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Thursday, August 24, 2017
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[A Border Patrol officer on a road along the border with Mexico in Nogales, Ariz., this year.](
A Border Patrol officer on a road along the border with Mexico in Nogales, Ariz., this year. Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Good Thursday morning,Â
Here are some of the stories making news in Washington and politics today:
- President Trump [has widened a rift with his own party]( by threatening a government shutdown over his long-promised border wall and attacking lawmakers whose votes he needs heading into a crucial legislative period.
- Mr. Trumpâs speech on Wednesday in Reno, Nev., [was a day-and-night contrast to his speech on Tuesday]( in Phoenix, where he ignored his prepared remarks.
- Furious with Mr. Trumpâs reaction to the Charlottesville protests, four groups of rabbis denounced him, [saying they would not participate in a nonpartisan holiday tradition](.
- Detested by some and admired by others, Joe Arpaio, the 85-year-old crusader against illegal immigration, [finds himself thrust into the political fray]( by the prospect of a Trump pardon.
- Thanks to migration, adaptation, pop culture and commerce, the Spanish language [endures in the United States]( regardless of any effort to control it.
- A federal judge [blocked Texas from enforcing]( its revamped voter identification law, ruling that the legislatureâs attempt to loosen the law perpetuated discrimination against black and Hispanic voters.
â The First Draft Team
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The Upshot
[How Many Americans Would Pass an Immigration Test Endorsed by Trump?](
By QUOCTRUNG BUI
President Trump this month endorsed legislation that would [effectively cut immigration to the United States by half](. The bill, known as the [Raise Act]( would sharply reduce the share of people admitted through family ties and create a skills-based system that scores applicants on factors including age, education, income, job prospects and proficiency in English.
The Senate sponsors of the bill say their system, modeled on merit systems used by Canada and Australia, would make the United States more competitive. If passed â and immigration overhaul has defied decades of attempts â it would replace standards largely established in the Johnson administration.
[Read more »](
Â
[Federal Electricity Study Hints at Future Support for Coal](
By BRAD PLUMER
The Energy Department report says the current grid is robust but suggests additional support for the ailing coal and nuclear industries.
[Coach Bronco Mendenhall leading Virginia onto the field in 2016. The ESPN announcer Robert Lee had been scheduled to call the Virginia-William and Mary game in Charlottesville on Saturday.]( [ESPN Pulls a Broadcaster, Robert Lee, and Encounters a Storm](
By MARC TRACY
A decision that a broadcaster who shares a name with the Confederate general should not call a Virginia game in Charlottesville has been met with criticism.
[Judge A. Wallace Tashima in 2012. He ruled on Tuesday that the decision to end a Mexican-American studies program in Tucson was âmotivated by a desire to advance a political agenda by capitalizing on race-based fears.â]( [Tucsonâs Mexican Studies Program Was a Victim of âRacial Animus,â Judge Says](
By MAGGIE ASTOR
A federal judge ruled that state officialsâ actions were racially driven when they ended a Mexican-American studies program in Tucsonâs public schools.
[Senator Robert Menendez arrived at Federal Court in Newark on Tuesday. On some days this fall, Mr. Menendez will have to choose between attending his corruption trial and casting votes in the Senate.]( [Menendez Is Denied Reprieve From Corruption Trial to Cast Senate Votes](
By NICK CORASANITI
Senator Robert Menendez had requested that his trial be delayed until after the Senate session in September, or postponed on days when major votes were taking place.
[Prime Minister Najib Razak of Malaysia in Beijing in May.]( [Malaysian Leader in Billion-Dollar Scandal Is Invited to White House](
By GARDINER HARRIS
The visit by Prime Minister Najib Razak promises to bestow legitimacy on him and illustrates what critics say is the Trump administrationâs disregard for corruption.
[An Exxon Mobil refinery in Billings, Mont. in 2016. A new paper by two Harvard researchers who reviewed nearly 200 documents representing the companyâs research and public statements found that the company largely misled the public on the science explaining climate change.]( [Exxon Misled the Public on Climate Change, Study Says](
By JOHN SCHWARTZ
A new paper argues that Exxon Mobil âcontributed quietly to the scienceâ of climate change âand loudly to raising doubts about it.â
[A coal pile at the NRG WA Parish electrical generating station near Houston. It uses carbon capture and storage technology.]( [What âClean Coalâ Is â and Isnât](
By BRAD PLUMER
President Trumpâs comments about âclean coalâ in Phoenix betrayed a common confusion about the term.
[During a rally in Phoenix on Tuesday, President Trump blamed the news media for the countryâs deepening divisions, saying it had failed to properly report his remarks on the violence in Charlottesville, Va.]( [U.N. Panel Condemns Trumpâs Response to Charlottesville Violence](
By SEWELL CHAN AND NICK CUMMING-BRUCE
The anti-racism committee invoked its urgent warning procedures for the first time since an outbreak of killings last year in Burundi.
[Alaskaâs Permafrost Is Thawing](
By HENRY FOUNTAIN
The loss of frozen ground in Arctic regions is a striking result of climate change. And it is also a cause of more warming to come.
[Justice Bernd Zabel last year. The judge said he had worn a âMake America Great Againâ hat as a joke.]( [Canadian Judge Faces Possible Discipline for Wearing Trump Cap](
By CATHERINE PORTER
Justice Bernd Zabel of Ontario faced a disciplinary panel because he arrived in his Hamilton courtroom wearing a red âMake America Great Againâ ball cap.
[Gerard Baker, the editor in chief of The Wall Street Journal.]( [Wall Street Journal Editor Admonishes Reporters Over Trump Coverage](
By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM
In internal emails, Gerard Baker described the draft of an article about the presidentâs rally in Phoenix as âcommentary dressed up as news reporting.â
[The memorial will be cleaned and repaired, and educational space will be added beneath it.]( [Americaâs Most Popular Statues](
By SHIVANI VORA
Statues honoring the Confederacy have gotten a lot of attention lately. But the statues that draw millions are largely monuments to freedom.
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.
From the Right
â¢Â [Thomas Joscelyn]( and [Bill Roggio]( in [The Weekly Standard](
âWith his decision, President Trump has ensured that the worst-case scenario wonât unfold. But that is a long way from victory.â
Mr. Trumpâs speech last night may have indeed appeased the neoconservatives listening. Mr. Joscelyn and Mr. Roggio believe that President Trump deserves credit for his decision to increase troop levels in Afghanistan, writing that âa complete withdrawal would have been disastrous.â They are cautious, however, and warn the commander in chief that he must âdrastically reassess Americaâs jihadist enemies.â [Read more »](
_____
From the Left
â¢Â [Fred Kaplan]( in [Slate](
âBut nowhere in the speech did Trump lay out how the pounding might lead to the winning of the war and the settling of the peace.â
Mr. Kaplan heard little in the way of an actual plan to win in Afghanistan on Monday night. As the president made clear in his speech, he is more interested in âkilling terroristsâ than ânation-building.â Which leads Mr. Kaplan to wonder, âWhat is he going to do about the Afghan nation?â After all, âkilling is only the beginning of winning a war.â [Read more »](
_____
[More selections »](
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