The Evening: A potentially devastating hurricane
Also, the partisan redistricting battle keeps growing.
The Evening
October 27, 2025

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

  • Hurricane Melissa heads to Jamaica
  • The redistricting battle grows
  • Plus, finding meaning in nailed skulls
The coastline today in Kingston, Jamaica. Octavio Jones/Reuters

A powerful storm nears Jamaica

Hurricane Melissa, a Category 5 storm, is churning toward Jamaica. The hurricane could be the strongest storm in the island’s recorded history, with winds of 175 miles per hour, potentially life-threatening flooding and a devastating storm surge. Hurricane Melissa is expected to make landfall tomorrow morning; you can find the latest updates here and track the storm live.

Melissa has been moving painstakingly slowly across the Caribbean’s warm waters, and it is expected to deliver rain totals measured not in inches but in feet. Officials in the region have ordered more than a million people to evacuate and have closed many airports and schools.

More on the storm:

President Trump with the prime minister of Cambodia yesterday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Trump is testing his diplomatic skills in Asia

President Trump’s erratic approach to foreign policy has upended parts of the global economy, shaken relationships with some American allies and resulted in some substantial victories. Now, the president’s six-day trip across Southeast Asia is offering a new test of his diplomatic acumen.

Trump began the trip yesterday by signing a series of trade deals with Malaysia, Thailand and Cambodia. He met with Japan’s emperor today, and tomorrow he is set to meet with the new prime minister. On the agenda: a discussion on how Japan can increase its own military spending and invest more in the U.S., both of which Trump has demanded.

And on Thursday, Trump is set to meet with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, to discuss a trade deal. Details of the potential agreement suggest that it would return the U.S.-China relationship to where it was before this year’s trade war — and would solve a crisis of Trump’s own making.

In other Trump administration news:

Gov. Mike Braun, in a suit, speaking.
Gov. Mike Braun of Indiana. Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

The partisan redistricting battle keeps growing

Mike Braun, the Republican governor of Indiana, called a special legislative session today to redraw his state’s congressional map to benefit his party. The push makes Indiana the latest red state to consider upending the typical redistricting schedule at Trump’s behest.

It’s unclear if Braun’s effort will have enough support to pass new maps. But other Republican-led states, like Texas, Missouri and North Carolina, have already done so, netting the party as many as seven House seats in next year’s midterms.

Democrats have responded with their own redistricting efforts. In Virginia, lawmakers met today to begin the process of redrawing the state’s maps to benefit Democrats. In New York, where a bipartisan commission is in charge of the maps, Democrats are hoping that lawsuits — like one filed today — can flip a few seats. And a measure on the ballot in California next week could give Democrats a more favorable map in the state.

A student fills out a worksheet.
Lea Suzuki/The San Francisco Chronicle, via Getty Images

Politics is changing the way history is taught

Several major curriculum publishers have recently withdrawn history and social studies materials. California has retreated from teaching ethnic studies. And a group that provides free, nonpartisan lesson plans has found that teachers are shying away from topics like constitutional limits on executive power.

According to a recent poll of educators, some of that is a result of political pressure. Supporters of the changing curriculum say it’s a long-overdue corrective to what they see as a leftward tilt in the education establishment. Critics, however, see the changes as an alarming crackdown on free speech led by the Trump administration.

More top news

  • Elections: The party of Argentina’s libertarian president, Javier Milei, won a resounding legislative victory. Trump had threatened to withhold his $20 billion bailout of Argentina unless Milei’s party won.
  • Africa: The world’s oldest president, Paul Biya of Cameroon, won re-election. He will be nearly 100 years old when his next term ends.
  • Media: John Dickerson, an anchor of CBS’s nightly news broadcast, is leaving the network, the first major departure since it came under new ownership.
  • Health: Diphtheria, a vaccine-preventable disease that is especially dangerous in children, is surging. One hospital in Somalia has had nearly 1,000 cases this year, compared with 49 last year.
  • Vaccines: The anti-vaccine movement has led some pet owners to oppose lifesaving rabies shots for their cats and dogs.
  • California: A stretch of Los Angeles known as “the Blade” has become one of the country’s most notorious sex-trafficking corridors. A reporter for The Times Magazine embedded with vice investigators there.

TIME TO UNWIND

This picture shows Jack Carr standing in front of a dark wood wall in his podcast studio, holding a hunting bow. He wears a blue plaid shirt, brown pants and a trucker hat stitched with tomahawks.
Jack Carr. Russel Daniels for The New York Times

This pseudonymous author quickly gained a mass following

Jack Carr was a Navy SEAL before he became a best-selling author, and that’s a big part of his appeal. His thrillers, including his latest, “Cry Havoc,” are full of details and experiences that Carr learned from his time in the military.

Since his debut novel in 2018, Carr — who uses a pseudonym to protect his privacy — has sold more than five million copies and generated a large following among fellow veterans. His books have already spawned two TV series.

A human skull on a gray background with a large iron nail through its forehead.
Archaeology Museum of Catalonia

Science sheds light on an ancient practice

Some 2,000 years ago, the people of the northeastern Iberian Peninsula — modern-day Catalonia — observed a macabre ritual. They would mount the skulls of the dead on porches, walls and stakes. Were these displays trophies of war or memorials to loved ones?

A new paper suggests that both were true. By studying atomic isotopes, researchers learned whether the skulls had belonged to locals or outsiders. Skulls of locals were showcased in a home, while those of outsiders were found near a settlement’s outside wall — suggesting they might have been mounted as a warning.

TK

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Ryan Liebe for The New York Times

Cook: This chicken and vermicelli soup is a satisfying fall dinner.

Read: “Still Life” is one of our favorite cozy fall books.

Click around: These video games might actually help you focus.

Listen: Two of our in-house composers show how they make music for “The Daily.”

Exercise: These tips can help make running healthier and more fun.

Test yourself: Take this week’s Flashback history quiz.

Play: Here are today’s Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all our games here.