Monday's Headlines: Eagles defeat Patriots, 41-33, denting New England’s dynasty and seizing Philadelphia’s first title
The Patriots definitely did not get all the favorable calls; Review: This is how Justin Timberlake lost the Super Bowl; Analysis: The five best Super Bowl commercials
Democracy Dies in Darkness
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
The Patriots' Tom Brady played at his legendary best, but it was fill-in Eagles quarterback Nick Foles and the daring of Coach Doug Pederson that brought the championship to Philadelphia in a frantic game that broke records for offense.
Ava Olsen, who was in first grade during a 2016 school shooting in South Carolina, wrote the president to tell him that she lost the 6-year-old boy she wanted to marry. A response arrived the day after Christmas.
In the self-labeled "state of resistance," the political debate is being pushed further left without any sign of a Republican renaissance to serve as a check on spending and social policy ambitions. That means Democratic candidates will be staking out the most liberal stance on issues such as single-payer health care, defending California's "sanctuary state" status on immigration, and pushing green investment to reach strict environmental goals.
Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Christopher A. Coons (D-Del.) plan to introduce legislation today that would grant permanent legal status to immigrant "dreamers" in the country since 2013. It would also bolster security along the U.S.-Mexico border but would not call for spending the $30 billion President Trump is seeking for new wall and fence construction.
The 18 Democrats warned the president in a letter about the risks of military action and sought more information on the sudden derailment of the White House's original choice for ambassador to South Korea.
Oil wells ignited in Iraq by retreating ISIS militants burned for nine months, killing cattle, ruining cropland, fouling water supplies and causing permanent breathing ailments for many residents.
By Tamer El-Ghobashy and and Joby Warrick • Read more »
Lee Jae-yong, the third-generation head of Samsung and the country's most influential businessman, had appealed the sentence, imposed in July after he was found guilty of charges including bribery, embezzlement and perjury.
Federal courts in Texas, North Carolina and Wisconsin have ordered boundaries redrawn for 2018 elections, but those rulings are awaiting Supreme Court review, which means midterm contests will almost surely occur within current district borders.
While the NBC drama is primarily a cathartic cry-fest about a family's complex relationships, it has sort of become a whodunit as writers keep weaving in bits and pieces about what happened to the beloved patriarch.
Actresses have been subject to abuses of power virtually since the invention of cinema, a medium invented by men photographing other men doing things and women looking beautiful.
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