Immigrants have been turned away from pharmacies and other places after being asked for driver’s licenses, Social Security numbers or health insurance cards — documentation required by neither states nor the federal government but often requested at vaccination sites around the country.
Thousands of migrants have died of covid-19. Diplomats and loved ones are working to repatriate their remains.
By Kevin Sieff
The former president used most of a speech at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida to fling familiar grievances, excoriating a number of Republicans even as he publicly called for party unity.
By Josh Dawsey
Bad Brains, circa 1981, pictured from left: Dr. Know (Gary Miller), H.R. (Paul Hudson), Earl Hudson (front) and Darryl Jenifer. (Glen E. Friedman from the book “My Rules”)
Hoping to combine those British sneers with the radiance of Jamaican reggae, the group made an unprecedented noise that would make Washington the epicenter of American hardcore.
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Democratic lawmakers enacted a long-sought bill that creates a new discipline process and gives civilians a role in, but not control of, police misconduct probes.
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Eric Sheppard is the great-great-great-nephew of Moses Grandy, who was enslaved in the Great Dismal Swamp and ultimately became an abolitionist. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Post)
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A Virginia congressman has filed a bill to make the swamp a National Heritage Site.
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Health-care workers in Washington, D.C., are trying to make the coronavirus vaccine more accessible in Black communities and combat lingering skepticism.
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The crosscurrents could turn the coming weeks into a make-or-break moment for some of President Biden’s biggest initiatives — and perhaps a final chance to demonstrate whether bipartisan cooperation is possible.
By Mike DeBonis and Seung Min Kim
Stephanie Byers, left, and Annise Parker. (Lily illustration; photos: John Hanna/AP; Erich Schlegel/The Post)
Of the nearly 1,000 LGBTQ elected officials serving office, 40 percent are women and 9 percent are women of color.
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How the president is pursuing his agenda.
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President Biden’s transition has been slower than previous ones.
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Prince Hamzah stood with King Abdullah II to recite Quranic verses at the graves of their forefathers in an apparent attempt to show unity on a major Jordanian holiday.
By Josef Federman and Omar Akour | AP
Cargo ships, backlogged in San Francisco Bay on March 26, wait to enter the Port of Oakland. (Melina Mara/The Post)
Global trade depends on maritime workers, but the pandemic has thrust them into “humanitarian and economic crisis” — forbidden from coming ashore, at risk of a coronavirus outbreak onboard. Some mariners have been at sea for as long as 20 months.
By Taylor Telford and Jacob Bogage
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The agreement between the Biden administration and two South Korean companies will allow the new plants to open and run without limitations that the U.S. International Trade Commission had imposed.
By Steven Mufson1 hour ago
By Olga R. Rodriguez and Damian Dovarganes | AP
Metro now requires its employees to trigger a full emergency response whenever a passenger train, bus or MetroAccess car breaks down in lieu of several safety and reporting failures that officials said occurred last month.
The Memorial for Enslaved Laborers t the University of Virginia. (Evelyn Hockstein for The Post)
The monument evokes a broken shackle and seeks to honor the 4,000 enslaved laborers who constructed the university, many of whose descendants still live in Charlottesville.
The 45-year-old dining destination in Great Falls succeeds thanks to delicious consistency.
By Tom Sietsema
The coronavirus is still worrisome, but outdoor events are starting up again. Here’s what to know.
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After the Chicago Tribune's Phil Vittel and TV host Steve Dolinsky stepped down, the city is left without an experienced voice to help locals and visitors alike understand the scene.
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Many have turned to online plans to carve out room for school, work and hanging out.
By Erika Mailman
The list of reasons why the Washington Wizards were outmatched and overwhelmed by an aggressive, confident Phoenix Suns team for a 134-106 loss Saturday is varied and lengthy.
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They savored the break from the crowds, obligations and small talk of our pre-pandemic world. How will they fare now — and what can they teach the rest of us?
She’s been juggling care for three family members. Others are hounding her about visits.
A recent interaction with someone touting his professional success was an uncomfortable throwback.
Reader gets no grown-up conversations with her faraway sister.
Geoff Edgers and Tony Hawk on Edgers’s Instagram Live show, “Stuck With Geoff.” (The Post)
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