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8:35 PM ET, June 26, 2017

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
New York Times:
Senate Health Bill Would Leave 22 Million More Uninsured, C.B.O. Says  —  WASHINGTON — The Senate bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act would increase the number of people without health insurance by 22 million by 2026, a figure that is only slightly lower than the 23 million more uninsured …
RELATED:
CBO's Publications:
H.R. 1628, Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017  —  CBO and JCT estimate that enacting the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017 would reduce federal deficits by $321 billion over the coming decade and increase the number of people who are uninsured by 22 million in 2026 relative to current law.
Sarah Kliff / Vox:
Page 48 is the most important page in the CBO report  —  This is the web version of VoxCare, a daily newsletter from Vox on the latest twists and turns in America's health care debate.  Like what you're reading?  Sign up to get VoxCare in your inbox here.  —  The Congressional Budget …
Ezra Klein / Vox:
The most devastating passage in the CBO's report on the Senate health bill  —  The CBO says “few low-income people would purchase any plan” under GOP health bill.  —  The Congressional Budget Office has released its analysis of the Senate GOP's Better Care Reconciliation Act, and it's a bloodbath.
Ron Johnson / New York Times:
Where the Senate Health Care Bill Fails  —  Speaking at a rally for his wife's presidential campaign last year, Bill Clinton called Obamacare “the craziest thing in the world.”  As he put it, “The people who are out there busting it, sometimes 60 hours a week, wind up with their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half.”
Dan Diamond / Politico:
CBO score sure to add to McConnell's headaches  —  The budget office is poised to tell Senate Republicans their health bill will leave millions more uninsured than Obamacare.  —  The CBO is poised to tell Senate Republicans this week that their health plan will leave millions more uninsured …
Discussion: Axios, ABC News, The Outline and CBS Philly
Sarah Kliff / Vox:
This chart shows the stunning trade-off at the heart of the GOP health plan
Discussion: ThinkProgress
Jeanne Lambrew / The Hill:
Budget estimate shows GOP bill is about tax cuts for rich, not healthcare
Discussion: Hullabaloo
The Hill:
Senate adds penalty for going uninsured to healthcare bill
Discussion: RedState and The Daily Caller
Matthew Wisner / Fox Business:
Medicaid will bankrupt every state if we don't have cost controls: Mike Huckabee
Olivia Beavers / The Hill:
Huckabee: Senate GOP ‘on the pathway to making some major blunders’ with healthcare bill
Discussion: RedState
Adam Cancryn / Politico:
CBO: 22 million more uninsured under Senate health bill
Discussion: The FADER, Forbes and TheStreet
Brian Stelter / CNNMoney:
Three journalists leaving CNN after retracted article  —  Three CNN journalists, including the executive editor in charge of a new investigative unit, have resigned after the publication of a Russia-related article that was retracted.  —  Thomas Frank, who wrote the story in question …
RELATED:
Erik Wemple / Washington Post:
Three CNN employees resign over retracted story on Russia ties  —  Thomas Frank, a reporter for “CNN Investigates,” last Thursday appeared to have a compelling exclusive on the story of the year.  The Senate Intelligence Committee, reported Frank, was investigating a Russian investment fund …
New York Times:
Supreme Court Will Hear Travel Ban, Which Is Partly Reinstated  —  WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday cleared the way for President Trump to prohibit the entry of some people into the United States from countries he deems dangerous, but the justices imposed strict limits on Mr. Trump's travel ban …
RELATED:
Mark Sherman / AP News:
Trump travel ban partly reinstated; fall court arguments set  —  WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court is allowing the Trump administration to go forward with a limited version of its ban on travel from six mostly Muslim countries, a victory for President Donald Trump in the biggest legal controversy of his young presidency.
Discussion: Fusion and Shakesville
Thomas Phippen / The Daily Caller:
Justice Thomas Calls Out The Supreme Court For Not Believing In The Second Amendment
Discussion: SARAH PALIN
Robert Barnes / Washington Post:
Supreme Court allows limited version of Trump's travel ban to take effect and will consider case in fall
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
Supreme Court turns down case on right to carry guns
Robert Barnes / Washington Post:
Supreme Court sides with religious institutions in a major church-state decision
Max Ehrenfreund / Washington Post:
A ‘very credible’ new study on Seattle's $15 minimum wage has bad news for liberals  —  When Seattle officials voted three years ago to incrementally boost the city's minimum wage up to $15 an hour, they'd hoped to improve the lives of low-income workers.  Yet according to a major new study …
RELATED:
FiveThirtyEight:
Seattle's Minimum Wage Hike May Have Gone Too Far  —  As cities across the country pushed their minimum wages to untested heights in recent years, some economists began to ask: How high is too high?  —  Seattle, with its highest-in-the-country minimum wage, may have hit that limit.
NBER:
Minimum Wage Increases, Wages, and Low-Wage Employment: Evidence from Seattle  —  Ekaterina Jardim, Mark C. Long, Robert Plotnick, Emma van Inwegen, Jacob Vigdor, Hilary Wething  —  NBER Working Paper No. 23532 … You may purchase this paper on-line in .pdf format from SSRN.com ($5) for electronic delivery.
Economic Policy Institute:
The “high road” Seattle labor market and the effects of the minimum wage increase: Data limitations …
Discussion: The Atlantic and Mother Jones
Devlin Barrett / Washington Post:
FBI has questioned Trump campaign adviser Carter Page at length in Russia probe  —  FBI agents have repeatedly questioned former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page about his contacts with Russians and his interactions with the Trump campaign, according to people familiar with the investigation.
Greg Sargent / Washington Post:
Trump's latest bizarre tweets about Russia just left him badly exposed  —  THE MORNING PLUM:  —  In recent days, President Trump has adopted a fiendishly clever new line on the ongoing Russia probes: He will fully acknowledge that Russia did try to sabotage our election …
RELATED:
Jordan Fabian / The Hill:
Trump believes Russia ‘probably’ behind election hacking
Discussion: ABC News
Caroline Kenny / CNN:
Trump confirms he called health care bill ‘mean’
Numbers / Pew Research Center:
Support for Same-Sex Marriage Grows, Even Among Groups That Had Been Skeptical  —  For first time, as many Republicans favor as oppose gay marriage  —  Two years after the Supreme Court decision that required states to recognize same-sex marriages nationwide, support for allowing gays …
Discussion: NPR, Hit & Run, IJR and Shakesville
RELATED:
Josh Dawsey / Politico:
Kushner adds powerhouse lawyer Abbe Lowell to legal team  —  Jared Kushner has hired Abbe Lowell, one of the country's leading criminal defense lawyers, to represent him in the special counsel's probe of potential Russian collusion with the Trump campaign and his financial dealings, as well as in separate congressional inquiries.
Discussion: BuzzFeed, Axios and Talking Points Memo
Matt Shuham / Talking Points Memo:
THIS CHART: Premiums Shoot Up For Older Americans Under Senate Obamacare Repeal Bill  —  The Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive think tank, on Monday released an analysis of the effects of Senate Republicans' Obamacare repeal bill on health care premiums.
RELATED:
Jessie Hellmann / The Hill:
American Medical Association: ObamaCare repeal violates ‘do no harm’ rule
Daily Mail:
College fires professor who said Otto Warmbier ‘deserved’ to die because he was a ‘young, rich clueless, white male’ who ‘never had to face the consequences of his actions’  — University of Delaware has cut ties with professor Katherine Dettwyler after she said Otto Warmbier ‘deserved’ to die for stealing a poster in North Korea
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
China's All-Seeing Surveillance State Is Reading Its Citizens' Faces  —  In vast social-engineering experiment, facial-recognition systems crunch data from ubiquitous cameras to monitor citizens  —  SHENZHEN—Gan Liping pumped her bike across a busy street, racing to beat a crossing light before it turned red.
Discussion: Axios
 
 
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 More Items: 
Associated Press:
The Latest: Trump hails India's Modi for boosting economy
Discussion: Axios
Christopher M. Matthews / Wall Street Journal:
The Shale Revolution's Staggering Impact in Just One Word: Plastics
Reuters:
Asylum seekers in Canada who fled Trump now trapped in legal limbo
Edward-Isaac Dovere / Politico:
New Orleans mayor fights back against Trump's agenda
Discussion: SARAH PALIN
Justin Gillis / New York Times:
Carbon in Atmosphere Is Rising, Even as Emissions Stabilize
Discussion: New York Magazine and The Week
 Earlier Items: 
Joe Otterson / Variety:
TV Ratings: ‘Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly’ Slips Again in Week 4
Discussion: Breitbart, IJR, AOL and The Daily Caller
Sarah Kliff / Vox:
6 Nobel Prize-winning economists announce opposition to Senate health bill
Discussion: bradford-delong.com
Mat Honan / BuzzFeed:
Amazon's New Echo Show Is Very Cool And A Little Creepy
Travis M. Andrews / Washington Post:
Audiences of Broadway's graphic portrayal of ‘1984’ faint and vomit
Jeffrey Toobin / New Yorker:
The National Enquirer's Fervor for Trump
 

 
From Mediagazer:

The New York Times Company:
The New York Times names Dick Stevenson as Washington bureau chief; Stevenson has been at the paper for nearly 40 years and Washington editor since 2021

Caitlin Huston / The Hollywood Reporter:
Internal memo: Hearst Magazines president announces layoffs as part of a decision to “reallocate resources” to “continue our focus on digital innovation”

Ayodeji Rotinwa / Columbia Journalism Review:
A look at the Agora Center for Research, a Ugandan newsroom sitting between activism and investigative reporting, posting its work on various social media sites

 
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