The Washington Post

What we learned from this batch of Hillary Clinton e-mails

The State Department released another batch of about 6,000 e-mails from Hillary Clinton's private server while secretary of state, continuing the monthly drip of documents. The Fix's Chris Cillizza on what we learned, and what it means for her 2016 campaign.

  • 30 minutes ago
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Why Rep. McCarthy's Benghazi comment backfired

Rep. Kevin McCarthy appeared on Fox News Channel and commented on the Select Committee on Benghazi, suggesting the panel and its investigation brought Hillary Clinton's poll numbers down. Washington Post reporter Elise Viebeck explains why McCarthy's comment ended up getting him in trouble and being a win for Clinton.

  • 32 minutes ago
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Before emissions cheating, analysts predicted sales to increase closer to 10 percent.

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Police responded to reported shooting on Oregon community college campus

Congress takes aim at cost overruns plaguing the Gerald R. Ford-class carrier group.

The Cadillac tax's defenders

The Israeli leader also said he was ready to resume peace talks with the Palestinians “without preconditions.”

Experiments in Atlanta could point the way to the future. The school president calls it "Amazonification" of higher ed.

Giant impact of space rock could have intensified volcanic eruption, scientists say

More than 7 million bats have perished from white-nose syndrome since it was discovered in an Albany, N.Y. cave nine years ago, and a new research paper provides insight into why.

More than 21 million federal employees and others are being officially notified about the cyber theft of their personal information and of ID protection services.

Now the decision moves to the board of the nation’s largest union; but some argue for Sanders.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan gives a surprising response to why the federal government doesn't put strings on the charter money.

The U.S. Air Force’s senior intelligence officer said Thursday that Russia lacked precision-guided weapons for its bombing campaign in Syria and would likely inflict substantial civilian casualties as a result.

The best features: A canyon four times longer than the Grand and possible ice volcanoes.

Congress warns that negotiators risk losing critical support if they cave in on thorny issues just to close a deal.

In the weeks following the shooting of Fox Lake Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, authorities provided little clarity about the cause of his death.

At one Iraqi training facility 14 Iraqis were living in a room built for two.

“I know that my decisions have caused some to criticize me both publicly and privately," Tulsa County Sheriff Stanley Glanz said.

New medical codes take effect Oct. 1, and some are hilarious.

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