The Morning: The end of the cease-fire?
Plus, Graham Platner’s scandal, Mitch McConnell’s hospitalization and luxury snow rooms.
The Morning
July 8, 2026

Good morning. At the NATO summit in Turkey today, President Trump put the cease-fire with Iran into doubt. “To me, I think it’s over,” he said. We’ll start with that.

Then we’ll look at the mess in Maine, with the implosion of Graham Platner’s campaign for the Senate.

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Mark Rutte, the NATO secretary general, and President Trump, sit on a stage in front of American and NATO flags and backdrop with the NATO logo.
Mark Rutte, the NATO secretary general, and President Trump. Doug Mills/The New York Times

A threatened cease-fire

The United States and Iran traded strikes last night, about a month after leaders of both countries signed a preliminary cease-fire deal.

The American military said it had hit 80 targets across Iran after Iran attacked ships in the Strait of Hormuz, the vital oil and gas shipping route. In response, Iran said it had targeted U.S. military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait.

The preliminary truce was intended to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and allow longer negotiations toward permanently ending the war. Both goals are in question now.

The price of oil spiked after the attacks — and jumped again after Trump’s remarks.

Read the latest news.

Inside Iran

A huge crowd of people surrounds a truck. Many are holding Iranian flags.
Arash Khamooshi/Polaris for The New York Times

Millions of people have come out to bid farewell to Iran’s late supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The photograph above, by Arash Khamooshi, shows a crowd on Monday in Tehran, where supporters so packed the route that the truck carrying Khamenei’s coffin could only inch forward.

The Times has annotated details on the photo to help explain the remarkable scene. Click the image above to see.

Graham Platner is standing at a microphone. His right hand is over his mouth.
Graham Platner Sophie Park for The New York Times

The mess in Maine

The Senate campaign of Graham Platner, a Maine Democrat, oyster farmer and former Marine combat infantryman who has been running to flip a Republican-held seat, appears close to its end after a series of scandals culminated this week in an accusation of rape.

Democrats high and low — in Maine and across the country — have called for the political neophyte to end his campaign and make room for a different candidate before the Monday deadline for him to withdraw from the ballot.

Even Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, one of Platner’s earliest and most stalwart supporters, backed away from the candidate yesterday afternoon, saying, “In light of these very serious allegations, I have recommended that he step aside.” The main super PAC for Democrats running for the Senate said it would redirect $24 million in advertising to other states if he remained.

Who could replace him in this critical race to determine control of Congress? Platner, who has denied the allegation that he sexually assaulted a former girlfriend, hasn’t yet stepped aside. But Democrats in Maine are starting to clash over the question as progressive and moderates gear up to pick his successor. It’s unclear how the state party might go about doing so, but options include a pop-up convention or a statewide caucus in late July.

My colleagues who are covering the race in Maine say that several candidates are being discussed, many of them losers in previous races. They include Troy Jackson, a Republican turned progressive who was president of the Maine Senate; Nirav Shah, a moderate who ran Maine’s public health agency; and Shenna Bellows, a former director of the A.C.L.U. of Maine who is now Maine’s secretary of state. You can read about them here.

(One polling firm even floated one of Maine’s most famous sons, the actor Patrick Dempsey. Some 52 percent of voters in its survey regarded McDreamy favorably.)

Progressives, including Platner, want to continue with a progressive candidate. Platner, after all, won the primary over Gov. Janet Mills, a moderate two-term Democrat who withdrew more than a month before the election. “To the Democratic establishment: This is not your opening,” one said.

According to other Democrats, though, the next nominee should not have anything to do with Platner. As a state senator put it on social media on Monday afternoon, “Any connections to Platner will doom that person’s campaign from the very beginning.” An official with the Maine Democratic Party said last night that Platner would have “no role” in the selection process.

Read more about the clashes here.

To the polls

Voters standing at voting booths.
Voters casting ballots in Portland, Maine, last month. John Tully for The New York Times

Just over a week ago, The Times published the results of a poll of likely Maine voters that we conducted with The Portland Press Herald and Siena College. The results showed Platner with a narrow two-point lead over Susan Collins, the Republican incumbent, in a head-to-head challenge for the Senate.

But for the Platner campaign, the poll also suggested that his past — his death’s head tattoo, his history with women — could be suppressing his chances of electoral success. When those surveyed were asked which party they wanted to control the Senate, 54 percent said Democrats, compared with 42 percent who preferred Republicans. That’s a difference of 12 points, not two.

Yesterday I talked to Michael Cooper, our politics editor, about that. Did voters in our poll want a regular-degular Democrat as their Senate candidate, and not someone weighed down by so much baggage?

“That’s a premise that’s going to be tested here,” Coop told me. “As we’re learning in real time, there’s no such thing as a generic Democrat.”

More on Platner’s fall

THE LATEST NEWS

Politics

Mitch McConnell is holding onto the arms of two men, who are standing on either side of him.
Senator Mitch McConnell being escorted onto the Senate floor last month. Michael A. McCoy for The New York Times

Around the World

Marine Le Pen, wearing a white shirt and pink jacket. There are security guards in front of and behind her.
Marine Le Pen Dimitar Dilkoff/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Marine Le Pen, the far-right leader in France, said she would run for president next year, after a court upheld an embezzlement conviction but let her seek public office.
  • Prince Harry lost a lawsuit against the publisher of a tabloid in Britain that he accused of unlawfully invading his privacy.
  • People in Venezuela are risking imprisonment by expressing public rage over their government’s response to the recent earthquakes.

Other Big Stories

  • An ICE agent shot and killed a man from Mexico during a traffic stop in Houston, the agency’s acting director said.
  • Last year, a mother in Idaho said she had found her twin toddlers dead in their bed and blamed vaccines. An anti-vaccine group co-founded by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. quickly embraced her. But prosecutors now tell a different, darker story: The mother has been charged with murder.

OPINIONS

A short video shows a grid with a person pictured in each square. When one person is speaking, the other squares are blurred out.
The New York Times

Dozens of Americans spoke with Times Opinion about one of the hardest jobs they’ve ever taken on: caring for an aging parent. Click the video above to learn their stories.

What lesson is there from the Graham Platner disaster? Heed the warnings you might not wish to hear, Michelle Goldberg writes.

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MORNING READS

A cavelike room is crusted with snow and icicles.
A snow room. TechnoAlpin

We’ve made the stories in this section free for you, once you log in. Enjoy!

SPORTS

World Cup

  • Argentina advanced via a late comeback over Egypt, scoring three goals in the match’s final 15 minutes to win 3-2.
  • Lionel Messi and company will play Switzerland, which survived a nervy 0-0 tie against Colombia and won in a penalty shootout.

Wimbledon

RECIPE OF THE DAY

An egg salad sandwich on white bread is on a plate with a pickle slice and some potato chips.