Wednesday's Headlines: Senate passes tax overhaul bill; House expected to re-vote on measure today
The GOP tax bill was the easy part. The next debate promises to be much uglier.; Boston archbishop who became a symbol of Catholic Church's sex abuse scandal dies at 86; 'He's not...
Democracy Dies in Darkness
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
Senate Republicans passed the biggest overhaul to the U.S. tax code in three decades early Wednesday, sending the measure back to the House for a final vote before President Trump signs it into law. Passage of the bill, which cuts the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent, would mark the first major legislative accomplishment for Trump and GOP leaders in a year of stumbles.
The Republicans' tax-cut legislation makes the nation's already serious debt problem even worse, and sets the stage for a politically fraught debate in coming years on questions as fundamental as what type of financial security to provide elderly Americans and how secure a safety net there will be for the nation's poor.
Bernard F. Law rose from parish priest to Boston archbishop and became one of the most influential Catholic leaders in the United States before resigning in 2002 amid revelations that he and other priests had known for years of rampant child molestation by parish priests.
The collapse of three of President Trump's judicial nominations in the span of a week has embarrassed the White House, but they are also aberrations in what has been an undeniable success for Trump: putting conservative jurists on the federal bench.
By Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey and Ashley Parker • Read more »
In the case of retired Maj. Gen. James J. Grazioplene — accused of repeatedly raping a young girl between 1983 and 1989 — the Army is grappling with how to apply the statute of limitations and how to address a lack of documentation.
The bus, which was carrying 27 passengers from two ships belonging to Miami-based Royal Caribbean Cruises, was traveling to Mayan ruins in southeastern Mexico.
Republican incumbent David Yancey had a tenuous 10-vote lead over Shelly Simonds before today's recount. The state House of Delegates has no mechanism to break ties, so any legislation short of 51 votes will not advance.
The decision that could change the way Uber functions across the continent. The case stemmed from a complaint by a Barcelona taxi drivers association, which wanted to prevent Uber from setting up shop in the city.
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