Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Evening Edition: Trump halts covert arming of Syria rebels, a move likely to please Russia

Justices let refugee restrictions stand, but allow exemptions for travel order; Trump changes course, tells senators to stay in D.C. to finish health-care bill; Pence tries his best to keep unsaid what Trump then says about election integrity; Trump promised a wall. As president, he knows he needs to build one.; Across Trump's government, some workers are elated, others downcast; Postal Service broke law in pushing time off for workers to campaign for Hillary Clinton, investigation finds; Why did Trump meet with Putin again? Here are three possibilities.; There’s literally a ton of plastic garbage for every person on Earth; Australian woman fatally shot by Minneapolis police called 911 twice to report hearing a possible rape; PET scans show many Alzheimer's patients may not actually have the disease; Justice Department turns a $65 million asset forfeiture spigot back on; Is it bad when waiters don't remember who ordered each plate?; Fla. mayoral candidate had a message for activists who want reparations: ‘Go back to Africa’;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Trump halts covert arming of Syria rebels, a move likely to please Russia
Officials said phasing out the CIA program reflects the president's interest in finding ways to work with Russia, which saw the anti-Assad program as an assault on its interests. Trump decided to scrap the program nearly a month ago, before he met Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Group of 20 summit in Germany.
Justices let refugee restrictions stand, but allow exemptions for travel order
The Supreme Court refused the Trump administration's request to stay a lower court's decision that said officials had too severely interpreted a decision about exempting travelers from six majority-Muslim countries with close family relationships. But the court did say that it could enforce a refugee ban for now.
 
Trump changes course, tells senators to stay in D.C. to finish health-care bill
A day after the GOP strategy to roll back the Affordable Care Act appeared dead, Trump invited Republican senators to lunch at the White House and challenged them to work out an agreement, even if it means remaining in Washington through next month's summer recess.
 
Analysis
Pence tries his best to keep unsaid what Trump then says about election integrity
The president says what he wants. The vice president reads the stuff that goes on the teleprompter.
 
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Trump promised a wall. As president, he knows he needs to build one.
President Trump is often dismissed by critics as uninterested in the policy process and unwilling to delve into minutiae. But on illegal immigration, officials credit him for being relentless in framing it as a threat to public safety and to the economic security of American workers, and for turning a border wall into a populist rallying cry.
 
Across Trump's government, some workers are elated, others downcast
The president's stark priorities — sharp cuts here, fattened funding there — are keenly felt throughout the career civil service.
 
Postal Service broke law in pushing time off for workers to campaign for Hillary Clinton, investigation finds
USPS violated the Hatch Act, which restricts federal employees from working for or against a political candidate or party during election season, investigators said.
 
The Fix | Analysis
Why did Trump meet with Putin again? Here are three possibilities.
We boiled down Trump's undisclosed meeting with the Russian president to three explanations.
 
There’s literally a ton of plastic garbage for every person on Earth
Seven billion tons is stuck on Earth as garbage in landfills or littering the environment, including deep oceans, a new study found.
 
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Australian woman fatally shot by Minneapolis police called 911 twice to report hearing a possible rape
Eight minutes after calling 911, police say, Justine Damond called again because "no one's here" and she was "wondering if they got the address wrong."
 
PET scans show many Alzheimer's patients may not actually have the disease
A four-year study is testing over 18,000 people with mild cognitive impairment or dementia, and, so far, the results have been dramatic.
 
Wonkblog | Analysis
Justice Department turns a $65 million asset forfeiture spigot back on
A lucrative program for state and local police is back in business.
 
Chat Transcript
Is it bad when waiters don't remember who ordered each plate?
Washington Post food critic Tom Sietsema entertains your dining questions, rants and raves.
 
Fla. mayoral candidate had a message for activists who want reparations: ‘Go back to Africa’
Paul Congemi has received bad press before: He was charged with abusing his elderly mother, and also banned from a KFC.
 
 
     
 
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