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Sunday, January 7, 2018

Tipsheet: Disaster aid becomes hostage to funding fight

 
 
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Disaster aid becomes hostage to funding fight
By Katie Bo Williams
 
A massive disaster aid package is getting caught up in a broader political fight on Capitol Hill over spending, immigration and other contentious issues.

The stalled relief money may wind up in the next round of government funding, as the issue is quickly being overtaken by a race to prevent a shutdown and automatic across-the-board spending cuts.  
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Trump strikes back at 'Fire and Fury' allegations from Camp David
By Jordan Fabian
THURMONT, Md. — President Trump on Saturday launched a defense of his fitness for office, striking back against a new book that portrays him as a man who is ill-equipped to handle the presidency. 
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The Memo: Trump can turn page on book storm
By Niall Stanage
For all the fire and the fury ignited in Washington this week by Michael Wolff’s book of the same name, the political landscape has been little changed.
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‘Fire and Fury’ author predicts his book will help end Trump’s presidency
By Alicia Cohn
Michael Wolff, the author of a controversial new book about President Trump’s White House, said Saturday that his book is creating “the perception and the understanding that will finally end ... this presidency.”
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Sessions under fire from all sides
By Alexander Bolton
Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s job security is in question after taking withering fire from fellow Republicans this week, including from two prominent House conservatives who called on him to resign.
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Trump on North Korea: 'I'd like to see them getting involved in the Olympics'
By Julia Manchester
President Trump on Saturday said that he would like to see North Korea get involved in the upcoming Winter Olympics in South Korea.
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Trump reiterates 'Mexico will pay for the wall' after $18B request to Congress
By Jacqueline Thomsen
President Trump said Saturday that Mexico will pay for his proposed wall on the U.S.–Mexico border, one day after it was reported that he will ask Congress for $18 billion to fund the wall.
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House GOP intensifies assault on Mueller probe
By Katie Bo Williams
House Republicans are intensifying a multipronged assault to chip away at special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the U.S. election.
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Papadopoulos's fiancée says she interviewed with Mueller's team
By John Bowden
The fiancée of a former Trump campaign aide who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI last year revealed in a new interview that she spoke with investigators on Robert Mueller's special counsel team.
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More than $100K raised for Moore accuser whose home was destroyed in suspicious fire
By Avery Anapol
In less than 24 hours, more than $120,000 was raised in a GoFundMe for the Roy Moore accuser whose house burned down in a suspicious fire.
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Iranian protests give America chance to advance freedom
By Frederick Kagan
OPINION | The protests in Iran are dying down, but the opportunity they created to advance America’s interests in the region remains. 
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Massive Intel software vulnerability is a reminder to always protect sensitive data
By George Avetisov
OPINION | The one way to deliver trust across our connected world is to put privileged data, and access to it, back in the hands of those to whom it belongs.
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The Associated Press: Trump washes his hands of insurgency against GOP incumbents
By Jill Colvin
President Donald Trump says he’s done campaigning for insurgents challenging incumbent Republican members of Congress.
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Reuters: Trump, meeting with Republican leaders, says welfare reform may have to wait
By James Oliphant
 
U.S. President Donald Trump and Republican congressional leaders said after talks on Saturday that they would make an election-year push this year for an immigration overhaul and infrastructure spending but that welfare reform may have to wait for later.
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The Washington Post: Trump’s extraordinary tweetstorms mark an unsettling start to 2018
By Dan Balz
In a White House marked by a string of high-level comings and goings, there remains but one constant. That is the disorder at the center, perpetrated by a president who continues to break the norms of his office. It’s why this year could eclipse 2017 for political turbulence.
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The Wall Street Journal: SEC looks into Kushner Cos. over use of EB-5 program for immigrant investors
By Erica Orden
 
Probe is being conducted in collaboration with Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office, which issued similar subpoena.
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The New York Times: How North Korea’s nuclear pace caught the US off guard
By David E. Sanger and William J. Broad
For decades, American intelligence officials warned the North was making progress on a missile that could reach the United States. But the last breakthroughs happened much faster than they expected.
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