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BY REBECCA BEITSCH AND MIKE LILLIS |
The Jan. 6 committee's prime-time rollout this week was its first attempt to reach the nearly unreachable: those who have long moved on from the attack. From the apathetic to the apoplectic, the committee is hoping its investigative findings will resonate not just with those who have tuned out in the almost 17 months since the attack, but also with even a sliver of those who are indignant that its investigation has continued. |
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The Jan. 6 committee's prime-time hearing was its opening argument in making its public case that former President Trump was at the center of a plot to remain in power. |
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Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) didn't make any new friends in the GOP with her star turn bashing former President Trump in prime time on Thursday night. It doesn't bother her a bit. |
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| Nearly 20 million people watched Thursday night's first hearing of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol across broadcast and cable news, according to preliminary ratings figures from Nielsen. |
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Members of the Jan. 6 select committee expressed satisfaction after its first public hearing, a two-hour prime-time event that laid out the case that former President Trump was at the center of a scheme to keep himself in power. |
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A judge in Texas on Friday threw out a policy instituted by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) last year that directed border officials to exercise discretion in deportation cases. |
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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Rochelle Walensky signed an order on Friday ending a requirement for international travelers to show a negative COVID-19 test or proof of recovery from the virus before boarding flights to the United States. |
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Reviewers at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said in briefing documents released on Friday that Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine is both effective and safe for children under 6 years old. |
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Consumer prices growth spiked in May as another surge in oil prices spurred inflation higher across the U.S. economy, according to data released Friday by the Labor Department. |
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Virginia "Ginni" Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, reached out to almost 30 Arizona lawmakers following former President Trump's defeat in the state's 2020 election to urge them to reject President Biden's victory, The Washington Post reported Friday. |
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| OPINION | The first hearing by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, violent attack on the U.S. Capitol presented new and compelling evidence of the actions by former President Donald Trump and his supporters to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election to keep him in office. |
OPINION | Your typical congressional oversight hearings are hard enough to script and choreograph to engage an otherwise distracted audience. Infinitely more difficult is when it's not just one hearing, but several over the course of a month, based on information collected over an entire year, from 1,000 witnesses and 140,000 documents. And it's not just any old committee, but the January 6 Select Committee — with resources, yes, but with the clock running, unbridled, toward expiration. |
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| | KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — In the outdoor gym on Venice Beach, the name given to an inviting stretch of sand on the majestic Dnieper River that courses through the capital of Ukraine, Serhiy Chornyi is working on his summer body, up-down-up-downing a chunky hunk of iron. |
BY LIZA LIN AND SARAH NASSAUER |
Walmart Inc. opened its first store in China in 1996, a sprawling supercenter in the Hong Kong border city of Shenzhen. It has been working to find the right strategy ever since. | BY REID J. EPSTEIN AND JENNIFER MEDINA |
Midway through the 2022 primary season, many Democratic lawmakers and party officials are venting their frustrations with President Biden's struggle to advance the bulk of his agenda, doubting his ability to rescue the party from a predicted midterm trouncing and increasingly viewing him as an anchor that should be cut loose in 2024. | BY IAAC ARNSDORF AND JOSH DAWSEY |
Former president Donald Trump has demanded that many of his aides and advisers claim privilege and resist subpoenas from the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. |
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