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The deep-blue state's primary elections will show how angry voters are at the status quo.
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A month after withdrawing from the state's Senate race, Gov. Janet Mills suggested she remained an option after the likely Democratic nominee, Graham Platner, faced a new scandal.
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Tuesday's Senate primary features two candidates with compelling personal stories. Both have stressed their independence.
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Newly published documents show Lord Mandelson and ministers' concerns about the prime minister and Labour MPs.
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(Second column, 11th story, link)
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The fund has drawn backlash from critics who said it was a scheme to reward President Trump's political allies with public benefits.
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(First column, 6th story, link)
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A federal jury last week convicted three people on felony conspiracy charges over their involvement in an anti-ICE protest in Spokane, Washington, last June. The "Spokane Three" are awaiting sentencing and face up to six years in prison for conspiracy to impede or injure ICE officers. They had attempted to block the transfer of a group of detained immigrants by sitting in front of a bus. Six of the nine protesters originally charged took plea deals, but the Spokane Three decided to fight the charges.
"If I had taken a plea deal, it would have essentially been me lying and saying that I did something that I didn't do. I didn't assault anybody," says Bajun Mavalwalla, a U.S. military veteran and one of the Spokane Three.
"What we have here is a really large reach of the conspiracy statute," adds journalist and author Aaron Glantz, highlighting that no officers were hurt in the June protest. "What happened was a relatively minor demonstration."
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An estimated 300 immigrants detained at the Delaney Hall ICE jail in Newark, New Jersey, are continuing a hunger and labor strike to demand their freedom. Amid ongoing protests, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill has deployed state police, who erected a barricade around the facility and have reportedly brutalized activists. Newark Mayor Ras Baraka has also imposed a nightly curfew around Delaney Hall until further notice.
Local investigative journalist Bob Hennelly joins Democracy Now! to talk about the ongoing hunger and labor strike, launched on May 22, and its historical implications in Newark and the rest of the country. In letters at the outset of their strike detailing the conditions in the ICE jail, detainees have "written something that I think historians will say is equivalent to the Declaration of Independence," says Hennelly, "because they so vividly describe the way they've been deprived of all the basic human rights that we've come to associate with this nation."
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President Trump told CNBC that he "couldn't care less" if the negotiations with Iran break down.
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(Second column, 3rd story, link)
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The documents will offer a fascinating internal insight into how government works, including the way information flows and disagreements.
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Here are the places that are expected to decide the midterm elections, according to the most recent ratings by the Cook Political Report.
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A federal judge wrote that the phrase, which also led to charges against the former F.B.I. director, James Comey, did not appear to constitute a true threat.
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(First column, 1st story, link)
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The government has published more than 1,000 pages of documents about the former US ambassador's appointment.
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The federal courts have long assumed that the government's lawyers are trustworthy. Now judges across the country are criticizing their lack of candor.
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Its unusual primary system, combined with scandal and a low-profile field, have made this year's race harder to predict.
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(First column, 5th story, link)
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Graham Platner, whose contest in Maine is a key to Democrats' hopes of winning the Senate, sought to discredit reports that he had exchanged sexual messages with women outside his marriage.
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Come November, the Republican Party will need the support of voters outside of President Trump's base, many of whom are deeply dissatisfied with the economy and the Iran war.
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Gov. Mikie Sherrill and other New Jersey elected officials have urged calm as demonstrators clashed with police while protesting conditions at the immigration detention center.
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(Second column, 10th story, link)
Related stories: PHOTOS: Protesters, ICE agents clash outside NJ detention center... Emergency curfew... Fears of travel chaos as Mullin weighs pulling customs officers from Newark...
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The agent was charged in Minnesota with assault and filing a false police report in the shooting of an immigrant from Venezuela.
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Follow President Trump's progress filling over 800 positions, among about 1,300 that require Senate confirmation, in this tracker from The Washington Post and the Partnership for Public Service.
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U.S. President Donald Trump fully backs Senate Republicans' police reform bill unveiled earlier on Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters at a briefing.
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