Trump is trying to blame Arnold for the inevitable death of ‘The Apprentice’; Trump finds something to like in the last Obama-era jobs numbers; Here’s how much the anti-Trump protests cost, at Trump paid-turnout rates; Milo Yiannopoulos grabs headlines in wake of Berkeley riot; The Daily 202: More companies back away from Donald Trump under pressure from customers; Kellyanne Conway’s claim of a ‘Bowling Green massacre’; What’s interesting about Conway’s ‘Bowling Green massacre’ is what came next; Can President Trump’s immigration ban survive?; Bipartisan Hill leaders warn White House on whistleblowers; Yes, signing those petitions makes a difference — even if they don’t change Trump’s mind; Trump might push to confirm his Supreme Court nominee quickly. That would cost him.;
 
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Trump’s administration isn’t very diverse. Photo ops make it glaringly obvious.
If the images aim to show a man of action, they also have delivered another unspoken message.
Trump is trying to blame Arnold for the inevitable death of ‘The Apprentice’
Trump may as well have asked Arnold to make Zubaz popular again.
 
Trump finds something to like in the last Obama-era jobs numbers
The president was a big-league critic of government-issued employment data during the campaign.
 
Here’s how much the anti-Trump protests cost, at Trump paid-turnout rates
Who paid $57.4 million to those protesters, anyway?
 
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Milo Yiannopoulos grabs headlines in wake of Berkeley riot
 
The Daily 202: More companies back away from Donald Trump under pressure from customers
But are the boycotts going too far?
 
Kellyanne Conway’s claim of a ‘Bowling Green massacre’
A top White House aide claimed a “massacre” that didn't happen. Here's what did happen.
 
What’s interesting about Conway’s ‘Bowling Green massacre’ is what came next
Did she get a pass on the inaccuracy in the way that her boss would?
 
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Can President Trump’s immigration ban survive?
A deep look at the constitutionality and historical precedent for Trump's immigration executive order.
 
Bipartisan Hill leaders warn White House on whistleblowers
There is strong bipartisan congressional support for federal employees who report wrongdoing
 
Yes, signing those petitions makes a difference — even if they don’t change Trump’s mind
But the difference they make isn't in others, but in those who sign. Here's the data.
 
Trump might push to confirm his Supreme Court nominee quickly. That would cost him.
If a president says a single sentence in public about his Supreme Court nominee, he reduces his odds of passing an important proposal through the Senate.
 
 
     
 
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