Monday, 8 April 2019

Politics A.M.: Kirstjen Nielsen quits as homeland security secretary after meeting with Trump

The Washington Post
Democracy Dies in Darkness
Politics
The most important politics stories today
Kirstjen Nielsen quits as homeland security secretary after meeting with Trump
Two senior administration officials said Nielsen had no intention of resigning when she went to the meeting and that she was forced to step down. The move comes amid an influx of migrants at the border.
Kevin McAleenan is taking over DHS. Will he be 'tough' enough for Trump?
After Kirstjen Nielsen's ouster, chief of U.S. Customs and Border Protection steps into leading role for president's immigration policy — one of the most difficult jobs in Washington.
 
Analysis
Power Up: Nielsen's ouster signals even tougher Trump border rhetoric
Get ready for a more charged immigration debate.
Trump seeks to campaign on problems he promised to fix
The president's 2020 reelection effort centers on a foreboding, populist message about the perils of lax immigration and foreign economic threats — much like his campaign in 2016.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
In Iowa, Bernie Sanders and Beto O'Rourke change up their styles to win over skeptical voters
Sanders sought a more personal connection and O'Rourke added more specifics as both responded to criticisms of their campaigns.
 
Elizabeth Warren bets that slew of policy ideas will win over Trump-weary voters
Candidates considered "policy nerds" have struggled in the past.
 
Beto O'Rourke on Benjamin Netanyahu: 'Racist'
The Democratic presidential candidate said the Israeli prime minister's actions have made peace in the Middle East "impossible."
Analysis
The Trailer: Answers to your questions on Biden, health care and campaign tunes
In this special travel edition (i.e., shorter edition): Reader questions answered.
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Fact Checker · Analysis
Betsy DeVos's claim about public funding for 'Education Freedom Scholarships'
A carefully worded tweet by the education secretary blurs out the government's role in funding scholarships for private or religious schools.
 
Mulvaney says Democrats will 'never' see Trump's tax returns
The White House chief of staff said voters had already shown in 2016 that they didn't care.
Scrutiny and suspicion as Mueller report undergoes redaction
Under fire from Democrats, Attorney General William P. Barr has prepared for public questioning. Experts say he has wide discretion to determine what is revealed, meaning the fight over blacked-out boxes is likely to spawn months of legal fights.
 
Recommended for you
Get the Technology 202 newsletter
Your daily guide to the intersection of technology and politics.

No comments:

Post a Comment