Saturday, December 9, 2017

Saturday's Headlines: Republicans reconsider proposal to shrink corporate tax cut

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Republicans reconsider proposal to shrink corporate tax cut
Separate GOP bills that passed the House and Senate would lower the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent, but lawmakers negotiating the final bill have considered raising it to 22 percent. An advocacy group backed by the Koch brothers joined a chorus of conservative groups and senators urging the GOP to "stick to their vision" and hold firm at 20 percent.
Rep. Franks offered $5 million to aide to bear his child, resigns amid inquiry
Republican Trent Franks of Arizona indicated that he had drawn up a written contract for the woman to sign, according to the executive director of the Traditional Values Coalition, who encouraged the aide to bring the story to the attention of House leadership.
 
Resignation raises questions of 'pro-life approach' to IVF, surrogacy
Having struggled with infertility, Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.) said in a statement, he and his wife used a surrogate to successfully have twins. He described the process used as a "pro-life approach" that did not result in throwing away any embryos. But many in the antiabortion activist community have decried the use of in vitro fertilization and surrogacy, even when embryos are not discarded.
 
Six women say appeals court judge Alex Kozinski asked them to watch porn or subjected them to inappropriate comments
Two women said the judge in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, where he served as chief from 2007 to 2014, had them watch pornography in his chambers. Four others said they were subjected to inappropriate comments or other actions.
 
Trump calls Romney 'a great man,' but works to undermine him and block Senate run
The tense history between the two men includes President Trump's request earlier this year that Mitt Romney's niece, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, stop using the Romney name. Then this week, Trump made a trip to Utah with a single political goal: to convince Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) to run for reelection and thwart Romney — who has remained a frequent critic of the president — from mounting his own bid for the seat, according to a White House official.
 
Inside the day that set in motion Flynn's guilty plea: What did Trump know?
On Dec. 29, 2016, a crucial chain of events unspooled, involving Michael Flynn, his top deputy and a discussion with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kisylak urging Moscow not to retaliate after President Obama imposed new sanctions on Russia. Whether Trump knew of the back channel and whether he urged Flynn to discuss the sanctions are questions that now loom large in the special counsel investigation.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Opinions
 
The one best idea for ending sexual harassment
 
Al Franken, martyr
 
For black women, #MeToo came centuries too late
 
Real change is taking root on sexual harassment. Unless it's not.
 
No, Trump didn't end the peace process by recognizing Jerusalem
 
Trump is set to release his health records. Why not his taxes?
ADVERTISEMENT
More News
 
First fire-related death reported as nightmarish flames, towering smoke engulf Southern Calif.
More than a half-dozen blazes across nearly 250 square miles destroyed hundreds of buildings, put thousands more at risk, and spewed dense smoke that has sent air quality readings "off the charts."
 
 
Israeli jets hit Gaza following rocket fire in a sharp escalation of violence over Trump's Jerusalem decision
Two Palestinians were killed after the Israeli military said it had "fired selectively" toward "instigators" of what it described as violent riots at six places along the Gaza border, which it said drew 4,500 participants.
 
In Fla. campaign-style speech, Trump banks on economy outweighing his many woes
Whether President Trump can make the case that he is the reason for any economic success remains unclear, but the master salesman is trying. He also mocked Arnold Schwarzenegger's "Apprentice" ratings and relived his election defeat of Hillary Clinton more than a year ago.
 
Roy Moore accuser changes part of her account about inscription in yearbook
Beverly Nelson's attorney said that the accuser had written a "D.A.," a date and "Olde Hickory House" next to the inscription but that the rest of the message was written by the Alabama candidate for Senate.
 
Denied asylum and facing deportation, Mexican journalist says he'll be killed if sent home
Emilio Gutierrez fled Mexico after exposing abuses by Mexico's military and sought asylum in the United States in 2008. He was arrested by immigration agents this week and told he'd be deported, but an appeals board temporarily halted his removal — sparing his life for now, he said.
 
Wonkblog | Analysis
Cattle have gotten so big that restaurants and grocery stores need new ways to cut steaks
As U.S. beef cattle have ballooned in size, experts say, restaurants, grocers and meat processors have had to get creative in how they slice and dice them up. Increasingly, that means thinner steaks — as well as more scrap meat and "alternative" cuts.
 
     
 
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment