Officials from all wings of the Republican Party are bending to the president’s will as he undermines the peaceful transfer of power with baseless election challenges.
Ebullient investors have shrugged off the pandemic’s painful toll.
Key details about the shipments of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine began to emerge as hospitals grappled with the ethical and logistical challenges of distributing it.
The group's recommendations are the gold standard for health-care providers and pave the way for shots to begin as the first vaccine shipments arrive Monday at hospitals and state health agencies.
By Lena H. Sun and Isaac Stanley-Becker
A California sea lion comes across a discarded face mask in Monterey, Calif. Many types of masks contain plastics that taint ocean ecosystems and disrupt marine food chains. (Ralph Pace)
The masks, gloves, disinfectant wipes and other meant to protect people from infections are also polluting the environment.
By Scott Wilson
Officials at the Food and Drug Administration said health-care sites administering the shots would be equipped with safety equipment to treat potential severe allergic reactions.
Charley Pride1934-2020
Pride, who overcame racial obstacles to become one of the genre’s most popular performers, died at 86.
Opinion by George P. Shultz
Opinion by Christopher Blackwell
Opinion by Pippa Norris
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Concerned Veterans of America, one of the most muscular arms of the conservative Koch network, is among those that criticized Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie.
By Lisa Rein
Despite widespread fears, cities with robust public transportation systems don’t experience more deaths from flu or pneumonia, researchers found. The team launched its study before the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, but it says because the coronavirus spreads in ways similar to the seasonal flu, their findings could apply to the current health emergency.
By Lori Aratani
Holidays
Perspective
(Bill Vaughan)
For more than 15 years, people have driven by Bill Vaughan’s house in Alexandria, Va., during this time of year, expecting to marvel at his display of lights. He was determined to put up his lights this year. Then the leg of a 16-foot ladder he stood on sunk into the ground.
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Drea Cornejo/The Washington Post
Laid off from her job at Disney after 14 years, a server struggles to navigate the pandemicDisney has said it is laying off at least 32,000 workers during the coronavirus pandemic. Part-time workers like Flaviana Decker were hit the hardest.
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The TakeAnalysis
More than 100 House members wanted the Supreme Court to overturn the election results. Did they really believe the election was corrupted, or was it simply fear and blind loyalty?
By Dan Balz
The FixAnalysis
President Trump and allies are hailing dissents from Justices Thomas and Alito and noting the court didn't decide on the merits. That entirely misses the point.
By Aaron Blake
Stacy Efrat in Marietta, Ga., on Dec. 5. (Lynsey Weatherspoon)
The Lily
By Caroline Kitchener
The FixAnalysis
Even as he successfully commands loyalty from Republicans on his election loss, they’re more willing than ever to rebuke him when it comes to actual policy.
@PKCapitolAnalysis
Republicans want Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), 87, to seek another six-year term, and Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), 80, will decide next November.
By Paul Kane
They are big and designed to get people in and out as fast as possible.
By Loveday Morris and Luisa Beck
Facing an international outcry over its testing of a “Uighur alarm” system, Huawei said it is committed to human rights. But the tech giant has worked with dozens of surveillance contractors over the years to build systems that could aid the Chinese government and police.
By Eva Dou and Drew Harwell
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For Joseph Varon, there can be no vacation when a pandemic is tearing through the country, his covid-19 unit is filled with more than 45 patients and his staff is exhausted.
Capital Weather Gang
Washington straddles the rain-snow line, while the Interstate 81 corridor is in the sweet spot for a major snowstorm.
By Jason Samenow, Wes Junker and Andrew Freedman
As coronavirus vaccines are expected to begin arriving next week, Montgomery County reported the highest daily spike in infections Saturday, followed by Prince George’s and Fairfax counties.
Experts praised the city for transparency but questioned whether it calculates correctly and whether restaurants should close.
Nora Heidenhain, 22 months, embraces the leg of her mother, Sharayah Heidenhain, who peruses the wares at Mason & Greens. (Matt McClain/The Post)
Disturbed by the amount of trash their family of four was generating, Justin and Anna Marino adopted a "zero waste" lifestyle. Then they took it a step further, opening the first zero-waste store in the Washington area.
Santa-themed tiki drinks, holiday trivia and colorful lights make these festive bars the perfect holiday escapes.
By Fritz Hahn
ASK TOM | Readers ask, and food critic Tom Sietsema responds, to dining questions during the pandemic.
By Tom Sietsema
It’s impossible not to smile when taking in these festive shows.
The mental health consequences of so much sudden death in so short a time could be dire. (Jessica Durant for The Post)
These families are turning their grief into action to save themselves and others — and to begin to heal our collective trauma.
Date Lab
He contacted us after he saw her at a live Date Lab event.
By Maureen O'Connor
Review
Readers ask, and food critic Tom Sietsema responds, to dining questions during the pandemic.
By Tom Sietsema
RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
By Ronald G. Shafer
(Adam Hunger/AP)
Army blanked Navy, 15-0, for its first shutout in the rivalry in 51 years.
Utah State football players forced the cancellation of their season finale as a protest of what they alleged was religious discrimination by the school president.
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(Jonathan Newton/The Post)
Michael Pack, a Trump appointee who has made sweeping and controversial changes at VOA and its sister broadcasting networks, pushed out Elez Biberaj, a VOA veteran whom Pack had appointed as the head of the service on an interim basis in June.
By Paul Farhi
First, let’s count the innocent reasons she might have had for not throwing them out.
Reader has stayed away from Mom because of covid concerns. Now she has a serious illness.
Reader wants to give a one-time gift to several organizations but doesn’t want solicitations.
Josh Groban’s first holiday concert premieres online Dec. 19. (Andrew Eccles)
Innovative virtual performances are filling out the seasonal schedules of some sidelined Broadway names.
By Peter Marks
With one Facebook post, Kitty O’Meara set off a wave of hope — and a creative windfall.
By Nora Krug
Music Review
On “Nightmare Vacation,” the Maryland rapper finally makes her big splash.
Book Review
By Liz Robbins
