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The retired general was passed over for Trump's national security adviser twice.
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Another shakeup in John Boltonâs National Security Council staff? Keith Kellogg, a retired Army general who had been chief of staff to previous national security advisers Michael Flynn and H.R. McMaster, will now serve as national security adviser to Vice President Mike Pence.
After Flynn resigned his post in February 2017, and before McMaster was appointed, Kellogg briefly served as acting NSA for President Trump. His name had been discussed as a possible successor to both Flynn and later to McMaster, though he has not been particularly popular among the NSA staff. Kellogg had been an adviser to Trumpâs presidential campaign.
Kellogg joins the VPâs staff after Penceâs initial pick for the job, Jon Lerner, withdrew shortly after getting the nod. Lerner, who is a deputy to United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley but has close professional ties with Pence chief of staff Nick Ayers, had run an anti-Trump PAC during the 2016 Republican primary.
Macron WatchâTuesday nightâs state dinner honoring French president Emmanuel Macron will feature dishes that incorporate French-influenced American food, like an onion soubise and jambalaya. Earlier in the day, First Lady Melania Trump will take her counterpart, Brigitte Macron, to the National Gallery of Art to view an exhibit of portraits from French painter Paul Cézanne.
Amy Henderson, [writing in the magazine]( reviewed what she called a âwell-curatedâ exhibition, the first to study exclusively the neo-impressionistâs portraiture work. âThe 60 portraits in this exhibition have been selected with a keen curatorial eye from private and public collections around the world,â she writes. âArranged chronologically, they convey how Cézanne's artistic voice evolved over time, ranging from early works when he used a palette knife and applied paint thickly, to later portraits when he lightened his paint to create a greater sense of luminosity. Cézanne was always searching for the new, and his portraits deftly reinforce the argument that he opened the door to 20th-century modernismâthat he was the figure whom Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso both reportedly called âthe father of us all.ââ
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Donald Trump and Emmanuel Macron plant a tree watched by Trump's wife Melania and Macron's wife Brigitte on the grounds of the White House April 23, 2018. The tree, a gift from Macron, comes from Belleau Woods, near the Marne River in France, where in June 1918 U.S. forces suffered 9,777 casualties, including 1,811 killed in the Belleau Wood battle during World War I.
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President Trumpâs nominee for secretary of state narrowly cleared a committee vote Monday, [paving the way for a full Senate vote]( to confirm Mike Pompeo for the top diplomat job later this week. For much of the day, it seemed that Pompeo would not receive the backing of the 21-member Senate Foreign Relations committee, where he faced strong opposition from ten Democrats and one Republican, Rand Paul.
But Paul changed his tune Monday afternoon after reportedly receiving a phone call from President Trump. âAfter calling continuously for weeks for Director Pompeo to support President Trumpâs belief that the Iraq War was a mistake, and that it is time to leave Afghanistan, today I received confirmation that Director Pompeo agrees with Donald Trump,â Paul tweeted prior to the vote.
Meanwhile, Pompeoâs fortunes on the Senate floor improved earlier in the day when two moderate Democrats, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Joe Donnelly of Indiana, announced they would support Pompeoâs nomination. That brought his number of presumptive Democratic âyesâ votes to three and all but assures his eventual confirmation by the Senate.
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Monday took Democrats to task for their opposition to Pompeoâs nomination, calling their resistance âpointless obstruction to score cheap political points with their base as a willful attempt to undermine American diplomacy.â
Cabinet WatchâPresident Trumpâs nominee to head the Department of Veterans Affairs seems to have hit a significant snag. [The Washington Post has more](
Senate lawmakers have postponed the confirmation hearing for Ronny L. Jackson, President Trumpâs nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, after top Republicans and Democrats raised concerns about his qualifications and oversight of the White House medical staff, White House and other administration officials were told Monday.
The development came just two days before Jackson, the White House physician, was scheduled to testify before the Senate Committee on Veteransâ Affairs and threw what was looking to be a difficult confirmation process into further jeopardy.
Profile of the Dayâ[âMcMaster and Commanderâ]( by Patrick Radden Keefe for the New Yorker.
One day after President Trump mistakenly claimed on Twitter that North Korea has âagreed to denuclearizationâ ahead of talks between Trump and Kim Jong-un, the White House struggled Monday to articulate what Trumpâs goals are for the talks and even what the administrationâs stated goal of âdenuclearizationâ means.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders declined to state to reporters whether the White House would accept anything short of a complete denuclearization before easing pressure on North Korea, saying only that âthe goal is denuclearizationâ and that they would maintain pressure until they saw Kim taking âconcrete actionsâ toward that end.
Asked to clarify further how Trump defines âdenuclearizationââfor months the White Houseâs central stated aim on Korean policyâSanders dodged. âIâm not going to negotiate with you guys,â Sanders said. âIâm going to leave that to the president and Kim Jong-un to walk through what some of those details would look like when that meeting takes place.â
The administration has maintained for months that the âmaximum pressureâ campaign, which is designed to isolate North Korea both diplomatically and economically from the international community, will not be lifted until North Korea commits to âcomplete and total denuclearizationââa demand that presumably includes the Kim regime giving up their current nuclear stockpile. But so far, Pyongyang has promised [no such thing](.
Song of the Dayâ [âStill Be Aroundâ by Uncle Tupelo](
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