The Report: Putin’s War at Home

Plus: Democrats' infighting, the GOP's bench and 'stealth' omicron's spread
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March 4, 2022

U.S. News & World Report

The Report

Measuring government performance

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - MARCH 3: Security forces intervene in anti-war protesters in Saint-Petersburg, Russia on March 3, 2022. (Photo by Sergey Mihailicenko/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Recent public pushback shows that Vladimir Putin could be meeting his match – not just with Ukrainians, but also his own people who are tiring of constant wars.

The president is laying down the law on behalf of mainstream Democrats who don't want to fight both Republicans and a wing of their own party to defend their imperiled majorities this fall.

The relaxing of mitigation measures like mask mandates paired with the spread of a highly transmissible subvariant threatens to prolong the latest wave of the coronavirus in the U.S.

Arizona's governor is the fourth to pass on a run for federal office as Republicans struggle with some candidate recruitment in their efforts to take back Senate control in November.

Biden's address was not a lofty speech, as Barack Obama delivered. Nor did he come out swinging, as Donald Trump did. But his address made clear he still believes Americans can work together.

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

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