Thursday, 16 February 2017

Thursday's Headlines: Labor nominee Puzder’s withdrawal magnifies turmoil in White House

Flynn saga shifts balance of power between president, Congress ; Trump's friends, donors jockey for ambassador jobs; Airport assassination of half brother focuses new attention on North Korean leader; Where Obama lectured, Trump just declares; Trump's claim that there's a 'tremendous amount of increase' in autism cases earns 3 Pinocchios;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Labor nominee Puzder's withdrawal magnifies turmoil in White House
With concerns growing among Republican members of the Senate, the demise of restaurant executive Andrew Puzder's nomination for labor secretary worsened the already deteriorating relationship between the White House and lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
Flynn saga shifts balance of power between president, Congress
In the wake of Michael Flynn's resignation as national security adviser, Republican senators are vowing more aggressive oversight of the new administration, and Democrats are seizing an opportunity to ask pointed questions about President Trump's ties to Russia.
 
Trump's friends, donors jockey for ambassador jobs
Most of the top ambassadorships traditionally have gone to close friends and top campaign donors in a secret process with no public comments before a nomination. But Trump loyalists seem to be more forthcoming about their desire to represent him overseas.
 
Airport assassination of half brother focuses new attention on North Korean leader
The plot, complete with a honey trap and a public poisoning, has focused new attention on Kim Jong Un, the 33-year-old leader of North Korea, suggesting he will stop at nothing to keep power.
 
Where Obama lectured, Trump just declares
For eight years, a presidential news conference was a forum for the long-winded Professor Obama. With a new administration, brevity is in.
 
Trump's claim that there's a 'tremendous amount of increase' in autism cases earns 3 Pinocchios
Trump characterized autism as an increasingly common disorder, but there's not enough research and no medical consensus to determine that.
 
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Opinions
 
Why do smart people in the White House do stupid things? Because Trump tells them to.
 
Congress can take back power from the president. Here's how.
 
Admit it: Trump is unfit to serve
 
How liberals undermine the food stamp program
 
Just resisting Trump won't do enough for Democrats
 
The nation needs answers, not deflections, on Russia and Trump
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More News
 
House GOP leaders say they'll elaborate on their health-care plans today
The closed-door meeting comes as Republican leaders are working to rally sharply divided GOP lawmakers around a single plan to repeal and replace portions of the Affordable Care Act.
Yemeni students, unable to go home, face uncertain status in U.S.
With Yemen embroiled in civil war, options are slim for the two dozen students, including six attending community college in Virginia, who will soon lose their funding and visas from the State Department.
Boeing workers in S.C. vote against union
After years of bitter campaigning, the International Association of Machinists failed to sway the factory's 3,000 workers to organize in a state profoundly hostile to organized labor.
Endangered Species Act may be heading for the threatened list
At least one Republican has vowed to wage an effort to repeal the 43-year-old law, which has saved bald eagles, gray wolves and manatees from extinction. Other GOP lawmakers took aim at the measure during a Senate hearing.
Southern Poverty Law Center says American hate groups are on the rise
The number of such groups has been climbing steadily for most of the past 30 years, the group says, but the new arrivals to its list in 2016 were predominantly characterized as white nationalist and anti-Muslim groups.
Americans are seriously stressed about the future of the country, survey finds
Political talk is consuming therapy sessions, the American Psychological Association reports, with Muslim Americans, immigrants and victims of sexual trauma especially prone to greater stress since the election.
Why one food executive is pledging $25 million to fight his own industry
Puzzled by a Food and Drug Administration ruling that salmon, avocados, olives, eggs and tree nuts weren't "healthy," he decided that Big Food had too much power in shaping nutrition policy.
With a dramatic career pivot, they took a chance to reinvent themselves
The older one gets, the harder it is to launch a new path in life. But advances in technology have changed the calculation for older workers, leading some back to school to follow their dreams.
New York Fashion Week
In the Trump era, fashion designers get woke
Whether with velvet or puffer coats, designers are bringing the feminist fight to fashion.
 
     
 
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