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Thursday, January 18, 2018

Tipsheet: GOP sees omens of a Dem wave in Wisconsin

 
 
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GOP sees omens of a Dem wave in Wisconsin
By Jonathan Easley
 
A surprise loss in a special statehouse election Tuesday night in Wisconsin has set off a new round of alarm among Republicans worried that they could face a Democratic wave in this year’s midterm elections. 
Read the full story here
 
 
Listen: Rattled by Wisconsin loss, GOP looks toward upcoming races
By Alexis Simendinger
 
Political shock waves jolted the GOP following its loss Tuesday in a special election for a Wisconsin state Senate seat. AM View talks with reporter Ben Kamisar about the GOP’s jitters.
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Shutdown drama grips the Capitol
By Melanie Zanona
House Republican leaders are within striking distance of securing enough GOP votes to pass a stopgap spending bill to prevent a government shutdown, which would shift the funding fight to the Senate.
Read the full story here
 
 
Dems harden line on stopgap measure
By Alexander Bolton
Senate Democrats are taking a harder line on backing a short-term funding measure that does not protect immigrants known as “Dreamers” from deportation. 
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Durbin: Majority of Senate will support DACA deal
By Jordain Carney
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said on Wednesday evening that a bipartisan immigration agreement has the support of a majority of the Senate. 
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House panels to grill Comey’s former chief of staff on FBI probe of Clinton
By Katie Bo Williams and Olivia Beavers
A pair of House committees on Thursday morning will grill former FBI Director James Comey’s onetime chief of staff as part of an ongoing joint probe into the bureau’s handling of the investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s private email server.
Read the full story here
 
 
Russian hackers move to new political targets
By Morgan Williams
Russia’s cyber operations against the United States are showing signs of accelerating even as lawmakers grapple with how to deter and respond to the threat.
Read the full story here
 
 
WH delays spark fear for family planning groups
By Jessie Hellmann
The Trump administration is running months behind in supplying basic information on how organizations that provide birth control and other reproductive health services to low-income women and families can apply for federal family planning grants, raising new uncertainties over the program.
Read the full story here
 
 
GOP looks to avoid PA upset
By Ben Kamisar
President Trump will touch down in Pennsylvania on Thursday, where he’ll make an appearance in the Pittsburgh-area district that’s home to the next high-profile special House election.
Read the full story here
 
 
Lawmakers see path to bringing back earmarks
By Cristina Marcos
Lawmakers from both parties expressed support on Wednesday for reversing the House’s ban on earmarks, despite skepticism from key conservatives who originally pushed to end the practice nearly a decade ago.
Read the full story here
 
 
Bitcoin's real story isn't the rampant speculation, but its untold potential
By Steve Forbes
OPINION | The key thing to keep in mind about bitcoin and hundreds of other so-called cryptocurrencies is that they are not yet real money. They are useless for doing transactions. Money that wildly fluctuates will never gain wide acceptance as a means of conducting commerce in the global marketplace.
Read the full story here
 
 
March for Life should be about more than abortion
By Patrick Carolan and Eli McCarthy and Maryanne Mueller
OPINION | On Jan. 19, Washington, D.C. and states throughout the nation will host the 44th annual March for Life. As in years past there will be great media coverage about this annual event when many thousands of Catholics will march to protest abortion.
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The Wall Street Journal: One year in, Trump has broken all the rules
By Gerald F. Seib
Populist president has scrambled conventional wisdom on every level, with mixed policy results.
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The Associated Press: Trump claims credit for what is still mostly Obama’s economy
By Christopher Rugaber
President Donald Trump relentlessly congratulates himself for the healthy state of the U.S. economy, with its steady growth, low unemployment, busier factories and confident consumers.
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The Washington Post: Kelly calls some of Trump’s campaign pledges on immigration and wall ‘uninformed’
By Ed O'Keefe
 
In comments that put him at odds with the president, White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly told Democratic lawmakers that the U.S. will never construct a physical wall along the entire stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border and that Mexico will never pay for it.
Read the full story here
 
 
Reuters: Trump administration bars Haitians from US visas for low-skilled work
By Yeganeh Turbot
 
Haitians will no longer be eligible for U.S. visas given to low-skilled workers, the Trump administration said on Wednesday, bringing an end to a small-scale effort to employ Haitians in the United States after a catastrophic 2010 earthquake.
Read the full story here
 
 
The New York Times: Presidential run-up pushes Democrats in Senate further left
By Sheryl Gay Stolberg
No fewer than six senators are eyeing the Democratic nomination in 2020, with each angling to get to the left of the others.
Read the full story here
 
 
 
 
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