Maryland Politics



The panel is still considering banning chokeholds and restricting no-knock warrants, as well as the future of the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights.

New Goucher survey finds Biden with 31-point lead over Trump in Maryland.

Sens. J.B. Jennings and Steve Hershey said they won’t seek a seventh year leading the minority caucus.

Police union is launching a broad campaign against tougher laws, fewer protections for police.

An attorney for the Montgomery County-based Tree House center said some children are getting counseling elsewhere.

President Barack Obama’s former education secretary and liberal leaders aim to turn anti-racism solidarity into sweeping policy change.

Some want a full repeal. Some want to replace it. Police union says the bill ‘works well.’

Scores of new laws take effect Oct. 1, including the nation’s first statewide ban on foam food containers.

Forecasters predicted “staggering” losses of nearly $2 billion but now say federal stimulus programs staved off an economic crisis.

Overcrowded housing, high rates of uninsurance and preexisting conditions are among them.

The Post newsroom is compiling everywhere voters can cast their ballot in the Washington region this election cycle.

  • Washington Post Staff
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The ballots that tens of thousands of voters have obtained online cannot be scanned directly by the state’s machines.

Grieving family members are seeking accountability and transparency from county officials.

Voters will choose from two sets of competing ballot initiatives, including versions endorsed by the County Council.

Spurred by a historic year, people in their 20s and 30s are volunteering in record numbers.

Roy McGrath has been under public scrutiny about payments made to him at his previous job leading a quasi-state agency.

Maryland’s GOP governor said Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s successor should not be rammed through “on a partisan-line vote.”

The Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission will study the 42 racial terror lynchings in the state.

Binsar Siahaan, now facing deportation, has two children who are U.S. citizens and has been in the country for three decades.

State lawmakers will hold another hearing Thursday about the latest problems with the unemployment system.

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