Tuesday 19 June 2018

Politics A.M.: The facts about Trump’s policy of separating families at the border

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Fact Checker •  Analysis
The facts about Trump's policy of separating families at the border
In Orwellian fashion, the Trump administration repeatedly claims its own policy doesn't exist or was written by others.
As debate shifts, Republican candidates decry family separations
The president has longed used the issue of immigration to his advantage. But backlash over the decision to separate children from their parents has left GOP candidates scrambling to distance themselves.
 
Trump defiant as crisis grows over family separation at the border
The president said immigrant parents could be "murderers," and he continued to falsely blame Democrats for the policy.
 
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Nielsen becomes the public face of Trump's family separation policy
"We will not apologize," the DHS secretary said during a day-long defense amid a growing political uproar over the practice and the administration's erroneous claims.
 
Analysis
How to mislead with statistics, DHS Secretary Nielsen edition
A surge in smuggling cited by Kirstjen Nielsen means that 191 of 30,911 family units are suspect.
 
Monkey Cage • Analysis
The extraordinary unpopularity of Trump's family separation policy (in one graph)
It's less popular than the GOP tax bill, the border wall and many, many other policies.
 
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Romney calls for 'disturbing' family separations to stop
The Senate candidate, in remarks to voters in Utah, avoided blaming President Trump or the Department of Homeland Security for the humanitarian crisis.
 
It was a Trump favorite. Now lawyers want the famously discreet Beverly Hills Hotel to share its secrets.
Records of his stays at its bungalows have been subpoenaed in a defamation lawsuit brought by former "Apprentice" contestant Summer Zervos — the first legal action to open the president's private life to discovery.
 
 
Supreme Court to consider cases on the seizure of a $40,000 Land Rover, iPhone apps and a moose hunter
The high court will consider limits on the common, controversial practice of asset forfeiture.
 
Monkey Cage • Analysis
The Supreme Court decided not to decide Wisconsin's gerrymandering case. But here's why it will be back.
Justice Kagan offered specific instructions for how plaintiffs could resuscitate the case.
 
 
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