Plus: Putin's health, abortion surveillance and COVID's toll on Latinos |
The ReportMeasuring government performance |
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In a handful of closely fought states, even a shift of a single percentage point in a voter group could decide who controls the Senate next year. Lawmaker and privacy groups are warning that the availability and abundance of sensitive information from cellphones threatens to make a post-Roe America much harsher on abortion than before the landmark case became the law of the land. From vaccines for the youngest children in the U.S. to omicron-specific booster shots, big decisions are on the horizon. Western officials don't know what would happen in the Kremlin's chain of command if Putin were to become incapacitated at a time of persistent rumors about his supposed illness. The president is having a hard time making his case to an unhappy public that has emerged from a pandemic only to be hit with grocery and gas bills, a war and traumatizing mass shootings. The coronavirus pandemic has eaten away at the Latino edge in life expectancy in staggering fashion, and taken a disproportionate toll on older members of the community compared with whites. U.S. News photo editors curate this month's most compelling images from at home and abroad. |
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