Monday, January 2, 2017

Monday's Headlines: GOP Congress maps plans for sweeping conservative agenda

lslamic State says it carried out Turkey attack that left dozens dead, calls it revenge; Trump's doubts about cybersecurity alarm experts; Trump's chief of staff faces daunting task of bringing order to White House; Abnormal is the new normal, politics-wise;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
GOP Congress maps plans for sweeping conservative agenda
When the 115th Congress begins this week with Republicans firmly in charge of the House and Senate, GOP lawmakers will be poised to move quickly on an ambitious package of conservative legislation, confident that their long-delayed legislative goals are poised to become reality with Donald Trump in the Oval Office.
lslamic State says it carried out Turkey attack that left dozens dead, calls it revenge
The mass shooting that killed 39 people at an Istanbul club was designed to target Christians as an act of vengeance for Turkish military actions, the militant group said.
 
Trump's doubts about cybersecurity alarm experts
The president-elect's comments and his handling of the Russian hacking allegations could embolden foreign hackers and undermine the U.S. government's ability to respond to them, analysts said.
 
Trump's chief of staff faces daunting task of bringing order to White House
The power-sharing dynamic between Reince Priebus and his soon-to-be colleagues in a Trump White House looks worrisome to those who held his title in prior administrations. Some predict flatly that it will not work.
 
Abnormal is the new normal, politics-wise
Whether the old rules are dead or whether Donald Trump simply bucked them remains to be seen. But anyone analyzing something based on "the way things work" will have to stop and think hard about whether that's the way they actually work now.
 
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Opinions
 
A year to protect democracy
 
School choice for children who have none
 
The United States must join Europe to resist Russia's meddling
 
The new world order, 2017
 
New Year's resolution
 
D.C.'s 'beyond broken' criminal-justice system is an outrage
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More News
 
Kim says North Korea close to testing intercontinental missile
While Kim Jong Un made no mention of President-elect Donald Trump in his speech, his comments signaled that North Korea might seek to test-fire a long-range missile around the time of the U.S. presidential inauguration.
After a century of promises, New Yorkers finally get their 2nd Avenue subway
The $4.5 billion project is the the transit system's first major expansion in 50 years.
Thomas Boswell | Columnist
Redskins should have expected Giants to play like it mattered
Washington's state of unpreparedness against New York was shocking to anyone with a sense of the historic rivalry.
The new year is the time to ask: Do I have the job I really want?
Many people working in an office would prefer to fix houses or bake cakes for a living. Should they?
Mexicans are outraged over a huge hike in gas prices
Few issues stir more indignation in the country than "gasolinazos," as Mexicans call hikes in the government-set gasoline price.
Zombie Apocalypse: An addiction crisis in America
A reporter reflects on the opioid epidemic, the rise in the death rate among midlife white Americans, and the people trying to survive this epidemic of self-destruction.
Venezuelans flee to Brazil for medical care — overwhelming its hospitals and morgues
A spiraling economic crisis and hyperinflation have cleaned Venezuelan hospitals of needles, bandages and medicine. Desperate for care, patients are crossing the border by the thousands.
Mariah Carey's disastrous New Year's Eve performance, explained — sort of
A representative for Carey attributed the botched performance to technical difficulties. The singer had another description for what happened.
Solo-ish
2017 will be the year of friend-dates
They aren't necessarily romantic meetings. They're designed to connect with people who let you be vulnerable.
Books
26 titles to add to your 'to read' list
Coretta Scott King is among authors whose stories will brighten the 2017 literary landscape.
Travel
In Paris, an unsung arrondissement
For a longtime resident, 13 is her lucky number when it comes to choice of district.
 
     
 
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