After several hours of blistering criticism from the president's allies and refugee advocates, the White House press secretary said the final refugee cap for this year would be announced by May 15.
By Sean Sullivan and Seung Min Kim
For some Afghans, the U.S. invasion created opportunities that would have been unimaginable just years before. But the same forces also ripped communities apart.
More than 200 Texans have joined what is expected to be a flood of liability suits. And state political leaders in Austin are feeling intense pressure to recast the electricity market to try to avoid another debacle.
By Will Englund
Case numbers have spiked in nearly all regions, with larger outbreaks gripping Brazil, India, Poland, Turkey and some other countries.
By Erin Cunningham and Siobhán O'Grady
Should I take a vaccine selfie? Can I ask someone else if they've been vaccinated? How do I talk to family members about the shots? Vaccines bring new etiquette questions.
By Teddy Amenabar and Allyson Chiu
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President Biden signaled a focus on Asia by making Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga his first in-person foreign guest. Biden pledged cooperation across a range of issues, including climate change and coronavirus vaccine distribution.
Pedestrians walk past the Brooklyn Center, Minn., water tower. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post)
As suburbs become more diverse and less affluent, tensions are rising and communities are struggling with how to respond to demands for racial justice.
By Tim Craig and Silvia Foster-Frau
Moscow’s move matches part of the U.S. action to impose targeted sanctions and order 10 Russian diplomats to leave the country as punishment for Russian election interference and suspected hacking.
By Robyn Dixon
Rachel Marie Powell, accused of carrying a bullhorn and breaking a Capitol window, allegedly grew "evasive" when asked about wearing a see-through mask in a Facebook video.
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Activists allege that meatpacking facilities in Nebraska are still unsafe for workers, and are fighting to enshrine protections as Nebraska law.
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The bill to make the District of Columbia the 51st state is likely to pass the House but will face hurdles in the Senate.
By Meagan Flynn
Republican opinion of Anthony Fauci has dropped in the Biden era, and GOP legislators are aware of it.
By Philip Bump
The effort in Maricopa County, which local officials have resisted, is the most extensive endeavor still underway to scrutinize President Biden’s win.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki holds the daily press briefing Thursday. (Demetrius Freeman/The Post)
President Biden’s team is launching a new focus on local media, reaching past national outlets to ones that are more trusted in their communities.
How the president is pursuing his agenda.
By Washington Post Staff
Sixty-two years after a band of revolutionaries set Cuba down the path of confrontation with Washington, the last of the Castro brothers, towering figures of the Cold War, announced he will surrender official power.
People wait to get the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine at the Ngor Clinic in Dakar, Senegal, this month. (AFP/Getty Images)
The Covax initiative aims to help developing countries, with the easy-to-store AstraZeneca vaccine as the centerpiece.
The Biden administration Thursday imposed a substantial slate of economic sanctions on Russia. The move came as little surprise.
Brazil is losing thousands of people every day to the coronavirus. And while vaccine hesitancy is a public health challenge in the best of circumstances, analysts say it is a greater problem when the vaccine has a lower efficacy rate.
By Heloísa Traiano and Terrence McCoy
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“I see no evidence whatsoever that Adam Toledo shot at police,” Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) told reporters.
By Mark Guarino, Meryl Kornfield and Kim Bellware
More than 200 health care professionals signed a letter saying they are concerned that withdrawing Helfer’s membership will create a culture of stigma and shame for clients seeking therapy.
Patricia Stephens Due is arrested for protesting segregation at the Florida Theater in Tallahassee in 1963. (State Archives of Florida)
About UsPerspective
A photo capturing the determination, grit and refusal to relent on the face of Patricia Due while she's being arrested is inspiring voting rights activists anew.
By John D. Due, Jr. and Tananarive Due
Montgomery County Council member Craig Rice. (Rebecca Tan/The Post)
Montgomery County Council member Craig Rice (D) once said anti-police activists were engaged in “crazy talk.”
By Rebecca Tan
Two Republican contenders have each lent their campaigns more than $5 million.
By Laura Vozzella and Antonio Olivo
Jonathan Freitag resigned while under internal Fairfax police investigation in May 2020, then joined the Brevard County Sheriff's Office in Florida three months later. He was fired earlier this month.
By Tom Jackman1 hour ago
“Until the Flood,” by Dael Orlandersmith, looks at systemic racism from multiple perspectives.
By Thomas Floyd
Virtual film festivals, streaming concerts and socially distanced events offer escapes during the coronavirus pandemic.
By Fritz Hahn and Anying Guo
“Traces” features eight very different artists, all connected conceptually.
By Mark Jenkins
Solutions to climate change may be beyond our reach until we first reorient our relationship with Earth. (Torkil Gudnason)
Climate news is relentlessly, objectively grim. Should we ever allow ourselves to feel optimism?
By Heidi Paster Harf
She didn’t want to say goodbye.
By Tanya Ballard Brown
Look for chargrilled beef, goat stew and ace side dishes from Kenya native Kevin Onyona.
By Tom Sietsema
A Lord & Taylor store in the Friendship Heights neighborhood of D.C. (Matt McClain/The Post)
Nearly 200 department stores have disappeared in the past year, and another 800 — or about half the country’s remaining mall-based locations — are expected to shutter by the end of 2025, according to one real estate firm.
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The rebound is outpacing Western nations, despite vaccine challenges and U.S. sanctions.
By Eva Dou
Republicans say businesses should stay out of politics — but baseball and politics have always been intertwined.
After 118 years, the Minnesota men's gymnastics team is shuttering, part of a wave of sports cuts at universities across the country. (Kelly Hagenson/University of Minnesota)
The budget-driven elimination of men's gymnastics at Minnesota leave only 12 NCAA Division I teams nationwide, raising alarm about the pipeline for future Olympians.
By Liz Clarke
Washington put on a warm ceremony for Backstrom’s 1,000th game with the team, then lost to Buffalo, 5-2.
By Roman Stubbs
Major League Soccer kicks off its 25th-anniversary season this weekend.
By Steven Goff
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International travel buffs are playing it safe as vaccines fail to open the door to travel.
By Alex Pulaski
The pandemic showed her what she valued. She can still honor that while helping her kids.
Best friends’ bad behavior has woman stewing a year later.
Mother-in-law insists on creating itineraries that exhaust family members.
Stowaway Brian Robson, who shipped himself out of Australia in a crate, is seen upon his arrival at London Airport on May 18, 1965. (AP)
Homesick while working in Australia, Brian Robson didn't have enough money to travel home to Wales. So he came up with a madcap idea: Ship himself in a crate via airfreight to London for a fraction of the fare.
By Cathy Free
The book by Louisville Police Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly details the raid that killed Breonna Taylor.
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