Thursday, October 19, 2017

Evening Edition: White House chief of staff defends Trump’s call to Gold Star widow

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
White House chief of staff defends Trump's call to Gold Star widow
President Trump made a "brave" decision to call families of four fallen members of the military this week, said White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, adding that he was "stunned" that a member of Congress called the president's words insensitive.
The Fix • Analysis
Bush's unmistakable takedown of Trumpism: 'Bigotry seems emboldened'
For the past nine years, George W. Bush has largely stayed out of presidential politics. That changed in a big way today. Bush didn't use President Trump's name, but his target became clearer as the speech progressed.
 
In the military, trusted officers become alleged assailants in sex crimes
Ten soldiers and civilians who have been trained to deter sex offenses or help victims have been charged, convicted or investigated over the past year in connection with sexual assault, Army officials confirmed to The Post.
 
 
What would happen if Amazon brought 50,000 workers to your city? Ask Seattle.
When Amazon made a surprise announcement last month that it planned to open a second headquarters with even more jobs, it set off an unprecedented race among cities to lure the tech giant their way. Amazon said it ultimately would need 8 million square feet in a second region, making it the biggest economic development target experts can remember in decades.
 
Trump suggests FBI may have 'paid for' dossier alleging Russia ties
The compendium of information about Trump, much of it unproven, was produced by a former British intelligence agent last year, mostly before Trump won the 2016 election.
 
Putin talks like Russia's next president, but stays silent on whether he'll run
The Russian leader used a major speech to list the Kremlin's grievances against the U.S. Russian Kremlin watchers had expected Vladimir Putin to announce his candidacy.
 
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Trump promised $25,000 to a grieving military father in a phone call. The check hasn't arrived.
The father of Army Sgt. Dillon Baldridge told The Post that President Trump called him and offered him $25,000 out of his personal account a few weeks after his son was killed in Afghanistan in June.
 
PowerPost • Analysis
What Sessions wouldn't say was more revealing than what he did
Attorney General Jeff Sessions was the personification of a hostile witness whenever a Democratic lawmaker questioned him during a contentious five-hour oversight hearing.
 
Trump gives federal response to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico a 10 out of 10
The president made his comments during a meeting with Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló. "You responded immediately," Rosselló said when asked by Trump, "Did we do a great job?"
 
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Immigration • Analysis
Appeals court to review judge's order allowing abortion for undocumented teen immigrant
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said the pregnant 17-year-old may go to an abortion clinic Thursday for counseling but cannot terminate the pregnancy before the court has a chance to rule on the case.
 
After Bill O'Reilly's taunt, Jake Tapper reminds him he was 'humiliated in front of the world'
O'Reilly mocked the CNN anchor for his low ratings. Tapper responded: "'Low' would be sexually harassing staffers and then getting fired for it."
 
 
Retropolis • The Past, Rediscovered
Missouri v. Celia: She killed the white master raping her, then claimed self-defense
Long before #MeToo hashtags, a 19-year-old slave faced the death penalty for the murder of her owner, who had been assaulting her for years.
 
Lulu the dog flunked out of CIA bomb-sniffer school because she just didn't care
The black Lab seemed to know she wasn't living her best life. The agency, to its credit, honored her wish to be true to herself.
 
 
     
 
 
 
 

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