The outbreak is believed to be partly linked to a series of campaign rallies that President Trump held in the weeks before the Nov. 3 election, according to people familiar with the situation.
As coronavirus cases surge ahead of Thanksgiving and the holiday season, relying on a single tool or data point could create a false sense of security, experts say.
By Allyson Chiu1 hour ago
Post ReportsPodcast
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White House personnel director John McEntee huddles with President Trump backstage before an event in February. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)
Valerie Boyd, the top official for international affairs at DHS, was asked for her resignation, as was Bryan Ware, a senior policy aide at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Cybersecurity chief Christopher Krebs could be fired next, after his agency released a statement refuting the president’s election fraud allegations.
By Nick Miroff and Ellen Nakashima
The prosecutor in the Arbery case presented evidence that Travis McMichael had a history of using racist slurs and epithets in text messages and on social media.
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Republicans know Trump lost, but they're indulging him anyway. Here’s why.The Post's Ashley Parker explains why some Republicans followed President Trump's lead in denying the reality of the election and the danger they're posing.
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Analysis
The president insisted he would couple rolling back containment measures with protecting those at risk. He's only done the former.
By Philip Bump1 hour ago
The Technology 202Analysis
The Supreme Court justice said he was not criticizing officials for their policy decisions and said before launching into a speech that he hoped his remarks would not be “twisted or misunderstood.”
The 87-year-old was just elected to his 25th term in the U.S. House.
The high-profile aide to the British prime minister denied being pushed out, saying he is keeping a promise to become “redundant” by the end of the year.
Jerry Rawlings1947–2020
After seizing power twice in coups, he guided the African country toward democratic reform.
By Matt Schudel
Ugur Sahin, left, is chief executive, and Ozlem Tureci is chief medical officer of BioNTech. (Felix Schmitt/Contact Press Images/Focus)
Ugur Sahin and Ozlem Tureci, founders of BioNTech, are working with Pfizer. The husband-and-wife team, both children of Turkish immigrants to Germany, are the sort of people who don’t own a car and who took the morning off for their wedding day in 2002 before returning to the lab. Half a day was “sufficient,” Tureci explained.
Today's WorldViewAnalysis
The president-elect has already signaled his willingness to confront Beijing on other fronts.
By Ishaan Tharoor1 hour ago
Drivers rounding a prominent traffic circle in the Turkmen capital of Ashgabat now have the chance to take in a rather unusual sight.
Census worker Ken Leonard wears a mask at a U.S. Census walk-up counting site set up for Hunt County in Greenville, Tex., on July 31. (LM Otero/AP)
The share of Americans who doubt the accuracy of the census reportedly grew from 24 percent in early March to 31 percent by late July.
By Tara Bahrampour56 minutes ago
RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
By Ronald G. Shafer
The storm’s moisture has brought devastating rainfall to the Tarheel State.
There are no major conferences for the acting Homeland Security chief to attend in the region that week, and at least one person familiar with the outlines of the plan referred to the trip as “a boondoggle.”
By Nick Miroff
After months of negotiation, the deal makes in-person teaching optional for the second quarter of the academic year.
By Perry Stein1 hour ago
Prince George’s and Anne Arundel counties joined Baltimore City in implementing Maryland’s strictest limits for indoor social gatherings, forbidding groups of more than 10 people inside.
The commonwealth’s attorney and public defender filed unusual legal challenges against a judge they argue overstepped his authority and thwarted efforts to change the criminal justice system.
Bryan Votaggio replaces his high-end Volt with a more accessible dining destination.
By Tom Sietsema
Stuck inside during the pandemic, Geandy Pavón made 40 days’ worth of witty, elegant art.
By Mark Jenkins
Virtual film festivals, streaming concerts and socially distanced events offer escapes during the coronavirus pandemic.
By Fritz Hahn and Hau Chu
For many, the event marks the first real competition in 8 ½ months. The entire swim calendar was wiped clean during the pandemic, and most of the country’s top swimmers haven’t raced since early March.
By Rick Maese
Wednesday's draft will be virtual and, at least where the picks are concerned, highly unpredictable.
By Ava Wallace
They say he is “immature,” but money seems to be on their mind.
She’s not in a relationship so she doesn’t want to hear about anyone else’s.
It’s best to assume fellow shoppers haven’t noticed the one-way aisles.
“The Crown” Season 4 delves into the relationship between Princess Diana and Prince Charles. (Des Willie/Netflix)
TV Review
The Charles and Diana saga weighs heavy on ‘The Crown,’ but Gillian Anderson’s Thatcher is a triumph
By Hank Stuever
Book Review
In “Nobody Ever Asked Me About the Girls,” Lisa Robinson offers a behind-the-scenes look at the women of rock and pop.
By Elizabeth Hand
Ken Spears1938–2020
He and Joe Ruby, his longtime creative partner who died three months earlier, wrote all but four of the show’s original 25 episodes.
The novel’s self-help aphorisms are superficial when they aren’t simply nonsensical.
By Ron Charles
The announcement arrives toward the end of a successful year for the R&B singer, a three-time Grammy winner whose March release, “After Hours,” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.
By Sonia Rao



