Monday, March 6, 2017

Monday's Headlines: Inside Trump’s fury: The president rages at leaks, setbacks and accusations

Comey asked Justice officials to refute Trump's unproven wiretapping claims; Wiretapping accusation pushes Trump presidency onto a road with no guardrails; Caught between Trump and Russia, Germans begin to ratchet up their military might; GOP bill threatens to dismantle one of the nation's strongest school desegregation efforts;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Inside Trump's fury: The president rages at leaks, setbacks and accusations
At the center of the turmoil in the White House is an impatient president frustrated by his administration's inability to erase the impression that his campaign was engaged with Russia, to stem leaks or to implement any signature achievements. Interviews with 17 insiders offer a look at the tumultuous recent days.
Comey asked Justice officials to refute Trump's unproven wiretapping claims
The FBI director's request is the latest rebuff of Trump's unfounded accusation that then-President Obama had ordered a wiretap of his campaign headquarters. Former director of national intelligence, James Clapper, denied allegations that wiretaps were authorized against Trump.
 
Debrief
Wiretapping accusation pushes Trump presidency onto a road with no guardrails
The president's tweets may have been an effort to distract from revelations that his associates had contact with Russian officials, but instead it invites scrutiny and deepens doubts about his own judgment.
 
Caught between Trump and Russia, Germans begin to ratchet up their military might
With the Trump administration pressing allies to shoulder more of their own defense and fears of Russian aggression, Germans, who have largely rejected militarism since the Nazi horror, are debating a military buildup in a manner rarely seen since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
 
GOP bill threatens to dismantle one of the nation's strongest school desegregation efforts
White and black and poor and rich children have long shared schools in Louisville, Ky., with arts- and science-themed programs helping to draw students into different parts of town. Opponents to the push by state Republicans for neighborhood schools fear it would concentrate minority and low-income students apart from their affluent peers.
 
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Opinions
 
The Trump Experiment may come to an early tipping point
 
Trump's blindness on trade is all too easy to see
 
Vice President Pence is quietly becoming a foreign policy power player
 
How the rest of the world could shape Trump's foreign policy
 
The administrative state is huge, and it's only getting bigger
 
Picking on robots won't deal with job destruction
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More News
 
North Korea launches four more missiles
Three of the missiles landed in Japanese waters. The launch coincided with an annual joint U.S.-South Korea military exercise and China's National People's Congress.
Marine Corps rocked by nude-photo scandal
Marine officials are looking into allegations that an unknown number of current and former service members shared naked and compromising photos of their female colleagues on social media.
A U.S. citizen is denied college aid — because of her mother's immigration status
Natalia Villalobos was born and raised in Washington, D.C., and argues a city tuition assistance program unfairly discriminates against U.S. citizens with immigrant parents, including those living here legally.
Some Indians fearful of U.S. travel after three high-profile attacks in 10 days
The violence has prompted some in India to ask their government to issue a travel advisory against the United States.
After Trump's win, people buy fewer firearms, with one big exception: Minorities
Lagging national firearms sales are coupled with an interesting twist: Renewed interest in guns among those who fear that racial and gender-based violence could increase during Donald Trump's presidency.
WorldViews | Analysis
American cocaine use is way up. Colombia’s coca boom might be why.
The illegal Colombian crop has exploded since 2013, and a State Department report says 90 percent of the cocaine for sale in the United States is of Colombian origin.
General Motors to sell its European business
The sale of GM's loss-making European car business — including Germany's Opel and British brand Vauxhall — to PSA group will create Europe's second-biggest automaker.
Analysis
The dramatic difference between Mike Pence and Donald Trump when it comes to the press
The vice president lobbed jokes at reporters as well as politicians and staff members at the annual Gridiron dinner. See what he said about the media in this annotated transcript.
La. congressman apologizes to Kellyanne Conway over sofa joke
Rep. Cedric Richmond's mea culpa came after his words were widely criticized — and after top Democrat Nancy Pelosi had to answer for them.
 
     
 
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