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2018年6月2日 星期六

The 10 essential reads you missed this week

Get caught up on the week's news from The Hill
 
 
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The 10 essential reads you missed this week
After a week of controversy ranging from TBS host Samantha Bee to crowd size at the latest presidential rally, here's a round up of stand-out news and analysis.
 
Conservatives cry foul after Roseanne Barr is punished
Joe Concha reports that conservatives are citing offensive comments made by left-leaning TV personalities as proof of a double standard after pro-Trump sitcom star Roseanne Barr was fired this week.
 

 
Groups say Google Plus ignored flagged posts of extremist content
Pro-ISIS content is thriving on Google’s social media platform, and the company apparently ignored repeated warnings about it, reports Ali Breland.
 

 
Patients will now be able to try more experimental drugs
President Trump signed Right to Try legislation this week, pleasing Republicans and potentially weakening the FDA, reports Jessie Hellmann.
 

 
The US-North Korea summit may still happen
The Trump administration scrambled to save a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un this week, reports Rebecca Kheel.
 

 
Who’s to blame for policy separating immigrant families at the border?
Rafael Bernal and Mike Lillis break down questions about where a policy dividing migrant parents from their children came from, amid Republicans and Democrats pointing fingers at each other.
 

 
Trump cites political targeting in pardoning conservative author
President Trump exercised his pardon power for the fifth time on behalf of Dinesh D’Souza, reports Jordan Fabian.
 

 
Warren may be poised to unite Democrats
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren may be able to bring the divided Democrat party together in 2020, reports Amie Parnes.
 

 
Trump signals jobs data before report's release, breaking with protocol
President Trump again tweeted about the jobs report ahead of its release, a break with tradition and previous policy, reports Sylvan Lane.
 

 
Trump lawyer’s case takes step away from Stormy Daniels controversy
Stormy Daniels will not be represented in a separate case against attorney Michael Cohen, after a judge criticized her lawyer Michael Avenatti’s behavior, Lydia Wheeler reports.
 

 
Key Republican publicly defends FBI against Trump criticisms
The chairman of a key House committee defended the FBI against President Trump’s criticism that the agency “spied” on his campaign, reports Morgan Gstalter.
 
 
 
© Getty Images: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met with top North Korea official Kim Yong Chol on Thursday in New York.
 
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