Restaurants are closing and people are cancelling plans, but the White House sees no need yet for a big cash infusion.
By Jeff Stein
Fatouma speaks to mothers in a suburb of Niamey, the capital of Niger, in September, trying to convince them to heed her message: Let your girls grow up. (Jessica Sarkodie for The Post)
For millions of girls, the pandemic has amplified the risk of a forced wedding.
Pulled between not trusting some tech companies and still wanting to use their products, people look to government regulation, a Washington Post-Schar School poll found.
By Heather Kelly and Emily Guskin
Opinion by Susan Molinari and Beth Brooke
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Charles Lieber’s conviction is a victory for the U.S. Justice Department’s initiative against “economic espionage.”
By Bryan Pietsch35 minutes ago
Plaintiffs in a two-year-old lawsuit say emails show executives worked behind the scenes on a policy that would take more human livers from rural areas and send them to big-city transplant centers.
Millions around the world took to the streets this year.
Some portray disasters, such as 2004′s “The Day After Tomorrow.” Others create a post-apocalyptic society, as in 2015’s “Mad Max: Fury Road.”
By Sonia Rao
A cardinal at a bird feeder during a snowstorm in Silver Spring, Md., on Jan. 31. (Bill O'Leary/The Post)
Temperatures have hastily risen throughout the U.S., disrupting nature’s normal rhythms.
By Kasha Patel
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The omicron variant is disrupting travel on top of typical Christmas chaos.
They’re hard at work, fighting the supply-chain crisis.
By Eddie Alvarez and Jake Crump
Deluxe eggnog. (Tom McCorkle for The Post)
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Should you still go out to a party? What about a restaurant? How can you keep people safe at gatherings?
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But passing a measure to outlaw partisan gerrymandering could cause a new kind of chaos.
Robert Garcia, the mayor of Long Beach, Calif., has announced plans to run in a newly created House district. (Ashley Landis/AP)
The extreme response underlines China’s hypervigilance as Beijing prepares to host the Winter Olympics in February amid new local cases of the omicron variant.
By Lily Kuo
Chilean President-elect Gabriel Boric hugs a supporter Tuesday after a meeting with Constituent Convention President Elisa Loncon in Santiago, Chile. (AP)
Today’s WorldViewAnalysis
The new crop of leftists scoring wins across the region diverges from the socialist leaders of the 2000s.
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The Justice Department ruling could allow thousands to stay out of prison and continue reintegrating into society.
People wait to receive food in Chelsea, Mass., in November. U.S. population growth hit its lowest rate in history, in part due to deaths from the virus and a drop in immigration. (AFP/Getty Images)
The 2020 census showed the slowest growth rate for any decade since the United States started taking a census, with the exception of the 1930s during the Great Depression.
The large in-person tech conference is dealing with a loss of attendees and exhibitors over coronavirus worries.
By Heather Kelly and Chris Velazco
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said it's probing popular credit products offered by Affirm, Afterpay, Klarna, PayPal and Zip.
(Jonathan Baran/TWP)
Apple’s AirTags can be creepy and helpful. Finding them with some phones is easier than with others.
Hopefully, no one is using one of Apple's AirTags to track your location. But it’s important to know what to do, just in case.
A District Urgent Care clinic staffer registers people in line to get a Covid-19 test on Tuesday. (Michael S. Williamson/The Post)
The surge led residents to seek scarce home-testing kits and caused officials to warn of a need for tighter precautions and more hospital capacity.
Laura Jane Grace, plus three New Year’s Eve shows.
Quarterback Russell Wilson, right, and Coach Pete Carroll built the Seattle Seahawks into a power. (Ashley Landis/AP)
Seattle clinched the first losing season of Russell Wilson's career, an unwanted milestone that feels more like the end of the road than a bump in it.
By Adam Kilgore
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The Home You OwnPerspective
The constant churn of toys and clothes is overwhelming. But there are ways to get the mess under control — and teach your children about organizing in the process.
By Nicole Anzia
He feels resentful that their family’s financial security is falling exclusively on his shoulders as his wife starts her new business.
Your sister is visiting and wants you to provide empty drawer and hanging space by clearing out your stuff.
The LilyElevating stories about women
(Jay Maidment/AP)
The Season 2 finale of "The Witcher" features a big reveal about Ciri's backstory and the evil forces from which Geralt and Co. will need to protect her.
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