President Biden’s wide-ranging relief bill cleared the House early Saturday over unanimous GOP opposition. Even bigger fights await in the Senate, where Democratic unity will face greater tests.
Annual closures are expected along the exotic road. But wildfire is reaching into places it has never been, stripping vegetation from fragile hillsides and causing more serious washouts.
By Scott Wilson
Ahead of his first major post-White House address at the Conservative Political Action Conference, the former president is making plans to launch a super PAC, has begun endorsing candidates and is plotting a possible 2024 run.
By Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer
The radio impresario will be posthumously honored today at CPAC.
Opinion by Kelsey Zorzi
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Five strategies to increase the chances of getting a free shot for yourself or someone you care about.
We talked to experts about how to navigate pandemic life in them.
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In an interview with The Post, the new secretary of energy invites Texas to join the national grid. But her main focus is on the big national energy transition that the Biden administration hopes to promote.
By Will Englund50 minutes ago
More than 11,000 people were arrested during protests for jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny. Their stories are starting to emerge.
By Robyn Dixon
Thurgood Marshall outside the Supreme Court in Washington in 1958. (AP)
The violence 75 years ago in Columbia, Tenn., escalated quickly.
By Chris Lamb
Ahmed Abdullah al-Harbi resurfaced weeks later in Saudi Arabia after telling other activists he’d revealed their names to Saudi authorities.
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By Will Englund | Photos by Whitney Curtis for The Post
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JM Rieger/The Washington Post
As Biden calls for unity, he is using a legislative process that requires no Republican votesDespite calls for unity, President Biden plans to pass his first major policy via budget reconciliation, a legislative process that requires no GOP votes.
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Rachel Levine, nominee for Department of Health and Human Services assistant secretary, testifies before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions committee. (AP)
By Monica Hesse
A growing number of states have filed resolutions supporting, or opposing, D.C. statehood.
By Meagan Flynn
While surveying Houston's storm damage and stopping by a food bank, the president sought to show his trademark empathy — at a time when even a hand on a shoulder presents a health risk.
By Washington Post Staff
The report confirms previous reporting on the crown prince’s readily apparent role in Khashoggi’s murder.
By Aaron Blake
A group of Russian diplomats and their family members returned to Russia from North Korea on a hand-pushed rail trolley.(Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)
North Korea, in a bid to shield itself and its poor health infrastructure from the pandemic, has halted all train and air transport to neighboring countries.
By Erin Cunningham and Miriam Berger
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Empty window displays at a Neiman Marcus in Washington. (Matt McClain/The Post)
Experts warn that because bankruptcies lag other signals of economic distress, a mountain of filings may be to come. New data show what industries might be most at risk.
ICE investigators used a private utility database covering millions to pursue immigration violations
The government is increasingly accessing private information they are not authorized to compile on their own. “When you sign up for electricity, you don’t expect them to send immigration agents to your front door,” a researcher said.
By Drew Harwell
A judge has held Godspeak Calvary Chapel in Ventura County in contempt of court for ignoring restrictions, but it still draws hundreds of maskless worshippers to its indoor services each week.
By Sam Kestenbaum
Federal agencies should not automatically disqualify job applicants or take disciplinary actions against current employees for using marijuana, the central personnel agency says.
By Eric Yoder
People bike through Rock Creek Park in May. (Katherine Frey/The Post)
The coronavirus has significantly altered travel routines for scores of residents in the region, and respondents say their habits may never be the same.
By Lori Aratani
Within 40 minutes Friday, all 4,350 appointments available to D.C. residents who are at least 65, have health problems or qualifying jobs were filled.
Gov. Larry Hogan will not veto three-year payments to low-income workers who don’t have Social Security numbers.
By Erin Cox
Sharbat in Adams Morgan welcomes visitors with expertly made sweet and savory baked goods from Azerbaijan.
By Tom Sietsema
The National Museum of Mathematics presents an augmented-reality art show you look at on your phone.
By Mark Jenkins
A new anthology compiles decades of music writing from the 90-year-old jazz critic.
(Illustrations by Jaqueline Tam)
By Emma Brown
The last, best gift we can give our pets is a merciful one.
The Riggs Hotel opened empty guest rooms to diners. So I spent a couple of hours feasting in one.
By Tom Sietsema
The loss of fruits and vegetables during last week’s cold snap in Texas could lead to shortfalls at food banks and higher prices at grocery stores.
By Laura Reiley
Market Watch
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By Elizabeth Anne Brown1 hour ago
The silhouette unveiled in 1969 honors the league’s first Black players to make an imprint on professional basketball, change it forever and assume its throne. They still deserve that recognition.
Tiger Woods played with his son Charlie at a December father-son tournament in Orlando. (AP)
A transcendent golfer occupies our headspace like no other athlete, thanks to the unadorned intimacy and longevity afforded by the sport. That role for Woods is now in question.
By Dave Sheinin
The Atlanta Dream's new ownership group includes a former star player, Renee Montgomery. “My Dream has come true,” Montgomery said.
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Marty Baron, left, the retiring executive editor of The Washington Post, was portrayed by actor Liev Schreiber in the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight.” (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images)
A film critic offers her take on the Oscar-caliber Post editor who just bowed out.
By Ann Hornaday
The job will help his finances, but it upsets his children. How can he maintain a strong bond?
Friends or family members often insist on preparing food they think is safe. But it often isn’t.
Is it proper etiquette to work out possible technical problems in advance?