WHITE HOUSE and ADMINISTRATION: Entertainment personalities and the White House continued to share space Wednesday. The Hill: After less than a day of restrained silence, Trump weighed in on the controversy surrounding Roseanne Barr, a Trump backer. Her hit television sitcom "Roseanne" was yanked off the air by ABC bosses on Tuesday. The president accused the entertainment network of a double standard in its decision to cancel the program, prompted by Barr's racist and offensive tweets earlier in the week. © Twitter
Prison Reform: Vanity Fair: Kim Kardashian West joined the White House effort to enact prison reform legislation, a policy project shepherded for Trump by his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. The reality TV diva, who has met the president before, joined a political effort to secure a pardon for Alice Marie Johnson, who is serving a life sentence without parole for a nonviolent drug offense. Dressed in black and trailed by an assistant, Kardashian West took her message directly to the president on Wednesday. © Twitter
Kardashian West first discussed the idea with Kushner earlier this month, and their collaboration soon made the rounds in news and entertainment media. The woman famous for being famous (and her husband Kanye West) tapped their enormous social media audiences to promote a pardon for Johnson. The effort piggybacks on a viral video by Mic, which described the 62-year-old great-grandmother's case. © Twitter
Sports celebrities at the White House: On the South Lawn, athletes also gathered Wednesday for a White House Sports and Fitness Day event, part of a PR campaign to promote health, fitness and nutrition. Lending their celebrity sway for the day were football great Herschel Walker; baseball stars Mariano Rivera and Johnny Damon; volleyball Olympian Misty May-Treanor; and golf's Natalie Gulbis, among many others. **** INTERNATIONAL: Summit suspense remains in the headlines, as preparations for a possible meeting between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un continue. Both sides dispatched global representatives to world capitals for high-level conversations. The Associated Press: Today, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will meet with Kim Yong Chol, North Korea's former military intelligence chief, in New York City. Traveling first through Beijing, Kim arrived in the United States on Wednesday. The discussions are aimed at figuring out if a June 12 summit in Singapore should proceed. Other U.S. representatives have been in North Korea for logistical discussions tied to a possible summit. Meanwhile, at the invitation of North Korea, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is in Pyongyang today to discuss the nuclear standoff and bilateral ties with North Korea's foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho. The Hill: On Wednesday, Pompeo warned Lavrov by phone that Russia must not interfere with U.S. domestic matters, including elections. It was the secretary's first such discussion with his Russian counterpart since his confirmation to lead the State Department. Russia tweeted the endeavor to "overcome existing differences": © Twitter
Reuters: The outgoing head of U.S. Pacific Command, Adm. Harry Harris, who is Trump's pick to be the ambassador to South Korea, says North Korea remains the United States' most imminent threat. China: Speaking of Pacific threats, China again vows to protect its interests against U.S. trade tariffs. US-China relations have chilled, Reuters reports. The Wall Street Journal: The administration's surprise decision to move forward with tariffs and other sanctions against China threatens to derail trade talks scheduled for this weekend, featuring Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. The latest U.S. tactic tied to trade isn't being received well in the Chinese capital: The official Xinhua News Agency said the Trump administration's "flip-flopping" is hurting U.S. "national credibility." And Trump's trade advisers are not on the same page, and not shy about disclosing their differences. The Hill: White House senior aide Peter Navarro, during an interview with NPR, called Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's assertion that a U.S.-China trade was on hold "an unfortunate sound bite." Also taking aim at China's theft of intellectual property from the United States, the administration said it wants to send a message by limiting the duration of visas available to Chinese students who study in certain fields in this country, The Associated Press reports. Today, China rejected as "ridiculous" the U.S. assertions that it is militarizing the South China Sea, Reuters reports. U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis said this week that the U.S. would confront China's actions in the disputed waterways. Trade: The Trump administration is getting tougher with European allies, in addition to China. The Wall Street Journal reports the United States plans to hit the European Union with steel and aluminum tariffs. The two sides face a Friday deadline. Ukraine: The New York Times: Authorities in Kiev revealed an elaborate fiction in which prominent Russian war correspondent Arkady Babchenko, in exile in Ukraine, had supposedly been shot and killed on Tuesday. Instead, he attended a news conference Wednesday and apologized to his colleagues and to his wife. Babchenko and police said they faked his death as part of a sting to try to apprehend unnamed individuals who plotted to kill him. They suggested Russian intelligence wanted him dead. The hoax was widely criticized. |
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