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2018年2月5日 星期一

Tipsheet: Congress returns with just days to avoid shutdown

 
 
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Congress returns with just days to avoid shutdown
By Melanie Zanona
 
Republican lawmakers fresh off their annual GOP legislative retreat will be confronting an all-too-familiar problem when they return to Washington on Monday: avoiding a government shutdown.

GOP leaders are eyeing a six-week funding bill that would keep the government’s lights on until March 23. The measure could include sweeteners like funding for community health centers.
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Listen: Lawmakers say House GOP memo doesn't vindicate Trump
By Alexis Simendinger
 
Lawmakers from both parties challenged President Trump’s assertion that he’s vindicated in the ongoing Russia investigation following the release of a House GOP memo critical of the FBI. Republicans joined Democrats in saying special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe must continue.
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This week: Congress races to prevent another shutdown
By Cristina Marcos and Jordain Carney
Time is running short for Congress to avoid another shutdown once funding runs out after Thursday.
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Help Trump climb down from the wall
By Juan Williams
OPINION | Is there any way to help President Trump climb down from his pledge to build a “great, beautiful” wall on the Mexican border?
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For a president, words matter
By Judd Gregg
OPINION | “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” — President Franklin D. Roosevelt
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Lawmakers dispute ‘vindication’ for Trump in Intel memo
By Mallory Shelbourne
Democrats on Sunday argued that the release of a controversial memo accusing the Justice Department of surveillance abuses does not vindicate President Trump in the Russia investigation — and Republicans are also avoiding declarations of Trump's exoneration.
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Trump to Americans on Super Bowl Sunday: 'Stand for the National Anthem'
By Avery Anapol
President Trump on Sunday sent a Super Bowl message to Americans that called on them to stand during the national anthem.
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No players kneel during national anthem at Super Bowl
By Brandon Conradis
No players knelt or sat during the national anthem as the Super Bowl kicked off in Minneapolis on Sunday, according to The Associated Press.
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McCain, Coons to introduce new immigration bill that omits wall funding: report
By Julia Manchester
Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Christopher Coons (D-Del.) will introduce immigration legislation on Monday in an effort to reach a budget deal before the federal government's current funding runs out on Friday, The Wall Street Journal reported.
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Fractured GOP struggles with immigration strategy
By Jordain Carney
Republicans are barreling toward a fight over immigration despite divisions on what the party's strategy should be.
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Comey takes page from Trump by turning to Twitter to attack enemies
By Jonathan Turley
OPINION | The recently released memo from the House Intelligence Committee had barely hit the news when phones across the Beltway went off with that all-too-familiar sound: a chirp. However, the blast was not from the tweeter-in-chief but from former FBI Director James Comey.
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What I've learned as a native-born 'Dreamer': We are a nation of assimilated immigrants
By Niger Innis
OPINION | I am a native-born Dreamer and here is what I have come to learn about immigration reform.
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The New York Times: With vote expected, Democrats press to release their memo
By Nicholas Fandos
As some Republicans backed away from President Trump’s claim that a new memo vindicates him in the Russia inquiry, Democrats sought the release of their own classified rebuttal.
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Reuters: Senior Democrat: 'Dreamers' issue unresolved but government shutdown unlikely
By Reuters Staff
The No. 2 U.S. Senate Democrat, Dick Durbin, said on Sunday he did not expect to have a deal protecting young immigrants before government funding expires this week but that a shutdown over the issue was unlikely.
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The Wall Street Journal: Paul Ryan pushes to keep overhaul of safety-net programs on GOP agenda
By Natalie Andrews
Speaker seeks tighter work requirements for government aid.
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The Washington Post: Democrats in liberal California unveil their battle strategy for election season: ‘Go left’
By Scott Wilson
 
In the self-labeled “state of resistance,” the political debate is being pushed further left without any sign of a Republican renaissance to serve as a check on spending and social policy ambitions. That means Democratic candidates will be staking out the most liberal stance on issues such as single-payer health care, defending California’s “sanctuary state” status on immigration, and pushing green investment to reach strict environmental goals.
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The Associated Press: US starts Iraq drawdown after declaration of victory over IS
By Susannah George and Qassim Abdul-Zahra
 
American troops have started to draw down from Iraq following Baghdad’s declaration of victory over the Islamic State group last year, according to Western contractors at a U.S.-led coalition base in Iraq.
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