Iman Alsaden, the medical director of Planned Parenthood of Great Plains, travels hundreds of miles across state lines every month to provide abortion care at clinics in the Midwest.
The Washington Post's national security reporters unveil the deep divisions inside the Obama White House over how to respond to Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election.
The American Renewal Project has been working to inspire Christian pastors and church members to run for political office across North Carolina.
After the Camp Fire destroyed her hometown, Holly Ratliff became one of roughly 50,000 people forced to flee the Sierra Nevada foothills. Like thousands of other Americans displaced by natural disasters, the single mother of three struggled to rebuild — fighting to remain near her family even when she didn’t know where she would sleep.

Jeff Taylor went from the pulpit to the Red Cross to a college nonprofit. Now, his alleged victims are speaking out, and the FBI is investigating.

Newly freed from four massive dams, the Klamath River offered a historic — and audacious — opportunity. Fifteen young kayakers, most new to the sport, set out to complete the first full descent of the river’s 300-mile journey from Oregon’s Cascade Mountains to the Pacific coast of California.
It's been seven years since astronauts launched from American soil, now NASA has hired SpaceX and Boeing to restore launch capabilities to the U.S and allow private citizens into space.

Puerto Rico’s apagón, or “super blackout,” is the longest and largest major power outage in modern U.S. history. Without electricity, there is no reliable source of clean water. School is out, indefinitely. Health care is fraught. Small businesses are faltering. The tasks of daily life are both exhausting and dangerous. There is nothing to do but wait, and no one can say when the lights will com back on.
Rodeo stars find purpose in navigating primal forces. None of them ever went harder than J.B. Mauney.

By 2024, trains carrying tourists will rumble over hundreds of buried settlements, caves and underground rivers, raising the risk of collapse and contamination.
As St. Louis County prosecuting attorney Robert McCulloch read the grand jury decision to not indict Officer Darren Wilson, Michael Brown's mother, Lesley McSpadden, broke down in front of a crowd before the protest turned into a riot.
In the aftermath of George Floyd's death, a neighborhood group in north Minneapolis, backed by the local NAACP chapter, is patrolling the streets to prevent fires and looting at local businesses.
Washington Post reporter Whitney Leaming described how the night of Aug. 25 unfolded in Kenosha, Wis., and her close encounter with the alleged gunman.
Every U.S. president in recent history has campaigned to reform immigration, yet problems on the southern border persist. From El Paso to Chicago, The Washington Post's Jorge Ribas explores how border security will remain a critical issue during the 2024 election.
Like thousands of families in Ukraine, Andrii Mishchenko and Olha Taranova said goodbye at the border. Andrii headed east towards the front lines. Olha headed west with her 11-year-old daughter and elderly father. Now over a year later, the family deals with the strain of separation, the volatility of settling into a new culture and the fear of the worst that could come of the war.

Across the U.S., civilians are documenting ICE and Border Patrol activity — and sparking a national debate. Supporters call it community observation; Republicans say it’s dangerous. The controversy has grown even sharper in recent days after the fatal shooting of Renée Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, which has ignited protests and political backlash nationwide.

An immersive multimedia project exploring the rise of early-onset cancer among millennials and Gen Z. Through intimate interviews, video, and visual storytelling, the piece captures how young adults are reshaping the public narrative around cancer — sharing their experiences online with candor, vulnerability, and community, while confronting the emotional and physical realities of a diagnosis once thought to belong to older generations.

Tanner was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer in November 2020 at age 25, and since then, life had been a series of starts and stops.

Bryce Adams and her boyfriend used to sell baseball equipment on the internet. Now they make millions as one of the top-earning accounts on OnlyFans.

At just 25, Tanner Martin was diagnosed with Stage 4 colorectal cancer. Amid hospital visits, endless scans and painful treatments, he and his wife, Shay, faced an agonizing question: Could they still chase their dream of starting a family?