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There hasn't been a single week in 2022 without a mass shooting, where four or more people are injured or killed, in the United States. → Read More
Remembering one person for each week of the pandemic: what brought them joy and what they wanted to do next. And how that was cut short. → Read More
Public transit demand during the pandemic has shifted to neighborhoods with high numbers of Black, Hispanic and lower-income workers, flattening peak travel periods and forcing transit agencies to respond to new patterns, a Washington Post analysis of national data shows. → Read More
At least 250 new laws have been proposed in 43 states to limit mail, early in-person and Election Day voting. → Read More
One of President-elect Joe Biden’s very first tasks will be filling the key positions in his White House and Cabinet. → Read More
More than 1 million early votes have already been cast in the 2020 election, but in several battleground states mail-in ballots will go virtually untouched until right before Election Day. → Read More
Voting in 2020? Here's everything you need to know about voting by mail, in person, early or absentee. → Read More
Millions have regained the right to vote since the 2016 election through expanded voting access for formerly and currently incarcerated Americans convicted of a felony → Read More
The coronavirus pandemic will change how millions of Americans vote in November, as states expand access to vote-by-mail as a safer alternative to voting in person. → Read More
It`s been a year since the wave election gave the House the youngest and most diverse group of lawmakers ever. → Read More
Minority students, particularly Latinos, are on the rise, but few of their classes are taught by teachers of the same race. → Read More
The people and events described in the whistleblower complaint. → Read More
Democratic support for impeachment has grown in fits and starts, often corresponding to key junctures in the many investigations of President Trump. Here's how the momentum built. → Read More
Big-city schools remain segregated but in small towns and suburbs across the nation, there's a rise in integration. → Read More
The number of children attending U.S. public schools with students of other races has nearly doubled, a Washington Post analysis has found. → Read More
The resolution has enough votes to pass the Senate, but not to withstand a presidential veto. → Read More
Where Republican senators stand on Trump’s national emergency declaration. → Read More
Trump’s consistently rallied for a wall, but his wall has taken on different heights, lengths, costs and materials over time. → Read More
See how much money you would have if you invested at various points in the last two decades. → Read More
The new director will probably continue gutting the agency, but with their new majority in the House, Democrats have a way to push back. → Read More