| Ousted Ukraine ambassador expected to testify despite White House vow not to cooperate, congressional aides say; While White House is mum, Ukraine's president gives reporters an all-day session; House Democrats subpoena Energy Secretary Perry for documents in impeachment inquiry; Pence's extremely evasive answers on Ukraine; How China called foul on American businesses; Erdogan says Turkey will prevent Islamic State resurgence as his forces push into Syria; El Paso shooting suspect pleads not guilty to capital murder in attack at Walmart that killed 22; Ronan Farrow describes spies, intimidation on path to breaking some of the Me Too era's biggest stories; The world needs a massive carbon tax in just 10 years to limit climate change, IMF says |
| | | | | The day's most important stories, curated by Post editors. | | | | | | | | | | Rudy Giuliani has coffee with Lev Parnas at the Trump International Hotel in Washington on Sept. 20. (Aram Roston/Reuters) | | | Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, who routed a large donation to a pro-Trump super PAC, are accused of taking part in a plan to funnel foreign money to candidates for federal and state office. They were arrested Wednesday evening at Dulles International Airport, where they had one-way tickets on a flight out of the country, officials said. | | By Devlin Barrett, John Wagner and Rosalind Helderman ● Read more » | | | Marie Yovanovitch was recalled by the Trump administration amid accusations she was biased against the president. | | By Karoun Demirjian and Carol Morello ● Read more » | | | "I wanted to have an informal meeting." So Volodymyr Zelensky meets 300 journalists at a hip food hall. | | By Natalie Gryvnyak and Will Englund ● Read more » | | | The subpoena comes two days after the White House told Congress it would not cooperate with the inquiry. | | By Colby Itkowitz, John Wagner and Felicia Sonmez ● Read more » | | | A reporter pressed Mike Pence hard on what he knew about Trump's Ukraine maneuvers. The vice president was extremely -- and conspicuously -- evasive. | | ANALYSIS ● By Aaron Blake ● Read more » | | | Jeanne Whalen examines how Western businesses are bowing to political pressure from China. Samantha Schmidt on how a vulnerable community of transgender sex workers takes care of its own. And Luisa Beck unpacks the implications of a shooting in Germany. | | Post Reports | Listen Now ● By The Washington Post ● Read more » | | | "After Turkey takes control of this region, everyone can be sure that [the Islamic State] will not reappear," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, adding that Turkey would either imprison or deport the Islamist militants and their families. | | By Erin Cunningham, Kareem Fahim, Sarah Dadouch and Asser Khattab ● Read more » | | | The 21-year-old Texan faces a possible death sentence in the deadliest attack targeting Hispanics in recent history. | | By Robert Moore ● Read more » | | | The investigative journalist's new book, "Catch and Kill," is producing explosive headlines. | | By Paul Farhi ● Read more » | | | | | | The international organization suggests a carbon tax that would cost $75 per ton by 2030. That would greatly increase the price of fossil-fuel-based energy, especially from the burning of coal. | | By Chris Mooney and Andrew Freedman ● Read more » | | | | | | | |
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