| | The day's most important stories, curated by Post editors. | | | | Researchers describe a lack of a centralized national strategy, overlapping efforts and no standards for what data to collect or how to share it to get to answers faster. By Carolyn Y. Johnson ● Read more » | | National Security Council officials worried there were not enough masks on the White House complex, so they turned to a foreign government for help. By Carol Leonnig, Elizabeth Dwoskin and John Hudson ● Read more » | | A small but growing body of evidence suggests the virus invades other organs and tissues, causing heart arrhythmias, blood clots and renal failure. By Lenny Bernstein, Carolyn Y. Johnson, Sarah Kaplan and Laurie McGinley ● Read more » | | The World Health Organization's slow response and deference to China reveal a global agency ill-suited to combat a pandemic. By Emily Rauhala ● Read more » | | The virus has reached all continents except Antarctica and officially killed more than 120,000 people, including more than 26,000 in the United States. LIVE UPDATES ● By Teo Armus, Antonia Farzan, Rick Noack, Marisa Iati, Alex Horton, Miriam Berger, Adam Taylor, Siobhán O'Grady, John Wagner and Brittany Shammas ● Read more » | | What's being protested is what President Trump himself has advocated at the state level: efforts to reduce interactions and, therefore, limit the spread of the virus. Analysis ● By Philip Bump ● Read more » | | Martine Powers and Ishaan Tharoor explore the meaning of borders in a pandemic, and how coronavirus might change travel and migration in the future. And Mary Beth Sheridan walks us through public service announcements from around the world. Post Reports | Listen Now ● By The Washington Post ● Read more » | | Approximately 23.5 million American women live alone, more than ever before. The Lily asked to hear from women who are self-quarantined alone and almost 1,300 of all ages responded. Here's what they said. The Lily ● By Story by Caroline Kitchener | Illustrations by Olivia Waller ● Read more » | | League officials still intend to play a full season with full stadiums. But their contingency planning has included playing a shortened schedule and holding games in half-full or empty stadiums. By Mark Maske ● Read more » | | Wild boars in Barcelona. Goats in Wales. With billions of people around the world in isolation and city streets emptied, nature is pushing back. By Terrence McCoy ● Read more » | | Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) is under investigation for stock trades he made as the U.S. braced for the coronavirus pandemic. Sen. Thom Tillis is his Republican colleague from North Carolina. By Paul Kane and Felicia Sonmez ● Read more » | | The agency is burdened by hundreds of billions of dollars in debt and falling revenue, and Congress and the White House have signaled an unwillingness to grant more funding without major restructuring. By Jacob Bogage ● Read more » | | 'I would like to see more of him,' said one self-described 'enthusiastic' Biden supporter. 'I've started to wonder if Cuomo should run for president.' By Ben Terris ● Read more » | | Thousands of Democrats were mobilized by their anger with the GOP for its insistence on holding the election amid the pandemic — seen by many as a way to suppress turnout and boost the conservative candidate in an obscure court race. By Amy Gardner, Dan Balz and Dan Simmons ● Read more » | | The move follows endorsements from former president Barack Obama and Sen. Bernie Sanders as Biden aims to present a united front against President Trump as the campaign turns to the general election in November. By Annie Linskey ● Read more » | | | | | | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment