President Biden laid out plans to provide universal preschool, free community college and expanded health care and new tax breaks for families. He said the country has “stared into an abyss of insurrection and autocracy, of pandemic and pain,” and emerged strong.
The FixAnalysis
President Biden’s address previewed the looming battles over his huge spending proposals, with an at-times fanciful tone.
By Aaron Blake
(Video: Mahlia Posey/The Post; photo: Melina Mara/The Post)
Well before President Biden arrived at the Capitol Wednesday night, Republicans had laid the groundwork for a narrative rooted in false pledges and creeping “socialism.”
By Marianna Sotomayor and Mike DeBonis
Biden has an ambitious plan that would greatly expand the U.S. government’s role in daily life. It will be tough to pass — and make the changes permanent.
By Heather Long
Opinion by Thad Kousser
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The search was part of a long-running investigation into whether the onetime New York mayor and Trump attorney acted as an unregistered foreign agent, people familiar with the matter said.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was grilled on Wednesday by the opposition over the funding used to refurbish his Downing Street apartment. (Getty Images)
Concerns over the prime minister's apartment were thrust into the spotlight last week after Dominic Cummings, a former top aide to the prime minister who is now at odds with his old boss, wrote that Johnson had planned to get Conservative Party donors to “secretly pay” for the renovations.
By Karla Adam
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot suggested that the incident began with a low-level traffic offense. Video shows an officer firing as Alvarez flees, then Alvarez falling to the ground and dropping what authorities identified as a gun.
George Floyd and Courteney Ross. (Courteney Ross)
By Robert Samuels
The 31-year-old high school basketball coach is the first juror in the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin to speak publicly about the experience.
By Kim Bellware
The family of 26-year-old Mario Gonzalez compared his death to the killing of George Floyd.
By Marisa Iati
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The Post's Annie Linskey and Matt Viser analyze President Biden's first 100 days and how his actions could impact the remainder of his presidency.
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The FixAnalysis
Ukraine is hardly the only issue on which Giuliani has flown close to the sun in recent years — and now faces the legal problems that come with it. In some ways, he seemed to have been begging for such scrutiny.
By Aaron Blake
Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) called it a “historic day,” with two Black women nominated to federal appeals courts in Washington and Chicago.
President Biden’s transition has been slower than previous ones.
By Harry Stevens and Madison Walls
In some cities, makeshift crematoriums have been erected to cope with the growing number of dead. Over the past week alone, according to official figures, more than 2,000 infected people have died in India every day.
Overburdened health-care facilities and staff are appealing for supplies and assistance on social media.
Many in the Philippines blame a lackluster effort by the government for the shortage of vaccines and hospital beds. (EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Many who need treatment must be driven out of the capital, to hospitals as far as five hours away, as the health system buckles under the strain.
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Interstate 15 carries heavy traffic between Southern California and Las Vegas. (David McNew/Getty Images)
Nearly every form of Particulate Matter (PM) 2.5 disproportionately affects Americans of color, regardless of their location or income level, according to a peer-reviewed analysis published Wednesday.
By Juliet Eilperin and Darryl Fears
The settlement, which the plaintiffs’ lawyers describe as the largest of its kind, ends a case in which former employees of the Federal Aviation Administration said their jobs were privatized because agency leaders thought they were getting too old.
By Ian Duncan
Gov. Larry Hogan (R) also removed social-distancing requirements for outdoor dining and bar service as of Saturday, although local governments may impose stricter rules on dining if they choose.
By Erin Cox
Students follow first-grade teacher Nia Manoleras as they attend an outdoor class at Centreville Elementary School last week. (Matt McClain/The Post)
To expand classroom capacity and reduce the risk of contracting the coronavirus, Fairfax County Public Schools has been piloting outdoor learning, asking educators to hold lessons beneath large tents with detachable sides.
At a time without live performance, “The Juxtapose Tenement” conjures theatrical magic in the cyber realm.
By Celia Wren
Offerings from Ankhlejohn, Gallant and more.
By Lawrence Burney
Then-President Donald Trump greets Satya Nadella, center, chief executive of Microsoft, and Jeff Bezos, chief executive of Amazon, on June 19, 2017. (Jabin Botsford/The Post)
By Aaron Gregg
An electrical bonding problem on cockpit panels could “result in loss of critical functions...which may prevent continued safe flight and landing,” the agency said.
Inflation is also rising in certain areas, but Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell said that those increases aren’t expected to persist through the entire economy.
Should people delay installing Apple’s latest update? Is it too late to worry about data security? What will Facebook do next?
Market WatchLast Updated: 04/28/2021
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Unlike last season, when Washington knew it would draft Chase Young with its first-round pick, the team enters the draft not knowing how things will play out. (Toni L. Sandys/The Post)
Coach Ron Rivera and the Washington Football Team could go in a number of directions with the team's first-round pick.
By Sam Fortier
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The Stokes aster is among summer-flowering perennials that draw a host of native bee species. (Mt. Cuba Center)
A richly planted garden could be a lifeline for pollinators threatened by habitat loss, pesticides and climate change.
You don’t have to protect the outstanding reputation of a father whose abuse of his family was a well-kept secret.
Old high school friend is no longer responsive
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No enthusiasm for long-awaited home renovation
The LilyElevating stories about women
Publishers have always made highly selective judgments about who they print and who they don’t. But the precipitous fall of Philip Roth biographer Blake Bailey shows that publishers can no longer ignore their authors’ behavior.
By Ron Charles
Al Schmitt1930–2021
Schmitt worked in the studio with Ray Charles, Bob Dylan, Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand and Paul McCartney.
By Hillel Italie
Self-Portrait, Yawning, by Joseph Ducreux, 1783. (The J. Paul Getty Museum)
Great Works, In FocusCritic’s Notebook
Things can get too serious in the halls of our great art museums. Thank God for this painting by Joseph Ducreux at the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.
Viktor Kossakovsky’s film is a gorgeously immersive meditation on life, on and off the farm.
Former Post editor Martin Baron is working on a book about Trump, Bezos and the future of journalism
“Collision of Power” will be part memoir and part investigation into what’s ahead for the free press.
By Ron Charles
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