INTERNATIONAL: Over the weekend, the White House dispatched senior administration officials and a pre-advance team to North Korea, hoping to get an on-again, off-again summit back on track in Singapore on June 12. The West Wing referred Monday to an "expected meeting" between Trump and Kim Jong Un, suggesting optimism that a summit could take place. The Associated Press: Today, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported from Seoul that senior North Korean official Kim Yong Chol plans to head to the United States, potentially for more talks to arrange the summit. He would be the most senior North Korean official to visit the United States in 18 years. The Wall Street Journal: U.S. decided Monday to defer new round of sanctions aimed at North Korea while summit preparations are continuing. The president spoke with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Monday, promising "close coordination" before any summit with Kim, the White House said in a statement. (Trump is set to attend meetings of the Group of Seven industrialized nations, which includes Japan, early in June in Canada.) This week, the president is set to meet twice with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the White House, according to his schedule. The Associated Press: Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in agreed during a surprise meeting together Saturday to "positively cooperate with each other as ever to improve [North Korea]-U.S. relations and establish a mechanism for permanent and durable peace." Kim and Moon agreed to have their governments' top officials meet again June 1. Moon said military generals and Red Cross officials from the Koreas will also meet separately to discuss how to ease military tensions and resume reunions of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War. The Hill: Five indicators a Trump summit with Kim might still happen, despite the president's decision last week to withdraw his participation via letter. The Hill: On Saturday, the president told reporters that discussions with the North Koreans to resurrect a summit were going "very well." Reuters: In their meeting on Saturday, Kim reaffirmed his commitment to "complete" denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and to a planned summit with Trump, Moon told reporters in Seoul. The Hill: Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations and Intelligence committees, said Sunday he is convinced Kim does not want to denuclearize North Korea. The Hill: Michael Hayden, a former CIA director, predicted Sunday that North Korea will not give up its nuclear weapons. CHINA: The Hill: Trump late Friday appeared to confirm that his administration reached a deal to put Chinese telecommunications company ZTE back in business. The Hill: The president's and the Trump family's business deals continue to spark scrutiny. More than 60 Democratic lawmakers say they want an ethics investigation into the president's ties to China in response to the ZTE Corp. controversy. The New York Times: China granted seven trademarks in May to White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump for her branded merchandise, raising new ethics questions as her father reached an agreement on ZTE. Reuters: China will host Iranian President Hassan Rouhani next month at a regional summit, its foreign ministry said on Monday, as major powers scramble to save Iran's nuclear deal after the United States pulled out. TRADE: The Hill: Deep disagreements between Republicans and Trump over his threat to apply trade tariffs to imported vehicles are boiling over. At the root of the GOP worries: the midterms, objections from U.S. companies and experts, and economic projections. Bloomberg: Trump's proposed auto tariffs, predicated on an argument of national security, appeal to his protectionist base but alienate his allies. Nikkei Asia Review: Nissan Motor to cut North American auto production by up to 20 percent, impacting jobs, as U.S. sales stall for the first time in eight years and uncertainties abound with unfinished NAFTA rewrite and Trump-favored auto tariffs. Reuters: British Prime Minister Theresa May reportedly suggested Trump meet with her at her private residence during his July visit to avoid protesters. **** WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: Trump and leading Democrats pointed fingers at one another this weekend over a controversial immigration policy. The administration's decision to try to discourage undocumented migrants from showing up at the U.S. border by separating children from their parents triggered howls of protest from Democrats. In turn, Trump assailed Congress's minority party, suggesting incorrectly that the policy determinations of the departments of Justice and Homeland Security were "a horrible law." Republican lawmakers — some uncomfortable with the policy and others queasy about the optics of children torn from parents and placed in temporary holding pens and with "sponsors" — called for changes. The president turned to Twitter this morning to maintain pressure on Democrats and emphasize border security. © Twitter
The Washington Post: The reactions from Trump and lawmakers are not a surprise. The Wall Street Journal: Trump blames Democrats for his administration's policy. CNN: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) says it lost track of nearly 1,500 migrant children after separation from parents. (DHS official testified about the details in April.) Reuters: Administration official late Monday denied that migrant children "lost"; says children's sponsors in U.S. not responding to government contacts. The New York Times: Did the Trump administration separate immigrant children from their parents and lose them? Arizona Daily Star: Children, parents ensnared in U.S. "zero tolerance" border prosecutions. National Guard: The Hill: The Pentagon approved hundreds more National Guard troops to support border agents. Federal firing: The Hill: Trump issued three orders designed to make it easier to fire federal employees. Hunting & endangered wildlife: The Hill: Pro-hunting Trump officials diminish wildlife protections. Veterans Affairs: The Hill: The president's new nominee to lead the department boosts veterans' hopes for reforms. Education Department: The Associated Press: Federal court ruled the department violated privacy laws when it used the Social Security Administration (SSA) to help it analyze loan forgiveness for students defrauded by the for-profit Corinthian Colleges. The district court ordered the department to cease debt collection from the defrauded students and to stop seeking SSA's services for the practice. |
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