Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Tuesday's Headlines: ‘Honorary’ job at for-profit college paid Bill Clinton millions

Trump dismisses questions about improper gift to Florida attorney general; Without conservative majority in Supreme Court, voter-law challengers score big wins; Phyllis Schlafly, conservative activist who helped move GOP to the right, dies at 92; Colombia's war displaced 7 million. But peace won't bring back their homes.;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
JAVIER SORIANO / AFP/Getty Images
'Honorary' job at for-profit college paid Bill Clinton millions
A close examination of the deal reveals how the former president leveraged the Clintons' connections to enhance their personal wealth — potentially providing another avenue for supporters to gain access to the family.
Trump dismisses questions about improper gift to Florida attorney general
Donald Trump's charity violated federal rules in 2013 with a $25,000 contribution to a group connected to Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was then considering whether to open a fraud investigation against Trump University.
 
Without conservative majority in Supreme Court, voter-law challengers score big wins
Civil rights groups, Democratic lawyers and the Obama administration have made gains in overturning strict voting laws, highlighting how Antonin Scalia's death has removed the Supreme Court as a conservative backstop for such measures.
 
Phyllis Schlafly, conservative activist who helped move GOP to the right, dies at 92
The lawyer and author is credited with almost single-handedly stopping the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and helped push the Republican Party toward the religious, family-values right wing.
 
Colombia's war displaced 7 million. But peace won't bring back their homes.
Forced to flee their farms and villages, rural residents poured into cities to escape bombings, massacres and kidnappings. They see peace with the FARC as a remedy for only one source of violence. And they don't trust the government to protect them.
 
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Opinions
 
Trump's 'get even' program
 
The ugliest, most appalling spectacle in American politics
 
America's melting pot is under assault — from the left as much as the right
 
Brown University president: A safe space for freedom of expression
 
Virginia Republicans' essentially racist project
 
Trump's mind-boggling history of corruption
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Obama cancels meeting with Philippine president, who now expresses regret over obscenity flap
Rodrigo Duterte had threatened to curse out the U.S. president if he raised the issue of extrajudicial killings by Philippine authorities in a sweeping crackdown on drug trafficking.
Kabul is shaken by attacks on international charity and Defense Ministry
The 11-hour standoff at the CARE International headquarters followed a double bombing against the Defense Ministry that killed 35 people.
Congress returns with one goal: No government shutdown
After a summer break, lawmakers have four weeks to hammer out a spending deal before the fiscal year ends Sept. 30. But some are already warning the task will not be easy.
Trump says he'll do debates, though the moderators have tripped him up in the past
The Republican presidential nominee had previously said "certain moderators would be unacceptable." Apparently the ones handling this fall's debates weren't among them.
Guess who's taking aim at Fox News now? Conservatives.
They complain that the network's "echo chamber" boosted Trump — and is killing their own movement.
Fact Checker: 4 Pinocchios for claim that Clinton was fired during Watergate inquiry
An Internet meme claims that Hillary Clinton was fired from the Watergate inquiry. Here's the proof that it's bogus.
The geographic divide in American creativity
The Great Creative Divide isn't between the coasts and the center, but rather between North and South.
 
     
 
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