INTERNATIONAL: North Korea: The Hill: Trump says North Korea no longer poses a nuclear threat, and he asserts the U.S. achieved “everything” as part of the Singapore joint statement, but North Korea has taken no verifiable steps toward dismantling its nuclear weapons program in the aftermath of the June 12 summit. What’s next? Public Opinion: A new ABC News/Washington Post poll finds Americans remain skeptical (but less so than in the past) when it comes to whether North Korea intends to denuclearize after the Trump-Kim meeting. >The Japan Times: North Korea has yet to dismantle missile facilities despite Trump’s claims. North Korea does not appear to have begun work to dismantle any of its six known missile launch and engine test facilities and two ejection test stands, according to an analysis of recent satellite photos, despite a claim by Trump that the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, had told him it was “already destroying” a major testing site. >The Hill: The president’s announcement in Singapore that the United States would freeze large-scale joint military exercises with South Korea while negotiating with Pyongyang rattled defense officials. Trump claims credit for the decision. >The Associated Press: Trump seeks public approval in wake of his North Korea meeting with Kim. >The Hill: It falls to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to transform a vague bilateral statement signed nearly a week ago into an irreversible, verifiable agreement that results in the dismantling of North Korea’s nuclear capabilities. He has his work cut out for him. Trade Issues: The Hill: China calls for global retaliatory actions in response to Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods and European, Canadian and Mexican imports. Beijing accuses the president of sparking a trade war. China's ministry of commerce urged countries to take “joint actions” against the United States. >The New York Times: Trump’s tariffs policy, molded by nostalgia, picks winners and losers. >The Associated Press: China retaliates against U.S. with tariffs on soybeans, electric cars and fish. >Reuters: China’s tariffs on U.S. oil would disrupt $1 billion monthly business. >The Wall Street Journal: Trade fears threaten the best year in commodities since 2002. >The Wall Street Journal: Trade fight squeezes U.S. companies working in China. >The Des Moines Register: The costs of tariffs begin to add up for Iowa farmers. Russia: The Federation of American Scientists (FAS) will publish satellite images today, which the group says show a Russian nuclear weapons storage facility in the Baltic coast enclave between Poland and Lithuania being deepened and then covered with a new concrete roof in recent months (The Guardian). German government: The Guardian: Is Angela Merkel’s long tenure as German chancellor nearing a frustrated end? She is doubted at home, and has been bypassed abroad. Divisions over immigration within Germany’s coalition government may be near a breaking point today. © Twitter **** POLITICS & CAMPAIGNS: The Trump family is hitting the gas on fundraising ahead of the 2018 midterm elections. The president will headline a fundraiser for pro-Trump outside group America First Action at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday (Politico). Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump will join McCarthy for a swing through California for fundraising events aimed at protecting the GOP majority in the House (The Hill). And the president’s reelection campaign is raising money off a contest to meet the president at Wednesday’s campaign rally in Duluth, Minn. From the campaign trail … The Supreme Court will decide whether to strike down a voter map for the first time as an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander (The Hill) … House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions (R-Texas) reelection race is rated a toss-up (Cook Political Report) … The proposal to split California in three would give Democrats more seats (The Hill) … The next Democratic National Convention will take place in July before the 2020 Olympics (The Hill). ➔ WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: West Wing: The Hill’s MEMO: Trump’s media game puts the press on a back foot. EPA: The Hill: The president, who has continued to praise Administrator Scott Pruitt’s deregulatory results at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), now says he’s unhappy with some actions his cabinet member has taken. >The Hill: Two GOP senators from Iowa are increasingly critical of Pruitt following his wavering stance on ethanol. > The federal Office of Government Ethics (OGE) requested that the EPA inspector general expand its ongoing probes involving Pruitt to include a flurry of news reports and allegations involving the administrator’s instructions to senior aides to conduct personal business on his behalf. The OGE seeks the inspector general findings in order to make recommendations to Trump about potential ethics violations. Pentagon’s cyber attack offense: The New York Times reports the Pentagon has empowered the U.S. Cyber Command to take a more aggressive posture on the offensive, trying to counter attackers as they enter U.S. networks. The change in approach was not formally debated inside the White House before it was initiated. International telecom security: The Hill: Hackers seek to penetrate the undersea telecommunications infrastructure that carries the bulk of the world’s intercontinental electronic communications. One Russian company sanctioned by the Treasury Department is alleged to have provided such support for Moscow’s security and intelligence service, the FSB. CFPB nominee: The New York Times: Trump will nominate Kathy Kraninger to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), triggering immediate opposition from consumer advocates. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) employee whose specialty is homeland security has never worked as a financial regulator or inside the financial services industry, and is close to OMB Director Mick Mulvaney, who cannot continue to lead the agency as its acting director. CFPB, created as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank law to function as an independent watchdog, is a favorite target for proposed elimination by the financial sector and the GOP. |
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