Thursday, July 20, 2017

Thursday's Headlines: McCain diagnosed with brain cancer, sending a jolt through Congress

President halts covert arming of Syria rebels, a move likely to please Russia; Trump sees electoral consequences for senators who oppose Obamacare repeal; President blasts Sessions over his recusal from the Russia investigation; Senate panel to interview Kushner; subpoenas possible for Manafort and Trump Jr.;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
McCain diagnosed with brain cancer, sending a jolt through Congress
The Mayo Clinic said tests revealed an aggressive type of cancer with a poor prognosis. John McCain's significance in Congress is hard to overstate — and his absence, however long, will reverberate across the Capitol.
President 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 sees electoral consequences for senators who oppose Obamacare repeal
But there was no new evidence of additional support for the recently abandoned repeal-and-replace measure or a repeal-only approach, which the Congressional Budget Office now estimates would result in 32 million more uninsured people within 10 years. 
 
President blasts Sessions over his recusal from the Russia investigation
The president told the New York Times that if he had known Jeff Sessions would recuse himself from the inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 election, he would not have picked him to be attorney general. 
 
Senate panel to interview Kushner; subpoenas possible for Manafort and Trump Jr.
President Trump's senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner will speak to the Senate Intelligence Committee. Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and Donald Trump Jr. have been asked to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee, whose leaders "have agreed to issue subpoenas, if necessary" for them.
 
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Pro-Trump TV pundit's firm took undisclosed payments from Trump's reelection campaign
Fox commentator Mark Serrano has been one of President Trump's most enthusiastic supporters on air, but his financial ties to Trump were only disclosed after his company was paid $30,000.
An aging Muslim community worries about its future
As memories of the Nation of Islam's glory days fade along with stories of Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali — replaced by portrayals of Muslims as immigrants with foreign accents and ideologies — the remaining residents of New Medinah, Miss., realize that their community might die with its founders.
Nearly one-third of dementia cases could be prevented by a healthier lifestyle, report says
The Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention and Care identified nine risk factors, including hypertension, hearing loss and obesity in middle age; and smoking, depression, physical inactivity, social isolation and diabetes in late life.
One of John Wayne Gacy's seven remaining unidentified victims finally has a name
James "Jimmie" Byron Haakenson was confirmed as one of the victims the notorious serial killer buried in the crawl space of his home in the 1970s.
Body camera captures Baltimore police officer hiding, then 'finding' drugs
The video led prosecutors to drop the felony drug case against a suspect who had been jailed for nearly six months. Baltimore police said the officer may have forgotten to turn on his body camera and was reconstructing the discovery.
WorldViews | Analysis
How a video of a woman in a skirt became a global headache for Saudi Arabia
The reaction to the video points to PR problems abroad — and divisions at home.
The Fix | Analysis
Reporter breaks White House rules by streaming live audio of off-camera briefing
Reporters have chafed at recent restrictions on coverage of news briefings, but Ksenija Pavlovic's act of rebellion marks a significant development in White House-media relations.
 
     
 
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