President Trump called North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons “reckless” and said his administration was waging a “campaign of maximum pressure” to prevent the regime from arming itself with missiles that could threaten the United States.
The Fix
Analysis
A full transcript of the president's speech, plus context and analysis.
Fact Checker
President Trump took a victory lap, but the statistics he touted were a stretch.
(Washington Post video)
A key question of the internal investigation is whether then-No. 2 FBI official Andrew McCabe or anyone else at the agency wanted to avoid taking action on the laptop findings until after the Nov. 8 election, according to three people familiar with the matter. It’s unclear whether the inspector general has reached any conclusions on that point.
In a statement issued hours before a scheduled appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” Daniels said she will have “no further comment” on the matter.
subscribe
The story must be told.
Your subscription supports journalism that matters.
It is unclear what Washington will send Kansas City in return, but it probably will cost less than the roughly $35 million that would be owed Kirk Cousins if the Redskins were to use the franchise tag on him for a third year.
The executive order, issued during the State of the Union address, solidifies President Trump’s well-known intention to keep suspected militants locked up in Guantanamo Bay.
The employee’s troubled work history was detailed by a state investigation that found he had “been a source of concern ... for over 10 years." The employee was fired last week.
People frustrated by the lack of services in the unincorporated towns should move, critics say. But residents refuse to leave their land after years of trying to make it work.
Tech. Sgt. Geraldine Lovely was suspended from her leadership role after she posted a video of her tirade on social media. The Nellis Air Force Base called her actions “inappropriate and unacceptable.”
A Canadian couple’s stroll on a Caribbean beach led to a gut-churning travel nightmare of larvae that bored into their skin and started eating their way through their flesh.
Airlines talking about clamping down on “emotional support” animals may have found their case bolstered this week by a colorful bird.
A year in, how did President Trump's proposals fare?
Play Video 1:37
How Amazon, JP Morgan and Berkshire Hathaway might change health-care costs
Play Video 1:56
The January 31 moon: It's been 150 years in the making
Play Video 1:47
Lawmakers weigh in on release of classified surveillance memo
Play Video 1:55
Dow 26,076.89
Today 1.37%
S&P 2,822.43
Today 1.09%
NASDAQ 7,402.48
Today 0.86%
Last Updated:4:40 PM 01/31/2018
Share news tips with us confidentially

Do you have information the public should know? Here are some ways you can securely send information and documents to Post journalists.

Learn more

From Our Advertisers
This content is paid for by the advertiser and published by WP BrandStudio. The Washington Post newsroom was not involved in the creation of this content. Learn more about WP BrandStudio.