What was Macron's unlikely path to France's top job?; Le Pen comes up short but has widened the appeal of her far-right National Front party; House GOP defends health bill as Senate Republicans stay wary; 4th U.S. citizen detained in North Korea as relations with White House remain tense; Warren Buffett slams Wells Fargo's handling of sales scandal; The U.S. government wants Julian Assange in jail. That could hurt the free press.; Why D.C. forfeited $15.8 million as its poorest residents waited for homes; Teen with BB gun enlisted San Diego officers in suicide plot, police say; SNL ridicules Kellyanne Conway in a remarkably short sketch; Disney provides a castle to cap a storybook romance, but some couples say their wedding wasn't a fairy tale come true; Thunder Snow, the horse who refused to run the Kentucky Derby, is doing fine; When my mother was dying, I wish her doctors had told me the truth; | | | Democracy Dies in Darkness | | | | | The day's most important stories | | | | | Macron beats back populist tide to win French presidency | After a tumultuous campaign, voters rejected anti-E.U. firebrand Marine Le Pen and chose Emmanuel Macron, a centrist political neophyte who has pledged to revive both his struggling country and the flailing continent. Le Pen conceded defeat, telling her demoralized supporters in Paris that the country had "chosen continuity." | By Griff Witte, James McAuley and Isaac Stanley-Becker • Read more » | House GOP defends health bill as Senate Republicans stay wary | The party is presenting a divided front as senators cast the House legislation — which narrowly passed last week — as a mere starting point amid growing anxiety over its provisions. "The House bill is not going to come before us," Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said. | By Robert Costa and John Wagner • Read more » | | | | | | Why D.C. forfeited $15.8 million as its poorest residents waited for homes | The city's Department of Housing and Community Development was forced to return millions in the past three years after repeatedly missing key spending deadlines meant to ensure that federal housing money is properly managed. Those funds could have provided a year's worth of rent vouchers to about 1,000 of the neediest families. | By Debbie Cenziper, Sarah Bowman, Lillianna Byington and Robin Eberhardt • Read more » | | | | | | | | | | | | ©2017 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071 | | | | | | | |
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