Obama in a Milly gown, preparing to sit for Amy Sherald’s painting for the National Portrait Gallery. Carl Ray

Michelle Obama’s photo book isn’t just a coffee table tome

On its surface, Michelle Obama’s new book, “The Look,” provides her fans with a chance to flip through photos of her most memorable outfits as first lady. But our fashion critic, Vanessa Friedman, sees it instead as a historical document.

The book, Vanessa writes, captures a pivotal moment in the evolution of the role of first lady when clothing became an even bigger part of communication. For the first first lady with a stylist on the East Wing payroll, fashion was no longer just fashion; it was a vehicle of soft political power.

José Antonio Morante Camacho smokes a cigar in his living room around his prizes and bullheads.
José Antonio Morante Camacho at home in La Puebla del Rio, Spain. Ana Brigida for The New York Times

Spain’s biggest bullfighting star hung up his cape

When José Antonio Morante Camacho announced his retirement last month, the world of bullfighting lost its biggest star. Known across the Spanish-speaking world as Morante de la Puebla, he was considered a legend of the ring, beloved for his artistry, courage and imagination.

Even the Spaniards who wanted to ban bullfighting often appreciated Morante, 46, for his bravery in publicly wrestling with mental health problems.

An animated GIF of scenes from Leiden: people walk across a bridge next to a windmill; a flower hangs from a tree; people bicycle past a cafe.
Desiré Van Den Berg for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Arepas, small round bread pockets, stuffed with avocado, chicken and herbs.
Christopher Testani for The New York Times

Cook: These chicken and avocado-stuffed arepas are one of our most popular recipes this week.

Read: Lucas Schaefer’s “The Slip” is likely to be the most impressive debut of the year, our reviewer writes.

Listen: The Latin Grammys are tomorrow. Here’s a primer on some of the best tracks.

Wear: Take inspiration from our fashion photographer’s look of the week.

Learn: About 90 percent of Americans eat too much salt. We have tips on cutting back.

Test yourself: Take our quiz to see if you know where these books about road trips were set.

Play: Here are today’s