Democrats moved forward with no GOP support after failing to win over a single Republican senator on President Biden’s first major legislative initiative.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) is the only Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee who voted to send the interior secretary nomination of Rep. Deb Haaland to the full Senate.
By Darryl Fears
The White House is conducting a months-long review of the drone strike policy it inherited from the previous administration.
By Ellen Nakashima and Missy Ryan
The story of one show’s highs — and a devastating low — is also a story of resilience.
By Peter Marks
A flood of thermal scanners hit the market last year. But researchers say many of the devices use software that can make a feverish person appear perfectly well.
By Drew Harwell
Ad
Ad
Five strategies to increase the chances of getting a free shot for yourself or someone you care about.
More Top Stories
The mission for the 5,200-strong force, established in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, is slated to end March 12. Pentagon officials said the extension request has been received by the Defense Department and will be considered by Army officials and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.
By Dan Lamothe
As Texas’ population continues to grow and diversify, many in the new generation are asking for more from state leaders.
By Silvia Foster-Frau and Scott Wilson
(Chris Mcgrath/Getty Images)
It is his first international trip since the start of the pandemic.
Story by Liz Sly | Videos by Marzena Skubatz | Photos by Salwan Georges
Don’t Miss
Ad
Ad
Trending
Monica Akhtar, Sarah Hashemi/The Washington Post
Will Biden forgive student loans?President Biden has the power to forgive student loan debt. Will he? And what would that mean for the average Jo?
Get the headlines from today's paper, and click on each one to read the story.
Multi-tasking? Follow the latest headlines and analysis through our podcasts.
The Post offers several ways to securely send information and documents to journalists.
Stay connected with the latest news on your tablet and phone.
After pulling back containment measures, the governor and lieutenant governor are attacking immigrants as sources of infection.
By Philip Bump
FEMA support would be primarily aimed at testing and potentially quarantining family groups and adults before their release from U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has not signed off on the plan, which requires state approval.
By Nick Miroff
Members of the Pennsylvania National Guard line up Thursday outside the U.S. Capitol. (Matt McClain/The Post)
On the day when the ex-president's most delusional supporters swore he would return to power — and the House suspended its business because of supposed threats to the U.S. Capitol — Washington looked on Thursday much the way it has for the past two months.
Follow the president’s progress in filling hundreds of positions.
By Harry Stevens and Madison Walls
Full coverage of what the president is doing to enact his agenda.
By Washington Post Staff
The move was the first time an E.U. country deployed new powers introduced in January, after AstraZeneca announced it would deliver sharply fewer doses to the E.U. than promised for the first months of the year.
By Michael Birnbaum, Quentin Ariès and Stefano Pitrelli
Unarmed but organized, hundreds of thousands have turned out in Myanmar’s major cities day after day, clamoring for democracy in stirring displays of nationwide civil disobedience.
Archivists are assembling an international scrapbook that chronicles what we got right — and what we got wrong.
The cats were eventually dried off with towels and fed by rescuers.
Ad
Ad
The Biden administration is preparing to convert detention facilities in South Texas into hubs that will screen migrant parents and children with a goal of releasing them into the United States within 72 hours.
Stanley Gao, 14, attends school from his home in Philadelphia on Feb. 26. (Nancy Lin)
Fear of the coronavirus — and of anti-Asian harassment — has led many Asian and Asian American families to keep their children home.
Minimal information about the city's move to a new system for scheduling coronavirus vaccine appointments has left D.C. residents wondering where their place in line will be.
The former chief of the Laurel Police Department was charged Wednesday for allegedly committing arson and attempted murder. (Prince George's County Police)
Investigators say they began to draw connections to ex-Laurel police chief David Crawford after Prince George’s released evidence seeking tips in 2019.
By Dan Morse
It's feeling more like winter than spring through tomorrow.
Mr. Davis, who died of complications from covid-19, wrote a two-hander that became a staple of community theater after premiering on Broadway in 1981.
These works, recommended by local authors and bookstore owners, remind us just how special Washington is.
Actor Patrick Page (‘Hadestown’) performs a streaming version of his one-man show for the Shakespeare Theatre Company.
By Thomas Floyd
Stocks fell sharply Thursday after the Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell said prices were likely to increase later this year, even as he cautioned that any inflation would be short-lived.
(Tingshu Wang/Reuters)
Big increases in research and development spending, and manipulating elections in Hong Kong are part of the latest plans.
By Gerry Shih
Market Watch
Last Updated: 03/04/2021
Dow 30,924.14
Today -1.11%
S&P 3,768.47
Today -1.34%
NASDAQ 12,723.47
Today -2.11%
Harassing emails. Demeaning comments. A struggle to climb the corporate ladder. Former and current workers of the network describe a culture that routinely sidelines women.
By Ben Strauss
“Coach [Greg] McDermott and our athletics program must use this incident as an opportunity for growth and learning,” the school said, “as clearly more work needs to be done.”
By Des Bieler
Brian Dozier, who has lost his shirt, celebrates Washington's NLCS win with Howie Kendrick and Aníbal Sánchez. (Toni L. Sandys/The Post)
Baseball can get lost in translation, so the recently retired Dozier wants more players to learn Spanish.
Ad
(iStock)
Parents shouldn’t need a pandemic to have the right to bond with their babies in the first year of life.
By Victoria Livingstone
A reader wonders whether she should say something about quips made during video gatherings.
What to say when a friend brags about getting the vaccine before her turn?
Reader wasn’t sure how to help man and his son who were counting out change for a can of soup.
In “Boogie,” the American-born teenage son of Taiwanese immigrants navigates love and lit class.