United States Postal Service

The Trump administration engaged in a "politically motivated attack" on the Postal Service when it implemented recent changes at the agency, a judge said Thursday.
The postal service was reportedly going to distribute 560 million reusable face masks across the U.S. before White House officials expressed concern that the move would cause "panic."
Neither snow nor Category 5 hurricanes nor massive printing snafus stopped the Postal Service from helping safeguard U.S. elections. Has that changed?
The postcard featured "PRESIDENT TRUMP'S CORONAVIRUS GUIDELINES FOR AMERICA" — despite the president downplaying COVID-19 at the time.
The postmaster general also faces a congressional subpoena demanding documents about his meetings.
Postal Service is fighting the order, seeking to continue mailing out the inaccurate postcards.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy refused to let state officials review notices before they went out, says Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold.
DeJoy is alleged to have violated North Carolina and federal campaign finance laws.
Despite congressional subpoenas and Freedom of Information Act requests, the USPS might succeed in keeping the document secret until after the election.
Democrats have accused the Trump administration of sabotaging the postal system to hobble mail-in ballot delivery to Trump's advantage.