Monday, 27 August 2018

Politics A.M.: Trump rejected plans for a White House statement praising McCain

Democracy Dies in Darkness
Politics
The most important politics stories today
 
Trump rejected plans for a White House statement praising McCain
The president opted instead for a short tweet that mentioned McCain's family rather than the Arizona senator, who died Saturday after a battle with brain cancer.
In most of the country, McCain is being lauded as a hero. On Arizona's GOP campaign trail, he's a pariah.
The distance between McCain and the current candidates demonstrates President Trump's takeover of the Republican Party.
 
Lawyer pulls back from claims about information Cohen has on Trump's knowledge of Russian efforts
Lanny Davis, a spokesman and attorney for President Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, expressed regret for not being clearer in assertions he made to reporters.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
N.Y. investigation, not Mueller, is 'greatest threat' to Trump, adviser says
"There are no constitutional defenses to what the Southern District is investigating," Alan Dershowitz, an informal Trump adviser, said.
 
One moment from McCain's 2008 run made clear his character and foretold Trump's rise
The presidential hopeful had wanted his campaign to be about the issues. It became something else.
 
The Take • Analysis
The passing of John McCain also marks the passing of an era
McCain leaves behind a giant legacy and a challenge to a different generation.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Senate candidate Kelli Ward suggests McCain timed pre-death announcement to hurt her campaign
Ward has made controversial comments about Sen. John McCain in the past.
 
The Fix • Analysis
Whether he wanted to or not, John McCain played an outsized role in Trump's political narrative
In the last year of his life, McCain was leading the battle for the soul for the Republican Party.
 
Analysis
Trump, McCain and the waning of the 'liberal order'
McCain's neoconservative internationalism, reviled by the U.S. president, may be in its twilight.
 
 
Fact Checker • Analysis
A misleading attack on a senatorial spouse's investments
Sen. Claire McCaskill's husband earns money from investments in low-income housing. A GOP attack ad uses big numbers to paint a misleading picture of swampy behavior.
 
Too big to sanction? U.S. struggles with punishing large Russian businesses.
Attempted measures against an aluminum company caused so much market havoc the U.S. was forced to scale back.
 
Republicans do a delicate dance in states feeling the pinch from Trump's tariffs
In Tennessee and beyond, Republican Senate candidates have allied themselves with President Trump while trying to keep their distance from his trade policy.
 
 
Recommended for you
 
 
Get The Daily 202 newsletter
PowerPost's must-read morning briefing for decision-makers, by national political correspondent James Hohmann.
Sign Up  »
©2018 The Washington Post  |  1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071

No comments:

Post a Comment