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The New York Times Wins 4 Pulitzer Prizes

The New York Times received four Pulitzer Prizes, including awards for reporting on Sudan’s civil war, the U.S. failures in Afghanistan, and photographs of the attempted assassination of Donald J. Trump. They also won in collaboration with The Baltimore Banner for an investigation into the opioid crisis.

The New Yorker won three awards for commentary, feature photography, and their investigative podcast, “In The Dark.”

ProPublica won the award for public service for their coverage of the impact of state abortion bans on preventable deaths of mothers.

The Washington Post staff won for breaking news reporting on the attempted assassination of Mr. Trump, Ann Telnaes won for illustrated reporting, and Reuters won for investigative reporting on the Fentanyl trade.

The Wall Street Journal staff won the national reporting award for their coverage of Elon Musk, revealing details about his influence in conservative politics and conversations with Vladimir Putin.

Other winners included The Houston Chronicle for editorial writing, Esquire magazine for feature writing, and Bloomberg CityLab for criticism.

In arts and letters, winners included Percival Everett for the novel “James,” Branden Jacobs-Jenkins for the play “Purpose,” and Kathleen DuVal for the history book “Native Nations.”

The Pulitzer Prize Board also awarded a special citation to Chuck Stone, a pioneering Black journalist who covered the civil rights movement.

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