-

Google Search Boss Says Company Invests to Avoid Becoming ‘Roadkill’
At the start of its antitrust defense, Google attributed its success to relentless investment, countering government claims that it broke the law to stay ahead.
-

Ford’s U.A.W. Deal Will Raise Costs While Easing Labor Strife
A tentative agreement gives union members at the carmaker their best terms in decades but could complicate Ford’s electric vehicle plans.
-

U.S. Economic Growth Accelerated in the Third Quarter
Gross domestic product expanded at a 4.9 percent annual rate over the summer, powered by prodigious consumer spending. But the pace is not expected to be sustained.
-

Why U.A.W. President Shawn Fain Has Taken a Hard Line
Shawn Fain owes his rise within the United Automobile Workers to a group determined to make the union far more confrontational toward automakers.
-

Inside Google’s Plan to Stop Apple From Getting Serious About Search
Google has worried for years that Apple would one day expand its internet search technology, and has been working on ways to prevent that from happening.
-

Siemens Energy in Talks With German Government for Financial Help
Financial problems at the company, a major supplier of wind turbines and power plants, could hamper the energy transition.
-

Does Mike Johnson get too much credit for the effort to overturn 2020?
The new House speaker unquestionably supported the effort to block Joe Biden’s presidency. But it’s not clear that his role was particularly significant.
-

Judge rules Georgia’s political maps must be redrawn before 2024 elections
U.S. District Judge Steve Jones said the current maps must be redrawn by Dec. 8, in a win for voting rights activists who argued the state’s maps dilute the power of Black voters.
-

Trump ally Blake Masters announces House run in Arizona after failed Senate bid
The Republican venture capitalist, who lost an expensive bid to represent Arizona in the U.S. Senate last year, announced Thursday that he’s running for a House seat.
-

Most Republicans say Trump didn’t even try to overturn the election
It’s hardly the first poll to suggest strong unfamiliarity — or refusal to acknowledge — the basic facts underlying Trump’s indictments.