NYT editorial board: Why Trump will be a lame-duck president
NYT OPINION: There can be no illusions about who Trump is and how he intends to govern.
NYT OPINION: There can be no illusions about who Trump is and how he intends to govern.
OPINION: Beating political opponents is one thing. Now Trump faces a more powerful foe.
FT: The president-elect is facing two federal indictments and two state cases.
New paint, balustrades, privacy screens, walkway: New-ish Ponsonby state units upgraded.
Could a new trade war stifle growth, and will Trump's win trigger more inflation?
New York Times: Trump’s victory caps an astonishing political comeback.
Financial Times: US dollar on course for best day in years as ‘Trump trades’ take off.
Why Foodstuffs would face long odds if it appeals rejected merger plan.
Different interpretations of shareholder survey results.
OPINION: Also in today's letters: the Treaty Principles Bill, the US election and tax.
OPINION: The Treaty Grounds enable deep learning and a fountain of knowledge.
OPINION: Reduced excise on a less risky alternative ought to make sense too.
Spark and Infratil dominated trading volumes for the third day this week.
New York Times: Exit polls don’t have a very good track record.
New Zealand wholesale interest rates rose, while the NZ dollar fell on US election day.
OPINION: It was the Mexican peso that first indicated Trump was winning US election.
New York Times: Despite a barrage of threats, voting stayed largely on track.
New York Times: The film followed a thorny path to distribution.
Real-time spending data giving central European country an edge.
The proposed job cuts are the equivalent of almost 10% of TVNZ's workforce.
Board chairman discredits ComCom's suggestion Kiwibank could be a 'maverick' bank.
Financial Times: These campaigns have been another remarkable ride for American democracy.
Retaining a premium price in the future could be a problem, Zespri warns.
Broadcaster's big cuts: Email invites to be sent to affected workers by 11am Wednesday.
NY Times: Setting boundaries often means disappointing others. How to do it without guilt.
Being in and out has its challenges, Will Young says. Is this series his turning point?
New York Times: A look at some plausible outcomes.
A parent's compassionate approach can make all the difference when teens resist school.
OPINION: Herald deputy political editor Thomas Coughlan is at Harris' former college.
Financial Times: Authorities swoop in long-running investigation.