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. Other measures include a statewide use-of-force policy and a law the would make some complaints about police conduct available for public review.
Russia’s moves are seen more as a statement of resolve than as a prelude to an offensive.
Emergent Chief Executive Robert Kramer received $5.6 million in 2020 in salary, bonus, stocks, and stock option awards, according to a company filing Friday. Manufacturing problems at the plant this year ruined 15 million doses of Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine.
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 covid outbreak onboard. Some mariners have been at sea for as long as 20 months.
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Queen Elizabeth II has approved the prime minister's recommendation that there be eight days of national mourning, to end next Saturday.
By William Booth and Miriam Berger
The crosscurrents could turn the coming weeks into a make-or-break moment for some of Biden’s biggest initiatives — and perhaps a final chance to demonstrate whether bipartisan cooperation is possible.
By Mike DeBonis and Seung Min Kim
Opinion by Kate Crawford
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Shell Reed with her children in Houston’s Third Ward, where several past government antipoverty initiatives have failed to alleviate longtime ills. (Montinique Monroe for The Post)
Whether the largest antipoverty effort in a generation produces lasting change or becomes a cautionary tale about the limits of governmental largesse will play out in communities such as Cuney Homes.
NASA is preparing to fly the Ingenuity helicopter on Mars, in an otherworldly Wright brothers moment
The tiny helicopter’s flight, now postponed until at least Wednesday, would be a first in interplanetary travel.
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(Jason Aldag/The Washington Post)
Washington Post correspondents who covered the Arab Spring reflect on the uprisings and the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East.
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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s fundraising has alarmed her detractors, who warn she represents a dangerous side of American politics bent of waging divisive battles over race and the changing demographics of the country.
Crenshaw, who lost his right eye in Afghanistan, said he discovered his left retina was detaching this week.
By Amy B Wang
Outgoing Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) gives a wave to the crowd at the end of his resignation speech in the House Chamber of the U.S. Capitol on Oct., 29, 2015. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Post)
@PKCapitolAnalysis
When the former speaker entered Congress 30 years ago, the incentive structure encouraged falling in line, not becoming a rabble-rouser on TV.
By Paul Kane
The president is now associated with a losing cause, but some labor leaders applaud him for siding with them at an important moment.
How the president is pursuing his agenda.
By Washington Post Staff
President Biden’s transition has been slower than previous ones.
By Harry Stevens and Madison Walls
The Taliban has shown relative unity during the peace talks. The United States and its partners have not.
RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
An improbable group of Americans became the first to enter Communist China in two decades and begin a thaw that would evolve over 50 years.
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Last year, drought led to an extreme wildfire season in California and Colorado. This year it's worse.
By Diana Leonard and Becky Bolinger
The agreement between the Biden administration and two South Korean makers of batteries for electric vehicles will allow the two new plants to open and run without limitations that the U.S. International Trade Commission had imposed.
Tequila sunrise, anyone? As space tourism blasts off, experts contemplate the possibilities of an outer space check-in.
By Liz Langley
Patriotic scholars differ. But maybe Americans just don’t like civics.
By Jay Mathews
Virtual public listening sessions will be open to residents in all eight wards of the nation’s capital as efforts to reimagine policing intensify throughout the city.
City officials are also discussing whether to remove parking from one of the most congested commuter corridors in Northwest Washington.
By Luz Lazo
Tony Lewis Jr., left, is urging the president to free his father, Tony Lewis Sr., right. (Tony Lewis Jr.)
Drug kingpin is the title many associate with the older Lewis. But that describes the 26-year-old when he was arrested and not the 58-year-old who has spent decades in a federal prison mentoring young inmates, his son says.
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The 45-year-old dining destination in Great Falls succeeds thanks to delicious consistency.
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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.
By Tom Sietsema
(Josh Partee for The Post)
Many have turned to online plans to carve out room for school, work and hanging out.
By Erika Mailman
With its star back healthy and an upgraded roster around him, the Brooklyn team has answered many of its early-season questions and emerged as an odds-on title favorite.
By Ben Golliver
Both junior guards have until July 19 to decide whether to remain in the draft or return to College Park.
U.S. sprinter Allyson Felix praised the committee's decision to allow Olympic athletes to speak out on social justice issues during competitions. (AP)
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee’s stance on social and racial demonstrations conflicts with that of the International Olympic Committee, which adheres to Rule 50 of the Olympic charter that bans such activism.
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(Carolyn Van Houten/The Washington Post; iStock; Lily illustration)
While male-dominated industries are typically hit hardest in a recession, the coronavirus sparked a different kind of economic downturn.
By Caroline Kitchener
Tips from the columnist and readers: Rehearse, take notes and don’t chat in the exam room.
He goes through the bedrooms of her young adult children supposedly to clean up.
Reader gets no grown-up conversations with her faraway sister.
In this 2019 photo, DMX performs at Barclays Center in New York. (Theo Wargo/Getty Images)
Earl Simmons1970–2021
His first five albums all reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart. He also starred in action movies and made headlines for his drug use and legal troubles.
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