New impeachment evidence more directly links Trump to effort to pressure Ukraine
By Evan Halper, Jennifer Haberkorn and Noah Bierman Los Angeles Times
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By Evan Halper, Jennifer Haberkorn and Noah Bierman Los Angeles Times
By David G. SavageLos Angeles TimesWASHINGTON – Here are key developments that led to the Supreme Court case that will decide whether President Donald Trump was justified in seeking to end the Obama-era program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.
By Sonja SharpLos Angeles TimesLOS ANGELES — Every day for a year, Marsha Maus has trekked up Mulholland Highway to tend to her garden.Her yard — so green it looks neon — overflows with towering sunflowers and creeping vines. Her plot looks down on the 1960s-era section of Seminole Springs Mobile Home Park, a tidy subdivision tucked high in the Santa Monica Mountains.
By Nick Wadhams and Saleha MohsinBloomberg NewsWASHINGTON – President Donald Trump says he lifted his freeze on aid to Ukraine on Sept. 11, but the State Department had quietly authorized releasing $141 million of the money several days earlier, according to five people familiar with the matter.
By Doreen ChristensenSun SentinelIn a rare celestial event, Mercury will pass in front on the sun on Monday, Nov. 11.
By Eli Stokols Los Angeles Times
By David Lauter Los Angeles Times
By Roll Call StaffCQ-Roll CallWASHINGTON — The third-highest ranking official at the State Department arrived at the Capitol on Wednesday for his House impeachment deposition, where he is expected to testify that political considerations fueled the department's decision not to strongly defend the former ambassador to Ukraine from efforts by President Donald Trump and his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to oust her.
By Jacqueline CharlesMiami HeraldThe prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, annoyed that Harvard University has ignored repeated requests from his government to make amends for Antiguan slave labor contributions to the creation of Harvard Law School, has personally written to the university's president to get results.
By Ryan Teague Beckwith and Gregory KorteBloomberg NewsWASHINGTON – Democrats' argument for impeachment is straightforward: President Donald Trump ran a shadow foreign policy campaign to pressure Ukraine to launch investigations that would help him politically.To make their case, House investigators have called a number of participants in the effort, including career diplomats and others who can provide firsthand accounts.
By Rebekah AllenThe Dallas Morning NewsAUSTIN, Texas — Another student organization at the University of Texas is being shuttered after allegations of hazing.
By Louis SahagunLos Angeles TimesAt the urging of a controversial team of advisers, the Trump administration is mulling proposals to privatize national park campgrounds and further commercialize the parks with expanded Wi-Fi service, food trucks and even Amazon deliveries at tourist camp sites.
By Mark Z. BarabakLos Angeles TimesROCK HILL, S.C. – Laura and Lamont Williams live in a house divided.
By John TozziBloomberg News
By Keith Naughton Bloomberg News
By Sam Dean Los Angeles Times
By Daniela AltimariThe Hartford CourantHARTFORD, Conn. — Civil liberties groups are raising constitutional questions about the arrest of two University of Connecticut students caught on video repeatedly uttering a racist slur on the Mansfield, Connecticut, campus.
By Erik WassonBloomberg NewsWASHINGTON — The House Democrats leading the impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump demanded that a former White House official appear for his scheduled hearing Monday, dismissing his attempt to challenge a subpoena in court.
By Alex WigglesworthLos Angeles TimesActress Felicity Huffman was released Friday from federal prison after serving most of a 14-day sentence for paying to rig her daughter's university entrance exam as part of the wide-ranging college admissions scandal.
By Karl W. SmithBloomberg NewsElizabeth Warren's $800 billion plan to improve public education, like many of her plans, is admirable in its ambitions but misguided in its approach. If the federal government is going to spend more money on schools, then Americans should be allowed more choice about which schools their children attend.