But privately, the Trump administration worked to hash out increasingly bitter differences.
View in [Browser]( | Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your address book.
[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Thursday, April 13, 2017
[NYTimes.com/Politics »](
[President Trump publicly chastised President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Wednesday.](
President Trump publicly chastised President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Wednesday. Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
Good Thursday morning,Â
Here are some of the stories making news in Washington and politics today:
- The Trump administration [publicly chastised President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia]( but privately worked to hash out increasingly bitter differences. At the same time, President Trump embraced NATO as an effective and vital force for peace and security.
- President Trump [backtracked from labeling China a currency manipulator]( said that he no longer wanted to eliminate the Export-Import Bank and suggested that he might retain the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve.
- A comment by President Trump, âI am my own strategist,â [was taken as ominous]( for the presidentâs chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, who is seen as increasingly isolated in the White House.
- A shell company created by Paul Manafort the same day he left the presidential campaign [quickly received $13 million in loans]( from businesses with Trump ties.
â The First Draft Team
HAVE A CONFIDENTIAL NEWS TIP?
Do you have the next big story? Want to share it with The New York Times? We offer several ways to get in touch with and provide materials to our journalists. [Learn More »](
ADVERTISEMENT
[Vietnam â67 Newsletter](
Examining Americaâs long war in Southeast Asia through the course of a single year.
[⢠Sign up »](
[Guarding Washingtonâs Most Powerful](
By NICHOLAS FANDOS
[The Diplomatic Security Service of the State Department protects Nikki R. Haley, the United States ambassador to the United Nations. The service also provides protection for visiting foreign dignitaries.](
The Diplomatic Security Service of the State Department protects Nikki R. Haley, the United States ambassador to the United Nations. The service also provides protection for visiting foreign dignitaries. Sam Hodgson for The New York Times
In a city obsessed with the trappings of power, they are the ultimate status symbol: the wire-wearing, black S.U.V.-driving protective crews that come with high-level government service.
So when it [came to light]( last week that the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, had ordered the United States Marshals Service to extend a full protective detail to Betsy DeVos, the education secretary, for as much as $1 million a month, many people began to wonder about the protective pecking order in the Trump era.
The answer, given the nature of the job, is difficult to know. Security forces are loath to discuss much about who they protect or what it costs, for fear, they say, of compromising their mission.
But when the billionaire Wilbur L. Ross Jr., the commerce secretary, goes to dinner at a fancy Georgetown restaurant, bodyguards sit nearby. When members of Congress practice in the early mornings in an Alexandria, Va., public park for their [Congressional Baseball Game]( plainclothes United States [Capitol Police]( are sitting there in a black S.U.V.
The secretary of the Interior Department, who rode a horse to his first day at work, turns to the [United States Park Police]( better known for patrolling the nationâs national parks, often on horseback. Protecting top government officials, from the president to the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, involves a patchwork of more than a dozen federal agencies and offices.
It may be easier to ask who in Washington does not have a protective detail. But it is possible, based on public records, news accounts and interviews with security officials, to sketch the rough outlines.
[Read more »](
[U.S. Takes Sharper Tone on Russiaâs Role in Syria](
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS AND DAVID E. SANGER
President Trumpâs hopes for an alliance faded as he and his administration publicly chastised President Vladimir V. Putin.
[At Meeting, Putin and Tillerson Find Very Little to Agree On](
By DAVID E. SANGER
Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson said after meeting President Vladimir V. Putin that Russia and the United States needed to âput an end to this steady degradation.â
[Russia Vetoes U.N. Resolution Condemning Syria Chemical Attack](
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
The resolution would have strengthened the ability of investigators to look into the attack that killed dozens of civilians. The United States blames Syriaâs president.
[Trump Reversals Hint at Sway of Wall Street Wing in White House](
By ALAN RAPPEPORT
Startling shifts on China and the Export-Import Bank and the possible reappointment of the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve show financiers may be gaining the upper hand over the populists.
[Trump Undercuts Bannon, Whose Job May Be in Danger](
By JEREMY W. PETERS AND MAGGIE HABERMAN
The president said Mr. Bannon was not the chief strategist of his campaign victory, distancing himself from the contentious hard-right adviser who is increasingly isolated in the White House.
[âI Screwed Upâ: Sean Spicer Apologizes for Holocaust Comments](
By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
Facing an outcry that included calls for his resignation, Sean Spicer said his remarks, in which he compared Hitler to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, were âinexcusable.â
[Manafort Borrowed From Businesses With Trump Ties](
By MIKE MCINTIRE
A shell company created by Paul Manafort the same day he left the presidential campaign quickly received $13 million in loans from the businesses.
[Scott Pruitt Faces Anger From Right Over E.P.A. Finding He Wonât Fight](
By CORAL DAVENPORT
Critics charge the agencyâs administrator should have challenged a legal finding that underpinned the Obama climate policies, but he refuses to budge.
[Court Approved Wiretap on Trump Campaign Aide Over Russia Ties](
By MATTHEW ROSENBERG AND MATT APUZZO
To get permission to wiretap Carter Page, an adviser to the Trump campaign, last summer, the Justice Department had to show probable cause that he was acting as a Russian agent.
[Suburban G.O.P. Voters Sour on Party, Raising Republican Fears](
By ALEXANDER BURNS AND JONATHAN MARTIN
A narrower-than-expected victory in Kansas and an even tougher contest next week in Georgia are highlighting Republicansâ troubles with affluent white voters.
[The Republican Won, but Voters Shifted Left in the Kansas Election](
By ALICIA PARLAPIANO
Kansasâ Fourth Congressional District shifted 24 points toward Democrats in Tuesdayâs special election.
[Who Is Ron Estes, Kansasâ Newest Congressman?](
By JULIE TURKEWITZ
Mr. Estes, the state treasurer and a Republican, won a special election on Tuesday for the seat vacated by Mike Pompeo, now the C.I.A. director.
[At Fox News, the Murdochs Assess the OâReilly Damage](
By EMILY STEEL AND MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Bill OâReilly has left Fox News for a vacation while his employers decide whether they should force him from the network over sexual harassment accusations.
Fact Check
[Trump Says He Didnât Meet Bannon Until 2016, but They Met in 2011](
By LINDA QIU
The president also repeated falsehoods about Hillary Clinton and contradicted his own earlier positions on Syria and chemical attacks.
[Choice of Pro-Immigration Economic Adviser Riles Base](
By ALAN RAPPEPORT
President Trump selected Kevin Hassett, who believes that immigration spurs economic growth, to lead his Council of Economic Advisers.
[Why âSorryâ Is Still the Hardest Word to Say](
By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
The representatives of United Airlines and the White House both found themselves grappling with an increasingly common ritual: the public apology.
[To Detain More Immigrants, Trump Will Speed Border Hiring](
By VIVIAN YEE AND RON NIXON
The internal memo also says the administration wants to find space to detain thousands more immigrants and to speed deportation cases.
[Riddle of Why Hitler Didnât Use Sarin Gas Remains Unsolved](
By WILLIAM J. BROAD
Theories abound as to why the deadly nerve agent was not used during World War II, which could have dealt a major blow to the Allies, who didnât know about the lethal arms.
Right and Left: Partisan Writing You Shouldnât Miss
Read about how the other side thinks. We have collected political writing from around the web and across ideologies.
Â
From the Right
â¢Â [Noah Rothman]( in [Commentary](
âA presidentâs âforeign-policy doctrineâ is a thing that becomes transcendentally relevant only in hindsight.â
Noah Rothman explains why itâs O.K. that there is no âTrump Doctrineâ when it comes to foreign policy. With the presidentâs intervention in Syria at odds with the âAmerica Firstâ message of his campaign, Mr. Rothman points out that âdoctrines develop out of crisesâ and are inherently âevolutionary.â [Read more »](
_____
Â
From the Left
â¢Â [Robert Kuttner]( in [American Prospect](
âWhile Americaâs biggest companies, especially those with reputational concerns, are singing kumbaya with a multicultural rainbow, these same companies are happily taking the tax cuts, the deregulation, and the anti-labor laws.â
It is tempting, Robert Kuttner writes, to see large corporations as a âfirewallâ serving to protect the country from President Trumpâs more illiberal policies. However, while companies in Silicon Valley and beyond may defy the president when it comes to immigration and identitarian issues, on economic policy, âcorporate elites are lined up at Trumpâs trough.â [Read more »](
_____
Â
[More selections »](
ADVERTISEMENT
HOW ARE WE DOING?
Weâd love your feedback on this newsletter. Please email thoughts and suggestions to [washington-newsletter@nytimes.com](mailto:washington-newsletter@nytimes.com?subject=Newsletter%20Feedback).
FOLLOW NYTimes
[Facebook] [FACEBOOK](
[Twitter] [@NYTPolitics](
Get more [NYTimes.com newsletters »]( Â
|
Get unlimited access to NYTimes.com and our NYTimes apps for just $0.99. [Subscribe »](
ABOUT THIS EMAIL
You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's First Draft newsletter.
[Unsubscribe]( | [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Change Your Email]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Contact]( | [Advertise](
Copyright 2017 The New York Times Company
620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018