Thanks to absentee ballots, drop-off boxes, and curbside voting, people with disabilities turned out in record numbers in the 2020 election. That’s likely to change.
Becky Pringle, the president of the National Education Association, won’t back a blanket vaccination requirement yet—but she thinks there are other ways to ensure that students and teachers are safe.
Several states have low vaccination rates, rampant COVID-19 spread, and no mask mandates in schools. Parents are worried for their kids.
Sixteen months after my grandmother died, my family finally gathered to bury her.
Had Osama bin Laden been killed or captured in December 2001, justice would have been served in the way Americans like: fast, hard, and cheap.
The outing of a top administrator of the nation’s conference of Catholic bishops as a regular Grindr user was clearly a story. But what kind?
My mom wanted to be prepared for wildfire season. But I knew she was concerned about the cost.
The president won’t be able to celebrate the Senate’s bipartisan passage of an infrastructure bill until Democrats deliver the rest of his economic agenda this fall.
The reporter Jonathan Katz explains how he wrestled with the sins of U.S. interventions abroad—and what to call them.
Hakeem Jeffries could end up being the first Black speaker of the House—but not all progressives are happy about his rise.
I asked vaccinated fans of the Fox News host what it will take to get more Republicans to get their shots.
Get the adults in your community vaccinated.
The state GOP’s comeback runs through Latino communities.
The Democratic primary became a proxy war between progressives and the establishment. But the outcome doesn’t tell us much about the party’s future.
Gymnast Rachael Denhollander is one of many people who can no longer watch the Olympics with casual enjoyment.
Emily Oster caters to a data-obsessed crowd of modern parents. But sometimes you just can’t optimize your kid.
The Trump administration desperately wanted to cut government benefits, and it had outside help to do so. But very few of its new rules held up.
Businesses such as Nike and Oracle are happy to let you work from home—just not in Colorado.
In the United States, this pandemic could be almost over by now. The reasons it’s still going are pretty clear.
Depending on where you live and your risk tolerance, vaccinated people are justified in either masking or unmasking indoors.