The Report: Erasing Trump's Legacy With the Stroke of a Pen

December 18, 2020

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The Report

Measuring government performance

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 28: A pen is seen on a notebook before US President Donald Trump signs an executive order on implementing an America-First Offshore Energy Strategy in the Roosevelt Room at The White House on April 28, 2017 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by  Eric Thayer-Pool/Getty Images)

Joe Biden is hoping to lead in a manner that, unlike his recent predecessors, leans more on legislation and less on signing executive orders. But he may not have a choice.

Biden is elevating the issue as a policy priority, appointing people to newly created positions and threading it through other agencies than those that have traditionally addressed it.

People of color have been hammered by the coronavirus, but achieving racial equity in the vaccine rollout may be easier said than done.

The data show a disparity between revenues and employment, leaving state economies depressed.

Letting a CDC moratorium on evictions expire come January will fuel a pandemic that's already raging, researchers warn.

On Mexico's border with the U.S., early coordinated work by aid workers who gained the trust of asylum-seekers has minimized the spread of COVID-19.

U.S. News photo editors curate this month's most compelling images from at home and abroad.

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