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The president said he wouldn't seek congressional approval for his expanding military offensive against cartels, but some in his party believe Congress should weigh in.
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The anti-tariff ad, which Trump pointed to in cutting off trade talks with Canada, uses several sound bites from an April 1987 speech, though not in the order President Ronald Reagan said them.
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(First column, 8th story, link)
Related stories: The one-minute advert that made him very angry...
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(First column, 9th story, link)
Related stories: The Abdication of Congress... The Don shits on America. Few in media care... 24% APPROVE... The East Wing is gone, and Trump turns to damage control... Archaeologist Torches Teardown With Scathing ISIS Comparison...
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President Donald Trump said Canada "fraudulently used" an ad that featured audio from a 1987 radio address by President Ronald Reagan criticizing tariffs.
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The president said he would bypass Congress rather than ask for approval for his military campaign against drug traffickers, even as he said it would expand from sea to land.
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(Third column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: Mexican President Sheinbaum Rejects Strikes Against Alleged Drug Boats...
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(Third column, 2nd story, link)
Related stories: Maduro boasts of 'thousands' of Russian anti-aircraft missiles...
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The list includes major tech and crypto companies.
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After months of restraint, President Trump's move to blacklist Lukoil and Rosneft will hit Russia where it hurts.
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President Donald Trump's sanctions against two of Russia's largest oil companies come as the European Union passes its 19th package targeting the energy sector.
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"The votes aren't there for redistricting," said a spokesman for the state's Senate GOP, the president's first major setback in his redistricting push ahead of next year's elections.
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President Trump wants to help the Chinese firm, but a top intel official told the Senate that ZTE cellphones may be used by the Chinese government to spy.
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