網頁

2018年9月8日 星期六

News Alert: The year the party machines broke

 
 
View in your browser
 
News Alert
Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Email
 
The year the party machines broke
2018 marks the demise of the big-city Democratic machine.

For centuries, those storied machines dominated America’s largest cities, driving volunteers through neighborhoods and delivering voters to the polls.

But for the last several years, those machines have come under intense pressure, from a rising generation of progressive and minority activists and from rampant scandals of corruption and rot -- twin factors that are driving the demise of the last of the country’s powerful political bosses.
Read the full story here
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 
 
 
 
  Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Email  
 
Did a friend forward you this email?
Sign up for News Alerts  
 
 
 
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.
 
 

Tipsheet: The year the party machines broke

 
 
View in your browser
 
The Hill Tipsheet
Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Email
 
The year the party machines broke
BY REID WILSON
 
2018 marks the demise of the big-city Democratic machine.

For centuries, those storied machines dominated America’s largest cities, driving volunteers through neighborhoods and delivering voters to the polls. But for the last several years, those machines have come under intense pressure, driving the demise of the last of the country’s powerful political bosses.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump in good shape to secure second Supreme Court confirmation victory
BY JORDAIN CARNEY AND LYDIA WHEELER
 
Brett Kavanaugh is in good shape for winning confirmation to the Supreme Court following a week of hearings and some tough questioning from Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Read the full story here
 
 
Trump gets good news on wages
BY VICKI NEEDHAM 
A new report from the Labor Department on Friday showed a significant hike in wages, providing a bolt of good news to President Trump and congressional Republicans less than two months before the midterms.
Read the full story here
 
 
Cohen seeks to vacate hush-money deal with Stormy Daniels
BY JOHN BOWDEN
Michael Cohen's shell company has reportedly moved to vacate a 2016 nondisclosure agreement with adult-film star Stormy Daniels, requesting that she return the $130,000 she received as part of the deal.
Read the full story here
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 
 
Papadopoulos sentenced to 14 days in jail in Mueller probe
BY MORGAN CHALFANT
Former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos has been sentenced to 14 days in federal prison and one year supervised release for lying to FBI investigators about his Russia contacts. "I made a terrible mistake for which I paid dearly,” Papadopoulos said in court on Friday.
Read the full story here
 
 
DNC: Papadopoulos's UK contact may be dead
BY JOHN BOWDEN
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) on Friday raised the prospect that the London-based professor who told former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos that Russia had "dirt" on Hillary Clinton may be dead.
Read the full story here
 
 
Booker defies GOP warning, releases another batch of 'confidential' Kavanaugh docs
BY JORDAIN CARNEY
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) is releasing another round of "confidential" paperwork from Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's work as a White House lawyer, despite the threat of a potential ethics investigation.
Read the full story here
 
 
7 times Obama hit Trump in speech
BY MAX GREENWOOD AND PETER SULLIVAN
Former President Obama ripped President Trump on the economy and a laundry list of other issues during a fiery address on Friday. From taxes to Russia and Vladimir Putin, here are seven of the most prominent examples
Read the full story here
 
 
Apple bans Infowars app from store
BY JOHN BOWDEN
Apple has permanently banned InfoWars' app from its app store, just weeks after the tech giant announced it was monitoring the right-wing conspiracy newscast app for possible content policy violations.
Read the full story here
 
 
NYT blasts Trump's call for DOJ to investigate anonymous op-ed
BY TAL AXELROD
The New York Times came out swinging Friday against President Trump’s call for the Department of Justice to investigate the identity of the anonymous senior administration official who published a blistering op-ed critical of the president in the paper.
Read the full story here
 
 
The glory days may be dead and gone for social media giants
BY LIZ PEEK
OPINION | Congress and customers can no longer assume that competition and the kind of disruption we associate with new technologies will keep them honest. Victims of their success, social media companies have become way too big to be governed by the marketplace.
Read the full story here
 
 
What Puerto Rico’s death toll really tells us
BY NICOLETTE LOUISSAINT
OPINION | Policymakers, emergency management officials and private sector partners should fight for the sustained investment necessary to tackle issues in emergency preparedness. Lives depend on it and we cannot ignore the facts any longer.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Associated Press: Echoes of Watergate in Trump tumult
By Calvin Woodward and Nancy Benac
The White House seethes with intrigue and backstabbing as aides hunt for the anonymous Deep (state) Throat among them. A president feels besieged by tormentors — Bob Woodward is driving him crazy — so he tends his version of an enemies list, wondering aloud if he should rid himself of his attorney general or the special prosecutor or both.
Read the full story here
 
 
CNN: Obama and Trump fight for America's soul
By Stephen Collinson
Just as Barack Obama was warning that America is in the grip of a politics of fear that undermines norms and political accountability, President Donald Trump was unleashing his latest assault on traditions of governance that underpin the nation's democracy.
Read the full story here
 
 
The New York Times: Congressional G.O.P. Agenda Quietly Falls Into Place Even as Trump Steals the Spotlight
By Nicholas Fandos
 
On one end of Pennsylvania Avenue this week, President Trump and his closest advisers labored to beat back perceptions, fueled by an anonymous essay in The New York Times and a bruising new book by Bob Woodward, that he had all but lost control of the presidency from within. He lashed out anew at his attorney general, shouted “TREASON” and demanded investigations of his detractors.

But as he raged, Republicans in the Senate were pressing steadily through angry liberal protests and Democratic perjury traps toward perhaps the most lasting impact of the Trump era: a conservative shift in the balance of the Supreme Court capable of shaping the country for a generation.
Read the full story here
 
 
The Washington Post: Ryan, McConnell try to coax Trump away from shutdown — using props and flattery
By Damian Paletta, Erica Werner and Josh Dawsey
 
The top two Republicans in Congress arrived at the White House this week armed with props aimed at flattering and cajoling President Trump out of shutting down the government at the end of this month.
Read the full story here
 
 
Bloomberg News: Trump Signals He's Ready to Go All-In Against China on Tariffs
By Andrew Mayeda, Shannon Pettypiece, and Mark Niquette
President Donald Trump is raising the stakes in his gamble that the world will line up behind the U.S. to take on China over trade.
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.