US-related events during the year 2023
The following is a list of events of the year 2023 in the United States .
The dominant political story of the year has been the 270-day long speakership of Representative Kevin McCarthy , whose slim majority in the House of Representatives has enabled a far-right rebellion to exert more weight over the lower chamber. The battle between the Freedom Caucus and McCarthy has been at the heart of an averted debt-ceiling crisis and the annual budget debate nearly devolving into a government shutdown , all culminating in the removal of McCarthy on October 3. The debate over abortion has further continued, with numerous laws being passed by state legislatures and court decisions issued at all levels over the issue with last year's overturning of Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey with Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization . Political and media attention also has focused on a series of alleged Chinese spy balloons entering US airspace, various candidates entering the race for the following year's presidential election , legal issues surrounding former president Donald Trump and to a lesser extent Representative George Santos , and the continued intensity of a culture war most notably escalated by an ongoing feud between Florida governor Ron DeSantis and the Walt Disney Company over the state's Parental Rights in Education Act .
2023 also saw the roots of a global banking crisis arise out of four American regional banks, the two largest being Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic Bank . 2021's inflation surge moderated in 2023, while the Federal Reserve continued to raise its interest rates in the first half of the year. The rise of artificial intelligence and large language models dominated not only the economy but has also been at the root of a Hollywood "double strike" conducted by Writers Guild of America and a SAG-AFTRA strike; these were part of a larger phenomenon of labor strikes across the country, in which such large diverse groups, such as teamsters and autoworkers won new contracts. Additionally, the latter half of the year saw many large mergers and acquisitions; some of the largest announcements being in oil and gas with ExxonMobil 's purchase of Pioneer Natural Resources for nearly $60 billion and Chevron 's acquisition of Hess Corporation for $50 billion, both in October and pending regulatory approval prior to closure. Mass shootings in 2023 have also continued in high numbers, with 528 occurring as of October 2 according to Gun Violence Archive .[ 1] Additionally in 2023, as of November 8, the US experienced 25 weather and climate disasters which caused at least $1 billion in damage each.[ 2]
Nancy Pelosi (D-California) (until January 3)
Kevin McCarthy (R -California) (January 7 – October 3)
vacant (October 3–25),[ a] [ 3]
Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana ) (since October 25)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Lieutenant governors [ edit ]
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Will Ainsworth (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska : Nancy Dahlstrom (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas : Tim Griffin (Republican) (until January 10), Leslie Rutledge (Republican) (since January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of California : Eleni Kounalakis (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Dianne Primavera (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : Susan Bysiewicz (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : Bethany Hall-Long (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida : Jeanette Nuñez (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia : Geoff Duncan (Republican) (until January 9), Burt Jones (Republican) (since January 9)
Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii : Sylvia Luke (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : Janice McGeachin (Republican) (until January 2), Scott Bedke (Republican) (since January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : Juliana Stratton (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : Suzanne Crouch (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : Adam Gregg (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : David Toland (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : Jacqueline Coleman (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : Billy Nungesser (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Maryland : Boyd Rutherford (Republican) (until January 18), Aruna Miller (Democratic) (since January 18)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Karyn Polito (Republican) (until January 5), Kim Driscoll (Democratic) (since January 5)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : Garlin Gilchrist (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : Peggy Flanagan (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : Delbert Hosemann (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Mike Kehoe (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana : Kristen Juras (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Mike Foley (Republican) (until January 5), Joe Kelly (Republican) (since January 5)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Lisa Cano Burkhead (Democratic) (until January 2), Stavros Anthony (Democratic) (since January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey :
Sheila Oliver (Democratic) (until August 1),
Vacant (August 1 to September 8)
Tahesha Way (Democratic) (since September 8)
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico : Howie Morales (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New York : Antonio Delgado (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : Mark Robinson (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota :
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : Jon A. Husted (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma : Matt Pinnell (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania :
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Sabina Matos (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : Pamela Evette (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : Larry Rhoden (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : Randy McNally (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Dan Patrick (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Utah : Deidre Henderson (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : Molly Gray (Democratic) (until January 5), David Zuckerman (Progressive ) (since January 5)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : Winsome Sears (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : Denny Heck (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of West Virginia : Craig Blair (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : Mandela Barnes (Democratic) (until January 3), Sara Rodriguez (Democratic) (since January 3)
Elections were held on November 7, 2023. This was an off-year election where neither the president or vice president were on the ballot. Seats in the US Congress were not up for election either, save for special elections. One vacancy in the Senate opened up this year due to the death of Dianne Feinstein ; California governor Gavin Newsom appointed Laphonza Butler to serve the remainder of Feinstein's term.[ 4]
Kentucky , Louisiana , and Mississippi held elections for their governors, lieutenant governors, state treasurers, attorney generals, and state agriculture commissioners.[ 5] The cities of Chicago , Columbus , Dallas , Denver , Houston , Indianapolis , Jacksonville , Memphis , Nashville , Philadelphia , and Salt Lake City elected their mayors.[ 6]
State and local elections [ edit ]
March 7 – Oklahoma voters rejected State Question 820 , which if passed, would have legalized recreational cannabis for adults 21 and over, given a 15% excise tax on cannabis sales. The margin against State Question 820 was an overwhelming 62% against.[ 18] [ 19]
April 4 – Wisconsin voters approved Question 1 , Question 2 , and Question 3 , all by landslides. Questions 1 and 2 were binding votes ratifying amendments to the Constitution of Wisconsin , Question 3 was a nonbinding referendum. Question 1 raised the conditions necessary for pretrial release from jail; Question 2 inserted an additional paragraph allowing judges wider latitude for when to apply cash bail for people accused of violent crimes; Question 3 posed the question "Shall able-bodied, childless adults be required to look for work in order to receive taxpayer-funded welfare benefits?" Question 3 had no legal effect, and Wisconsin law already has work requirements for all welfare programs in the state.[ 20] [ 21]
August 8 – Ohioans voted to reject Issue 1 by a margin of 57% against to 43% in favor. If passed, the ballot measure would have required future constitutional amendments to be passed by a 60% margin among other changes, as opposed to the existing 50% margin for approval. The ballot measure was widely seen as a litmus test for a November vote to codify abortion rights in the Republican-led state.[ 22]
November 7
January 1
January 2 – 2022 NFL season : Buffalo Bills player Damar Hamlin collapses from cardiac arrest after a tackle, causing the Bills' game against the Cincinnati Bengals to be cancelled and deemed as a no contest.[ 28] [ 29]
January 3
January 4
January 5
January 6 – A sixteen-judge panel on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit blocks a federal ban on bump stocks .[ 40]
January 7
January 8
January 9 – The University of Georgia Bulldogs win the 2023 College Football Playoff National Championship at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood , California . Georgia defeats Texas Christian University by a score of 65–7, the largest victory in college bowl game history.[ 46]
January 10
January 11 – 2023 FAA system outage : For the first time since 9/11, the Federal Aviation Administration issues a nationwide ground stop following the failure of the FAA's NOTAM system.[ 54] [ 55]
January 12 – Joe Biden classified documents incident : Attorney general Merrick Garland appoints Robert Hur to investigate mishandling of classified documents by President Biden.[ 56]
January 12–22 – The 2023 Winter World University Games are held in Lake Placid, New York .[ 57]
January 16 – A baby, a teenager, and four others are killed in a mass shooting at a home in Goshen, California , by alleged cartel members.[ 58]
January 18 – The US Virgin Islands legalizes marijuana, becoming the third US territory and 25th US jurisdiction overall to do so.[ 59]
January 19 – Trade union membership hits an all-time low in US dropping from 10.3% to 10.1%.[ 60] [ 61]
January 21 – A mass shooting occurs at a dance studio in Monterey Park, California , after a Lunar New Year celebration. Eleven people are killed, and nine more are injured; the perpetrator commits suicide the following day.[ 62]
January 23
January 24 – Classified documents are revealed to be found at the home of former Vice President Mike Pence .[ 66]
January 27 – Protests begin after the Memphis Police Department releases a footage of officers beating Tyre Nichols to death . Following the release of the footage, the department disbands its SCORPION unit while the Memphis Fire Services dismisses three personnel for failing to render aid.[ 67] [ 68] [ 69]
January 31–February 2 – A massive ice storm over the Southern United States kills 10 people.[ 70]
February 1
February 2
In a party-line vote, the House of Representatives ousts Representative Ilhan Omar from the House Committee on Foreign Affairs due to remarks that she had previously made regarding Israeli policy that many deemed as antisemitic.[ 74]
In United States v. Rahimi , the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals rules that a federal law which criminalizes the possession of a firearm by an individual who is subject to a restraining order for domestic violence is unconstitutional.[ 75] [ 76]
2023 Chinese balloon incident : Defense officials announce that a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon is being tracked over the western United States.[ 77]
February 3
February 4
February 5
February 7
February 9
Pence is subpoenaed by a special counsel leading investigations into Trump.[ 87]
The United States military shoots down a high altitude object over Alaska.[ 88]
February 10 – Mike Pence classified documents incident : The FBI conducts a search of Pence's home and finds an additional classified document.[ 89]
February 11 – The United States military, under orders of President Biden, shoots down a high altitude object over Yukon , Canada.[ 90]
February 12
February 13
Georgia judge Robert C.I. McBurney approves the release of parts of a grand jury inquiry investigating Trump's effort to overturn election results in Georgia .[ 94]
A mass shooting is carried out at Michigan State University . Three students were killed in the attack and five others injured. The shooter committed suicide as he was being approached by police.[ 95]
February 14 – Nikki Haley announces her 2024 presidential campaign .[ 96]
February 17 – A shooting spree takes place in Arkabutla, Mississippi , killing six people and injuring one other person. The suspect is later arrested.[ 97]
February 19 – Ricky Stenhouse Jr. wins the 2023 running of the Daytona 500 , beginning the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series .[ 98]
February 21 – Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy announces his candidacy for president in the 2024 election .[ 99]
February 21–24 – A massive winter storm causes extreme wind and rain on the West Coast of the United States, while bringing extreme blizzard conditions to the Midwest and Northeast.
February 23 – The syndicated Dilbert comic strip is dropped by many newspapers, most notably the Los Angeles Times , The Washington Post , and USA Today , after creator Scott Adams posts a video in which he characterized Black people as a "hate group ".[ 100] [ 101]
March 2
March 3 – Walgreens announces that it will not sell abortion pills in states where Republican officials threaten to take legal action.[ 107]
March 4 – Marianne Williamson announces her 2024 presidential campaign .[ 108]
March 6 – State representative Bryan Slaton introduces the Texas Independence Referendum Act which, if passed, would call for a state referendum on the secession of Texas from the United States .[ 80] [ 109] The bill would later fail to get out of committee before the end of the regular session.
March 8
March 10 – In the largest bank failure since the 2007–2008 financial crisis , Silicon Valley Bank , with $212 billion in assets, becomes the second bank to fail this month after it is shuttered by regulators after a bank run leads to its collapse. It would become the third largest bank failure after First Republic Bank failed a month later.[ 112]
March 12
March 13 – The Alaska Willow project , which calls for oil extraction in the northern region of the state, is approved. The project was and remains subject to substantial controversy and protest, especially on social media.[ 116]
March 14 – The March 2023 nor'easter causes widespread damage and knocks out power for 250,000 people in New York and New England.[ 117] [ 118]
March 15 – Federal regulators approve the merger of major railroads Kansas City Southern and Canadian Pacific .[ 119]
March 18 – Wyoming becomes the first US state to ban the Mifepristone pill.[ 120] [ 121]
March 20
The Idaho state legislature passes a bill that brings in execution by firing squad . If signed by the governor, Idaho would become the fifth state to use this method.[ 122] [ 123]
President Biden issues his first veto to block a federal rule by the Department of Labor to weigh the long-term impacts of social factors and climate change on investments.[ 124] [ 125]
March 22 – The Federal Reserve raises interest rates by 0.25 percent from 4.75 percent to 5 percent.[ 126]
March 24 – 2023 Pennsylvania chocolate factory explosion : An explosion at an R.M. Palmer Company chocolate factory in West Reading, Pennsylvania kills seven and injures eight others.[ 127]
March 24–27 – A tornado outbreak kills at least 26 people in Mississippi and Alabama. This includes a violent tornado which devastated the city of Rolling Fork and the town of Silver City in Mississippi, killing 16 people and injuring 165 others.[ 128] [ 129]
March 27
March 28 – The United States announces that it will stop sharing information about its nuclear arsenal with Russia over the latter's withdrawal from the New START nuclear arms treaty .[ 132]
March 29 – In basketball, the Sacramento Kings make the NBA playoffs for the first time since 2006 , ending their record 17-year playoff drought.[ 133] [ 134]
March 30
March 31 – Kentucky governor Andy Beshear signs a bill legalizing medical cannabis in the state.[ 137]
March 31–April 1 – At least 32 people are killed in a series of tornado outbreaks in the south and midwest.[ 138]
April 1 – Federal judge Robert L. Pitman orders that twelve books containing LGBT and racial content which were banned by Llano County, Texas school officials must be returned to school shelves.[ 139]
April 2
April 3
April 4 – Indictment of Donald Trump : The former president pleads not guilty to 34 charges of falsifying business records related to the scandal involving Stormy Daniels.[ 146]
April 5 – Attorney and author Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announces his presidential campaign , challenging Biden in the 2024 Democratic primaries .[ 147]
April 6
April 10
April 11 – In ice hockey , the Boston Bruins break the NHL record for the most points scored in a single season with 133 points. This comes two days after surpassing the 2018–19 Tampa Bay Lightning and 1995–96 Detroit Red Wings for the most wins in a regular season with their 63rd win.[ 154] [ 155]
April 12
April 13
April 14 – Montana becomes the first state to pass legislation banning TikTok on all personal devices from operating within state lines and barring app stores from offering TikTok for downloads.[ 161] [ 162]
April 15 – 2023 Dadeville shooting : Four people are killed, and 32 injured, at a birthday celebration in Dadeville, Alabama .[ 163]
April 18
April 20
April 22 – The Supreme Court rules that pending trial, mifepristone can remain on US markets. The decision is seen as a victory for the national abortion-rights movement .[ 167]
April 23
April 24
Within minutes of each other, Fox News and CNN fire Tucker Carlson and Don Lemon respectively. Carlson's firing was a result of the Dominion lawsuit settlement, while Lemon's was because of numerous misogynistic comments made in the past.[ 171]
April 25 – President Biden formally announces his campaign for reelection in the 2024 United States presidential election .[ 172]
April 26 – Disney and Florida's Parental Rights in Education Act : Disney files suit against Ron DeSantis over "a targeted campaign of government retaliation".[ 173]
April 27 – The 2023 NFL draft is held in Kansas City , with Alabama quarterback Bryce Young being selected by the Carolina Panthers as the first overall pick .[ 174]
April 28 – A shooting occurs in Cleveland, Texas killing five, and the suspect is caught after four days.[ 175]
July 1 – Question 4 takes effect in Maryland , legalizing cannabis for recreational use in the state; the first licensed sales take place the same day.[ 243]
July 2
July 3 – A mass shooting takes place in Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , killing five and injuring two. The suspect was arrested later that day.[ 246]
July 5
July 6–9 – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen visits Beijing with the intent to reduce tensions in Chinese American relations .[ 249]
July 7
July 9–11 – A series of destructive floods strike the Northeast after a heavy rainstorm.[ 252]
July 11 – Bank of America is ordered by the CFPB to pay $253.4 million, including a $150 million fine, for deceptive practices and misuse of overdraft fees.[ 253]
July 13 – The FDA announces that the birth control pill Norgestrel , also known as Opill, will be available without a prescription.[ 254]
July 14
July 16 – Mexico wins the 2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final against Panama 1–0 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood , California .[ 257]
July 17 – The FDA approves the drug Nirsevimab , also known as Beyfortus, which treats RSV in infants.[ 258]
July 18 – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announces charges against 16 pro-Trump "fake electors" who attempted to overturn Biden’s victory in the state during the 2020 election .[ 259]
July 21 – Warner Bros.' Barbie and Universal's Oppenheimer are both released, causing the Barbenheimer cultural phenomenon, which encouraged moviegoers to see both films as a double feature. The two movies end up being the highest and third highest grossing movies of the year, respectively.[ 260]
July 26
July 27 – Federal prosecution of Donald Trump : Special counsel Jack Smith charges Mar-a-Lago maintenance chief Carlos de Oliveira and levies additional charges against Walt Nauta and Trump.[ 264]
July 31 – The Vogtle Electric Generating Plant begins operations at its unit 3 reactor, America's first new nuclear reactor in seven years.[ 265]
August 1
August 3 – Pittsburgh synagogue shooting : Perpetrator Robert Gregory Bowers is sentenced to the death penalty .[ 269]
August 4 – Riots break out in New York City's Union Square during a PS5 giveaway hosted by internet streamer Kai Cenat . Dozens of people are arrested, including Cenat himself, and several police officers are injured.[ 270]
August 5 – A large brawl occurs on Montgomery's Riverfront dock.[ 271]
August 6 – At the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup , the United States loses in the Round of 16 to Sweden 5–4 in penalties after tying 0–0, making it the first time in the Women's World Cup that the United States failed to reach either the quarterfinals or the semifinals.[ 272]
August 7 – Former Minneapolis police officer Tou Thao is sentenced to four years and nine months in prison for his actions in the murder of George Floyd .[ 273]
August 8–11 – Wildfires caused by high winds from Hurricane Dora strike the island of Maui in Hawaii , almost completely destroying the town of Lahaina . As of August 25, 115 people have been killed, 67 have been injured, over 380 people are missing, and 2,207 buildings have been destroyed.[needs update ] It marks the deadliest wildfire in the last 100 years.[ 274]
August 9 – Taylor Swift completes the first U.S. leg of The Eras Tour at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles , which has had a wide impact on the United States economy and culture .[ 275] [ 276]
August 10 – Tapestry , owner of Kate Spade and Coach , announces it will buy Capri Holdings , owner of Michael Kors , Versace and Jimmy Choo , for $8.5 billion in cash.[ 277]
August 11 – The United States reports it recorded its highest number of suicides in 2022, with 49,449 people taking their own lives, making it the deadliest suicide rate in the country since World War II .[ 278]
August 14 – Trump is indicted in Atlanta on 13 counts including racketeering for his attempts to overturn President Biden's victory in Georgia during the 2020 election . Indictments are also announced against 18 Trump associates.[ 279] [ 280]
August 18 – American–Japanese–Korean trilateral pact : The United States, Japan, and South Korea agree to sign a trilateral pact at Camp David, Maryland .[ 281]
August 20 – Hurricane Hilary makes landfall in Southern California causing widespread flooding and thousands of power outages, making it the first major tropical storm to impact the region and the first to strike California since 1939 .[ 282] [ 283]
August 23
August 24
August 26 – 2023 Jacksonville shooting : A man killed three people before committing suicide at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida . The motive is believed to be racial hatred.[ 289]
August 28
Zijie Yan , a professor at UNC Chapel Hill is murdered by one of his graduate students.[ 290]
Google announced plans to invest $1.7 billion into its current and future Ohio data centers.[ 291]
August 30 – Hurricane Idalia makes landfall at 7:45am EDT with 125 mph winds near Keaton Beach, Florida . It is the first major hurricane on record to impact the Big Bend of Florida.[ 292]
August 31 – Proud Boys leader Joe Biggs is sentenced to 17 years in federal prison for his actions in the January 6 United States Capitol attack .[ 293]
September 1 – Two more Proud Boys , leader Ethan Nordean and member Dominic Pezzola , are sentenced to 18 and 10 years respectively for their actions in the January 6 Capitol attack .[ 294]
September 5
New York City Local Law 18 comes into effect, which effectively bans Airbnb from doing business within city limits.[ 295]
Ex-Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio is sentenced to 22 years in prison for his part in the January 6 Capitol attack.[ 296]
September 6 – Geologists report the discovery of what may be the largest known deposit of lithium , located in the crater of a dormant volcano along the Nevada –Oregon border, and estimated to contain 20 to 40 million tonnes of the metal.[ 297]
September 7
September 8 – Gotion High-tech Co. announced plans to set up a $2 billion electric vehicle (EV) lithium battery manufacturing plant in Illinois.[ 299]
September 9 – Coco Gauff wins the women's singles in the US Open , making her the first teenager to win the title since Serena Williams in 1999.[ 300]
September 10 – The US national FIBA team gets fourth place at the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup after losing to Canada 127–118 in overtime.[ 301]
September 11 – Hostess Brands announces it will be bought by The J.M. Smucker Company in a $5.6 billion cash and stock deal.[ 302]
September 14
September 15 – The United Auto Workers begin a strike against the big three American automakers of Ford , General Motors , and Stellantis .[ 305]
September 17 – In ice hockey, Mike Babcock resigns as the head coach of the Columbus Blue Jackets following an NHL Players Association investigation into his alleged requests for personal photos of players.[ 306]
September 18 – The Linac Coherent Light Source at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is upgraded to LCLS-II and successfully demonstrates its first X-rays , which are 10,000 times brighter than the previous version.[ 307] [ 308]
September 19 – Instacart makes a highly-watched initial public offering on the Nasdaq , with the new stock ticker CART. One of the biggest IPOs of the past two years, the company falls below its IPO price of $30 per share the day after it opens.[ 309]
September 20
September 21 – Media mogul Rupert Murdoch announces his retirement and plan to hand off his businesses, News Corp and Fox , over to his son Lachlan .[ 312]
September 22
September 25
September 26
September 27
September 26 – AWS announced plans for additional data centers in New Albany and a $3.5 billion investment by 2030.[ 321]
September 29
September 30 – 2023 Major League Baseball postseason : Following a 7–3 Miami Marlins victory against the Pittsburgh Pirates , Kim Ng becomes the first female general manager to lead a playoff team in Major League Baseball history.[ 324]
October 1 – California Governor Gavin Newsom appoints Laphonza Butler to fill the U.S. Senate seat left vacant by the death of Dianne Feinstein .[ 325]
October 3 – Kevin McCarthy is ousted as Speaker of the House , marking the first removal of a speaker by a vote in the House. Eight Republicans, led by Matt Gaetz , join all present Democrats voting to remove in a 216–210 vote.[ 326]
October 4 – LG Energy Solution announced a $3 billion investment in its Michigan battery manufacturing plant, part of a new lithium battery supply deal with Toyota.[ 327]
October 9 – Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin orders the deployment of a carrier strike group led by the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford to the Eastern Mediterranean in response to terror attacks on civilians in Israel by Hamas . The group also includes the cruiser USS Normandy and the destroyers USS Thomas Hudner , USS Ramage , USS Carney , and USS Roosevelt .[ 328]
October 11 – ExxonMobil announces it will acquire Pioneer Natural Resources in a $60 billion all-stock deal, the largest in the energy industry in nearly two decades.[ 329]
October 13 – NASA launches its Psyche mission to visit the large metallic asteroid 16 Psyche .[ 330]
October 14 – An annular solar eclipse takes place across the Southwestern United States .[ 331]
October 15
October 17 – Detroit casino workers call the first strike in their history after failing to reach a deal with MGM Resorts and Penn Entertainment .[ 336]
October 18
October 19 – 2020 Georgia election investigation : Attorney Sidney Powell pleads guilty in the Georgia election racketeering prosecution for her role in attempting to overturn the results; she is joined by fellow attorneys Kenneth Chesebro the following day, and by attorney Jenna Ellis on October 24.[ 340] [ 341] [ 342]
October 20
October 21 – Chevron announces it will acquire Hess Corporation for $50 billion.[ 345]
October 23 – Horizon Air Flight 2059 : An off-duty pilot reportedly attempts to hijack and crash a passenger plane traveling from Everett, Washington , to San Francisco , California .[ 346]
October 24
October 25
A mass shooting occurs in Lewiston, Maine , killing at least 18 and injuring a further 13 in the deadliest mass shooting of the year so far.[ 351] The suspect is found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound two days later.[ 352]
Hyundai and LG Energy Solution announced plans to invest $7.6 billion in a new factory in the US.[ 353]
October 27 – A retired Colombian army officer who participated in the 2021 assassination of Haitian president Jovenel Moïse is sentenced by a court to life imprisonment in Miami .[ 354]
October 26 – QTS announced plans to invest $1.5 billion in New Albany, constructing four new data centers.[ 355]
October 28 – Mike Pence suspends his campaign for the Republican Party presidential nomination for the upcoming 2024 election .[ 356]
October 29 – 2023 Ybor City shootings : Two people are killed and 16 others are injured in a mass shooting in the Ybor City neighborhood of Tampa , Florida . A 22-year-old man is arrested.[ 357]
October 30
November 1 – 2023 Major League Baseball season – The Texas Rangers win their first World Series after defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks in five games.[ 361]
DC Blox announced plans to build a data center campus in Douglasville, Georgia, with an investment exceeding $1.2 billion.[ 362]
November 2
November 4 – 2023 Israel–Hamas war protests in the United States – The National March on Washington: Free Palestine takes place at the National Mall and attracts between 100,000 to 300,000 participants with the goal of reaching a ceasefire in Gaza amid the ongoing conflict .
November 5 – Antisemitism during the Israel–Hamas war – Paul Kessler , a 69-year-old Jewish man, is fatally injured during a confrontation between pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian demonstrators in Thousand Oaks, California . Local authorities are considering the case as an anti-Semitic hate crime.[ 367]
November 6 – WeWork , once the most valuable U.S. startup, files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with liabilities of up to $50 billion.[ 368]
November 7
A massive fire breaks out in Hangar No. 1 at the former Marine Corps Air Station Tustin in Tustin, California .[ 369]
Toyota announced it would invest an additional $8 billion in its first North American electric vehicle battery manufacturing facility, as announced by the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina, adding another 3,000 jobs.[ 370]
November 9
November 10 – The Big Ten Conference suspends Michigan Wolverines football head coach Jim Harbaugh from the team's final three regular season games due to a sign stealing scandal .[ 373]
November 12 – Senator Tim Scott suspends his campaign for president .[ 374]
November 14 – 2023 Israel–Hamas war protests in the United States – The March for Israel rally takes place at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. to support Israel amid its war against Hamas, to call for the release of hostages held by Hamas , and to combat rising antisemitism . The rally attracts 290,000 people in person and 250,000 people through livestream.[ 375]
November 14–17 – Biden hosts the APEC summit in San Francisco which Chinese president Xi Jinping attends, marking the first time since 2017 that Xi has set foot in the United States.[ 376] Both countries at the conclusion of the summit agree to re-open suspended channels of military communications and to cooperate in their fight against climate change .[ 377] [ 378]
November 17 – Ford announced plans to invest nearly $2 billion in its Louisville plants as part of a UAW labor deal.[ 379]
November 16 – George Santos says he will not seek re-election after the House Ethics Committee issued a scathing report against him, which led to him being charged with several counts of fraud.[ 380]
November 17 – Sam Altman , the founder and CEO of ChatGPT developer OpenAI , is fired by OpenAI's board for reportedly lying to its board of directors, though reinstated five days later after OpenAI investor Microsoft announces its intention to hire Altman as well as OpenAI cofounder Greg Brockman after the latter's resignation in protest of the board.[ 381] [ 382] [ 383] [ 384]
November 20 – The US men's national soccer team qualifies for the 2024 Copa América , which will be hosted in the United States.[ 385]
November 21 – 2023 Israel–Hamas war hostage crisis – A deal brokered by the US, Egypt and Qatar , sees the release of 50 Hamas -held hostages, including American citizens, held in Gaza.[ 386]
November 22
November 23 – Pro–Palestinian protesters disrupt the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in three locations by wearing white jumpsuits covered in fake blood and gluing themselves to the parade route.[ 389]
November 25 – Anti-Palestinianism during the Israel–Hamas war – Three Palestinian students are shot and injured in Burlington, Vermont while on Thanksgiving break after the suspect harasses them for speaking Arabic and wearing keffiyehs to show solidarity with Palestine amid the ongoing war in Gaza.[ 390]
November 28
November 29 – The US alleges a plot by the Indian government to assassinate the New York-based Sikh separatist Gurpatwant Singh Pannun , a spokesperson for the pro-Khalistan group Sikhs for Justice . An Indian government employee is the target of an indictment in New York for their alleged role in the assassination plot.[ 395]
November 30 – Amkor Technology announced plans to build a $2 billion semiconductor advanced packaging facility in Phoenix, Arizona. The project is expected to generate up to 2,000 jobs.[ 396]
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