Officials overseeing the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, an arm of the federal health department, used millions of dollars from the fund to pay for unrelated salaries, administrative expenses and even removing office furniture, according to an inspector general investigation of a whistleblower complaint.
It’s unclear whether increasing U.S. vaccine numbers will help return schools to in-person learning. A CDC report said that schools haven't been a major center of transmission.
One in 7 adults say their households don't have enough to eat — a persistent crisis made worse by the pandemic. The Post went to four states to spend time with people living with hunger and the people trying to help.
By Washington Post Staff
President Biden will make the needs of low-income Americans and communities of color the focus of his plan Wednesday, according to two individuals briefed on it, making environmental justice a top priority for the first time in a generation.
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Volunteers from the Los Angeles Food Bank load boxes into vehicles last week. (AFP/Getty Images)
Public worker retirement funds controlling more than $1 trillion are pressuring the world's largest asset manager to reveal more.
By Tory Newmyer
Democrats turn to quick action on President Biden’s relief bill after a power-sharing deal in Senate.
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The dream of an Arab Spring was dashed 10 years ago, but the movement may not be dead yetWashington Post correspondents who covered the Arab Spring reflect on the uprisings and the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin, under pressure from jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s social media network, said sites are “de facto competing with states.”
By Isabelle Khurshudyan55 minutes ago
President Biden aired allegations of human rights abuses and cyberspying in a phone call with the Russian president.
By Anne Gearan and Karen DeYoung
(Yahya Arhab/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)
By Missy Ryan and Souad Mekhennet
The looming showdown between President Biden and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is made more fraught by domestic pressures within both countries.
The new testing protocol comes ahead of the country’s largest holiday, when billions of trips are normally made nationwide.
By Eva Dou
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The breakdown in negotiations sets the table for what could be the district's fourth strike in a decade.
By Dawn Reiss and Kim Bellware
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, an ally of President Trump, declared “victory” over the temporary restraining order.
By Nick Miroff
A mass-vaccination site set up by Philly Fighting COVID at the Pennsylvania Convention Center on Jan. 15. (Rachel Wisniewski for The Post)
A bungled sign-up form left seniors in tears, their appointments canceled. The group switched to a for-profit model without publicizing it. One volunteer alleged that the 22-year-old CEO had pocketed vaccine doses, and another described a “free-for-all” where unsupervised 18- and 19-year-olds vaccinated one another and posed for photos.
Thanks to a changing political calculus among leading Democrats, statehood isn't as far-fetched as it once seemed.
By Nora Caplan-Bricker1 hour ago
The Maryland Transportation Authority is exploring three potential corridors for adding a third span to the Chesapeake Bay Bridge to relieve traffic backups. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Post)
Public hearings on the findings, scheduled for this winter, also have been postponed.
“Make Good Trouble: Marching for Change” documents the racial unrest of 2020.
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Actor-playwright Ryan J. Haddad’s ‘Hi, Are You Single?’ streams via Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.
By Celia Wren
A long-running French bistro, a bright and breezy Levantine cafe and more.
By Tom Sietsema
Taxpayers have a right to know how much propping up the economy is really going to cost future generations.
By Allan Sloan
Solar panels are stacked in a warehouse in Albuquerque. (Susan Montoya Bryan/AP)
As the cost of renewable energy plummets and climate change awareness grows, renewables, heavy industry efficiencies and novel transport ideas are attracting mainstream investors.
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By Ava Wallace
Warriors Coach Steve Kerr called the loss "crushing news" about someone who was "a part of the NBA family for a long time."
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Following a string of injuries, the loss of a projected starter to the NBA draft and a recent bout with the coronavirus that has prompted the program to pause basketball activities, not much has gone right for the Bisons.
By Tramel Raggs
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Working on your strength, core, flexibility and endurance during the offseason can help improve your experience and prevent injuries.
By Pam Moore
A reader is looking for ways to look past the things that bug her.
Reader, an admitted “type A,” wants to fix the situation.
Reader’s mom demands gifts and meals but is satisfied with none.
Zendaya, left, and John David Washington in “Malcolm & Marie.” (Dominic Miller/Netflix)
What starts out looking like a commercial for a luxury brand ends up more akin to “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” albeit with prettier people.
By Ann Hornaday
The Fabulous Ladies Book Club has shown that immunization efforts aren’t just about getting shots into arms.
By Nora Krug
The most common resolution involves not just spending more time reading but reaching a specific number of books.
By Ron Charles