Friday, December 15, 2017

Evening Edition: Rubio signals support, appearing to give GOP enough votes to pass tax plan

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Rubio signals support, appearing to give GOP enough votes to pass tax plan
The GOP adjusted the child tax credit to add more benefits for working families as the party finalized its tax bill, a change that prompted Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) to suggest he had dropped his threat of a "no" vote. With his support, Republicans are close to locking down the 50 Senate votes they need to pass the measure.
The Fix | Analysis
Trump's suggestive comment about a Michael Flynn pardon, and the pattern behind it
The president is often asked hypothetical questions about very serious matters that other politicians would steer clear of and offers a "we'll see what happens" in response. But what usually happens next?
 
Kushner's legal team looks to hire crisis public relations firm amid Russia probe
Kushner's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, has quietly called at least two firms, according to four people familiar with the matter. Crisis PR firms are often retained to handle a negative development or an avalanche of media inquiries. Kushner has been in the headlines almost daily, and he has complained to friends about the nonstop negative attention from the news media.
 
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The 10 best journalism movies, in the words of Katie Couric, Woodward and Bernstein, and more
Journalists weigh in on what movies reveal about their profession, from "His Girl Friday" to "Spotlight."
 
The Fix | Analysis
That painful exchange between a Trump judicial pick and a GOP senator, annotated
Matthew Spencer Petersen serves on the Federal Election Commission, but he had difficulty answering legal questions posed by Sen. John Neely Kennedy (R-La.).
 
The battle over net neutrality is far from over. Here's what's next.
Far from settling the matter, the Republican-led FCC just opened a new chapter in a bruising Washington fight that stretches back nearly as far as the dot-com boom itself.
 
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New drug law makes it 'harder for us to do our jobs,' former DEA officials say
A measure passed at the behest of drug companies has hurt efforts to stop suspicious shipments of prescription pain pills and slowed other work by the Drug Enforcement Administration, recently retired investigators told The Washington Post and "60 Minutes."
 
At screening for 'The Post,' Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg draw parallels to Nixon era
The cast and crew pointed to similarities between the movie's Nixon-era drama and the Trump administration — and they explained how they tried to get the historical details just right.
 
A jury convicted a maid of stealing jewelry. Then the jurors paid her fine.
The 19-year-old defendant returned three rings worth at least $5,000, and Fairfax County jurors took up a collection to pay her $60 fine. Numerous criminal lawyers said they had never seen jurors acting similarly. The victim said she thought the fine was too lenient.
 
 
Omarosa's reality-star exit from the White House hijacked the news
Omarosa Manigault Newman seemed cast in the same role in the White House as she had been on "The Apprentice," on which she was the show's elegant and icy villain competing for Donald Trump's favor.
 
Chat Transcript
Comforting a sister who continually picks the wrong guy isn't always easy
The advice columnist takes your questions about the strange train we call life.
 
 
     
 
 
 
 

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