Sunday's Headlines: Bannon’s departure is unlikely to calm the turmoil in Trump’s White House
The road to hate: For six young men, Charlottesville is only the beginning; Mnuchin defends Trump's comments on Charlottesville, rebuffs calls to resign; Seattle sees protests of...
Democracy Dies in Darkness
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
The tenure and ouster of Stephen K. Bannon, President Trump's chief strategist and champion of his nationalist impulses, exposed deep fissures within the Trump-era Republican party that are hindering efforts to kick-start a sputtering GOP legislative agenda.
Last weekend's Unite the Right rally included virtually every kind of white nationalist the U.S. has ever known. Amid them were young men who appeared clean-cut and unashamed. Who were they? And what had so aggrieved them that they came from across the country?
Recent condemnations of the president by GOP leaders have been harsher, more frequent and sometimes more personal. They are caught between disgust over his failure to unequivocally condemn neo-Nazism, a desire to advance a conservative agenda and fears of rupturing the Trump-GOP coalition ahead of the 2018 elections.
Drowned out by counterdemonstrators, the handful of rally attendees ended their event without speeches from planned speakers. Police said 27 people were arrested. The president praised police and later tweeted support for protesters "speaking out against bigotry and hate."
By Wesley Lowery and Christina Pazzanese • Read more »
Outside France, many see him as a symbol of youthful dynamism and a darling of social democrats. But the man who won a landslide victory less than four months ago now has a domestic approval rating near President Trump's.
Mr. Gregory broke the mold among black comedians and rose to national prominence in the early 1960s with audacious humor that was biting, subversive and topical.
Millions of eclipse enthusiasts are expected to strain roads, communications and public safety resources across several states as they flood the 70-mile-wide strip that will get total darkness coast-to-coast.
Parents said they feared their sons were radicalized by a visiting cleric who possibly brainwashed gullible youngsters who spoke better Spanish than Arabic.
By Souad Mekhennet and William Booth • Read more »
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