The Evening: Trump to demolish East Wing
Also, oil prices have fallen sharply.
The Evening
October 22, 2025

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

  • The East Wing is coming down
  • The U.S. strikes a boat in the Pacific
  • Plus, the motel turns 100
An animated GIF of construction equipment tearing away at a white building, the wall and roof of which are destroyed.
Alex Kent for The New York Times

Trump is demolishing the entire East Wing

President Trump is redesigning the White House. First, he decorated the Oval Office in gold. Then, he paved over the Rose Garden lawn to make it look like Mar-a-Lago. Now, a senior official confirmed today, Trump is demolishing the entire East Wing to make way for his $200 million ballroom.

When the president first unveiled his plans for a 90,000-square-foot ballroom, he pledged that the East Wing wouldn’t be touched. But the White House determined it was cheaper and more structurally sound to knock down the East Wing altogether. The demolition is expected to be finished by this weekend.

The East Wing was built in 1902, and overhauled in the 1940s. It was built primarily to conceal an underground bunker, the Presidential Emergency Operations Center, but became the domain of the first lady. Some legal experts have questioned whether the demolition runs afoul of the National Historic Preservation Act. (Here’s a map of the changes Trump is making to the White House.)

Trump has suggested that he’s nowhere near done. He’s directing renovations at the Kennedy Center, and now he wants an Arc de Triomphe-style arch built on the other side of the Potomac.

In other Trump administration news:

  • The University of Virginia struck an agreement with the White House to remove the threat of a federal investigation, part of a Trump pressure campaign.
  • The president met with NATO’s secretary general to discuss steps toward a cease-fire in Ukraine. The NATO chief said that Trump was “the only one who can get this done.”
  • The administration has made cuts to cyberdefense, even as threats grow.
Two military troops in uniform looking off the side of a boat.
U.S. troops during a training exercise in Arroyo, P.R., last week. Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters

The U.S. struck another suspected drug boat

For the eighth known time, U.S. Special Operations forces attacked a boat that the Trump administration claimed was carrying drugs. The strike, which Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said killed two people, was the first to target a vessel in the eastern Pacific Ocean since the president ordered the military to attack suspected smugglers.

U.S. officials have acknowledged seven previous strikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea, which they said have killed 32 people. The White House has described the strikes as self-defense against drug cartels that are attacking the country by bringing in drugs.

But the attacks, which began in September, are highly unusual and legally disputed. A broad range of legal experts have described the strikes as illegal because the military is not permitted to target civilians who are not engaged in hostilities. My colleagues answered many of the most common questions about the boat attacks.

An aerial view of pumps in an oil field. Patches of scrub brush are on the landscape.
J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times

Oil prices have fallen sharply

U.S. oil prices have dropped about 19 percent this year. That’s good news for drivers, who should be able to fuel their cars for less. But the falling price has caused strain for American oil companies, which have idled drilling rigs and shed thousands of workers.

The main reason for the price drop is that global oil production has remained strong, while demand has been slow to grow.

A CCTV still shot of people in blue hospital scrubs sitting on a concrete floor, being watched by soldiers.
Sweida National Hospital CCTV

Syria’s new leader promised peace. Massacres followed.

When rebels deposed the dictator Bashar al-Assad last year, the country’s new government — led by a former jihadist named Ahmed al-Shara — vowed to protect Syria’s many religious minorities. The assurances won international support, including from the U.S.

But then came a killing spree in a province called Sweida, where government forces rampaged against civilians from the Druse religious minority. Fury over the mass killings is now threatening al-Shara’s control over parts of Syria.

To understand what happened, my colleagues interviewed dozens of witnesses and analyzed hundreds of videos, uncovering execution-style atrocities against civilians carried out by government forces and pro-government fighters.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

Kathryn Bigelow, with long blonde-brown hair and a jean jacket, looking at the camera.
Meghan Marin for The New York Times

Kathryn Bigelow likes when facts and thrills mix

For the last two decades, the director Kathryn Bigelow has focused entirely on films that are informed by facts offscreen, like the “The Hurt Locker,” for which she became the first woman to win the Oscar for best director. Or, as she put it: by “the inflection point between film and journalism or information.”

Her new movie, “A House of Dynamite,” which arrives on Netflix this week, is a tense what-if thriller about American officials who try to stop an intercontinental ballistic missile from hitting the U.S. Our film critic Manohla Dargis talked with Bigelow about what interested her in the project.

An animated GIF of a sculpture of a woman with six arms holding different work items and running.
Animation By Fromm Studio

Middle-aged women are increasingly using testosterone

Testosterone use has recently exploded in popularity among middle-aged women, even though the Food and Drug Administration has not approved such use and many doctors will not prescribe it for women. The reason: Women who take the hormone — some in very high doses — report a dramatic return of their sex drives, as well as bursts of energy and improved muscle tone.

However, not everyone responds positively. My colleague Susan Dominus talked with researchers, doctors and patients to better understand the cultural phenomenon and how it affects women’s lives.

Four photos, clockwise from top left: a pink sign reading “Garden Please Curb Your Dog” with a childlike drawing of a dog and eggs; a planter box in the sidewalk; a sign with a dog in western wear that reads “Git Along Little Doggies”; and a paper sign tied around a tree that reads “Dog waste kills plants and trees.”
Graham Dickie for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Three deep red slices of pear with chopped pistachios, a cardamom crumble and a white cream.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Cook: Every bite of this roasted pear dessert offers something to savor.

Watch:The Monster of Florence” is a true-crime show set in Tuscany’s beautiful rolling hills.

Read: The thriller writer Hank Phillippi Ryan recommends nine great mystery novels.

Utilize: New software updates help your phone replace your printer and scanner.

Shop: The e-commerce app Depop has the energy of a good thrift store.

Listen: Our critic pointed out that several fake movie bands made genuinely good songs.

Decorate: Wirecutter’s home-décor experts explain how to shop secondhand like a pro.

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