Blackwater founder held secret meeting to establish Trump-Putin back channel; Ryan says rekindled health-care talks in 'conceptual stage' ; How Supreme Court confirmations have become more partisan; Neil Gorsuch could help cement Republican majorities for a generation; 'It went off the rails almost immediately': How Trump's messy transition led to a chaotic presidency; White House explores two new tax ideas as leading proposal to raise revenue falters; High-ranking Fed official resigns after revealing he leaked confidential information; She voted illegally. But was the 8-year prison sentence fair?; Meet Miss Stanley, the forgotten ‘Buffalo beauty’ who first introduced equal pay legislation in Congress; Divers to scour lake for Emperor Caligula’s 2,000-year-old pleasure ship; The loss of advertisers means that Bill O'Reilly's problems just got real; When radio reporter April Ryan tangles with the White House, people listen; This $26 sandwich — literally ham, butter and bread — says everything about D.C. dining; | | | Democracy Dies in Darkness | | | | | The day's most important stories | | | | | Scores killed in one of Syria's deadliest chemical attacks in years | Activists said airstrikes in the northwest delivered an unidentified chemical agent that killed at least 58 people and filled clinics across the area with patients foaming at the mouth or struggling to breathe. President Trump called the attack "reprehensible" but blamed the Syrian regime's "heinous actions" on the Obama administration's "weakness and irresolution." | By Louisa Loveluck • Read more » | Blackwater founder held secret meeting to establish Trump-Putin back channel | The United Arab Emirates arranged the meeting — nine days before the inauguration — between Blackwater founder Erik Prince and a Russian close to President Vladimir Putin in an apparent effort to establish a back-channel line of communication between Moscow and Trump, according to U.S., European and Arab officials. The White House said it was not aware of any meetings and Prince had no role in Trump's transition. | By Adam Entous, Greg Miller, Kevin Sieff and Karen DeYoung • Read more » | | | | | Graphic | How Supreme Court confirmations have become more partisan | The overwhelming majority of Supreme Court nominees have received a substantial majority of votes for confirmation, and no Supreme Court nominee has ever been blocked by a single-party filibuster. But that is expected to change with nominee Neil Gorsuch. | By Darla Cameron • Read more » | | | | | | She voted illegally. But was the 8-year prison sentence fair? | Rosa Ortega, an immigrant mother of four, is not a U.S. citizen, but she voted in Texas anyway. Her case rippled across a country divided over the scale and impact of voter fraud and the assertions of opinion over facts. Did her harsh sentence help to deter a societal problem, or was it the consequence of some modern-day myth? | By Robert Samuels • Read more » | | | | | | | | | | | | ©2017 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071 | | | | | | | |
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