➔ ENTERTAINMENT: ABC News canceled the hit comedy show "Roseanne" on Tuesday just hours after star Roseanne Barr posted a racist tweet about Valerie Jarrett, the former aide to President Obama. "Roseanne's Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values, and we have decided to cancel her show." - ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey. Barr has also been dropped by her talent agency and reruns are being yanked from syndication – a stunning downfall for the actress whose rebooted television series had been received as a political and cultural triumph. Barr is a Trump supporter who also played one on TV. The "Roseanne" reboot debut pulled in more than 18 million viewers, making it the most successful comedy launch in years. Critics raved over the show for its portrayal of a working-class family in the era of Trump. The president called Barr at the time to congratulate her. "Look at her ratings," Trump said in late March. "They were unbelievable, over 18 million people and it was about us." On Tuesday, the White House declined to comment, saying the president is focused on more important things. "We have to turn it into a teaching moment," Jarrett said at a town hall event on MSNBC on Tuesday night. . The Memo: "Roseanne" storm revives debate over Trump. ➔ SUPREME COURT: The Hill: The Supreme Court on Tuesday left in place an Arkansas law that restricts medication-induced abortions. Planned Parenthood of Arkansas and Eastern Oklahoma were challenging the state law. Among many pending decisions court-watchers await before the end of the term are another abortion case, Azar v. Garza, and Masterpiece Cakeshop Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, dealing with whether creative businesses have a constitutional right to refuse certain services. One familiar question posed by a SCOTUS Blog reader on Tuesday: Any clues about possible retirements by justices? Journalist Amy Howe's response on the site's live blog: "No news that I have heard. With the exception of Justice [Sandra Day] O'Connor [in 2005], virtually all of the justices who have retired recently have announced their retirements in April or early May, which sets up a schedule that would allow a replacement to be confirmed by the time the justices return from their summer recess. But obviously the justices can do whatever they want." ➔ POLITICS & CONGRESS: ***BREAKING LATE TUESDAY*** … Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens (R) has resigned amid a sex scandal and felony charges … the former Navy SEAL and rising GOP star claims innocence in resignation speech. The Kansas City Star: Greitens resigns, ending political career once aimed at the presidency. Reuters: St. Louis prosecutor will disclose details of a deal she reached with the disgraced governor on a felony charge. 2018: Former President George W. Bush's ethics chief Richard Painter is running as a Democrat to fill former Sen. Al Franken's (D) seat in Minnesota. Painter has raised his profile with searing Twitter attacks against Trump, but faces an uphill battle against Sen. Tina Smith (D), who was appointed to the seat after Franken's resignation (The Hill). The New York Times: In California's farm country, tide of resistance runs dry ahead of the primary. 2020: Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders (I), whose insurgent 2016 primary campaign against Hillary Clinton (D) electrified the left, is considering running for president again (The Hill). Quote of the day: "I'm not there." – Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on "The View" when asked whether she believes Trump should be impeached. Congressional rundown … Senators are under growing pressure to take up prison reform, which the House passed overwhelmingly and is a top priority for Jared Kushner (The Hill) … Rep. Jeff Denham (R-Calif.) is confident the House will overcome the disagreement on the discharge petition and pass immigration reform (The Hill). ➔ WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: West Wing staff and the administration writ large are juggling staffing, policy and political challenges this week. National Security Council: Trump's new adviser, John Bolton, is hiring more hand-picked loyalists at a particularly intense time for the NSC (Bloomberg). Immigration: The Hill: Trump adviser Stephen Miller defended an administration enforcement policy that results in the separation of some migrant children from their parents. During a briefing Tuesday, Miller said, "If people care about stopping child smuggling they'll close the loopholes. We cannot have an immigration system where you get a free pass if you smuggle a child." > Separation of families at the U.S.-Mexico border: The Washington Post: Fact checking the controversy. > The Washington Post: Migrant children in U.S. custody surged 21 percent to 10,773 in the past month, a result of administration immigration enforcement. Dueling falsehoods and Twitter wars: The Associated Press: The president on Tuesday pounced on an error by liberal activists, who tweeted photos of young-looking immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border detained in steel pens. The president's critics blamed the Trump administration for harsh immigration policies, illustrating their messages with photos taken in 2014 by AP — when President Obama was in charge. © Twitter
> How do you beat a liar? You do not play his game: The Hill opinion, by Fox News contributor Jessie Tarlov. Trump as a role model?: The Hill: Fewer Republicans say that moral leadership is very important in a president, according to a new Gallup poll. But that has not discouraged some GOP leaders from publicly distancing themselves and their families from Trump when it comes to his suitability as a role model. Utah Senate candidate Mitt Romney: Trump is not a role model for my grandchildren. Oklahoma's Sen. James Lankford (R): Trump is not a role model for my children. Homeland Security: McClatchy: Embattled Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen approved spending $1.7 billion in grants for communities, including "sanctuary cities," despite Trump's promise to stop funding sanctuary cities. State Department: Ronald Mortensen, tapped by Trump to become assistant secretary of state for the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, is being assailed by pro-immigration advocacy groups as a poor fit for that role. FWD.us President Todd Schulte urged leading GOP senators Tuesday to oppose the nominee based on his record as a fellow with the Center for Immigration Studies, which Schulte called "an anti-immigration policy center and hate group." EPA: Bloomberg: The agency's science advisers fault the EPA for ignoring its own science while seeking to roll back auto emissions standards. Puerto Rico's death toll in 2017 from Hurricane Maria: A new study published by The New England Journal of Medicine found that 64 officially reported deaths tied to that natural disaster was a "substantial undercount." The revised impact? A death toll of 4,645. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: The Washington Free Beacon: Acting head Mick Mulvaney is filling a position he cannot continue to hold beyond June 22. Political battles are ahead. |
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