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The Undecideds: Sure, Biden and Trump are very different. But maybe neither is right for the job.

The Undecideds: Sure, Biden and Trump are very different. But maybe neither is right for the job.

This article was published more than 2 years agoCommentGift ShareMaybe the debates will help, but for now, Karen and Marlin Boltz remain genuinely stymied. The couple voted for Donald Trump four years ago, but they can’t stand how he’s divided the country and emboldened white supremacists. They like Joe Biden, but recoil at the idea of higher taxes and bigger spending.The Boltzes, who live in a rural area half an hour outside Pittsburgh, find themselves squarely between their children. Their son who lives next door is more conservative than they are and supports Trump. Their daughter...

September 28, 2020
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Vote counts continue in Georgia, Arizona; Trump mounts legal challenges

Vote counts continue in Georgia, Arizona; Trump mounts legal challenges

Gift ShareThis article is free to access.Why?The Washington Post is providing this news free to all readers as a public service.Follow this story and more by This coverage has ended. Democratic nominee Joe Biden is 17 electoral votes away from a victory in the presidential race, projected by Edison Research to flip Michigan and Wisconsin. Alaska, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, and Nevada remain uncalled.Show moreThe latest …Trump, his son and top members of his campaign advanced a set of conspiracy theories about the vote-tallying process to claim that Democrats were...

November 4, 2020
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Despite Covid, Many Wealthy Hospitals Had a Banner Year With Federal Bailout

Despite Covid, Many Wealthy Hospitals Had a Banner Year With Federal Bailout

April 5, 2021Last May, Baylor Scott & White Health, the largest nonprofit hospital system in Texas, laid off 1,200 employees and furloughed others as it braced for the then-novel coronavirus to spread. The cancellation of lucrative elective procedures as the hospital pivoted to treat a new and less profitable infectious disease presaged financial distress, if not ruin. The federal government rushed $454 million in relief funds to help shore up its operations.But Baylor not only weathered the crisis, it thrived. By the end of 2020, Baylor had accumulated an $815 million surplus, $20...

April 5, 2021
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