Oct. 31, 2017
Happy Halloween from Washington, where the White House sees nothing to fear in the first indictments in the special counsel’s Russia probe. Fred Lucas reports. Women gathering in Detroit appear afraid of conservative views, though, Kelsey Harkness discovers. Why is the real estate industry split on tax reform? Rachel del Guidice explains. Plus: Rachel Greszler on a bad tax idea,Tara Ross on liberals’ electoral mistake, Will Racke on a church versus George Washington, and our “Right Side of History” podcast on this exceptional nation. Watch out for the little ones tonight.
In 1824, Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams were both members of the same political party. But in every other election with a discrepancy between the electoral and popular votes, the losing candidate has been the Democrat.
At the first-ever Women's Convention, organized by leaders of the Women's March, the topic of abortion was front and center.
"This is the beginning of a process, but so far there is no allegation of any wrongdoing by Donald Trump," says The Heritage Foundation's John Malcolm.
Open debate of the right-to-work proposal was expected to move a step closer to reality Tuesday during a Sussex County Council meeting.
Real estate professionals from 34 states urge congressional Republicans to pass their tax reform package, saying it would "unleash economic growth, create jobs, and increase wages."
NBC's Chuck Todd mocked a Republican for believing in God-given rights, saying he "doesn't appear to believe in the Constitution as it's written."
While the top marginal tax rate may not apply to all that many individual taxpayers, it creates distortions that ripple across wide portions of the economy, affecting far more people than just the top income earners.
Church leaders say the memorials, which sit to the left and right of the altar, have become too divisive and might be discouraging parishioners from attending services.
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