CDC offers few guidelines for reopening safely

The advice, which places the onus on state and local governments, was released on the same day that President Trump called testing “overrated” as a tool to track and control the virus.
BREAKING NEWS

A majority of Americans going to work fear exposing their household to virus, poll finds

Nearly 1 in 3 Americans, more over half of those with jobs, have continued to leave the house for work at least once a week as states issued stay-at-home orders, the Washington Post-Ipsos poll also found.

Ousted official doubts U.S. ability to handle another virus wave

Republicans attacked Rick Bright, who told lawmakers that the government should not play down the possibility that a vaccine for mass distribution could take years to develop.
Emergency physician Alessandra Said dons personal protective equipment before attending to a patient with covid-19 in Manaus, Brazil. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
Emergency physician Alessandra Said dons personal protective equipment before attending to a patient with covid-19 in Manaus, Brazil. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
A woman falls to her knees behind a member of an emergency team that could not revive her elderly relative who went into cardiac arrest. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
A woman falls to her knees behind a member of an emergency team that could not revive her elderly relative who went into cardiac arrest. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
After emergency personnel load this 78-year-old man into an ambulance, they will start searching for a hospital bed. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
After emergency personnel load this 78-year-old man into an ambulance, they will start searching for a hospital bed. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
Emergency physician Alessandra Said, exhausted, sighs after a visit with her mother, a cancer patient with covid-19. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
Emergency physician Alessandra Said, exhausted, sighs after a visit with her mother, a cancer patient with covid-19. (Raphael Alves for The Post)
The ambulance used by emergency physician Alessandra Said and her team is sanitized. (Raphael Alves for Post)
The ambulance used by emergency physician Alessandra Said and her team is sanitized. (Raphael Alves for Post)

In Brazil, a dying man and a desperate search for an open bed

Brazil’s failure to provide enough hospital beds for its surging number of critical coronavirus patients is yielding increasingly grim results, particularly in Manaus, a city of 2 million people.

Guide to the pandemic

There have been more than 4.3 million confirmed cases of the coronavirus. The virus has killed more than 300,000. Access to the following stories is free:
Stories You’ll Want to Hear

Choosing between a paycheck and your health

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Then-national security adviser Michael Flynn speaks at a White House press briefing on Feb. 1, 2017. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)
Then-national security adviser Michael Flynn speaks at a White House press briefing on Feb. 1, 2017. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)

How a Flynn theory became central to the Trump reelection campaign

The president’s government appointees and allies in Congress are using their powers to generate a political storm aimed at engulfing Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, and former president Barack Obama.

Trump’s company has received at least $970,000 from U.S. taxpayers for room rentals

Taxpayers have paid for more than 1,600 nightly room rentals at Trump properties, including 530 nights at the president’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida.
Don’t Miss

Biden says he does not remember Tara Reade

Joe Biden says on MSNBC that he does not recall the former senate aide, who worked for him in the early 1990s.

Ex-Obama aides angry over Ronny Jackson’s embrace of Trump’s conspiracy theories

The former White House doctor adopted President Trump's conspiracy that former president Barack Obama and his administration "weaponized the federal government" to hurt Trump.
President Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speak during a coronavirus task force briefing. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)
President Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speak during a coronavirus task force briefing. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)

Trump encourages Pompeo to run for Senate, but secretary of state rebuffs him

President Trump’s request underscores growing nervousness among Republicans that they could lose control of the Senate and that a once safe Kansas seat could now be in play.
A health worker takes the temperature of people riding a taxi van on May 9, amid concerns about the spread of the coronavirus in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters)
A health worker takes the temperature of people riding a taxi van on May 9, amid concerns about the spread of the coronavirus in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters)

In Yemen, deaths with coronavirus-like symptoms spike as hospitals shut down

Hundreds have died in the past week, suggesting the number of infected far exceeds official figures.
Today's WorldView
Analysis

Is a U.S.-China Cold War already underway?

Officials in Washington and Beijing insist they don't want a new Cold War, but the geopolitical head winds seem to blowing in that direction.

Democrats scrutinize State Dept. plan to overhaul Social Security

The “Eagle Plan” is among the options that have circulated in the Trump administration to address concerns about the ballooning national debt. It calls for giving Americans $10,000 upfront in exchange for curbing their federal retirement benefits, such as Social Security.

Aspen Institute to return $8 million in small business funds

The nonprofit think tank's decision Thursday marked an about-face after it argued Wednesday that the money was necessary to keep its 430-person staff despite a $115 million endowment and several billionaires among its trustees.
Lt. Col. Jason Monaco, the commander of the Air Force’s 18th Aggressor Squadron, flies in a two-seat F-16D jet over Alaska. (Dan Lamothe/The Post)
Lt. Col. Jason Monaco, the commander of the Air Force’s 18th Aggressor Squadron, flies in a two-seat F-16D jet over Alaska. (Dan Lamothe/The Post)

In remote Alaska, changes coming in how the Air Force prepares for war

In supersonic aircraft screaming over the wilderness, Air Force pilots prepare for future conflicts as service officials weigh how to upgrade training.

Airbnb creates a new listing: Its laid-off workers

When Airbnb chief executive Brian Chesky laid off 25 percent of his staff, he offered at least 14 weeks of pay, 12 months of health insurance and help finding a new job — a pivot for Silicon Valley's competition for tech talent.
The Bank of North Dakota has long stepped up in times of crisis. In the 1940s, for example, it sold foreclosed farmland back to farmers. (Beth J. Harpaz/AP)
The Bank of North Dakota has long stepped up in times of crisis. In the 1940s, for example, it sold foreclosed farmland back to farmers. (Beth J. Harpaz/AP)
Analysis

North Dakota businesses dominated the PPP. Their secret weapon? A century-old bank founded by radical progressives.

How North Dakota small businesses secured more Paycheck Protection Program dollars per employee than any other state, with the help of the last bank of its kind.

MLB chief details testing plans in bid to return to play

Rob Manfred said that a positive test for a player would not necessarily force his entire team into quarantine.
The stands are empty as both teams enter the pitch before a German Bundesliga soccer match this month. (Friedemann Vogel/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
The stands are empty as both teams enter the pitch before a German Bundesliga soccer match this month. (Friedemann Vogel/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

A viewer’s guide to all the sports on TV this weekend. No, really! Sports on TV!

We’re limping back toward normalcy with German soccer, UFC, golf and NASCAR.

As parts of region prepare to reopen, local officials voice apprehension

Washington’s suburbs will remain shut down, but businesses in farther-out areas are preparing to open Friday.

Maryland gives ‘staggering’ forecast of economic damage; Virginia sees large tax losses

Both states reported enormous budget holes from the pandemic’s economic standstill. As of Thursday, more than half a million Marylanders had filed for unemployment in the past eight weeks.
Metro has closed 19 stations, including College Park. (Bill O'Leary/The Post)
Metro has closed 19 stations, including College Park. (Bill O'Leary/The Post)

Metro to require all passengers to wear masks or face coverings beginning Monday

The policy will not be enforced with criminal sanctions, but the agency is hoping riders will take responsibility for themselves and consider the health of others.
“Frozen” won’t be playing on Broadway when shows open back up. (Getty Images)
“Frozen” won’t be playing on Broadway when shows open back up. (Getty Images)

Citing the pandemic, Disney puts Broadway’s ‘Frozen’ permanently on ice

In the first ground-shaking Broadway closing of the pandemic, “Frozen” the musical will not return to Times Square after the shutdown ends, Walt Disney Co. officials announced Thursday.
The National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo. (National World War I Museum and Memorial)
The National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo. (National World War I Museum and Memorial)

There’s a new top mission at this World War I museum: Preserving soldiers’ personal stories

Instead of cutting staff, the Missouri museum redeployed them to flesh out another kind of history using letters from the front lines.
(Washington Post illustration; iStock)
(Washington Post illustration; iStock)

Congress introduces bill requiring cash refunds from airlines — regardless of who cancels the trip

“Americans need cash in their pockets to pay for food, housing and prescriptions, not temporary credits toward future travel,” Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass) said. “In light of this pressing need, and an unprecedented multi-billion dollar bailout, it’s absolutely unconscionable that the airlines won’t give consumers their money back.”
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