Activists see a pattern imperiling many of President Biden’s non-White nominees, making their confirmation process rougher and meaner than in previous years and when compared with their White counterparts.
The president will deliver virtual remarks to the winter meeting of the National Governors Association on Thursday, continuing an outreach that in some cases includes Republican governors who resisted declaring him the winner of the presidential election.
By Matt Viser
Opened in 1760, the school may be the oldest still-standing building of its kind. More than 400 Black students were taught during the school’s existence, even though the practice was considered dangerous at the time by enslavers.
By Joe Heim
Rep. Marie Newman (D-Ill.), who has a transgender daughter, hung a transgender rights flag outside her office on Wednesday after a contentious debate on the Equality Act. Her neighbor, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green (R-Ga.), retaliated with an anti-transgender sign.
The variant now makes up more than half of the infections in 44 counties, scientists said.
By Joel Achenbach and Carolyn Y. Johnson
If many Americans opted to wait for a preferred vaccine it would not only leave more people at risk of developing a serious case of covid, but would also likely slow down the vaccination program, experts said.
By Allyson Chiu
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Five strategies to increase the chances of getting a free shot for yourself or someone you care about.
We talked to experts about how to navigate pandemic life in them.
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In Washington, there were 345 carjackings in 2020, compared with 142 the year before. It's worse this year, with 46 carjackings through early February.
By Dan Morse and Tom Jackman
A wildebeest at Valkyrie Ranch in Paige, Tex. (Sergio Flores for The Post)
Ranchers and breeders are still calculating their losses.
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How West Virginia became a leader in covid-19 vaccinationsGoing into the pandemic, West Virginia knew it was facing trouble, with one of the oldest and sickest populations in the U.S. But it's found vaccine success.
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Then-President Donald Trump on stage at the Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Md., on March 2, 2019. (J. Lawler Duggan for The Post)
Like the Republican Party and most of its voters, conservative activists meeting in Florida are all-in on false Trump claims.
By David Weigel
Full coverage of what the president is doing to enact his agenda.
By Washington Post Staff
The announcement underlines China’s looming demographic crisis.
By Lily Kuo
The secretary of state will hold meetings with America’s key neighbors amid new challenges on immigration and energy.
By John Hudson
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Lindsey Boylan said New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo “would go out of his way to touch me on my lower back, arms and legs.” A spokeswoman for Cuomo said “claims of inappropriate behavior are quite simply false.”
By Hannah Knowles and Reis Thebault
(Ad Council)
The campaign — the first concerted effort urging Americans to get vaccinated against coronavirus — is geared toward those unsure about getting shots.
By Dan Diamond
This Black History Month, as history struggles to keep up with current events, we can remember how we got here as we keep our eyes on the future.
By Washington Post Staff
A typical seven-mile trip on weekdays would average $4 to $5, the state says.
Moses Ingram talked to The Post about her breakout role. (Amber Ferguson/The Post)
The Yale-trained actor, 27, pursued her dream with the support of family and a committed student adviser at Baltimore City Community College.
Sunday is probably the rainier of the weekend days
By David Streit
A new anthology compiles decades of music writing from the 90-year-old jazz critic.
By Chris Richards1 hour ago
Virtual film festivals, streaming concerts and socially distanced events offer escapes during the coronavirus pandemic.
Virtual film festivals, streaming concerts and socially distanced events offer escapes during the coronavirus pandemic.
Workers protest outside their grocery store in Long Beach, Calif., on Feb. 3. (Reuters)
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In bits and sprinkles through the last three-plus years, players have told of devouring insights from Woods as they competed against him.
Alex Avila is Washington's new backup catcher. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
The Nats' backup catcher has caught Scherzer more than any other veteran.
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Tonya Council bakes cookies at her cafe in the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh. (Cornell Watson for The Post)
Tonya Council, a Chapel Hill, N.C., baker, says, "To me, it’s about being supportive, not just seeming supportive."
Everybody needs to accept the growing pains (and let’s retire “mean girls” while we’re at it).
Patient is worried because doctor wears only loose, cloth mask.
Husband won’t say anything to his mother, so wife wants to avoid the situation.
A still from “The Baptism,” in which Carl Hancock Rux reads his poem. (Lincoln Center)
In images and words of rebirth, a poignant tribute to civil rights giants John Lewis and C.T. Vivian
“The Baptism,” by Carl Hancock Rux and Carrie Mae Weems, was commissioned by Lincoln Center and is viewable online.
By Kelsey Ables
Black Americans left a lasting mark on Paris. Modern creatives are walking in their footsteps today.
By Priscilla Lalisse-Jespersen