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Trump’s Black Supporters: Inside a Small and Divided World

Most black voters are Democrats, but even among the tiny collection of Mr. Trump’s dedicated black supporters, there are factions.

Jared Kusher: Many Tasks, Few Words, Top-Secret Clearance

The president’s son-in-law has traveled around the world, conducting high-level work on behalf of the White House. Yet the Department of Justice found substantial issues related to his security clearance.

Lynch Mobs Killed Latinos Across the West. Descendants Want It Known.

A marker commemorating the massacre of Mexicans in Texas in 1918 is part of a larger move to recognize the widespread lynchings of Hispanics in the historic Southwest.

White House Ambitions Cloud Democratic Hopes to Win the Senate

If 2020 produces an anti-Trump wave, Democrats will need plenty of candidates to recapture the Senate. But some of the party’s best only want the White House.

For PG&E Board Candidate, ‘Job One Is to Restore the Public Trust’

Phil Angelides, one of 13 people on a slate nominated by a hedge fund, discussed what went wrong at the California utility and how it can be revived.

Behind Illicit Massage Parlors Lie a Vast Crime Network and Modern Indentured Servitude

In a $3 billion-a-year industry, many women stay on as prostitutes in order to pay debts to smugglers, spa owners and lawyers.

SpaceX and NASA Launch Is First Step to Renewed Human Spaceflight

The Crew Dragon capsule carried no crew, but it sets up a near future with astronauts traveling to orbit from the United States again.

Manafort’s Lawyers, Saying He Learned ‘Harsh Lesson,’ Seek Lenient Sentence

The former Trump campaign chairman will be sentenced next week in one of the two cases against him. Sentencing guidelines put the punishment at 19 to 24 years.

Trump Faces Fury After Saying He Believes North Korean Leader on Student’s Death

The family of Otto Warmbier spoke out after President Trump’s comments, saying that North Korea’s “evil regime” was responsible for the death of their son.

Tulsa Police Officer Who Killed Unarmed Black Man Won’t Face Civil Rights Charges

The Justice Department said it had found insufficient evidence to prove that Betty Shelby had willfully used unreasonable force against Terence Crutcher.

‘Mockingbird’ Producer Relents, Letting Local Plays Go Forward

Facing criticism for making regional theaters cancel productions of “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Scott Rudin said he would let them go on, using the new Aaron Sorkin script.

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