Warren Is Preparing for 2020. So Are Biden, Booker, Harris and Sanders.




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Warren Is Preparing for 2020. So Are Biden, Booker, Harris and Sanders. 
Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, speaking in Nevada last month, is among the Democrats taking the clearest steps toward a possible run for president in 2020. (photo: Bridget Bennett/NYT)
Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin, The New York Times
Excerpt: "During a campaign-style tour of the West late last month, Senator Elizabeth Warren did not announce she was running for president. But in private events and public speeches, her message about 2020 was as clear as it was rousing."
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Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump arrive for a State Dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron and President Donald Trump at the White House in April 2018. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)
Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump arrive for a State Dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron and President Donald Trump at the White House in April 2018. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)

Jared Kushner's Family Firm Accused of Pushing Out Tenants
Bernard Condon and Garance Burke, Associated Press
Excerpt: "The hammering and drilling began just months after Jared Kushner's family real estate firm bought a converted warehouse apartment building in the hip, Williamsburg section of Brooklyn."
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Brett Kavanaugh and Mike Pence. (photo: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
Brett Kavanaugh and Mike Pence. (photo: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)

Comments by Former Clerks May Backfire on Trump's High Court Pick
Lawrence Hurley, Reuters
Hurley writes: "When it became clear that President Donald Trump was seriously considering nominating Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, the conservative judge's former law clerks swung into action as among his most energetic public cheerleaders."
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Teachers rally in Denver, Colorado, amid strikes this spring. A supreme court decision puts unions' funding at risk. (photo: David Zalubowski/AP)
Teachers rally in Denver, Colorado, amid strikes this spring. A supreme court decision puts unions' funding at risk. (photo: David Zalubowski/AP)

'We're Militant Again': US Teachers at Convention Galvanized by Wave of Strikes
Mike Elk, Guardian UK
Elk writes: "Despite school being out for the summer, teachers around the country aren't taking a break."
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David D. Smith, the chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, in 2011. (photo: Nicholas Griner/Baltimore Business Journal)
David D. Smith, the chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, in 2011. (photo: Nicholas Griner/Baltimore Business Journal)

As News Ownership Consolidates, Will Local TV Become More Partisan?
Christa Case Bryant, The Christian Science Monitor
Case Bryant writes: "Until recently, most Americans had likely never heard of Sinclair Broadcast Group. But the conservative network, which is seeking a $3.9 billion merger that would make it the most influential player in local TV, set off alarm bells this spring when it required all its anchors around the country to read a statement about the importance of unbiased journalism."
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The mother of Amir al-Nimra, 15, second from left, and her three daughters at Luay Kaheel's funeral wake in Gaza. (photo: Hosam Salem/Al Jazeera)
The mother of Amir al-Nimra, 15, second from left, and her three daughters at Luay Kaheel's funeral wake in Gaza. (photo: Hosam Salem/Al Jazeera)

'Like Twins': Gaza Mourns Teenage Boys Killed in Israeli Air Raid
Farah Najjar and Maram Humaid, Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "An Israeli air strike killed Luay Kaheel, 16 and Amir al-Nimra, 15, while they were playing on a rooftop of a building." 

Scott Pruitt. (photo: WP)
Scott Pruitt. (photo: WP)

Science Under Siege: Behind the Scenes at Trump's Troubled Environment Agency
Jeff Tollefson, Nature Magazine
Tollefson writes: "Uncertainty, hostility and irrelevance are now part of daily life for scientists at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency."
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