Tuesday, 10 July 2018

Politics A.M.: Trump's Supreme Court pick has sided with broad views of presidential powers

Democracy Dies in Darkness
Politics
The most important politics stories today
 
Brett Kavanaugh, Trump's Supreme Court pick, has sided with broad views of presidential powers
The record of the federal appeals court judge suggests he would be more to the right than retiring Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.
Brett Kavanaugh is nominated by Trump to succeed Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy
If confirmed, the former Kennedy clerk who serves on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit could allow President Trump to solidify a more conservative majority on the Supreme Court.
 
The Fix • Analysis
4 big questions about Brett Kavanaugh
The Roe question. The McConnell question. The Bush question. And the Trump question.
 
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A more conservative Supreme Court could step, not lurch, to the right
President Trump's nominee and fellow conservatives can achieve right-of-center goals without overturning rulings such as Roe v. Wade.
 
From Clinton to Trump: How Kavanaugh navigated through some of Washington's biggest scandals
He investigated Vince Foster's death and Bill Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky before joining the George W. Bush administration.
 
Trump Supreme Court pick: How key senators reacted
As the confirmation process kicks off following the president's selection of Brett Kavanaugh, two groups of senators will play a pivotal role.
 
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Supreme Court nominee has argued presidents should not be distracted by investigations and lawsuits
Brett M. Kavanaugh worked on the independent counsel's team that investigated Bill Clinton, and his resulting views could be a central focus of his confirmation hearing to replace Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.
 
With Trump's nominee announced, the battle for the court begins
Odds favor Republicans, but millions of dollars will be spent in the coming weeks.
 
Fact Checker • Analysis
Anatomy of a Trump rally: 76 percent of claims are false, misleading or lacking evidence
The president made 98 factual claims at a rally. We found that 76 percent were false, misleading or unsupported by evidence.
 
 
Giuliani works for foreign clients while serving as Trump's attorney
The former New York mayor has not registered on behalf of customers in Ukraine and elsewhere with interests in Trump administration policies.
 
'Not fair to the U.S. taxpayer': Trump takes another shot at NATO as he prepares to meet with alliance leaders
The president complained anew about defense spending shortly before leaving the White House en route to Europe.
 
Prosecutor who reportedly suggested Maxine Waters be shot is placed on leave
A California prosecutor is the subject of an internal investigation, after reportedly targeting Rep. Waters, Michelle Obama, immigrants and Mexicans in comments on social media.
 
 
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