Thursday, October 26, 2017

Thursday's Headlines: GOP majority in Senate hangs in balance as McConnell allies declare open warfare on Bannon

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
GOP majority in Senate hangs in balance as McConnell allies declare open warfare on Bannon
Former White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon's attacks on establishment Republicans have prompted eruptions in once-sleepy races and on Capitol Hill, with retirements and acrimony following. The fallout may pose a threat to Republicans' Senate majority, prompting Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's allies to launch personal attacks on Bannon to blunt his efforts.
Amid Niger ambush chaos, the White House first thought several U.S. soldiers were missing
The White House did not officially receive word that three American bodies had been recovered, and one soldier remained missing, until at least eight hours after the attack had begun. President Trump said he did not "specifically" authorize the original mission, in which four Americans died.
 
Trump rekindles controversy, saying he remembered slain soldier's name 'right from the beginning'
The president said he has "one of the great memories of all time" in disputing the account of several others of his condolence call to Myeshia Johnson, whose husband was killed in Niger.
 
Trolling Trump: How viral visual taunts have changed protest in the nation's capital
In the year since Trump won, activists have expanded the age-old Washington staples of marches and rallies with more unconventional ploys — queer dance parties, high-wire banner stunts, animated graffiti projected onto the walls of Trump's Washington hotel — as a way to get under the president's famously thin skin.
 
New images show North Korea's extensive network of 're-education' camps
The camps are situated throughout the country, both on the outskirts of cities and in huge compounds in the mountains. People deemed to have committed serious economic crimes — making too much money in the markets, for instance — can end up in them, as can those who have tried to escape from North Korea.
 
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Opinions
 
Republicans won't quit Trump
 
A Trumpian shadow hangs over the Virginia election
 
Jeff Flake is out, and Roy Moore is in. Heaven help us.
 
Amazon Key is Silicon Valley at its most out-of-touch
 
Let the people vote
 
Trump crosses another line
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More News
 
Hepatitis A outbreak among homeless a byproduct of California's housing crunch
Exorbitant housing costs in Los Angeles, Santa Cruz and San Diego are driving a public health crisis, as those living on the streets are susceptible to what is typically a developing-world disease.
 
 
Drama, excitement and home runs aplenty as Astros beat the Dodgers and even up the World Series
Houston prevailed in Game 2, 7-6, amid a power surge that included a record eight home runs, five of them in extra innings. The Astros took the lead for good on a two-run homer in the 11th inning by George Springer. The series now shifts to Houston for the next three games.
 
Trump expected to release remaining JFK assassination documents today
The records, held by the National Archives and Records Administration, could shed more light on Lee Harvey Oswald's six-day trip to Mexico City, when he met with Cubans and Soviets two months before he shot Kennedy in Dallas.
 
Pat yourself on the back, America. Your cholesterol levels are holding steady, CDC says.
Health experts attribute the positive results to the public's growing awareness of high cholesterol's dangers, more people's health-conscious diets, the phaseout of artificial trans fats in the food supply and the use of cholesterol-lowering statin medications.
 
'I could live simpler': Floods and fires make Americans rethink their love affair with stuff
The recent spate of hurricanes, floods and fires has Americans, even those outside the disaster zones, talking about how much stuff they have — and what they really need.
 
Puerto Rico's electric utility likely to get emergency manager amid criticism over contract to small Montana firm
The Trump administration and Puerto Rico's financial oversight board are moving to install an emergency manager amid growing criticism of a $300 million contract the island's state-owned utility awarded to Whitefish Energy for rebuilding the crippled electrical grid.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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