Saturday, July 29, 2017

Saturday's Headlines: Trump ousts Priebus as chief of staff

John Kelly will bring plain-spoken discipline to an often chaotic West Wing; Trump moves further away from the Republican establishment; Health-care vote exposes key divide between McCain and McConnell; Trump plans to sign new Russia sanctions bill, White House says;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Trump ousts Priebus as chief of staff
With his agenda stalled, President Trump became convinced that Reince Priebus was a "weak" leader and had been lobbied intensely by rival advisers to remove the establishment-aligned Republican, who has long had friction with Trump loyalists, according to White House officials. Trump tapped Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly as the new chief of staff.
John Kelly will bring plain-spoken discipline to an often chaotic West Wing
In choosing Kelly, Trump has turned to someone who in many ways is the opposite of Priebus, a seasoned political operator.
 
The Fix | Analysis
Trump moves further away from the Republican establishment
Priebus's hiring was seen as a way for Trump to play nice with the GOP. He seems to have concluded that's exactly what has gone wrong with his presidency.
 
@PKCapitol | Analysis
Health-care vote exposes key divide between McCain and McConnell
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell counts success almost entirely through political victories. But Sen. John McCain is done with winning for the sake of winning.
 
Trump plans to sign new Russia sanctions bill, White House says
The decision comes despite strong reservations among advisers to the president over a provision in the legislation that would bind his hands when it comes to altering the policy.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Opinions
 
Trump is something the nation did not know it needed
 
What do we do if Trump really is crazy?
 
Priebus, sashay away
 
The unsurprising, yet still humiliating departure of Reince Priebus
 
Washington is dysfunctional. This Senate rule change could help fix it.
 
The single biggest lesson from repeal-and-replace
ADVERTISEMENT
 
More News
 
Tesla unveils first batch of highly anticipated 'mass market' Model 3
The much-hyped electric vehicle has a range of up to 310 miles, the company said. It starts at $35,000 for the lowest end version, while a Model 3 with all premium options will cost $60,000, according to Tesla.
Trump tells police not to worry about injuring suspects, drawing rebukes
The president's remarks, which came during a speech on gang violence and illegal immigration, drew applause from at least some of the law enforcement officers gathered on Long Island.
South Korea, in a shift, wants more military muscle against North Korea
Officials in Seoul called their counterparts in Washington to revise bilateral ballistic missile guidelines so that South Korea can double the payload permitted for its ballistic missiles.
'On their own': Trump's travel ban leaves orphans stuck in refugee camps
They were cleared to come to the United States. Their foster families are waiting for them. But they are stranded overseas.
Solo-ish | Analysis
Rom-coms don't believe in love online
Although many American adults see online dating as a good way to meet people, movies and television shows have a formula that portrays app dates as dutiful, shallow and repetitive.
 
     
 
©2017 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment