Friday, February 9, 2018

Friday's Headlines: Government shutdown set to end as House passes sweeping spending bill

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Government shutdown set to end as House passes sweeping spending bill
Some Democrats in the House were upset over a failure to address the hundreds of thousands of undocumented young immigrants who face deportation. A faction of Republicans had balked at adding to the nation's debt. The measure now heads to President Trump for his signature.
12 of the most important things in Congress's massive spending deal
Military spending and domestic outlays would each see 10 percent increases. The debt ceiling is waived until March 2019.
 
Spending bill includes much of the Democrats' 'Better Deal' agenda
"It delivers on exactly what we laid out last year," Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said. "Rural broadband, child care and assistance with college tuition."
 
McConnell attempts to protect two Kentucky colleges in budget deal
Tucked into the two-year congressional budget deal are provisions that would greatly benefit two colleges in Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) home state of Kentucky.
 
Top officials knew of abuse allegations against White House aide for months
White House Counsel Donald McGahn knew a year ago that Rob Porter's ex-wives accused him of domestic violence but allowed him to serve as an influential gatekeeper to the president, according to two people familiar with the matter. Chief of Staff John F. Kelly handed him more responsibilities even after learning this fall about the allegations and the related delay in Porter's security clearance.
 
With 1,000-point loss, Dow drops into correction territory for first time in years
The Dow Jones industrial average and the broader S&P 500 index have fallen more than 10 percent from their all-time highs, breaching an important psychological barrier. The jarring plunges in recent weeks have led some analysts to predicting darker, more volatile times ahead.
 
PyeongChang 2018
Figure skaters can now use songs with lyrics. Will that change be music to judges' ears?
Single skaters will be allowed to compete to music with lyrics for the first time in Olympic history. Relaxing the rules was intended to draw in younger audiences. But for skaters, is it freeing or confining?
 
Russian athletes' 11th-hour appeal denied
Composition of Olympic Athletes from Russia contingent at PyeongChang comes into focus after announcement just hours before Opening Ceremonies.
 
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Opinions
 
Devin Nunes is investigating me. Here's the truth.
 
Republicans' fiscal flip-flop is breathtakingly ill-timed
 
What's Trump's parade really about? His bottomless insecurity.
 
Trump won't be president forever. Nuclear policy shouldn't pretend he will.
 
We're better than this
 
The White House shrugged off domestic violence. It's not alone.
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More News
 
Dozens at White House — including Trump adviser Jared Kushner — lack permanent security clearances
The departure of an aide accused of domestic violence puts the FBI background investigations in the spotlight.
 
 
Fact Checker | Analysis
Did Hillary Clinton collude with the Russians to get 'dirt' on Trump to feed it to the FBI?
Rep. Devlin Nunes (R-Calif.) makes a startling claim about the Russian investigation. Let's explore whether there is a basis for Nunes's claim that Clinton is the ultimate villain in the Russia saga.
 
Trump wants a military parade. What can the Pentagon give him?
The Pentagon put the Army in charge of developing options. Here's a rundown of what those might look like.
 
Five major psychiatric diseases have overlapping patterns of genetic activity, new study shows
Autism, schizophrenia, bipolar, depression and alcoholism have similar molecular signatures in the brain.
 
Omarosa says she wouldn't vote for Trump again 'in a million years'
The former White House staffer is competing on "Celebrity Big Brother" and dropped some headline-making statements, tearfully painting a bleak picture of the West Wing: "No, it's not going to be okay, it's not."
 
A witness drew this terrible sketch to help police identify a suspect. It actually worked.
Police in Lancaster, Pa., called the sketch "amateurish and cartoonish," but it, along with a physical description, led authorities to identify a suspect who they say pretended to be a farmers market worker before fleeing with cash.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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