Saturday, November 12, 2016

Saturday's Headlines: Trump team backs off some sweeping campaign pledges

Pence replaces Christie as leader of Trump transition effort; Meet the potential Cabinet picks most likely to make liberals squirm; Vitriol only intensifies after bitter election; 'It’s now or never': How anti-Trump protests spread across the U.S.; In a crucial Democratic stronghold, Trump surged. Clinton didn't.; Series of strategic mistakes likely sealed Clinton's fate; Donors, lobbyists start shaping 'drain the swamp' administration of president-elect; Spurs coach Popovich, 'sick' over 'disgusting' election, sees parallel to ancient Rome; The Fix: Trump's questionable 'blind trust' setup just got more questionable; Professor who called Trump's big win also said Trump will be impeached;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Trump team backs off some sweeping campaign pledges
Statements by President-elect Donald Trump and his advisers suggest that some of his biggest campaign proposals — to repeal the Affordable Care Act, to build a border wall and to investigate Hillary Clinton, among others — may be subject to revision.
Pence replaces Christie as leader of Trump transition effort
Vice President-elect Mike Pence will replace the New Jersey governor as chairman of the Trump transition effort, a change that will cement Pence's influence over the incoming administration's policy and personnel.
 
Meet the potential Cabinet picks most likely to make liberals squirm
Some of the early names leaking out are of the sort that could send a real signal about Trump's path going forward.
 
Vitriol only intensifies after bitter election
In the days since Trump's victory, the animosity wrought by a divisive election may have intensified: Cities have convulsed with protests. Swastikas, racial slurs and threats have appeared on public buildings and dorm-room doors. And online, the vicious exchanges between Clinton and Trump supporters have escalated to videotaped accounts of personal confrontation and retribution.
 
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'It’s now or never': How anti-Trump protests spread across the U.S.
Rallies against the president-elect, which largely have been both organic and peaceful, are the sharpest physical manifestation of the anger, shock, fear and unease felt among many after a brutal, divisive election. And they showed no signs of abating as they started up again Friday night.
 
In a crucial Democratic stronghold, Trump surged. Clinton didn't.
When results started pouring in from West Philadelphia, Hillary Clinton's numbers were good — her vote share north of 95 percent — but not good enough. She would need to turn out more voters there to counteract the flood of Republican votes coming from other parts of the largely rural state.
 
Series of strategic mistakes likely sealed Clinton's fate
A lack of voter enthusiasm couldn't be overcome with a message that was focused so heavily on Trump's divisiveness, some say.
 
Donors, lobbyists start shaping 'drain the swamp' administration of president-elect
The president-elect is leaning on wealthy supporters and corporate lobbyists in his transition.
 
Spurs coach Popovich, 'sick' over 'disgusting' election, sees parallel to ancient Rome
The five-time NBA championship winning coach and U.S. Air Force veteran sounded off on the results of this week's presidential election prior to Friday night's game.
 
The Fix: Trump's questionable 'blind trust' setup just got more questionable
In addition to being in charge of his fortune, Trump's kids will serve on his transition team.
 
Professor who called Trump's big win also said Trump will be impeached
Allan Lichtman said Congress would prefer a President Mike Pence — someone whom establishment Republicans know and trust.
 
 
Opinions
 
The task ahead for today's conservatives
 
Spare me the euphemisms. White people made Trump president.
 
Is the White House already changing Donald Trump?
 
A clean shave for President Trump — but not a free one
 
In two days, America saw two Trumps
 
On foreign policy, Donald Trump is no realist
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More News
 
South Koreans gather en masse for protest against president
With demonstrators flocking to Seoul to call on President Park Geun-hye to resign amid a scandal, police say South Korea's capital could see its largest rally ever.
'If there were no civilians, we'd just burn it all': Noncombatants hamper Iraqi forces
The push to retake Mosul from the Islamic State is a bitter urban battle: street to street, house to house, with too many families clogging thoroughfares while car bombs scream out of garages and straight into advancing military convoys.
Suave spy in 1960s TV hit 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.' dies at 83
The debonair, Oscar-nominated actor was also a scholar and political activist.
Four killed, 14 wounded in bombing at U.S. air base in Afghanistan
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the blast at the Bagram base and said it had been planned for months.
Taking virtual reality beyond fun and games
From preserving history to documenting life in conflict zones, an emerging body of research is pushing policymakers, human rights workers and law enforcement officials to see new uses for the technology.
 
     
 
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