Democracy Dies in Darkness
President Biden acknowledged the pain higher oil costs were inflicting on Americans, but he said the United States and its allies had to economically isolate Russia.
Members of Ukraine’s Territorial Defense Force help to evacuate the elderly Tuesday in Irpin, Ukraine. (Heidi Levine for The Post)
Residents who fled Irpin described a battered city where the line between combatants and noncombatants is increasingly blurred.
A ban on Russian oil probably means higher gas prices — a potential political headache for Democrats.
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The week-long trial in D.C. federal court hinged on whether Reffitt, who never entered the Capitol building, paved the way for those behind him to do so.
The House Jan. 6 committee's chairman, Rep. Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.), far right, and other committee members  (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)
The panel’s "green team" is scrutinizing whether the Trump campaign, its affiliated super PACs, the RNC and protest rally organizers knowingly used false claims to dupe donors.
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Volunteers in Berlin help fill a truck bound for Ukraine last week. (Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff for The Post)
With supply chains disrupted by the war, people going back have become all the more valuable — especially people driving cavernous tractor trailers.
Strong winds are set to rock much of the eastern United States amid plummeting temperatures, with possible blizzard conditions in the interior Northeast.
The state’s position has parents more confused and medical experts criticizing its scientific justifications.
Hari Close prepares to embalm bodies at his Baltimore funeral home. (Marvin Joseph/The Post)
As the pandemic enters its third year, there's no return to normal for Hari Close and other Black funeral directors.
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