Thursday, February 20, 2025

The Evening: Kash Patel will lead the F.B.I.

Also, nearly one in 10 U.S. adults identifies as L.G.B.T.Q.
The Evening

February 20, 2025

Good evening. Here's the latest at the end of Thursday.

  • The next F.B.I. chief
  • A survey of L.G.B.T.Q. Americans
  • Plus, George Clooney's Broadway debut
Kash Patel speaking into a microphone.
Kash Patel in Washington last month. Eric Lee/The New York Times

The Senate confirmed Kash Patel as F.B.I. director

Fifty-one Republican senators voted today to narrowly confirm Kash Patel as the director of the F.B.I., installing a loyal ally of President Trump as the new leader of the nation's premier law enforcement agency.

Patel, 44, has embraced politics to a degree that is extraordinary for an F.B.I. director in the post-Watergate era. He is also a hard-line critic of the bureau. "As a campaign surrogate," our Justice Department reporter, Devlin Barrett, told me, "Patel vowed to empty F.B.I. headquarters, fire its leaders, and turn the building into a museum."

"It's safe to say there has never been a director like him," Devlin said.

Democrats questioned Patel's credentials and highlighted his embrace of conspiracy theories. But it's his loyalty to the president — the exact quality that seemed to secure him the job — that most concerned many critics and raised questions about the F.B.I.'s independence.

In an earlier era, Patel would have very likely had trouble surviving the confirmation process. But just two Republican senators — Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine — joined every Democrat in voting against him, a sign of Trump's hold over the party.

Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has been one of the few Republicans willing to vote against Trump's nominees. But the 83-year-old former leader voted for Patel and announced today that he planned to retire at the end of his term.

President Donald Trump sitting at a desk in the Oval Office.
Eric Lee/The New York Times

Trump's first month was frenetic

As of this afternoon, it's been a month since Trump returned to the White House and set out to overhaul the federal government at a scale unseen in decades. Some of the changes are considered well within his authority; others appear to purposely violate statutes, setting up tests of presidential power. We examined the legality of 38 of Trump's biggest moves so far.

He's not done. My colleagues reported today that the Trump administration has begun dismantling the teams of officials who had been flagging foreign interference in U.S. elections. Some experts are worried it could leave the country vulnerable.

Also, Trump is planning to all but eliminate the office that oversees America's recovery from the largest disasters and cut 6,000 jobs at the I.R.S.

In other politics news:

A group of people dressed in black, some with their faces covered, carry a coffin through a crowd.
Militants handing over what Hamas said were the remains of hostages in Gaza today. Saher Alghorra for The New York Times

Hamas returned the remains of Israeli hostages, with taunts

Hamas handed over today what the group said were the remains of four Israelis abducted during the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel — including those of Shiri Bibas and her two young children, whose abduction was widely seen as emblematic of the assault's viciousness. The fourth was that of Oded Lifshitz, who was 83.

The handoff was a theatrical display that a senior U.N. official called "abhorrent and cruel." The coffins were placed on a stage in front of a cartoonish picture of Israel's prime minister as triumphant music played. One coffin bore a picture of Kfir Bibas, who was less than 9 months old when he was kidnapped.

A line graph contains a dot for 9.3 percent of American adults in 2024.
The New York Times

Nearly one in 10 U.S. adults identifies as L.G.B.T.Q.

A large survey released today found that more than 9 percent of adults in the U.S. identified as L.G.B.T.Q. in 2024 — a rapid increase from just a few years ago. The rise, according to Gallup, was driven by adults 27 and under, nearly a quarter of whom identify as L.G.B.T.Q. More than half of these L.G.B.T.Q. young adults identify as bisexual.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

Team USA hockey players celebrating a score on the ice.
Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

Tonight is about national pride

At 8 p.m. Eastern, Team USA will take on Team Canada in the winner-take-all 4 Nations championship. And unlike other major American All-Star games, the players really care.

It is the kind of star-studded international competition that the hockey world has been hoping for. The Americans will be led by Auston Matthews, and the Canadians by both Connor McDavid and, of course, Sidney Crosby. The U.S. team is narrowly favored.

Clooney is seated and adjusting his left sleeve. A desk lamp is angled toward his face.
Thea Traff for The New York Times

George Clooney is making his Broadway debut

George Clooney doesn't like smoking; many of his relatives died of lung cancer. But when his children aren't looking, the 63-year-old movie star has been sneaking outside to practice lighting up in preparation for his Broadway debut next month in "Good Night, and Good Luck."

The play is an adaptation of a 2005 movie by the same name that Clooney made, financed by a mortgage on his house. Only this time, he stars as the CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow, who had a three-pack-a-day habit.

Clooney sat down for a five-hour interview with my colleague Maureen Dowd. He said he's ready but also "terrified" to take the stage.

Members of the choir Eternal Light, some with hands raised in the air, performing in a church.
"Eternal Light Choir Performing" (1980). Arlene Gottfried; via the Estate of Arlene Gottfried and The New York Historical

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Top down view of Cashew Butter Chicken Korma.
Armando Rafael for The New York Times

Cook: This cashew butter chicken korma is an efficient-yet-decadent meal.

Watch: "Best Interests" is a deeply empathetic British TV series.

Read: Here are some great second-chance romance novels.

Book: The dollar's strength against foreign currencies means bargains for U.S. travelers.

Work out: Body weight exercises can be just as effective as lifting. But it takes work.

Stitch: Our sewing expert swears by this "hardcore" sewing machine.

Hunt: Which Manhattan apartment would you buy with a $475,000 budget?

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

ONE LAST THING

Side-by-side looping videos show a few frames of gameplay from Metroid, on the left, and Castlevania, on the right.
Metroid, left, and Castlevania. 

In these games, it's a joy to be lost

In 1986, the Nintendo game Metroid gave players an unusual level of freedom to explore a labyrinthine alien world. The next year, Castlevania II was released with a similar format, but with a cursed vampire hunter in Dracula's mansion.

As decades passed, the games' ideas became so popular that they were smashed together into an accidental-but-enduring new video game subgenre: the metroidvania. With mazelike levels and areas that are unreachable until players achieve certain items or abilities, metroidvanias offer the freedom to be lost — and then found.

Have an explorative evening.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Matthew

Sean Kawasaki-Culligan was our photo editor today.

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

Evening Briefing Newsletter Logo

Writer: Matthew Cullen

Editors: Carole Landry, Whet Moser, Justin Porter, Jonathan Wolfe

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