網頁

2019年1月5日 星期六

Tipsheet: Trump sows fresh confusion on shutdown

 
 
View in your browser
 
The Hill Tipsheet
Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Email
 
The Memo: Trump sows fresh confusion on shutdown
BY NIALL STANAGE
President Trump declared the partial government shutdown could last for more than a year during a White House news conference on Friday. On the other hand, he said, it could end next week.

His remarks sowed confusion rather than clarity about a possible way out of the impasse, which on Saturday enters its 15th day.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump threatens to extend partial government shutdown for years
BY JORDAN FABIAN AND ALEXANDER BOLTON 
President Trump on Friday threatened to keep roughly a quarter of the federal government closed for years amid a dispute over border-wall funding, the latest sign the president and congressional Democrats remain far apart on resolving the two-week-long shutdown.
Read the full story here
 
 
Democrats launch ‘drain-the-swamp’ agenda
BY MIKE LILLIS
House Democrats on Friday introduced a sweeping government reform package designed to weed Washington of corruption and bolster voting rights across the country — two of the party’s principal campaign promises — as its top legislative priority.
Read the full story here
 
 
Court extends Mueller grand jury
BY LYDIA WHEELER AND MORGAN CHALFANT
Special counsel Robert Mueller’s Washington-based grand jury has been granted an extension days before it was set to expire by the head judge on the federal district court for the District of Columbia.
Read the full story here
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 
 
Trump says he may call a national emergency to build border wall
BY TAL AXELROD
 
President Trump said Friday that he is considering calling a national emergency to build a wall along the U.S.–Mexico border.
Read the full story here
 
 
Senate throws hundreds of Trump nominees into limbo
BY JORDAIN CARNEY
The Senate has sent hundreds of nominations back to the White House, throwing their fate into limbo. 
Read the full story here
 
 
Supreme Court to take up gerrymandering cases
BY LYDIA WHEELER
The Supreme Court has agreed to consider the constitutionality of partisan gerrymandering after punting the issue last term.
Read the full story here
 
 
House Homeland Security Committee chairman asks Nielsen to testify on ‘flawed’ border agenda
BY TAL AXELROD
Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the new chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, sent a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen Friday requesting her to testify in front of the committee regarding the Trump administration’s border security agenda.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump administration presses ahead with Alaskan drilling plan despite shutdown
BY TIMOTHY CAMA
The Trump administration will press forward with key steps toward opening more areas in northern Alaska to oil and natural gas drilling despite the ongoing partial government shutdown.
Read the full story here
 
 
House formally moves to intervene in ObamaCare lawsuit
BY NATHANIEL WEIXEL
House Democrats have officially filed a motion to intervene in defense of ObamaCare in court against a Republican-led lawsuit.
Read the full story here
 
 
Blockbuster jobs report puts fears of the economy's demise to rest
BY SEAN SNAITH
Opinion | Nine-and-a-half years into the economic expansion, to see job growth accelerating at this clip should allay fears that the economy has begun its initial descent in recession.
Read the full story here
 
 
End the shutdown with huge bipartisan immigration deal
BY JOSEPH MINARIK
Opinion | If the White House and new Congress pursued comprehensive reform in current talks, it could help them agree to finally reopen Uncle Sam.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Washington Post: A freshman, a viral video and a profanity revive Trump impeachment talk
BY ELISE VIEBECK AND MIKE DEBONIS
House Democratic leaders spent two years trying to keep talk of impeachment out of the headlines to win back their majority. All it took was a freshman lawmaker, a viral video and a curse word aimed at President Trump to put it right back.
Read the full story here
 
 
The New York Times: What the Shutdown Would Look Like if It Happened in Other Industries
BY KEITH COLLINS, ANJALI SINGHVI AND TROY GRIGGS
With the government in shutdown, a large number of federal employees have found themselves either on unpaid leave or working without pay. This is the effect the shutdown would have if the same number of people were laid off from American industries and companies.
Read the full story here
 
 
Bloomberg: Bolton Plans to Tell Israel That There’s No Timeline on Syria Pullout, Source Says
BY MARGARET TALEV AND NICK WADHAMS
U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton will tell Israeli leaders that there is no timetable for an American military pullout from Syria, two weeks after President Donald Trump’s announcement of a rapid withdrawal of U.S. forces.
Read the full story here
 
 
NBC News: For some Democrats, the real dirty word is 'impeachm---'
BY JONATHAN ALLEN
It didn't take long for newly empowered House Democrats to lose control of their message on the possible impeachment of President Donald Trump: less than a day.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Associated Press: New House Dems get early political lesson
BY LAURIE KELLMAN
The education of the star-studded class of House freshmen has begun. Lesson one: Speaking with the bluntness of a candidate can produce swift and uncomfortable results.
Read the full story here
 
  Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Email  
 
Did a friend forward you this email?
Sign up for The Hill Tipsheet    
 
 
 
You might like
 
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 
 
 
 
 
THE HILL
 
Privacy Policy  |  Manage Subscriptions  |  Unsubscribe  |  Email to a friend  |  Sign Up for Other Newsletters
 
The Hill 1625 K Street, NW 9th Floor, Washington DC 20006
©2016 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of News Communications, Inc.
 
 

沒有留言:

張貼留言