The Evening: Trump guts Biden climate policy
Also, Dick Van Dyke shares his secrets to aging well.
The Evening
December 3, 2025

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

  • Trump plans to lower mileage standards
  • Private employers cut jobs
  • Plus, Dick Van Dyke’s aging secrets
Doug Mills/The New York Times

Trump said he would lower fuel efficiency requirements

President Trump gathered executives from top U.S. automakers in the Oval Office this afternoon to announce that the federal government would weaken fuel efficiency requirements for tens of millions of new cars and light trucks.

The president said he would significantly scale back the Biden administration’s effort to spur the sale of battery-powered vehicles and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The move would effectively gut one of the country’s most significant efforts to address climate change.

Trump said that his proposal, which is set to be finalized next year, would save Americans $109 billion over five years and shave $1,000 off the average cost of a new car. The new policy frees automakers to sell more pickups and sport utility vehicles, which are usually much more profitable than smaller cars.

Environmentalists criticized Trump’s decision. Carmakers publicly praised the announcement, though some have privately fretted that they are being shuffled around by conflicting policies. The major U.S. car companies have already invested billions of dollars to produce electric vehicles and batteries.

The C.E.O. of General Motors told my colleague Andrew Ross Sorkin today that the company would continue to develop motors that are fuel-efficient and cleaner, even if federal standards no longer required them to do so. She was one of roughly a dozen guests at this year’s DealBook Summit. See what Scott Bessent, Gavin Newsom, Erika Kirk and others said in their interviews.

In other climate news: A prestigious science journal retracted a study that predicted that climate change would cause catastrophic economic damage by the end of the century.

President Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, seated at a table in the Cabinet Room.
Doug Mills/The New York Times

The military had contingency plans for boat strike survivors

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth approved contingency plans for what to do if an initial strike on boats carrying suspected drug smugglers left survivors, according to multiple U.S. officials.

Under the plans, the military would attempt to rescue helpless survivors — whom it would be a war crime to target — but it would try to kill them if they took what the U.S. deemed to be a hostile action, like communicating with suspected cartel members.

The plans could raise more questions about a second strike on a boat on Sept. 2 that killed two survivors of a first strike. One survivor radioed for help, the U.S. officials said. Adm. Frank Bradley, the operation’s commander, interpreted the purported communications as meaning that the survivors were still in the fight, and ordered the second strike.

In other Trump administration news:

Three men picking up papers displayed on a table.
An employment fair in Chicago in October. Akilah Townsend for The New York Times

Private employers cut jobs, hinting at a possible slowdown

Private employment declined last month for the third time in four months, according to the payroll processing company ADP. The firm’s economist said the losses were concentrated with small businesses, and indicated that wealthy households spent freely while lower-income families grew cautious.

The data is incomplete, and other sources have not shown the same sharp decline, but it is getting added attention because of delays in official statistics caused by the government shutdown.

In other economic news:

  • The country’s largest department-store chain, Macy’s, reported strong sales growth. The upscale chain it owns, Bloomingdale’s, performed particularly well.
  • Prices for major cryptocurrencies have plummeted.
A collage illustration with a heart overlaid on a rib cage, a figure with blue dots overlaid, and a collection of data represented by numbers, grids and circles.
Ricardo Santos

People are giving their medical records to A.I. bots

Millions of people around the world are using chatbots to better understand their health. Some — including more than a dozen who spoke to The Times — are uploading their personal health information and asking the A.I. bots to help them make medical decisions. One woman told us it seemed like the only way she could get answers.

Some experts are concerned. Studies have found that chatbots frequently guide users to incorrect diagnoses. And uploading sensitive data comes with real privacy risks.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

Four stills: a man holds a gun in the desert; two men look with fear off camera, a dance in traditional dress; and a woman in a wedding dress with two men in the desert.
Warner Bros. (2); via TIFF; Neon, via Associated Press

The race for a best picture nomination is wide open

My colleague Kyle Buchanan is always plugged into the whispers around Oscar voting. This year, he sees just five sure bets to earn nominations for best picture: “One Battle After Another,” “Sinners,” “Hamnet,” “Sentimental Value” and the still-to-come “Marty Supreme.”

As for the other five slots? It’s anyone’s guess, Kyle explained, so he’s got a lot of guesses.

For more great films: Our critics ranked their top 10 favorite movies of the year.

For something a bit more festive: We picked out several new holiday movies to stream.

Three women in formal dresses sitting on a sofa.
A scene from “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.” Fred Hayes/Disney

Mormon women are sweeping across pop culture

In years past, cultural portrayals of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were often satirical, investigative or focused on polygamy, which the church disavowed well over a century ago. Now, a wave of women who were raised in the church have become hugely popular across reality TV and social media.

It’s not just “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City.” Nearly half of this season’s professionals on “Dancing With the Stars” were raised Mormon. The church culture, one “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” cast member said, comes with “a little bit of an undertone of competition.”

Motion-blurred cars pass by Grand Central Terminal at dusk as 270 Park towers in the background.
The artist Leo Villareal made a display called “Celestial Passage” that the building shows most of the time. Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Four small round cake-shaped egg bites with vegetables.
Ghazalle Badiozamani for The New York Times

Cook: These cottage cheese egg bites were among our most popular recipes of 2025. See the rest.

Read: Janice Page’s new memoir is a moving story about her cross-cultural marriage.

Try: We put together a beginner’s guide to skiing.

Listen: Hear 13 great tracks from the beloved jazz institution A.A.C.M.

Save: Baby laundry detergent is expensive. It’s also unnecessary.

Play: Here are today’s Spelling Bee,