Washington Post Elections
Post Politics from The Washington Post is the source for political news headlines, in-depth politics coverage and political opinion, plus breaking news on the biden administration and White House, Congress, the Supreme Court, elections and more.
Updated: 51 weeks 7 hours ago
The churches where clergy and churchgoers agree (and disagree) politically
Despite high-profile breaks with Trump, a new survey says that White evangelical leaders and their congregations align, while Catholic priests and their flocks clash.
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U.S. international image rebounds with Biden reversing Trump policies
A new Pew survey shows 59 percent of people aboard view America favorably, but 82 percent say Washington interferes with other nations.
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Trump, aide plead not guilty in documents case. De Oliveira does not enter plea.
Donald Trump and one of his two co-defendants on Thursday pleaded not guilty in federal court in Florida to multiple charges in the classified documents case.
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U.S. seeks Jan. 2 trial date for Trump election subversion case
Special counsel Jack Smith proposed trying the former president on charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 election before the height of the 2024 primary season.
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Joe Manchin’s journey toward a potential divorce from the Democrats
Dissecting Manchin's move from denying a possible party switch to leaning into it, and what it means.
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Joe Manchin says he’s thinking ‘seriously’ about becoming an independent
The centrist West Virginia Democrat has at times sparred with his party and said he thinks that, because of partisanship, the Republican and Democratic “brands” have become “so bad.”
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Tommy Tuberville: Florida’s third senator?
The senator no longer owns any property in Alabama but has a huge house and a condo in Florida.
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Trump now adds ‘my opinion’ and ‘what I think’ to stolen-election claims
“In my opinion.” “I believe.” “That’s what I think.” “That’s my opinion.” “It’s a strong opinion.” “I think.”
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Lawsuit accuses Tennessee of ‘racially discriminatory’ redistricting
The lawsuit, filed in a U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, challenges aspects of the congressional and state Senate redistricting boundaries signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee (R-Tenn.) in February 2022.
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