Antiabortion groups are monitoring anonymous tips about potential noncompliance, and providers are preparing to challenge lawsuits that could ensue.
Both parties are thrust into new positions, as Democrats fear a long-standing principle is at risk and Republicans see their aspirations closer to reality. Will Democrats be mobilized by the threat, or Republicans by their gains?
By Annie Linskey, Colby Itkowitz and Mike DeBonis
Providers in the South are grappling with a future that could look a lot like the Lone Star State’s.
By Ben Guarino, Philip Bump, Mark Berman and Marc Fisher
Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson is accused of violating her oath of office and obstructing police in the Black man’s fatal shooting in February 2020.
Guerrilla fighters are part of a fledgling resistance force determined to prevent the Taliban from seizing the last fragment of Afghanistan the militants have yet to dominate — the rugged province of Panjshir, where the Soviets and the Taliban have failed before.
By Sudarsan Raghavan, Ezzatullah Mehrdad and Haq Nawaz Khan
The Taliban’s hold over the country is not in dispute but it is facing challenges from women against its extreme version of sharia law and guerrilla fighters in Afghanistan's north.
By Rachel Pannett13 minutes ago
Opinion by Thomas Warrick
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Alexanda A. Kotey pleaded guilty in federal court to involvement in the kidnappings and deaths of journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff and aid workers Peter Kassig and Kayla Mueller in Syria.
By Rachel Weiner and Tom Jackman
(Daniel Stolle for The Post)
The world’s largest cigarette maker is making acquisitions as it pursues a "nicotine-free" future. Many scientists are doubtful.
HOLIDAY WEEKEND
By The WayA Post Travel Destination
Summer’s last big travel weekend will be tempered by the delta variant.
Enjoy the long weekend with a free National Symphony Orchestra concert, attend the D.C. Jazz Fest or celebrate the grand reopening of the 9:30 Club.
By Fritz Hahn and Anying Guo
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The session, which will be public, could add clarity and transparency to a decision-making process that some people have criticized as confusing.
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A West Virginia judge ruled that a lawsuit against Trump Jr. can proceed because there is evidence he knowingly shared false and potentially defamatory information.
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The Biden administration wants Congress to provide at least $15 billion in pandemic prevention funding in the pending economic bill — dollars that might have to be diverted from other administration priorities.
By Mike DeBonis
The Republican congresswoman’s position will boost Democrats’ arguments that the probe is bipartisan even as many GOP lawmakers oppose it.
Abortion rights supporters protest in Edinburg, Tex., on Wednesday. (AP)
The FixAnalysis
By Aaron Blake
The FixAnalysis
A West Virginia judge ruled that a lawsuit against Trump Jr. can proceed because there is evidence he knowingly shared false and potentially defamatory information.
By Aaron Blake
The FixAnalysis
The top House Republican is trying to stop the Jan. 6 committee from getting phone records by using vague legal threats.
Indian authorities deployed troops around the restive region and cut Internet access following the death of Syed Ali Shah Geelani.
By Gerry Shih
Fed up with what participants said were the Taliban’s empty promises to protect their rights, participants marched toward the office of the governor of Herat to demand the inclusion of women in the coming government.
By Ezzatullah Mehrdad
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The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Thursday that it will no longer require disaster survivors living on inherited land to prove they own their homes before they can get help rebuilding.
Residents and businesses began cleaning up Thursday after remnants of the storm hit the D.C. region, with a tornado causing destruction in Annapolis and a severe storm triggering flooding in Rockville that killed a teenager.
By Justin Wm. Moyer and Karina Elwood
In two opinions, the justices affirmed the power of Gov. Ralph Northam (D) to take down the Confederate statue from state-owned property.
Time lost traveling to and from the office once seemed unavoidable. Now some say telework has made them see how unnecessary the commute has become.
The District-raised singer and fashion designer has a new ode to a disappearing city.
Enjoy the long weekend with a free National Symphony Orchestra concert, attend the D.C. Jazz Fest or celebrate the grand reopening of the 9:30 Club.
By Fritz Hahn and Anying Guo
Kathy Dillaber, who lost her sister at the Pentagon on 9/11, found connection and catharsis in the hit musical, which will be performed at the Lincoln Memorial on Sept. 10.
By Thomas Floyd
By Stacey Vanek Smith
The Sweetgreen chain sells salads for $10 to $15. (Jeffrey MacMillan for The Post)
Market WatchLast Updated: 09/02/2021
Dow 35,443.82
Today 0.37%
S&P 4,536.95
Today 0.28%
NASDAQ 15,331.18
Today 0.14%
United States' Sergino Dest, center, controls the ball during a qualifying soccer match against El Salvador on Sept. 2. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
By Steven Goff32 minutes ago
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By The WayA Post Travel Destination
September and pumpkin lattes are here, so start your fall trip planning with these expert recommendations.
Indoor family gatherings to include cousins who refuse the vaccine.
Reader is on the phone with a client when supervisor interrupts.
“Voyage” will be a follow-up to 1981’s “The Visitors,” which until now had been the swan song of the Swedish pop group.
By Associated Press
Simu Liu in “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.” (Jasin Boland/Marvel Studios)
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