Trey Gowdy replaced Chaffetz as head of House oversight. Will he investigate Trump?; Two years ago, Trump supporters couldn't look away. Now some are tuning out.; France's Macron, his party get boost from parliamentary elections; Inside the town that was home to a man who turned his weapons on Washington; 'Traumatic' collision that killed sailors almost sank destroyer, Navy says; Iraqi forces fight their way into the maze of Mosul's historic city center; Suspected jihadists attack hotel resort in Mali's capital; Democratic win in Georgia would signal that the party establishment is alive and kicking; $1.5 million ad campaign to pressure 5 GOP senators to vote against health-care overhaul; What's next for the Bill Cosby sex-assault case?; In Va. governor's race, Democrats pledge unity and say they will send message to Trump; Jury awards $870,000 to man whose doctor removed the wrong testicle; 20 shows worth watching this summer; | | | Democracy Dies in Darkness | | | | | The day's most important stories | | | | | Trump lawyer insists there is no obstruction probe but then hedges | Jay Sekulow repeatedly said on Sunday shows that the president is not under investigation for obstruction of justice but acknowledged he could not know for certain. His assessment was at odds with a Post report and seemingly conflicted with a tweet from Trump himself. | By John Wagner and Rosalind S. Helderman • Read more » | France's Macron, his party get boost from parliamentary elections | President Emmanuel Macron was projected to win a large parliamentary majority with the centrist party he founded a little more than a year ago triumphing at the polls. The rise of the pro-Europe, pro-business party represented a watershed moment in modern French politics. But voter abstention has never been higher — about 58 percent, according to one exit poll. | By James McAuley • Read more » | | | | | | Inside the town that was home to a man who turned his weapons on Washington | Before James Hodgkinson opened fire on a congressional baseball practice, his social-media pages indicated that his radical views and long-term concerns about taxation, fairness and the elite were born of Belleville: Dozens of empty storefronts line Main Street in the Illinois town. Mining companies that supported the working-class community have closed. And residents say crime is on the rise. | Story by Peter Holley and Kurt Shillinger | Photos by Whitney Curtis • Read more » | | | | | | Critic's Notebook | 20 shows worth watching this summer | Certain inane pleasures await when we stop treating TV like highbrow homework and let it become the populist entertainer it was made to be. Here are our TV critic's top picks for new and returning series. | By Hank Stuever • Read more » | | | | | | | | | | | | ©2017 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071 | | | | | | | |
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