This week marks one year since Robert Mueller took over the probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and a small international event in Great Britain drew U.S. attention on Saturday (Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has ideas for the royal honeymoon). Here's what else happened this week:
After it turned out Michael Cohen was paid more than $2 million to provide consulting, access and insight into the Trump administration for blue-chip clients, those companies faced a political nightmare, reports Megan R. Wilson.
A precedent-shattering decision by the Supreme Court could introduce online sports betting in multiple states as well as new legislation regulating it, Lydia Wheeler and Jordain Carney report.
Although the Pentagon has begun planning for a military parade as directed by the president, Democrats are now seeking to block those plans through amendments to the annual defense policy bill, reports Rebecca Kheel.
President Trump fulfilled one of his key campaign promises on Monday, but moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem inflamed tensions with the Palestinians, reports Jordan Fabian.
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