President Biden acknowledged the pain higher oil costs were inflicting on Americans, but he said the United States and its allies had to economically isolate Russia.
By Washington Post staff3 minutes ago
Members of Ukraine’s Territorial Defense Force help to evacuate the elderly Tuesday in Irpin, Ukraine. (Heidi Levine for The Post)
Residents who fled Irpin described a battered city where the line between combatants and noncombatants is increasingly blurred.
A ban on Russian oil probably means higher gas prices — a potential political headache for Democrats.
By Michael Laris, Jennifer Wadsworth, Mark Kreidler and Dan Simmons1 hour ago
Opinion by Muhamed Latic
Opinion by George Freeman and Lee Levine
Advertisement
Advertisement
More Top Stories
The week-long trial in D.C. federal court hinged on whether Reffitt, who never entered the Capitol building, paved the way for those behind him to do so.
By Rachel Weiner and Spencer S. Hsu
The House Jan. 6 committee's chairman, Rep. Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.), far right, and other committee members (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)
The panel’s "green team" is scrutinizing whether the Trump campaign, its affiliated super PACs, the RNC and protest rally organizers knowingly used false claims to dupe donors.
By Julianne McShane28 minutes ago
Don’t Miss
Advertisement
Advertisement
For YouRecommended Stories
Most read
featured Video
A solar facility on a 3,594-acre tract of land has environmental groups searching for a way to save what they consider a living museum.
By Mary Beth Gahan
Senate candidate Gary Chambers attends annual Zulu Coronation Ball held at New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. (AP)
Gary Chambers knows his campaign against Republican Sen. John Kennedy is a long shot. But the social activist is determined.
The FixAnalysis
The Fox News host's Putin-sympathetic view has yet to catch on, but it apparently won't fail for lack of trying.
By Aaron Blake
Volunteers in Berlin help fill a truck bound for Ukraine last week. (Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff for The Post)
With supply chains disrupted by the war, people going back have become all the more valuable — especially people driving cavernous tractor trailers.
The unusual public offer blindsided U.S. officials.
The boy escaped Zaporizhzhia, reaching Slovakia alone with a telephone number written on his hand.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Strong winds are set to rock much of the eastern United States amid plummeting temperatures, with possible blizzard conditions in the interior Northeast.
By Matthew Cappucci and Jason Samenow
The state’s position has parents more confused and medical experts criticizing its scientific justifications.
By Lori Rozsa1 hour ago
Hari Close prepares to embalm bodies at his Baltimore funeral home. (Marvin Joseph/The Post)
As the pandemic enters its third year, there's no return to normal for Hari Close and other Black funeral directors.
Bitcoin, dogecoin and other financial products in the crypto world are triggering a debate on whether or not they are allowed by religious Muslims.
The logo for Coinbase is displayed on a jumbotron in Times Square. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)
President Biden in set to require federal agencies to review key issues presented by crypto's surging growth.
By Tory Newmyer
Temperature difference from normal predicted by the American model for Saturday. (WeatherBell)
It may bring strong winds, downpours and a chance of snow.
By Jason Samenow and Wes Junker
The Damascus restaurant specializes in the Sichuan dishes that the chef learned from a master in Chengdu.
By Tim Carman
By Kerrin Jeromin, Becky Bolinger and Kasha Patel
The ’94 baseball strike was “millionaires vs. billionaires.” Now the media seems to love the worker. What’s driving the change?
By Ben Strauss
Phil Mickelson, who won last year's PGA Championship, is taking some time away from golf. (AP)
Amid a threat from the proposed Super Golf League, the PGA Tour altered its financial structure to reward its stars.
By Adam Kilgore1 hour ago
Advertisement
By the WayA Post Travel Destination
The groundbreaking move could set a new bar for how museums respond to changing attitudes about cultural heritage and the legacy of colonial violence.
From left, John C. Reilly as Jerry Buss, Quincy Isaiah as Magic Johnson and Jason Clarke as Jerry West in “Winning Time.” (Warrick Page/HBO)
By Inkoo Kang
TravelIncluding news and tips from By The Way