The wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas urged two legislators to choose “a clean slate of Electors,” according to emails obtained by The Post.
By Emma Brown1 hour ago
A U.S. official disputed earlier accounts that one of the employees had been arrested.
The gunman’s actions not only cost lives but psychologically maimed those who can most easily envision themselves among the slain.
Opinion by the Editorial Board
Advertisement
Advertisement
More Top Stories
The fallout from high gas prices is touching every corner of society.
By Evan Halper
Longtime activist Vic Basile retired in 2014, a year before the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples had a constitutional right to marry. (Ricky Carioti/The Post)
They hoped the long battle for mainstream acceptance was nearing an end. Then came the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bills and the “groomer” rhetoric.
We’re remembering one person for each week of the pandemic.
By Alyssa Fowers and Leslie Shapiro
25 Years of Carolyn Hax
Carolyn Hax answers questions on the anniversary of her column's publication.
By Carolyn Hax
(Video: Allie Caren/The Post; graphic: Daron Taylor/The Post)
The milestone for The Post’s advice column gives us a great excuse to revisit some of Carolyn Hax’s most famous responses.
By Christine Loman and Carolyn Hax
Have a favorite column, cartoon, story or piece of advice from over the years? Submit it here.
By Carolyn Hax and Nick Galifianakis1 hour ago
Don’t Miss
Advertisement
Advertisement
For YouRecommended Stories
Most Read Now
(The Washington Post illustration: J. Scott Applewhite/AP, iStock))
Joe Manchin keeps blocking President Biden's agenda. What can he teach us about our own work nemesis?
German lawmakers stripped Gerhard Schröder of his office and staff Thursday, as calls for him to resign from Rosneft mounted.
The story of how Sophia Raietska’s remains wound up near battles in northeastern Ukraine, separated from any relatives, is the story of a war that can reach any Ukrainian.
Story by Isabelle Khurshudyan and Sudarsan Raghavan | Photos by Wojciech Grzedzinski
The letter, an extraordinary public airing of a family conflict, was the latest twist in a royal drama that began more than a year ago.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Christian Secor, a far-right Republican leader at UCLA with white supremacist ties, pleaded guilty Thursday after admitting to sitting in Vice President Mike Pence’s chair in the Senate during the Jan. 6 Capitol breach.
(Sally Deng for The Post)
A growing number of lawmakers, teachers, students, parents and business leaders are trying to head off anti-Asian attacks partly by teaching children that the Asian American community is American, too — and that Asian American history is also American history.
Scientist Rebellion activists chain themselves together in protest of the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland, on Nov. 6. (Reuters)
After decades of being ignored, scientists are resorting to more radical action to communicate the dire urgency of the climate crisis.
By Casey Quackenbush
By Austyn Gaffney and Dane Rhys
The Climate 202Analysis
Zinke, who led the Interior Department under President Donald Trump before resigning under a cloud of ethics investigations, has a good shot at winning Montana's new House seat.
By Maxine Joselow and Vanessa Montalbano
Amid rising gas prices and climate change, car giants are in a fierce contest to perfect the solid-state battery, long viewed as a "holy grail" for electric vehicles.
Rising borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, after years of near-zero interest rates, could cause a sudden retrenchment.
(Washington Post illustration)
Smartphones and tablets are getting better at helping people with disabilities understand and interact with the world around them. Here's our guide to the accessibility features that are coming to your phone -- or the next one you buy.
Angela Kinsey and Jenna Fischer. (Adam Hendershott)
The self-proclaimed "Office BFFs" have a new book — and some thoughts on where Jim and Pam would be today.
By Angela Haupt
By Jen Rose Smith
By A. Camden Walker39 minutes ago
(Joe Cashman/Joe Cashman/Kenilworth Parks and Aquatic Gardens)
A wild turkey allegedly attacked a woman this week on the Anacostia Riverwalk Trail.
New Heights reopens with new owners, a new look and some fantastic new dishes.
By Tom Sietsema
Advertisement
Nick Saban and Jimbo Fisher traded verbal haymakers over recruiting.
By Adam Kilgore
For some athletes, concern has sharpened into anger at a system they say is inherently harmful to its participants’ mental health.
TravelIncluding news and tips from By The Way