BREAKING NEWS

In secretly recorded audio, Trump’s sister says he has ‘no principles’ and ‘you can’t trust him’

“I’m talking too freely,” Maryanne Trump Barry, a former federal judge and President Trump’s older sister, said during 15 hours recorded in 2018 and 2019 by her niece, Mary L. Trump. Barry’s remarks are the most critical comments known to have been made about the president by one of his siblings.
People gather for a rally in support of the Postal Service outside a post office in West Hurley, N.Y., on Saturday. (Justin Lane/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
People gather for a rally in support of the Postal Service outside a post office in West Hurley, N.Y., on Saturday. (Justin Lane/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

How Trump, Mnuchin and DeJoy edged the Postal Service into a crisis

Louis DeJoy’s short tenure leading the Postal Service has quickly engulfed an apolitical corner of the government in a controversy that’s fueling alarm over the reliability of vital services and the integrity of voting in November.

House passes bill to provide $25 billion to U.S. Postal Service amid Trump attacks

The 257-to-150 vote was largely along party lines. The Republican-led Senate is unlikely to act on the legislation.

Trump looks to GOP convention for optimistic campaign reboot

The party intends to present itself entirely in President Trump’s own image, and the stakes for him could hardly be higher.

Tenn. adopts new law that could strip some protesters of voting rights

Protesters who camp out on state property could now face felony charges. The law, which went into effect immediately, outraged civil rights groups.

Infections are trending upward in the Midwest

Spikes in cases across the Midwest come as other regions of the country have reported gains against the virus after seeing infections surge over the summer.

Without evidence, Trump makes accusation against the FDA

He accused the Food and Drug Administration of being part of the "deep state" and said regulators were holding up vaccines and treatments.
People sit at outdoor patios in Manhattan on Aug. 14. (Reuters)
People sit at outdoor patios in Manhattan on Aug. 14. (Reuters)

How our brains numb us to covid-19’s risks — and what we can do about it

Experts say this backsliding is predictable — in the face of what feels like chronic risk, we are less motivated to take specific action against the threat.
  • 11 hours ago

Amid pandemic, motels stage comeback

Seemingly designed for an outbreak, these modest lodgings may have been saved from extinction.
  • 2 days ago

D.C. to host thousands for protests and a civil rights march as Trump accepts GOP nomination

In the packed week ahead, Republicans and civil rights activist are planning protests, and Republican National Convention officials will set off fireworks on the Mall. Washington's mayor has doubled down on pandemic safety instructions for out-of-state visitors.

New York’s police grapple with surging gun violence, with public trust on the line

Hoping to ease tension in the city’s minority neighborhoods, the NYPD disbanded its controversial anti-crime unit this summer and said it would double down on community policing instead.
(Zach Purser Brown/The Washington Post)
Conventions upended: How to cover a virtual convention
University students prepare to return to campus: ‘It’s a ticking time bomb’
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Anti-racism: You may be doing it wrong. Here’s why.
Play Video 5:35
How a pandemic and protests affected voter registration
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Trump says the Post Office needs money for the election. He’s threatening to block it.
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Stories You’ll Want to Hear

How remote learning is affecting students, teachers and parents

As schools across the country wrestle with how to best return to teaching in the fall, the story of one class’s preparation for Advanced Placement exams reveals the highs and lows of distance learning. From The Post’s All Told podcast.
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  • Monday, Aug 24 at 2PM EDT
  • Tuesday, Aug 25 at 11AM EDT
More Top Stories

Three Calif. fires are now among the state’s largest ever, and they’re growing

More than 100,000 evacuations have taken place, and more lightning is on the way as officials seek help from other states, as well as Canada and Australia.
Vladimir Putin, left, and Alexander Lukashenko greet World War II veterans June 30 in the village of Khoroshevo, northwest of Moscow, (Kremlin Pool Photo/AP)
Vladimir Putin, left, and Alexander Lukashenko greet World War II veterans June 30 in the village of Khoroshevo, northwest of Moscow, (Kremlin Pool Photo/AP)

In one of the last wild cards between the Kremlin and the West, a strongman turns back toward Moscow for help

Russia’s determination to push forward a union with Belarus could suffocate aspirations for a more open, democratic society sought by protesters and opponents of longtime Belarusian leader Alexander Lukasheko.
Don’t Miss
Sen. Edward Markey, left, and challenger Rep. Joe Kennedy. (The Boston Globe/AP)
Sen. Edward Markey, left, and challenger Rep. Joe Kennedy. (The Boston Globe/AP)

In Mass., two Democrats chase generational change from opposite corners of the movement

Rep. Joe Kennedy is trying to unseat longtime Sen. Edward J. Markey and Alex Morse, a mayor, is trying to unseat Rep. Richard E. Neal, a 30-year incumbent who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee.
The Fix
Analysis

Five provocative nuggets from the Senate intelligence report on Trump and Russia

The 1,000-page document is rich with detail, including salacious items that the bipartisan report opted to include.
Retropolis
The Past, Rediscovered

Mail-in ballots were part of a plot to deny Lincoln reelection in 1864

  • 13 hours ago
The Fix
Analysis

How will the GOP answer Democrats’ tribute to American diversity?

Surveys explaining reasons for Donald Trump’s support in 2016 pointed to one idea that has come to define much of his base: anxiety over America’s increased diversity.

After Beirut blast, other ports find potential dangers in storage

Romanian officials found a single warehouse illegally holding about 5,000 tons of ammonium nitrate — nearly twice the amount of the explosive chemical that had been stored in unsafe conditions in the Beirut port.
A man holds a poster reading “Navalny was poisoned, we know who is to blame, Alexei you must live,” during an unsanctioned protest Saturday in Khabarovsk, Russia. (AP)
A man holds a poster reading “Navalny was poisoned, we know who is to blame, Alexei you must live,” during an unsanctioned protest Saturday in Khabarovsk, Russia. (AP)

How Navalny combined protests and anti-corruption campaigns to take on the Kremlin

Alexei Navalny, who is in critical condition in Germany after a suspected poisoning in Russia on Thursday, is more than just Russia’s leading critic of President Vladimir Putin — he challenges the entire Kremlin oligarchy.
(Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)
(Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)
 A woman record the strong waves due to the Laura storm in Guayama, southern Puerto Rico. (Thais Llorca/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
A woman record the strong waves due to the Laura storm in Guayama, southern Puerto Rico. (Thais Llorca/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

Marco and Laura forecast to hit Gulf Coast as back to back hurricanes, New Orleans at risk

The National Hurricane Center track forecast presents an ominous scenario in which Marco strikes coastal Louisiana on Monday, followed by a second wallop from Laura on Wednesday.

Thunderstorms might induce respiratory emergencies for those 65 and older, a study says

Days before thunderstorms, Medicare patients’ visits to the emergency department for respiratory illnesses increased, especially among patients with both asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • 11 hours ago

Trump administration to pause permit for Alaska’s Pebble Mine on Monday

The mine has come under fire from key Republicans on the grounds it could harm the world’s largest sockeye salmon fishery.

Chicks, cockroaches, crickets and frogs: How mail delays are affecting the live animal trade

Troubles at the USPS have led to reports of dead animals in postal warehouses.
(Eric Hart Jr. for The Washington Post)
(Eric Hart Jr. for The Washington Post)

Daniel Snyder’s pursuit of financial documents called ‘speculative fishing expedition’ in filing

Attorneys for a Virginia real estate firm counter that the NFL team owner’s request for the documents, which he claims are relevant to a defamation suit filed in India, is “overbroad."
Perspective

Ron Rivera’s cancer diagnosis is a challenge he and his players can turn into a building block

The NFL coach now has an instant bond with his new team. What the team does with it will say a lot about how quickly it can be relevant again.
Strasburg flexes his pitching hand in a game against Baltimore. (Jonathan Newton /The Post)
Strasburg flexes his pitching hand in a game against Baltimore. (Jonathan Newton /The Post)

Nationals ace Stephen Strasburg to undergo surgery for carpal tunnel, almost certainly ending his season

Washington placed the starting pitcher on the 60-day injured list earlier this month.

Zoom truce drives drop in gun violence in D.C. neighborhood

Thanks to a team from the D.C. attorney general’s office, a Southeast community goes nearly 100 days without shootings.
The pandemic keeps away the panda-mania that the zoo would typically experience. (Evelyn Hockstein for The Post)
The pandemic keeps away the panda-mania that the zoo would typically experience. (Evelyn Hockstein for The Post)

How the National Zoo orchestrated an ‘unthinkable’ panda pregnancy amid a pandemic

The newborn and 22-year-old mom Mei Xiang appear healthy.
This Italianate garden was established more than a century ago. (GAP Photos/John Glover)
This Italianate garden was established more than a century ago. (GAP Photos/John Glover)

Marking the gardener’s path through history

A new book from the venerable British landscape historian Penelope Hobhouse reminds us of our abiding relationship with nature.
(Nicole Eisenman/Carnegie Museum of Art)
(Nicole Eisenman/Carnegie Museum of Art)
Great Works, In Focus
Perspective

Nicole Eisenman’s painting perfectly captures the wonderful weirdness of human togetherness

“Ariana’s Salon,” which hangs in the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, is a tribute to Ariana Reines, a well-known poet and translator who used to organize a salon she called “Ancient Evenings.”
Some wines happily pair with lots of different foods, whether they’re rich, buttery, spicy, briny or pungent. (iStock)
Some wines happily pair with lots of different foods, whether they’re rich, buttery, spicy, briny or pungent. (iStock)

What does it mean for a wine to be ‘food-friendly’? Here’s what to look for.

We’re told that wine is food, meant to be consumed with food. Nowadays, however, we often drink wines as cocktails, on their own, without thinking about what we eat alongside.
(The Washington Post illustration/iStock images)
(The Washington Post illustration/iStock images)

A newbie RV renter learns from her mistakes — and so can you

For a safe and successful first trip, book a smaller vehicle with an experienced owner.
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