Saturday, September 23, 2017

Saturday's Headlines: Latest effort to repeal Obamacare on brink of failure after GOP defections

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Latest effort to repeal Obamacare on brink of failure after GOP defections
With Sen. John McCain joining Sen. Rand Paul in formally opposing the plan, the bill was left one vote away from defeat, forcing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and President Trump into a difficult corner. A fresh GOP failure on health care could have a seismic impact on the legislative dynamic and the emerging contours of the 2018 midterm elections.
Fact Checker • Analysis
Fact Checker: Sen. Cassidy's misleading claim that preexisting-conditions protection is 'absolutely the same'
In his spat with Jimmy Kimmel, Sen. Cassidy asserted his bill ensure protections for preexisting conditions even though it greatly weakens them.
 
Staff chafes at Kelly's style as he tries to tame West Wing
Some complain that the retired general may be growing his mandate too far and that his strict regimen stifles Trump's spontaneity — and cuts him off from his base.
 
Trump expresses doubts about Strange while stumping for him: 'I might have made a mistake'
The president promised that if the Alabama candidate didn't win his Senate race, he would campaign in the general election for his opponent.
 
The rotten rhetoric that spans time and oceans: Political insults
Insults between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un are the just the latest in a long — and often more cutting — line of political putdowns. Here's a look at jabs from America's founding fathers, leaders from the 20th century and politicians of today.
 
Trump escalates a war of words with North Korea, calling Kim Jong Un a 'madman'
The exchange of taunts marked a potentially alarming turn toward personal enmity between the two leaders. North Korea said it is considering how to respond to the threat of military action and suggested that it may soon test a hydrogen bomb over the Pacific.
 
'Thousands of people could die': 70,000 in Puerto Rico urged to evacuate with dam in 'imminent' danger of failure
Because of damage from Hurricane Maria's floodwaters, officials worried that tens of thousands of people could be in the path of a massive amount of rushing water in the event that the Guajataca Dam, after suffering a "fissure," releases into the Guajataca River, which flows north through low-lying coastal communities.
 
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Opinions
 
I was brought here illegally in 1950. I'm lucky I wasn't deported.
 
These jury systems are vestiges of white supremacy
 
If the kids aren't alright, blame the parents
 
Once upon a time, I was a gang member
 
Five myths about multilateralism
 
Tom Price sure knows a lot about waste, fraud and abuse
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More News
 
As Catalan independence vote nears, Europe supports keeping Spain intact
European leaders have avoided speaking out against the referendum, but many wish to avoid a successful precedent for a breakaway region, given the number of similar regions across Europe that might try to do the same.
 
 
GOP targeting a corporate tax rate of 20%, retreating from Trump's goal
In their tax plan, GOP negotiators are also expected to include "full expensing," which permits businesses to fully deduct their capital expenses immediately rather than writing them off over several years. But that provision will sunset after five years.
 
DHS tells 21 states they were targeted by Russian hackers during 2016 race
The Department of Homeland Security left it to individual states to decide whether to make public whether they had been targeted.
 
The African American Museum a year later: Still the hottest ticket in town
The Post art critic takes a second look at Washington's newest monumental architecture.
 
High court case offers window into how representatives choose their constituents
Wisconsin's redistricting maps are at the center of a Supreme Court case that could change the dynamics of U.S. politics — if the justices decide for the first time that a legislative map is so infected with political favoritism that it violates the Constitution.
 
EPA chief Pruitt met with many corporate execs. Then he made decisions in their favor.
Scott Pruitt's schedule shows he had frequent meetings with industry officials — but few with environmental or public health groups.
 
'What's going to happen to our generation?': An emotional Cris Carter talks CTE, his career and Aaron Hernandez's diagnosis
Despite what he knows now about football's risks, Carter said on "First Things First" he wouldn't change his career choice — and he feels conflicted.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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