Latest news with #CapitalWeatherGang


Washington Post
4 hours ago
- Climate
- Washington Post
CWG Live updates: Hot weather returns for June's final weekend, as does storm chance
Welcome to updated around-the-clock by Capital Weather Gang meteorologists. Happening now: It'll feel like summer again today after the short break Friday. Mid-80s to around 90 this afternoon with a chance of a couple of storms, which could be strong. What's next? Similar tomorrow and into the start of the workweek. A cold front eventually delivers somewhat drier air by Wednesday. Today's daily digit — 6/10: Back to summer, but at least it's a tamer version than earlier in the week. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Saturday): Clouds and any patchy fog should dissipate as the sun rises, leaving us mainly sunny weather midday into early afternoon. A few storms may pop up in the late-day sun as highs reach the mid-80s to a degree or two past 90. Winds are from the south and southwest around 5 to 10 mph. Confidence: Medium-High Tonight: A couple evening storms are possible. Otherwise, trending mainly clear and muggy. Lows are mainly in the 70 to 75 range. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Sunday): At least as sunny as today and probably sunnier. Afternoon storms should be few. Highs are similar to this afternoon's, or generally about 86 to 91. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow night: Partly cloudy. Lows again range from near 70 to the mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High A look ahead Not too much change Monday into Tuesday, at least until a cold front arrives late in the latter day. Small odds of storms Monday grow for Tuesday with the front closing in. Highs are largely within a few degrees of 90. Confidence: Medium Lower humidity for Wednesday and Thursday, but not too much change in temperatures. Overall, 80s are favored Wednesday and it might trend back closer to 90 for Thursday. Pretty close to average for the time of year. Confidence: Medium Today's daily digit — 6/10: Back to summer, but at least it's a tamer version than earlier in the week. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Saturday): Clouds and any patchy fog should dissipate as the sun rises, leaving us mainly sunny weather midday into early afternoon. A few storms may pop up in the late-day sun as highs reach the mid-80s to a degree or two past 90. Winds are from the south and southwest around 5 to 10 mph. Confidence: Medium-High Tonight: A couple evening storms are possible. Otherwise, trending mainly clear and muggy. Lows are mainly in the 70 to 75 range. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Sunday): At least as sunny as today and probably sunnier. Afternoon storms should be few. Highs are similar to this afternoon's, or generally about 86 to 91. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow night: Partly cloudy. Lows again range from near 70 to the mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High A look ahead Not too much change Monday into Tuesday, at least until a cold front arrives late in the latter day. Small odds of storms Monday grow for Tuesday with the front closing in. Highs are largely within a few degrees of 90. Confidence: Medium Lower humidity for Wednesday and Thursday, but not too much change in temperatures. Overall, 80s are favored Wednesday and it might trend back closer to 90 for Thursday. Pretty close to average for the time of year. Confidence: Medium


Washington Post
a day ago
- Climate
- Washington Post
CWG Live updates: Much cooler and cloudy today. Toastier with storms this weekend.
Welcome to updated around-the-clock by Capital Weather Gang meteorologists. Happening now: Our heat wave finally breaks today, with highs in the mid-70s (north and east) to mid-80s (south and west). Rain chances may focus south and west of town, but stay tuned. What's next? Back up to roughly 90 this weekend, with daily storm chances. A few storms could turn strong. It may still feel near 100 degrees early next workweek given high humidity. Today's daily digit — 6/10: Leaning into the heat break is the main positive, but it is cloudy with some rain chances around, especially south and west of town. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Friday): Cooler and mainly cloudy. Highs vary with mid- to upper 70s northeast of town to mid-80s southwest of town. A few showers, along with afternoon and evening storms, are possible. Rain may focus west and south of the area if the front sags that way. Monitor along with us. Confidence: Medium Tonight: Storms or a downpour are possible into the early morning hours, but most may just experience mostly cloudy skies. Muggy lows near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Saturday): Fairly typical weather for late June, with highs shooting for 90, plus or minus a few degrees. Humidity gets into the high side and should help set off some afternoon thunderstorms, with a few possibly turning strong to severe. We'll monitor. Confidence: Medium Tomorrow night: Evening thunderstorms may continue but their intensity wanes by midnight. Humid with lows near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium Sunday: More of the typical heat but perhaps just a slight dip in humidity (fingers crossed). Highs upper 80s to low 90s. A a few mid- to late afternoon thunderstorms have about a 50/50 chance of development. So far storm intensity isn't concerning. Confidence: Medium A look ahead Sunday night: A few evening storms may slip into the early morning hours. Lows are again not very cool with a possible resurgence in humidity — near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium A cold front slowly approaches Monday and Tuesday. This should ignite numerous afternoon and evening storms, and some could be strong to severe. Near-oppressive humidity with upper 80s to low 90s may make it feel like 100 degrees. Lows only get to near 70 into the mid-70s. Confidence: Medium Wednesday and Thursday have very limited, low rain chances, sunnier skies and somewhat less humid air for a change. Highs are currently looking like mid-80s to near 90. Confidence: Medium Today's daily digit — 6/10: Leaning into the heat break is the main positive, but it is cloudy with some rain chances around, especially south and west of town. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Friday): Cooler and mainly cloudy. Highs vary with mid- to upper 70s northeast of town to mid-80s southwest of town. A few showers, along with afternoon and evening storms, are possible. Rain may focus west and south of the area if the front sags that way. Monitor along with us. Confidence: Medium Tonight: Storms or a downpour are possible into the early morning hours, but most may just experience mostly cloudy skies. Muggy lows near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Saturday): Fairly typical weather for late June, with highs shooting for 90, plus or minus a few degrees. Humidity gets into the high side and should help set off some afternoon thunderstorms, with a few possibly turning strong to severe. We'll monitor. Confidence: Medium Tomorrow night: Evening thunderstorms may continue but their intensity wanes by midnight. Humid with lows near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium Sunday: More of the typical heat but perhaps just a slight dip in humidity (fingers crossed). Highs upper 80s to low 90s. A a few mid- to late afternoon thunderstorms have about a 50/50 chance of development. So far storm intensity isn't concerning. Confidence: Medium A look ahead Sunday night: A few evening storms may slip into the early morning hours. Lows are again not very cool with a possible resurgence in humidity — near 70 to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium A cold front slowly approaches Monday and Tuesday. This should ignite numerous afternoon and evening storms, and some could be strong to severe. Near-oppressive humidity with upper 80s to low 90s may make it feel like 100 degrees. Lows only get to near 70 into the mid-70s. Confidence: Medium Wednesday and Thursday have very limited, low rain chances, sunnier skies and somewhat less humid air for a change. Highs are currently looking like mid-80s to near 90. Confidence: Medium


Washington Post
2 days ago
- Climate
- Washington Post
June 26 morning weather update
The inside scoop on D.C. weather from the Capital Weather Gang. Get your D.C. area weather update in under a minute on weekday mornings.


Politico
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Politico
Trump's new war
Presented by With help from Eli Okun, Bethany Irvine and Ali Bianco On the Playbook Podcast this morning, Jack and POLITICO's Megan Messerly discuss why the Trump administration is so upset at suggestions its bombing of Iran might have failed. Plus: all the fallout from Zohran Mamdani's stunning Democratic primary win in New York. Good Thursday morning. This is Jack Blanchard, thrilled to see the D.C. heatwave is finally over. Today will be topping out at no more than … 95 degrees, per the Capital Weather Gang, so be sure to pack your sweater as you head out to work. THREE THINGS TO WATCH FOR AS WE HEAD TOWARD THE WEEKEND: FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — What D.C. will be watching: Donald Trump will sit down with Fox News' Maria Bartiromo at the White House tomorrow to pre-record an interview for her 'Sunday Morning Futures' show. This is Trump's first TV interview since ordering airstrikes on — and then brokering a ceasefire deal with — Iran, a subject that will surely dominate the conversation along with the progress of the 'big, beautiful bill' through the Senate. The interview airs at 10 a.m. Sunday — though don't be surprised if Fox trails a few of the best lines in advance. What Stephen Miller will be watching: There's now just a week to go until the Supreme Court justices pack away their robes and head off to the Adirondacks or Alaska for a summer break — and we're still awaiting several huge decisions with far-reaching consequences for the nation. Top of the list is a ruling on Trump's effort to end birthright citizenship, which has morphed into a push by Miller & co. to prevent federal judges from issuing nationwide injunctions against the government. Might today be the day? The court opens today's session at 10 a.m. What Elon Musk won't be watching: The 'wedding of the century' in Venice, Italy, where occasional D.C.-dweller Jeff Bezos — apparently he still pops in to Kalorama once in a while — is marrying Lauren Sánchez. Only politicos with the wealthiest connections can expect an invite. So naturally, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner have been there since Tuesday, and politics-adjacent billionaires like Oprah Winfrey and Bill Gates just might sneak in, too. And yes, it turns out Trump himself bagged an invitation, per WSJ's Josh Dawsey and colleagues — but sadly 'scheduling conflicts' mean he's unlikely to attend. Che peccato, signor presidente. In today's Playbook … — Why Trump just can't stop talking about Iran. — Dems in turmoil over Mamdani victory. — Trump to host 'big, beautiful' White House event as he turns the screws on GOP. DRIVING THE DAY TRUMP GOES TO WAR: Trump will continue his aggressive PR blitz on Iran this morning as the president seeks to hammer home the message that his bombing raids were a success. Trump will send out Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and assorted 'military representatives' for an 8 a.m. news conference — neatly timed to catch the Fox News breakfast crowd — to again make the case that Iran's nuclear facilities have been utterly destroyed. And that's just the start: At 1 p.m. Trump's combative press secretary Karoline Leavitt will enter the fray with a televised White House press briefing, which you already know will be focused on Saturday's air strikes. (Also — don't be surprised if she gives representatives from CNN and The New York Times a hard time.) And then at 4 p.m. Trump himself will appear for a White House event specifically focused on the passage of his 'big, beautiful bill.' It surely won't take long for Iran to come up. Here's the thing: It's rare to see the president this rattled by a negative story about his administration. Obviously Trump goes after the media all the time, but it mostly feels performative these days — and maybe it always did. This is different. The president posted 21 times on Truth Social yesterday about the supposed success of his military strikes. And at yesterday's NATO summit — a moment specifically designed by the Western world for Trump to bask in the glory of a huge defense spending boost — he spent most of his public appearances repeating his assertions on Iran. What's going on? Critics see a president spooked by a bombshell leak that has undermined his authority. Supporters say Trump is genuinely outraged by what he claims is false reporting and wants the record corrected. Either way — he's using every tool in his arsenal to push back hard: Witness the hammer-like repetition that sites were 'obliterated'; the plentiful use of surrogates like Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio; the vindictive targeting of the journalists and media organizations involved; the barrage of statements from both U.S. and Israeli intelligence chiefs yesterday that the initial report was wrong. Playing the patriotism card: Today things will get even more heated when we're told that to even question whether Iran's mountainous defenses might have held up a little better than expected is an outrageous slur on America's armed forces. Hegseth's job this morning is to 'fight for the Dignity of our Great American Pilots,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'These Patriots were very upset! After 36 hours of dangerously flying through Enemy Territory, they landed, they knew the Success was LEGENDARY, and then, two days later, they started reading Fake News by CNN and The Failing New York Times.' And that's before we get to the leakers themselves … who are now facing an FBI investigation. The White House is already pointing the finger of blame at Congress, per Axios' Marc Caputo, and there will be retribution in that direction too. 'Administration sources say they're planning to limit posting on CAPNET, a system the administration uses to share classified information with Congress,' Caputo reports. 'Almost as soon as we put the information on CAPNET, it leaks,' an administration source tells him. 'There's no reason to do this again.' The truth is, as Playbook has been saying all week, that nobody knows for sure the full extent of the damage done at Fordo — and won't for some time yet. Indeed, Rubio admitted as much yesterday in his interview with my Playbook colleague Dasha Burns. 'That's difficult,' he said, when asked when he expects to get a reliable assessment. 'This is a unique target set … 300 feet into a mountain. I don't think we'll be sending anyone down the hole anytime soon into those mountains.' He then added: 'Suffice to say we are very confident.' What everyone ought to be talking about: Rather than spending the entire day debating what may or may not have happened beneath 300 feet of Iranian rock, it's worth paying a little more attention to the vibes coming out of NATO yesterday — where Trump was more fulsome in his support for the world's strongest military alliance than he has ever been. 'These people really love their countries,' Trump said of the other NATO leaders. 'It's not a rip-off, and we're here to help them.' This is a big deal: Trump's anti-NATO rhetoric has always been the main reason he so unnerves America's European allies, who have placed their entire national security in the hands of the U.S. military for the past 80 years. His stance dates back well before he ever became president, and he even considered pulling America out of the treaty during his first term. Now, in 2025, he's learned to love the alliance and all it took was an extra $1 trillion or so in defense spending, plus one obsequious text message from Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Maybe this diplomacy lark is easier than it looks. NEW YORK, NEW YORK THE HOT TAKES KEEP COMING: As your social media feed since Tuesday night undoubtedly proves, everyone in politics has a hot take on Zohran Mamdani. And as the dust settles after his stunning triumph over former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in NYC's Democratic mayoral primary, it's already clear what Mamdani means for Republicans: They see his pending nomination as a political gift and are moving to make the 33-year-old Democratic Socialist an albatross they can tie to every possible Dem. But for Democrats, the Mamdani story is way more complicated. 'Progressives see a roadmap for Democrats to take back power, while moderates worry that New York City voters have just handed President Donald Trump a cudgel to beat them with during the 2026 midterm elections,' POLITICO's Elena Schneider and colleagues write this morning. 'And it has reenergized divides — progressive versus moderate, establishment versus outsider, young versus old — that continue to plague the party after last year's presidential election.' Simply put: 'For moderates and wealthy Democratic donors, the reaction is, this is horrible and it's going to ruin us. For center-left Democrats who don't necessarily support Mamdani's policies, the reaction is, this is a rejection of the Democratic establishment and Mamdani ran a great campaign against a sex offender,' said Tim Lim, a Democratic strategist and fundraiser. 'And for progressives, they believe this is what happens when you listen to voters.' The one thing everyone agrees on: Mamdani ran a great campaign. Advisers to potential 2028 Democratic candidates say Mamdani's campaign 'is a promising blueprint for several of the contenders who want to style themselves as the party's next generation,' Elena and colleagues write. 'Several operatives named Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) as one to watch.' But before everyone gets too carried away … The Democratic and New York establishments are stirring. Is there life in the old dog yet? Plenty of observers believe Mamdani's rise has given incumbent Mayor Eric Adams' struggling reelection bid a new lease on life 'as real estate and business honchos ponder ways' to block Mamdani in November, POLITICO's Joe Anuta reports this morning. Adams is expected to roll out his longshot independent campaign in a rally on the steps of City Hall later today. Follow the money: Top Democratic donors are also reluctant to support Mamdani and some are backing Adams instead, NYT's Dana Rubinstein and colleagues report. Their story reveals business groups and other big-money interests are quietly discussing ways to get a new independent candidate onto the ballot. Watch this space. That's enough Mamdani hot takes: Take a minute now to bow your head and mark the passing of another American political dynasty: the Cuomos of New York. As Alex Burns writes for POLITICO Magazine, the fall of another establishment behemoth is just part of a much broader trend. 'This is an age of angry populism and political disruption; breakneck social and technological change; and broad, deep frustration with the economic status quo,' he writes. 'Family names that voters once found comforting now seem to have other connotations — complacency, insularity, privilege, obsolescence.' More analysis: 'Zohran Mamdani Won Big. 8 Insiders Lay Out What That Means for the Democratic Party,' POLITICO Mag … '5 takeaways behind Mamdani's historic NYC win,' by POLITICO's Joe Anuta and Emily Ngo MEANWHILE ON THE HILL RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES: Trump will turn the screws on warring GOP factions today ahead of this weekend's crucial vote on the megabill. Trump will host a 'big, beautiful event' in the White House at 4 p.m. where he will make the case for getting the bill signed into law ASAP, Axios' Alex Isenstadt reports. Trump will be joined in the East Room by 'everyday Americans' whom the administration says would benefit from the bill — including tipped workers, food delivery drivers and border patrol agents. The message to Congress is clear: the bill will be a GOP vote winner in 2026. But but but: Even with a looming deadline and hundreds of billions of dollars at play, key GOP senators still aren't on board to move forward with a vote. During a closed-door meeting with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, GOP lawmakers warned leadership they did not have the 50 votes needed to advance the bill to a floor debate. Our Inside Congress colleagues have much more on the troubles Thune is facing in getting his conference in line. Despite weeks of negotiations, Medicaid cuts and changes to the provider tax provisions remain key sticking points. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) warned his colleagues he would not move ahead on the bill 'without further clarity on Medicaid changes,' Jordain reports. And Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) tells Semafor's Burgess Everett that 'unless we get further clarity on the rural hospital issue and what we're doing there,' there will be no progress. Just do it: 'Some colleagues of the resistant Republicans think it's time to force' the vote despite the opposition, Everett reports. 'On legislation like this, the only way to know whether you got the votes to get on the bill is to take the vote. You're having a lot of people say, 'they can't vote for the bill, they can't vote for the bill,' that in my judgment, will vote for the bill,' says Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.). When and how they get there is a whole other story. Should the Senate even get that far, GOP leaders are working to hammer out a version of the bill that can pass the House without returning to the negotiating table, per NBC's Sahil Kapur: 'That means hashing out SALT, Medicaid and clean energy. Easier said than done.' BEST OF THE REST FED UP: Trump is weighing whether to expedite his announcement to replace Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, whose term is up in 11 months, WSJ's Brian Schwartz and Nick Timiraos scoop. 'In recent weeks, the president has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Powell's replacement by September or October,' though the already rocky relationship could 'prompt an even-earlier announcement sometime this summer.' Several names have been floated as candidates, including Fed governor Kevin Warsh, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. HE'S RUNNING: After days of build-up, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker will formally announce he's seeking a third term in 2026 today at a rally on Chicago's South Side, POLITICO's Shia Kapos reports. But everyone agrees the Democratic governor is leaving the door open for a run for president in 2028. AND SHE … MIGHT BE: D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton told reporters that she is running for reelection yesterday — only for her office to again walk back her comment. 'No decision has been made. She wants to run but is still discussing it with people close to her,' a spokesperson told POLITICO's Nicholas Wu. This is the second time this month Norton's office has walked back her vow to run. FOR YOUR RADAR: The Wisconsin Supreme Court has rejected a challenge from Democrats hoping to overturn the battleground state's current congressional district boundaries before the 2026 midterms, AP's Scott Bauer reports from Madison. 'The decisions, made without explanation from the court, is a setback for Democrats who had hoped for new, friendlier district boundary lines in Wisconsin as they attempt to win back control of the House next year.' IMMIGRATION FILES: Kilmar Abrego Garcia will stay behind bars as lawyers spar over whether to deport him on new federal charges, per the AP. The Salvadoran national has remained incarcerated since his return to the U.S. on June 7. A federal judge ruled yesterday Abrego 'has a right to be released,' setting 'specific conditions … for him to live with his brother.' But Abrego's attorneys expressed concern that it would lead to 'immediate detention' and 'possible deportation' by ICE. A DECADE SINCE OBERGEFELL: POLITICO Mag's Dylon Jones is out with a moving profile of activist Jim Obergefell, 10 years after the Supreme Court case bearing his last name made gay marriage legal in all 50 states. Now, Obergefell has returned to Washington 'not to celebrate an historic anniversary of an historic decision, but to protest the institution that wrote his name into American law.' TALK OF THE TOWN Chuck Schumer went to the hospital for dehydration yesterday 'out of an abundance of caution' after getting lightheaded in the Senate gym. 'He wants to remind everyone to drink some water and stay out of the heat,' a Schumer spox said. OUT AND ABOUT — The National Energy Resources Organization celebrated its 50th anniversary with a reception last night, where Sen. Shelley Moore Capito ( was honored with NERO's Distinguished Service 2025 award and guests enjoyed a live band, pepperoni rolls, half smokes and moonshine cocktails. SPOTTED: Chris Tomassi, Donise Dukes, Kwame Canty, Bree Raum, Allison Hull, Carrie Domnitch, Brian Caudill, Kiran Malone, Nick Pearson, Lauren Allen, Montee Wynn, Marcie Haber, Jeff Leahey, Lindsay Westfield, Willie Lyles, Ryan Walker, Mike Sewell, Emily Duncan, Brittany Kelm, Laura Schepis, Billie Kaumaya and John Lee. — SPOTTED last night at La Vie for ROKK Solutions' 10-year anniversary celebration: Ron and Sara Bonjean, Rodell and Sheena Mollineau, Kristen Hawn and Ted Derheimer, Elizabeth Northrup, Ashley Carpenter, Jeff Grappone, Anna Palmer and Patrick Mellody, Collin Allen, Neil Grace, Lisa Hanna, Mark Leibovich, Carl Hulse, Jacquelyn Cameron, Debbie Marshall, Steve Clemons, Amber Lyons, David Montes, Missy Kirk, Sara Conrad, Shannon and Sheldon Bream, Kristy Croushore, Cole Rojewski, Doug Heye, Nick Massella, Jeff Berkowitz, Steve Rochlin and Alex Schriver. MEDIA MOVE — Caitlin Reilly will be a U.S. tax and fiscal policy reporter at Bloomberg. She previously has been a tax and economics reporter at CQ Roll Call. TRANSITIONS — Former Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall will be a nonresident senior fellow with the Center for American Progress' national security and international policy team. … Kate Kamber Brennan is joining Rational 360 as SVP of digital. She previously led stakeholder targeting programs for Edelman's global business marketing team. … Andrew Forman is now a partner at Latham & Watkins. He previously was deputy assistant AG in the Justice Department's antitrust division. … … Raymond Tolentino is now a partner with Cooley's commercial litigation practice. He previously was special assistant to the president and senior associate White House counsel under Biden. … Nicole Mason is now a senior counsel at Tully Rinckey. She previously was senior EEO adviser for Commerce's National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration research office. … Jeremy Eaton is now director of strategy for Techne. He previously was digital marketing strategist at Majority Strategies. WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Liana Guerra, chief of staff to Rep. Darren Soto (D-Fla.), and Daniel Tillman, associate attorney at Vaughan, Fincher and Sotelo, recently welcomed Cali Alicia Guerra-Tillman. — Megan Zavertnik, managing member of MZ Advising, and Brian Zavertnik, director of contracts at Divergent, yesterday welcomed Stevie Zavertnik, who joins big siblings Isabel and Benjamin. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Florida first lady Casey DeSantis … WaPo's Juliet Eilperin … NYT's Mike Bender and Daniel Victor … Emma Kinery … OpenAI's Elizabeth Wilner … POLITICO's Jonathan Finkelstein, Paroma Soni and Jacob Wendler … NBC's Scott Bland … Brunswick Group's Dave Brown … Rachel Gantz … DLA Piper's Preeya Noronha Pinto … Mark Kadesh … Emily McBride of Sen. Tommy Tuberville's (R-Ala.) office … Mark Ritacco … Mayer Brown's Mickey Leibner … Matthew Fery … Newsmax's Emma Rechenberg … Julie Norton … former Sen. Chuck Robb (D-Va.) … Merit's Trevor Cornwell … former Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie … CAA's Mark McGrath … Ross Baker … Oubai Shahbandar Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath. Corrections: Yesterday's Playbook misspelled the names of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu and Andrew Desiderio.

Washington Post
2 days ago
- Climate
- Washington Post
CWG Live updates: Heat stays strong today; much cooler Friday
Welcome to updated around-the-clock by Capital Weather Gang meteorologists. Happening now: The humidity today may be the highest of the heat wave, as afternoon highs in the mid-90s feel like 105 or so. Heat advisory runs from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Like yesterday, some spots could see a late-day storm. What's next? The heat wave finally breaks tomorrow with highs in the upper 70s to mid-80s. But we're back up to near 90 this weekend as daily storm chances continue. Today's daily digit — 2/10: Hot and steamy yet again with hit-or-miss late-day storms. But at least it's the last day of this heat wave. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Thursday): Partly to mostly sunny skies push afternoon highs into the mid-90s. Humidity is still painfully high, resulting in a heat index as high as about 107. Another fire-up of scattered late-afternoon storms is likely, with downpours to provide some cooling. Confidence: Medium-High Tonight: Scattered storms could linger well into the evening, perhaps not dying down until around midnight. Overnight lows fall to the low to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Friday): A weak cool front slips into the area from the northeast and should be just strong enough to limit highs to the upper 70s to mid-80s. Despite the cool down, scattered showers and storms are possible again, especially in the afternoon. Confidence: Medium Tomorrow night: Any storms should dissipate during the evening. Still rather muggy overnight with lows near 70 to the low 70s. Confidence: Medium A look ahead The weekend is fairly typical for the heart of summer. Both days should see afternoon highs in the upper 80s to low 90s and nighttime lows in the upper 60s to low 70s. Humidity is still on the high side and should help to set off a few afternoon or evening thunderstorms so be on the lookout. Confidence: Medium A cold front slowly approaches Monday and Tuesday, which could result in even more numerous afternoon and evening storms. Still humid as highs continue in the upper 80s to low 90s, with lows in the upper 60s to low 70s. Confidence: Medium Wednesday and Thursday look drier and somewhat less humid for a change with highs in the 80s. Confidence: Low-Medium Today's daily digit — 2/10: Hot and steamy yet again with hit-or-miss late-day storms. But at least it's the last day of this heat wave. | 🤚 Your call? The digit is a somewhat subjective rating of the day's weather, on a 0-to-10 scale. Forecast in detail Today (Thursday): Partly to mostly sunny skies push afternoon highs into the mid-90s. Humidity is still painfully high, resulting in a heat index as high as about 107. Another fire-up of scattered late-afternoon storms is likely, with downpours to provide some cooling. Confidence: Medium-High Tonight: Scattered storms could linger well into the evening, perhaps not dying down until around midnight. Overnight lows fall to the low to mid-70s. Confidence: Medium-High Tomorrow (Friday): A weak cool front slips into the area from the northeast and should be just strong enough to limit highs to the upper 70s to mid-80s. Despite the cool down, scattered showers and storms are possible again, especially in the afternoon. Confidence: Medium Tomorrow night: Any storms should dissipate during the evening. Still rather muggy overnight with lows near 70 to the low 70s. Confidence: Medium A look ahead The weekend is fairly typical for the heart of summer. Both days should see afternoon highs in the upper 80s to low 90s and nighttime lows in the upper 60s to low 70s. Humidity is still on the high side and should help to set off a few afternoon or evening thunderstorms so be on the lookout. Confidence: Medium A cold front slowly approaches Monday and Tuesday, which could result in even more numerous afternoon and evening storms. Still humid as highs continue in the upper 80s to low 90s, with lows in the upper 60s to low 70s. Confidence: Medium Wednesday and Thursday look drier and somewhat less humid for a change with highs in the 80s. Confidence: Low-Medium Here are some important heat safety tips to get through this heat wave … More heat safety infographics can be found here.