Friday, December 15, 2017

Friday's Headlines: Possible defection by Sen. Rubio puts tax overhaul bill closer to the brink of defeat

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Possible defection by Sen. Rubio puts tax overhaul bill closer to the brink of defeat
Senate leaders worked to win over Sen. Marco Rubio, who threatened to vote "No" on the tax measure unless it includes tens of billions of dollars in new breaks for low-income and working-class families. Republicans can't afford to lose more than two votes in the Senate on the bill.
Trump allies say Tillerson has 'not learned his lesson' and cannot continue in job for long
Beleaguered Secretary of State Rex Tillerson seemed focused this week on rebooting his image, but then he went off script with another invitation for talks with North Korea, exasperating President Trump and White House officials.
 
Senate Republicans try to shield Mueller from criticism of Russia probe
Some GOP lawmakers want to protect special counsel Robert S. Mueller III from factions of their own party who have said his investigation is tainted because of evidence that members of his team disliked President Trump.
 
'It can be really ostracizing': After Trump and Moore, some evangelicals find their own label too toxic to use
In major evangelical institutions across the country, debate over the term "evangelical" has bubbled to the forefront, especially among younger members of the faith. Many fear that the association between evangelicals and President Trump has damaged their reputation.
 
Critic's Notebook
Our food critic had what you're having and ranked the nation's chain restaurants
People love to pick on chain restaurants — their uniformity and ubiquity make them easy targets. But not all chains are created equal, and The Post's food critic set out to see how they stacked up. Here's what's good — and what's not — at 10 full-service chains.
 
HACKING DEMOCRACY
Doubting the intelligence, Trump pursues Putin and leaves a Russian threat unchecked
Nearly a year into his presidency, Trump continues to reject the evidence that Russia waged an unprecedented assault on a pillar of American democracy and supported his run for the White House. Interviews with more than 50 U.S. officials show that the personal insecurities of the president have impaired the government's response to a national security threat, with Trump resisting or attempting to roll back efforts to hold Moscow to account as he tries to forge a partnership with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
 
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Opinions
 
How Trump can win the GOP's great war of ideas
 
To save the GOP, Republicans have to lose
 
The Russia facts are hiding in plain sight
 
Newtonian physics will crush the GOP
 
A feast for regulatory parasites
 
Congress should help Puerto Rico — not hurt it
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More News
 
White House urges Roy Moore to concede, as supporters look for evidence of 'voter fraud'
Moore said in a Wednesday video that military and provisional ballots could change the results of the Alabama election for Senate.
 
 
The Fix | Analysis
Paul Ryan exiting as speaker? It only makes sense.
Speculation is swirling that Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) will quit as House speaker after the 2018 midterm election.
 
Fact Checker | Analysis
The biggest Pinocchios of 2017
From Sean Spicer to Sen. Bernie Sanders to President Trump, here is our annual roundup of the most outlandish claims of 2017.
 
Analysis
That giant stack of paper Trump stood next to? A little too giant.
President Trump participated in an event meant to visualize the growth of regulations and his efforts to eliminate that "red tape." Trump stood next to one small and one giant pile of paper — a giant pile that our analysis reveals as almost certainly too big to make the point accurately.
 
A lawmaker accused of molesting a teen killed himself. His widow calls it a 'high-tech lynching.'
Hours before Kentucky state Rep. Dan Johnson's body was found, he wrote on Facebook: "I cannot handle it any longer … BUT HEAVEN IS MY HOME."
 
The Switch | Analysis
With FCC's net neutrality rules repealed, this is what could happen to the Web
Net neutrality isn't a Republican or Democrat issue. It's about the startups that can't buy first-class access. Certain websites could slow to a crawl. Or perhaps they wouldn't show up at all.
 
Meryl Streep gave a passionate Golden Globes speech, and 'The Post' became a reality — quickly
The world-renowned actress and the female team behind "The Post" recently sat down to discuss a movie whose relevance shifted during production.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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