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2018年1月8日 星期一

Tipsheet: Dem hopefuls flock to Iowa

 
 
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Dem hopefuls flock to Iowa
By Amie Parnes
 
Democrats with White House aspirations are flocking to Iowa.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio, Rep. Tim Ryan (Ohio), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) and Rep. Seth Moulton (Mass.) are among the Democrats who visited the Hawkeye state last year.

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley dropped in four times, while former Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander has visited the state on seven occasions in recent months. He also deployed his former campaign manager to Iowa to head up a field office for his voting rights organization.
Read the full story here
 
 
Listen to the Hillcast AM View: Trump’s Nashville speech could offer clues about NAFTA’s fate
By Alexis Simendinger
 
President Trump is slated to speak in Nashville as lawmakers plan to lay down specifics for immigration and spending negotiations. Meanwhile, the fallout from a tell-all book about the White House continues to distract Washington.
Listen to The Hill's podcast here
 
 
The laws of bipartisanship
By Judd Gregg
OPINION | The Republican Congress has used its last partisan bullet.

It was the reconciliation instructions under the budget acts for this year and the prior year that gave Republicans in the Senate the chance to pass meaningful legislation: First, the attempt to repeal ObamaCare with only 51 votes, and second the success of passing their tax reform bill with 51 votes.
Read the full story here
 
 
This week: Clock ticks toward shutdown deadline
By Cristina Marcos and Jordain Carney
Lawmakers return to Washington on Monday with just 11 days left until the next deadline to avoid a government shutdown.
Read the full story here
 
 
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Rush to defend Trump from book’s claims creates more debate
By Mallory Shelbourne
Trump administration officials on Sunday are playing defense for their boss against shocking allegations reported in a new book detailing the first year of Trump’s presidency.
Read the full story here
 
 
Tapper cuts off Miller after heated interview
By Mallory Shelbourne
CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday cut off a contentious interview with White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, as the two sparred about President Trump and the news network.
Read the full story here
 
 
Bannon praises Trump Jr as a 'patriot' and 'good man' after book criticism
By Rebecca Savransky
Former White House chief strategist Stephen Bannon in a new statement praised Donald Trump Jr. as a "patriot" and a "good man" and expressed "regret" for his delayed response to quoted criticism in a book released last week.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump takes new tack to weaken ObamaCare
By Nathaniel Weixel
The Trump administration is turning to regulations as their last, best hope of chipping away at ObamaCare in 2018, with congressional Republicans unlikely to pass full repeal.
Read the full story here
 
 
Blue-state officials plot response to GOP tax law
By Naomi Jagoda
Elected officials in high-tax Democratic-leaning states are looking at creative ways to prevent the new tax law from raising their residents’ bills.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump flexes foreign policy muscle as new year begins
By Rebecca Kheel
President Trump spent the first week of the year flexing his muscles on the world stage, strongly supporting Iranian protestors and sending the signal that foreign aid could be cut off to nations that differ too much from U.S. policies.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump’s success in year one
By Salman Al-Ansari
OPINION | America’s 45th President Donald Trump successfully concluded his first year in the Oval Office. Trump’s vision of “America First” sheds light on his main achievements. Let’s look at the ways Trump has been perhaps the most successful first year American president in modern U.S. history.
Read the full story here
 
 
Cannabis chaos — Sessions has no exit strategy for his war on drugs
By Andrew Freedman and Lewis Koski
OPINION | One of the great social and political experiments of this decade, marijuana legalization, faces its greatest existential threat: Jeff Sessions.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Washington Post: Fate of ‘dreamers’ set to dominate next round of budget talks
By Ed O'Keefe, Mike DeBonis and Erica Werner
Both sides agree that if President Trump and lawmakers can strike a deal that ends the impasse over the legal status of young immigrants, other obstacles to reaching a spending agreement could be resolved more quickly. But Democrats have balked at Trump’s demands to tie a decision to his pledge of building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, and the party is split over whether to force a government shutdown to get its way.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Wall Street Journal: Trump faces pivotal decisions on Iran sanctions
By Felicia Schwartz
The president must choose whether to extend U.S. sanctions relief to Iran under the 2015 nuclear deal.
Read the full story here
 
 
Reuters: In possible boon for White House, Fed ready to lay low as tax plan kicks in
By Howard Schneider and Jonathan Spicer
 
U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers have come to view Donald Trump’s tax overhaul as a short-term economic boost that will neither permanently supercharge the economy, as the president says, or cause an immediate disruption that would require a central bank response, as some analysts have warned.
Read the full story here
 
 
CNN: Will Trump campaign for GOP candidates in 2018 midterms?
By Rebecca Schatz
It's now 2018 and for both political parties, that means the focus is all on midterm elections.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Associated Press: On health care, Democrats are shifting to offense
By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
 
Democrats are shifting to offense on health care, emboldened by successes in defending the Affordable Care Act. They say their ultimate goal is a government guarantee of affordable coverage for all.
Read the full story here
 
 
 
 
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DAILY DOSE: Sneaky Blessings

Chabad.org
ב"ה

Sneaky Blessings

By Tzvi Freeman

Due to the limitations of your reality, some of your best friends can enter only incognito.

In fact, the really big ones sometimes sneak in disguised as ugly monsters and vicious enemies. Otherwise, the guards at the gate would never permit them entry.

These are the events optimists call "blessings in disguise."

Here's how to fire the guards: Expand your mind, expand your world and sincerely rejoice in whatever G‑d sends you. Then the blessings will be free to enter in all their glory.


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By Tzvi Freeman





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