Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Tuesday's Headlines: Alabama Senate campaign closes with a wave of out-of-state star power

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Alabama Senate campaign closes with a wave of out-of-state star power
President Trump and former president Barack Obama as well as a Hollywood actress and a retired NBA star were among those making last-minute pitches on Monday to woo voters in the high-stakes Alabama Senate race between Republican Roy Moore and Democrat Doug Jones, a contest likely to set the stage for the 2018 midterm elections.
'How is my daughter a pervert?': Alabama father's plain-spoken rebuke of Roy Moore strikes a nerve
The two-minute video of Nathan Mathis speaking outside a Moore rally struck a nerve, traveling far and wide as a sort of emotional coda to a wrenching senate race in Alabama that has captivated the country.
 
As #MeToo movement reaches the White House, some in GOP are anxious about renewed spotlight on Trump's behavior
Those in President Trump's orbit have deliberated over how best to defend against more than a dozen women who have leveled specific claims against him — while also taking seriously claims of sexual assault and harassment and not seeming to dismiss women, according to people familiar with the matter.
 
Suspect in Manhattan bombing was inspired by ISIS, officials say
Authorities said the suspect in Monday's blast — identified as Akayed Ullah, a 27-year-old immigrant from Bangladesh — used Velcro and zip ties to attach a homemade explosive to himself. The suspect was among four people hurt, authorities said.
 
The end of the every-other-weekend dad? Shared-parenting bills may reshape custody battles.
Legislatures in more than 20 states are weighing bills this year that would encourage shared parenting — even when parents disagree. The legal push is a result of years of lobbying by fathers' rights advocates who feel alienated from their children and burdened by child support obligations.
 
North Korea's prisons are as bad as Nazi camps, says judge who survived Auschwitz
The conditions in the North Korean prison camps "are as terrible, or even worse, than those I saw and experienced in my youth," Thomas Buergenthal said after hearing from former prisoners and guards. Buergenthal is one of three jurists who have concluded that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un should be tried for crimes against humanity.
 
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Opinions
 
John Kelly must be exhausted
 
The Trump administration's tax 'report' reads like fan fiction
 
A reporter who stood up to far worse than journalists get from Trump
 
Some good reasons to vote for Roy Moore
 
It's America's turn to 'fight on the beaches'
 
Susan Collins is wrong about the tax bill and Obamacare
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More News
 
Today's WorldView | Analysis
Putin is outplaying Trump in the Middle East
Russian President Vladimir Putin has played the role of sober and dependable partner, while President Trump has sparked outrage across the region, most recently with his decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
 
 
Jimmy Kimmel holds his baby son, post-heart surgery, in emotional health-care monologue
The late-night television host scolded Congress for letting funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program expire, leaving millions of children in danger of losing health insurance.
 
Analysis
A lot of Americans spent 2017 bailing on the Republican Party
The exodus could be a problem for the president for the simple reason that only Republicans like him.
 
American soldier who defected to North Korea in 1965 dies at 77 in Japan
Army Sgt. Charles Jenkins spent almost four decades in North Korea before he was freed in 2004, two years after his wife, a Japanese citizen who had been abducted by the regime in 1978.
 
To control crowds in Kashmir police fired pellets. Now this 16-year-old will never see fully again.
It has been more than a year since more than 70 died and thousands more were injured in anti-government protests in Indian-administered Kashmir. India's security forces used shotguns loaded with pellet cartridges for crowd control. One of those pellets robbed Faisal Ahmed Dar of 93 percent of sight in his left eye. "My life is over," he said.
 
Will electric vehicles spell doom for your neighborhood auto mechanic?
Electric engines don't require oil changes, have far fewer moving parts and rarely break down, eliminating much of the maintenance that repair shops rely on.
 
New Yorker fires one of its Washington reporters for alleged 'improper sexual contact'
Political journalist Ryan Lizza vigorously denied the allegations, saying he was dismayed the New Yorker characterized "a respectful relationship" with a woman he dated as inappropriate. He called the decision to terminate him "a terrible mistake."
 
     
 
 
 
 

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