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Thanksgiving Winter Storms Forecasted Across US—Here’s Where Travel Could Be Disrupted - Forbes

Thanksgiving Winter Storms Forecasted Across US—Here’s Where Travel Could Be Disrupted  Forbes

 

Israel-Lebanon ceasefire: Netanyahu says he is ready to implement deal - Reuters

Israel-Lebanon ceasefire: Netanyahu says he is ready to implement deal  Reuters

 

S&P 500 rises slightly following Trump tariff plans; Amgen weighs on Dow: Live updates - CNBC

S&P 500 rises slightly following Trump tariff plans; Amgen weighs on Dow: Live updates  CNBC

 

U.K. Plans to Strike Back at Trump Tariffs

Politico: “The British government has been wargaming how to respond to potential Trump tariffs on U.K. goods, with officials briefing ministers that they can repurpose former EU measures against the U.S. without any need for further investigation.”

 

Kaitlan Collins Gets Busier

“CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, already busy anchoring the network’s news-heavy 9 p.m. show, will take on another high-pressure role as chief White House correspondent,” the Washington Post reports.
“In doing so, she will become CNN’s first prime-time anchor to also serve as its top White House reporter.”

 

Harris Campaign Deeply in Debt

Staffers to Vice President Kamala Harris say her presidential campaign is $20 million in debt, The Hill reports.

 

Texas Won’t Examine Maternal Deaths After Abortion Ban

“The Texas committee that examines all pregnancy-related deaths in the state will not review cases from 2022 and 2023, the first two years after Texas’s near-total abortion ban took effect, leaving any potential deaths related to abortion bans during those years uninvestigated by the 23 doctors, medical professionals and other specialists who make up the group,” the Washington Post reports.

 

Mexico Hints at Retaliation After Trump Threatens Tariffs

“President Claudia Sheinbaum suggested Mexico could respond to Donald Trump’s threatened tariffs with levies of its own, warning the economic consequences would be dire,” Bloomberg reports.

 

Limits on Presidential Criminality Are Unclear

Charlie Savage: “The end of the two federal criminal cases against President-elect Donald Trump on Monday left momentous, unsettled questions about constraints on criminal wrongdoing by presidents, from the scope of presidential immunity to whether the Justice Department may continue to appoint outside special counsels to investigate high-level wrongdoing.”

 

They Showed Their Loyalty to Trump

President-elect Donald Trump has now picked more than a dozen political operatives, lawyers and elected officials who attended his criminal trial for key roles, the New York Times reports.

 

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