US added 148000 jobs in December, in lagging finish to year of strong growth


Everyone seems to be hiring. But not everywhere. (Photo by Logan Cyrus for The Washington Post)

The U.S. economy added 148,000 jobs in December after a year of steady hiring, missing expectations for a larger last-minute surge, the government reported Friday.

The unemployment rate stayed at 4.1 percent last month, the lowest point since 2001. Wages continued their slow climb, rising by 9 cents to $26.63. That’s a 2.5 percent increase since December 2016 (and still below pre-recession levels).

President Trump’s first year in the White House brought healthy growth and 2.1 million new jobs, a slight drop from 2.2 million positions created during Obama’s last year in office, government estimates showed Friday.

The average number of jobs employers added each month in 2017 was 173,000, compared to the previous year’s 187,000.

One dark spot was retail, which lost 20,000 jobs in December, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. About 67,000 positions vanished from stores in 2017, a sharp reversal from the 203,000 jobs that were added in 2016.

“That’s a notoriously volatile number around the holiday season, but it also reflects in part that increasing number of sales are coming from e-commerce and not brick and mortar stores,” said David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide. “That’s part of a longer term decline in that sector.”

Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta said in a statement Friday that the December report reflected “steady growth.”

“With President Trump signing tax reform into law, 2018 will continue last year’s successes and, we hope, bring needed increases in wages and labor force participation,” he said. “Job creation, wage growth, and retirement savings drive prosperity and financial security.  Strong growth in all is necessary.”

Manufacturing saw strong gains in December, adding 25,000 jobs. The industry generated 196,000 jobs last year, compared to a loss of 16,000 positions in 2016.

Analysts had predicted between 200,000 and 250,000 new positions would be created in December.

“It’s certainly disappointing, but we’re still topping off a strong year for job creation, said Mike Loewengart, vice of president of investment strategy at E*TRADE, a financial services company in New York.

The BLS report still sends a promising message to job seekers: Employers will be increasingly desperate for your applications in 2018. And while wages stayed flat in 2017, the unemployment rate sank at a faster pace, which gives economists hope that raises are on the horizon.

“There’s almost one job open for every unemployed person,” said Dan North, chief economist at Euler Hermes North America, a credit insurance firm.

There are now six million vacancies in the United States and 6.6 million unemployed people, to be more precise. From January to November, the economy added 1.9 million jobs.

However, companies nationwide keep struggling to fill roles, citing tight labor markets, retiring baby boomers and failed drug tests. Factories, hospitals, contractors and eateries, among other employers, face this trouble.

“Restaurants are finding it extremely challenging to find workers,” Sonia Riggs, president and chief executive of the Colorado Restaurant Association, said in an email. “Many have even eliminated drug testing because finding employees is so difficult.”

Employers increasingly are turning to on-the-job training to find and retain employees — but that could be keeping wages down.

“In manufacturing and metals, especially, employers have been saying to me, ‘I could grow faster if I could find somebody, anybody,’ ” said North, the economist. “They’ll hire whoever they can find, pay them a low wage and train them up.”

Roughly 10,000 baby boomers turn 65 each day, and not enough young workers are cycling in to replace them.

One forecast from Goldman Sachs predicted the figure will dip to 3.5 percent by the end of next year, the lowest since 1969.

“Such a scenario would take the U.S. labor market into territory almost never seen outside of a major wartime mobilization,” Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius wrote in November.

Economists can’t agree on why wages haven’t lifted with the demand for workers. As paid training spreads and more workers master skills that boost their productivity, paychecks should grow too, as companies compete for workers, said Josh Wright, chief economist at iCIMS, a hiring software company.

“We’ll see more turnover,” he said. “Employers will be poaching more workers, and if workers feel undervalued, thinking, ‘I should have gotten that raise,’ they’re going to make a move.”

That could be especially true in health care, which drove much of the job growth in 2017 and doesn’t appear to be slowing down.

Nurses, physician assistants, home health aides and physical therapists are among the country’s fastest-growing jobs as the population ages.

While manufacturing has enjoyed a four-month growth streak, reaching an eight-year high in November (125,000 jobs), analysts expect the sector to remain a sliver of the economy, compared to service-based work.

But the hiring blitz hasn’t touched every corner of the country. West Virginia, where mining jobs have faded in recent decades, still has one of the highest jobless rates in the country (5.3 percent), and Ohio, which was hit hard by the manufacturing downturn, continues to grapple with a higher-than-average share of unemployed people (4.8 percent).

“We can’t just say everything is roses,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.

People in areas where opportunities have declined are showing less desire to pack up and leave. In 2017, only 11.2 percent of Americans relocated, the smallest share since the Census began tracking it in 1948.  Of those who moved, fewer than a fifth said they left for an employment-related reason.

Read more:

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Democratic White House hopefuls attack Sessions over marijuana policy change

Moments after Attorney General Jeff Sessions made it easier for federal marijuana laws to be enforced in states where possession and use of the substance is legal, the drumbeat began. One by one, Democrats from likely to dark horse candidates for their party’s 2020 presidential nomination denounced Sessions’ move.

By the end of the  day, there was unanimous support among these ambitious Democrats in supporting the states’ rights to legalize marijuana without federal interference — the stance of the Obama administration. It’s a telling sign of just how popular the issue is with the party’s base.

The first statement Thursday came from Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), a co-sponsor of a bill that, among multiple reforms, would change federal policy concerning medical marijuana use.

“Parents should be able to give their sick kids the medicine they need without having to fear that they will be prosecuted,” said Gillibrand. “Veterans should be able to come home from combat and use the medicine they need without having to fear they will be prosecuted. This is about public health, and it’s about reforming our broken criminal justice system that throws too many minorities in prison for completely nonviolent offenses.”

Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), another co-sponsor of the CARERS Act, but who favors legalizing marijuana outright, said in a statement and a floor speech that Sessions was “determined to revive the failed War on Drugs,” and needed to be stopped. (New Jersey may legalize marijuana use this year, after a new Democratic governor is sworn in next week.)

“History has shown that our deeply broken drug laws disproportionately harm low-income communities and communities of color and cost us billions annually in enforcement, incarceration, and wasted human potential, without making us any safer,” said Booker. “This unjust, backwards decision is wrong for America, and will prove to be on the wrong side of history.”

Rep. John Delaney (D-Md.), who launched a 2020 bid for the presidency last year, said in a statement to The Post that he also disagreed with Sessions.

“The Cole Memo provided clear guidance to an otherwise conflicting situation,” said Delaney, using the shorthand for the Obama-era guidance that allowed states like Colorado and Oregon to maintain legal marijuana markets. “Revoking the Cole Memo will restore that confusion and undermines the will of the voters in several states.”

It was an even easier call for Democrats whose states have legalized marijuana already. Both Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.), who’ve received some attention as potential candidates, swung hard against the decision.

“States like Massachusetts have put a lot of work into implementing common sense marijuana regulations,” said Warren. “This reckless action by the DOJ disrupts the ability of states to enforce their own drug policies and puts our public health and safety at risk. Congress needs to take immediate action to protect state marijuana laws and the patients that rely on them.”

“This is the opposite of what we should be doing,” said Moulton. “Let’s not kid ourselves — people will be using marijuana regardless of what Attorney General Sessions says. We have an obligation to regulate it and make it as safe as possible.”

Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-Ca.), a former state attorney general, attacked Sessions for misdirecting the DOJ’s resources.

“Instead of wasting money on failed policies like the ‘War on Drugs,’ the Department of Justice should be directing federal resources toward working with local law enforcement to clamp down on transnational criminal organizations and the trafficking of guns and human beings,” said Harris.

“In a weird way, I think the Sessions move might actually help us by accelerating efforts to change federal marijuana laws,” the chair of the advocacy group Marijuana Majority. “Whereas until now we’ve sort of been operating in a gray area, I think it’s now clear that a permanent resolution is needed. That is reflected in the fact that so many lawmakers from across the political spectrum are pushing back hard right now.”

Snowstorm floods Boston Harbor and coastal Massachusetts streets with icy water

A powerful winter storm walloping the Northeast inundated coastal Massachusetts with icy water today.

Officials posted dramatic images on social media of Boston Harbor overflowing with chunks of ice. The rising tide brought vessels up to street level and flooded parts of Seaport Boulevard, while the harbor side entrance of the Aquarium subway station was temporarily shuttered due flooding.

PHOTO: Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.Brian Snyder/Reuters
Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority announced via Twitter that ferry service was suspended today due to “severe weather and ice” in Boston Harbor.

The Massachusetts State Police tweeted that road closures were in effect, together with images of flooded streets.

PHOTO: A powerful winter storm brought snow and flooding to Boston, Jan. 4, 2018.MBTA
A powerful winter storm brought snow and flooding to Boston, Jan. 4, 2018.

Over a foot of icy water filled the roadway of Revere Street and Winthrop Parkway, about 7 miles northeast of downtown Boston. A resident standing outside his house nearby watched as vehicles attempted to plow through the thick slush. He told ABC affiliate WCVB flooding in the area is common but the amount of snow and ice is unusual and makes the floodwater more difficult to move through.

“It’s not so slushy like this, so it usually runs off more,” the resident said. “I guess we’ll see how it goes when we wake up in the morning.”

PHOTO: The Boston Fire Department shared images of Neponset Circle firefighters rescuing a driver who was trapped by rising water in Boston, Jan. 4, 2018.Boston Fire Dept.
The Boston Fire Department shared images of Neponset Circle firefighters rescuing a driver who was trapped by rising water in Boston, Jan. 4, 2018.

The National Weather Service said the worst of the coastal flooding is over, but warned the water would be slow to drain and said that some of the water would be likely to freeze as temperatures plunge heading into the weekend.

The next high tide will peak around midnight.

A flash freeze is of concern in the region of Cape Cod and the Islands, as well as in southeast coastal Plymouth County, the National Weather Service warned, adding untreated roads could become icy.

Across Massachusetts, more than 20,000 were without power.

PHOTO: Water rushes over the seawall between two houses, Jan. 4, 2018, in Scituate, Mass. Stephan Savoia/AP
Water rushes over the seawall between two houses, Jan. 4, 2018, in Scituate, Mass.

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh urged residents to stay off the streets in a press conference Thursday afternoon, adding that a number of rescues have been conducted due to stranded motorists and pedestrians.

Police have been required to drive doctors and nurses to and from hospitals, Walsh said.

Schools will be closed on Friday, and shelters are opening in case flooding continues and evacuations are necessary, Walsh said. Flooding is affecting the Seaport, Charlestown, the North End, East Boston and Dorchester, he added.

PHOTO: Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.Brian Snyder/Reuters
Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.

In Brighton, a senior complex was evacuated due to water damage, Walsh said, adding 89 seniors were put up in hotels.

Meanwhile, firefighters were seen rescuing a driver from a car that was stranded on a flooded underpass in Boston.

PHOTO: Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.Brian Snyder/Reuters
Drivers make their way along the flooded Beach Road after the ocean overtopped the seawall during a winter snowstorm in the Boston suburb of Lynn, Mass., Jan. 4, 2018.

In Winthrop, one resident was seen kayaking through the streets.

The massive storm has led U.S. airlines to cancel at least 3,731 flights within, into and out of the United States today, and delay 1,401 others, according to airline tracking firm FlightAware. Many of the cancellations were in Boston.

Eastern Massachusetts, including the Greater Boston area, is expected to get buried under 12 to 18 inches of snow today, according to the National Weather Service.

In Nantucket, a peak wind of 76 mph was reported.

PHOTO: A firefighter wades through flood waters from Boston Harbor on Long Wharf in Boston, Jan. 4, 2018. Michael Dwyer/AP
A firefighter wades through flood waters from Boston Harbor on Long Wharf in Boston, Jan. 4, 2018.

Snowfall in Boston should let up this evening, meteorologists said.

ABC News’ Morgan Winsor contributed to this report.

Meltdown and Spectre FAQ: Fix for Intel CPU flaws could slow down PCs and Macs

Massive security vulnerabilities in modern CPUs are forcing a redesign of the kernel software at the heart of all major operating systems. Since the issues—dubbed Meltdown and Spectre—exist in the CPU hardware itself, Windows, Linux, Android, Macs, Chromebooks, and other operating systems all need to protect against it. And worse, it appears that plugging the hole will negatively affect your PC’s performance.

Everyday home users shouldn’t panic too much, though. Just apply the latest operating system updates and keep your antivirus software vigilant, as ever.

Here’s a high-level look at what you need to know about Meltdown and Spectre, in plain language. If you want a deep-dive into the technical details, be sure to read Google’s post on the CPU vulnerabilities. We’ve updated this article repeatedly as new information becomes available.

Meltdown and Spectre CPU flaw FAQ

Editor’s note: This article was most recently updated to include many more details about the Meltdown and Spectre CPU flaws, as well as PC performance comments from Intel and AMD.

Give it to me straight—what’s the issue here?

Again, the CPU exploits in play here are extremely technical, but in a nutshell, the chip’s kernel is leaking memory because of how it handles “speculative execution,” which modern processors perform to increase performance. An attacker can exploit these CPU vulnerabilities to expose extremely sensitive data in your protected kernel memory, including passwords, cryptographic keys, personal photos, emails, or any other data on your PC.

Meltdown is the more serious exploit, and the one that operating systems are rushing to fix. It “breaks the most fundamental isolation between user applications and the operating system,” according to Google. This flaw most strongly affects Intel processors because of the aggressive way they handle speculative execution.

Spectre affects AMD and ARM processors as well as Intel CPUs, which means mobile devices are at risk. (We have a separate FAQ on how Spectre affects phones and tablets.) It’s “harder to exploit than Meltdown, but it is also harder to mitigate,” Google says. There may be no hardware solution to Spectre, which “tricks other applications into accessing arbitrary locations in their memory.” Software needs to be hardened to guard against it. 

What’s a kernel?

The kernel inside a chip is basically an invisible process that facilitates the way apps and functions work on your computer. It has complete control over your operating system. Your PC needs to switch between user mode and kernel mode thousands of times a day, making sure instructions and data flow seamlessly and instantaneously. Here’s how The Register puts it: “Think of the kernel as God sitting on a cloud, looking down on Earth. It’s there, and no normal being can see it, yet they can pray to it.”

How do I know if my PC is at risk?

Short answer: It is.

Magnitude 4.5 earthquake rumbles across Bay Area but no damage reported

A magnitude 4.5 earthquake shook up the San Francisco Bay Area early Thursday.

It was felt throughout the region, and could be felt for perhaps five to 10 seconds. Near the San Francisco International Airport, several jolts could be felt.

Items in a San Leandro store were knocked off the shelves, video from KRON4 showed, and Bay Area Rapid Transit started Thursday with train delays as workers performed a system-wide check for damage about 4 a.m.

The checks were completed about 5:30 a.m. with no reports of damage, the agency tweeted.

‘Bomb Cyclone’ Swirls Northward, Bringing Snow and Bitter Cold

• Most of New York City was forecast to receive five to eight inches of snowfall, although Queens, and neighboring Nassau County, could get up to 10 inches, forecasters said. Schools are closed, but the trains are running. New York Today is covering the storm live. Read the latest updates here.

• The storm also shut down schools in Baltimore; Boston; Newark; Philadelphia; Providence, R.I.; Virginia Beach; and Washington, among other places. Classes were also canceled in areas in the South that had seen snowfall and anticipated days of bitter cold. Some districts in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina closed schools for Thursday.

• The storm’s race up the East Coast — through some of the busiest air traffic corridors in the country — prompted airlines to cancel nearly 3,000 flights by early Thursday morning, according to FlightAware, an aviation tracking website. Nationwide, airlines have already scratched plans for more than 150 flights on Friday.

• Tens of thousands of customers, mostly in Virginia, were without power on Thursday morning, and even in places where electricity was mostly flowing, officials feared the consequences of frigid temperatures that will linger for days.

• With heating units in homes and commercial buildings running furiously to fend off the deep freeze, power companies have warned of possible fuel shortages to come. Read more here.

Sign up for the Morning Briefing for news and a daily look at what you need to know to begin your day.

Northeastern states are facing a major blow.

The Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with heavy snowfall and wind chills as low as minus 25 degrees expected.

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Roads remained open in New York, but state officials imposed speed restrictions on some crossings and banned trucks on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge because of high winds.

Mr. Cuomo said road conditions on Long Island were deteriorating and some cars had been stranded on the Long Island Expressway overnight, creating a “significant issue of public safety.”

On Wednesday, Kathryn Garcia, the commissioner of the Department of Sanitation in New York City, encouraged New Yorkers to avoid driving and use mass transit instead.

Chilly gusts of up to 50 miles per hour are likely to whip eastern Long Island and southeastern Connecticut starting late Thursday morning, with the potential for downed tree limbs and scattered power failures, the National Weather Service said.

Amtrak was operating a reduced schedule on its Acela and Northeast Regional services between Washington and New York. The rail service also said it had canceled trains between Washington and Newport News, Va., and had modified its schedule between Springfield, Mass., and New Haven.

With thousands of flights canceled, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Southwest and United were among the major carriers that said passengers could change certain travel plans without penalties.

In the Washington area, the federal government delayed opening offices on Thursday morning as slush and slick roads subsumed the capital.

The Office of Personnel Management, essentially the federal government’s human resources department, said that nonemergency workers could report two hours late, work remotely, or take an unscheduled leave.

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The National Weather Service predicted a Thursday high of 28 degrees for Washington, with winds gusting to 40 m.p.h. Temperatures are not expected to reach the 40s — maybe — until Monday.

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Sessions is rescinding Obama-era directive for feds to back off marijuana enforcement in states with legal pot

Attorney General Jeff Sessions is rescinding an Obama-era directive that discouraged enforcement of federal marijuana laws in states that had legalized the substance, according to people familiar with the decision.

The move potentially paves the way for the federal government to crack down on the burgeoning pot industry — though the precise impact remains to be seen. Marijuana already was illegal under U.S. law, even as federal prosecutors had been advised against bringing cases involving it in states that approved its use and sale.

The people who described Sessions’s decision, first reported by the Associated Press, spoke on the condition of anonymity. A formal announcement was expected later Thursday.

Eight states and the District of Columbia have laws allowing for personal pot consumption, according to NORML, a group which advocates legalization and tracks pot-related legislation.

Sessions’s Justice Department has long taken a hard line stance against marijuana, even effectively blocking the Drug Enforcement Administration from taking action on more than two dozen requests to grow marijuana to use in research. Sessions has said in the past that he did not believe marijuana should be legalized, even suggesting at an appearance last year that medical marijuana had been “hyped, maybe too much.” He and top Justice Department officials had long been reviewing the 2013 guidance from then Deputy Attorney James Cole directing federal prosecutors to effectively back off marijuana enforcement in states that had legalized the substance and had a system in place to regulate it.

In practice, that meant U.S. attorneys in jurisdictions that had legalized marijuana at the state level were often reluctant to bring marijuana cases — though Cole’s memo stressed that Congress had determined it to be an illegal drug that provided significant revenue to gangs. They might now be more willing to consider such prosecutions — though they will still potentially have to contend with jurors sympathetic to defendants whose conduct would not be illegal under state law.

Pro-marijuana advocates have long been critical of Sessions’s views on the topic, though his latest directive might also upset those in his own party. Asked by a Colorado TV station in 2016 about using federal authority to shut down sales of recreational marijuana, President Trump said, “I wouldn’t do that, no,” but he was noncommittal on whether he would block his attorney general from doing so.

Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) said on Twitter that the move “directly contradicts what Attorney General Sessions told me prior to his confirmation.”

“With no prior notice to Congress, the Justice Department has trampled on the will of the voters in CO and other states,” he wrote. “I am prepared to take all steps necessary, including holding DOJ nominees, until the Attorney General lives up to the commitment he made to me prior to his confirmation.”

Sessions’s move could have significant economic impacts, injecting even more uncertainty into investors already apprehensive about what the Justice Department might do when it comes to legal pot.

“If the Trump administration goes through with a crackdown on states that have legalized marijuana, they will be taking billions of dollars away from regulated, state-sanctioned businesses and putting that money back into the hands of drug cartels,” said NORML Political Director Justin Strekal.

Some pro-pot advocates, too, sought to cast the move as a continuation of Sessions’s war on drugs. Early in his tenure, he reversed another Obama-era directive and instructed prosecutors to pursue the most serious, readily provable charge — even if that might trigger stiff mandatory minimum penalties for drug crimes.

The Daily 202: Trump’s break with Bannon over Wolff book shows the limits of loyalty

With Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve.

THE BIG IDEA: None of this is normal. Try to picture Barack Obama declaring that David Axelrod had “lost his mind,” George W. Bush saying that Karl Rove “is learning that winning isn’t as easy as I make it look,” or Bill Clinton’s lawyers sending James Carville a cease-and-desist letter threatening “imminent” legal action. Conversely, imagine Robby Mook saying that Chelsea Clinton is “dumb as a brick.”

You can’t. Because all those scenarios are inconceivable. But that’s just another Wednesday in this chaotic White House, which once again plunged into crisis mode after the publication of excerpts from a forthcoming book by Michael Wolff called “Fire and Fury.”

President Trump’s insistence that Steve Bannon, his former chief strategist and a top aide at the White House until five months ago, was a mere “staffer” who had “very little to do with our historic victory” is akin to Joseph Stalin trying to erase Leon Trotsky from the history of the Russian Revolution.

“It was the kind of story-shaping statement that, not so long ago, Trump and Bannon might have written together,” writes Michael Kranish, one of our in-house Trump biographers. “In reality, Bannon has been a guiding figure for Trump for years … according to associates of both men.”

This is part of a well-established pattern for the thrice-married Trump, who treats partners and aides as disposable once they’ve outlived their usefulness to him and downplays their roles after they run into trouble.

Remember when Sean Spicer said that former campaign chairman Paul Manafort “played a very limited role for a very limited amount of time” and that former national security adviser Michael Flynn was “a volunteer of the campaign”?

Another former aide called George Papadopoulos a “coffee boy,” even though he was meeting with ambassadors, arranging sit-downs for Trump with heads of state and in contact with Russian intermediaries. Jeff Sessions climbed out on a limb and burned bridges with old friends when he became the first senator to support Trump, but after the attorney general recused himself from the Russia investigation, Trump didn’t hesitate to claim that the Alabama senator had only endorsed him for political expediency.

“Saying Steve Bannon has nothing to do with me or my presidency is like saying you’re not married to your ex-wife,” John Dickerson said on CBS last night. “It’s true at the moment, but it doesn’t erase the marriage.”

The fact that Trump’s lawyers sent a cease-and-desist letter last night to Bannon, arguing that he violated the employment agreement he signed with the Trump Organization and likely defamed the president, reflects the palpable concern about what he might say. The lawyers said Bannon must stop communicating confidential and or disparaging information, as well as preserve all records in preparation for an “imminent” lawsuit. This is a classic Trump tactic, but it can also be read as at least a tacit admission that there is some there there.

— Trump is obsessed with loyalty, but it’s mostly a one-way street. What he wants is loyalty to him and his offspring. His staff dissuaded him from unloading on Bannon after a critical Vanity Fair piece before the holidays, but the final straw came when his former chief strategist publicly unloaded on his progeny.

Speaking about the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting of Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr. and Manafort with Russians promising “dirt” on Hillary Clinton, Bannon told Wolff: “The three senior guys in the campaign … thought it was a good idea to meet with a foreign government inside Trump Tower in the conference room on the twenty-fifth floor with no lawyers. They didn’t have any lawyers. Even if you thought that this was not treasonous, or unpatriotic, or bad shit, and I happen to think it’s all of that, you should have called the FBI immediately.”

Additional comments from Bannon and others completely undercut the White House spin that there’s nothing to see vis-à-vis Russian interference in the 2016 election. He warned that special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation will wind up focusing on money laundering and the Trump family’s dealings with Deutsche Bank. “They’re going to crack Don Jr. like an egg on national TV,” Bannon said, according to Wolff. “They’re sitting on a beach trying to stop a Category Five.”

Most importantly, Trump’s dramatic statement served as a reminder that the bonds of family will probably trump everything else. This would be true of almost anyone, but it’s especially true with Trump because he’s not a particularly ideological person and was not primarily motivated to seek public office by any kind of deep concern about public policy. Would Trump tolerate Mueller indicting his son-in-law or son, who deny any wrongdoing?

There’s been lots of speculation that Ivanka and Jared might leave town at some point this year, and Trump reportedly now thinks it was a bad idea that they took high-profile jobs in the White House, but the couple has recently been touring homes for sale in the District. This suggests that they’re planning to stick around indefinitely. People familiar with the search tell the Reliable Source’s Emily Heil that they they’ve visited at least one property in the Massachusetts Avenue Heights neighborhood. Ironically, the place they looked is right by Bill and Hillary’s house. Javanka’s six-bedroom rental in Kalorama is walking distance from their synagogue, but the house is highly visible from a public street, so paparazzi sit out front and protesters often gather outside. Many of the homes by HRC’s place are more secluded and have longer driveways. 

Jared Kushner and Steve Bannon walk on the South Lawn in March. (Andrew Harnik/AP)

THIS IS A DISASTER FOR BANNON AND BREITBART’S BRAND:

— The break with Bannon is a huge win for the Republican establishment, which blames Bannon for Roy Moore becoming the GOP nominee in Alabama and the party losing what should have been an easy race in a ruby red state. This will likely neutralize him in several 2018 primaries where he could have played a huge role in boosting insurgents, from Nevada and Arizona to West Virginia and Wisconsin.

“Steve doesn’t represent my base — he’s only in it for himself,” Trump said in his statement, which also accused him of being a prolific leaker. “Steve was rarely in a one-on-one meeting with me and only pretends to have had influence to fool a few people with no access and no clue, whom he helped write phony books.”

Mitch McConnell and his team are ecstatic. The Senate majority leader’s political team posted a GIF of him beaming just minutes after Trump’s statement went out:

A few of the candidates who have aggressively sought Bannon’s endorsement in recent months quickly rushed to distance themselves, as his support became a liability and their primary rivals attacked them over it. Kelli Ward, in the open Arizona race to succeed Jeff Flake, said in a statement that Bannon is “only one of many high-profile endorsements” she has received. West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey took heat from his GOP rival, Rep. Evan Jenkins, in the primary to take on Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin. “Attorney General Morrisey does not support these attacks on President Trump and his family,” his spokeswoman said.

Rebekah Mercer attends an event put on by the Heartland Institute last year. (Oliver Contreras for The Washington Post)

“Bannon has in recent weeks also alienated his main financial backer, Rebekah Mercer, after he told several other major conservative donors that he would be able to count on the Mercers’ financial support should he run for president,” Josh Dawsey and Ashley Parker scoop. “A person familiar with the conversations said … Mercer now does not plan to financially support Bannon’s future projects — and that she was frustrated by his moves in Alabama and some of his comments in the news media that seemed to stoke unnecessary fights. A person close to Bannon said he was not running for president. … ‘The core constituency for Breitbart is what you would call the Trump Deplorables. That’s the audience. And if they’re asked to choose between Steve and Trump, they’re going to choose Trump. That’s clear,’ said a person familiar with the company’s ownership.”

— Bannon is already trying to make amends with Trump, suggesting that he might not stay off the reservation. On his Sirius XM radio show last night, he said that he remains a strong supporter of Trump. “The president of the United States is a great man,” he said. “You know I support him day in and day out.”

— Privately, Bannon doesn’t think the damage is irreparable: The Associated Press cites “a person familiar with his thinking” to report that he “was not surprised or particularly bothered by the blowback”: “That person said Bannon vowed on Wednesday to continue his war on the Republican establishment and also predicted that, after a cooling-off period, he’d continue to speak with Trump, who likes to maintain contact with former advisers even after he fires and sometimes disparages them.”

— But it may be too late, and his brand might be too damaged in the eyes of Trump die-hards.

To wit: The rest of the conservative media is taking Trump’s side over Bannon. “From Fox News to the Drudge Report, all the way down the spectrum to far-right conspiracy sites like The Gateway Pundit and InfoWars, headlines Wednesday afternoon painted … Bannon as unstable and self-interested, and … Trump as a forceful defender of his family and administration,” Politico reports. “The Daily Caller declared, ‘Trump Puts Bannon In A Body Bag.’”

“I can’t help thinking of Bannon as the Robespierre of this Trumpian revolution, ultimately devoured by the forces he helped release,” emailed Charlie Sykes, the legendary conservative radio host in Wisconsin who has emerged as a leading Trump critic. “He helped create a pro-Trump media ecosystem that demanded loyalty, not ideological consistency. Now that he is perceived as disloyal (and perhaps dangerous), he is going to get the same treatment he used to give the globalist, establishment types.” 

WHAT ELSE IS IN THE BOOK:

— Trump is portrayed as uninformed, unprepared and lacking focus in the book. John Wagner rounds up some of the buzziest nuggets that are out there: “Wolff writes that Trump became upset that he couldn’t give a Supreme Court seat to a friend rather than someone he didn’t know. He casts Trump as having ‘little or no interest’ in Republican attempts to overhaul the Affordable Care Act. And Wolff says aides were incredulous over Trump’s claims that President Obama had ‘wiretapped’ Trump Tower during the 2016 campaign …

“Early in the campaign … Trump aide Sam Nunberg was sent to explain the Constitution to the candidate, Wolff writes, and Nunberg offered this assessment of the experience: ‘I got as far as the Fourth Amendment before his finger is pulling down on his lip and his eyes are rolling back in his head.’

“Wolff also writes that Reince Priebus … was alarmed how often during the transition Trump offered people jobs on the spot, including many he had never met before. … Wolff writes that one of the reasons Trump didn’t want John Bolton, a famously hawkish diplomat, as his national security adviser, was because of his mustache.

“Wolff details how Trump did not take well to living in the White House, recounting a reprimand to the housekeeping staff for picking his shirt up from the floor. Trump also reportedly imposed a rule that no one touch his toothbrush.”

— Read a longer excerpt in New York Magazine, and here is the Guardian’s early write-up.

Author Michael Wolff stands in the lobby at Trump Tower last January. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

WHY YOU SHOULD READ THE BOOK WITH A GRAIN OF SALT:

— “Michael Wolff tells a juicy tale … But should we believe it?,” by Paul Farhi: “A provocateur and media polemicist, Wolff has a penchant for stirring up an argument and pushing the facts as far as they’ll go, and sometimes further than they can tolerate, according to his critics. He has been accused of not just re-creating scenes in his books and columns, but of creating them wholesale. … Wolff has even acknowledged that he can be unreliable: As he recounted in ‘Burn Rate’ — his best-selling book about his time as an early Internet entrepreneur — Wolff kept his bankers at bay by fabricating a story about his father-in-law having open-heart surgery. … Wolff’s business collapsed in 1997. ‘Burn Rate’ came under siege from critics who challenged its credibility, including the long verbatim conversations that Wolff recounted despite taking scant notes.”

Trump hasn’t explicitly disputed any of Wolff’s reporting, nor has Bannon backed down from his quotes, but the second-guessing of the 64-year-old’s work has already begun: “Wolff, for example, writes that Thomas Barrack Jr., a billionaire friend of Trump’s, told a friend that Trump is ‘not only crazy, he’s stupid.’ Barrack on Wednesday denied to a New York Times reporter that he ever said such a thing. Katie Walsh, a former White House adviser, has also disputed a comment attributed to her by Wolff, that dealing with Trump was ‘like trying to figure out what a child wants.’”

A sloppy error: Wolff writes that Trump had no idea who John Boehner was when Roger Ailes recommended him as a possible White House chief of staff. But the then-speaker of the House went golfing with the billionaire back in 2013, and Trump had often mentioned him on Twitter.

THE ROLLOUT AND THE PUSHBACK:

— Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Wolff “never actually sat down with the president” after he took office, and that the two only had one five- to seven-minute conversation “that had nothing to do, originally, with the book.” The White House also said last night that call logs show Trump has spoken with Bannon only five times since the former adviser left, and most of the calls were initiated by Bannon. “Trump, however, often uses cellphones to talk with outside advisers and confidants,” Josh and Ashley note.

— Wolff says Trump encouraged people to cooperate with him and that he has tapes to back up quotes in his incendiary book — dozens of hours of them, per Axios.

— Trump’s repudiation of Bannon is the best possible free advertising for Wolff’s book. “Fire and Fury” is already #1 on the Amazon bestseller list. A second excerpt will come out later today, per CNN, and NBC just announced that Wolff will appear on the “Today” show on Friday and “Meet the Press” on Sunday.

— How the president’s hometown tabloids are playing the revelations:

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING:

— Trump disbanded his controversial voter fraud commission because states wouldn’t cooperate and the effort was beset by lawsuits. But Sarah Huckabee Sanders insisted in a statement that there is still “substantial evidence of voter fraud,” despite the fact that there isn’t proof. Sanders said Trump has signed an executive order asking the Department of Homeland Security to review the allegations and “determine next courses of action.” Asking DHS to get involved suggests the administration believes any voter fraud — which has not been proved — is related to undocumented immigrants. Voting issues are normally handled by the Justice Department. (John Wagner)

— Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the vice chairman of the commission, blamed its dissolution on a “barrage of meritless lawsuits.” “This is a tactical shift by the president who remains very committed to finding the scope of voter fraud,” said Kobach, who’s running for governor. “In a perfect world, the commission would’ve moved swiftly and there wouldn’t be any lawsuits.” He confirmed that the DHS move was related to immigration: “This is a tactical shift by the president who remains very committed to finding the scope of voter fraud,” said Kobach, the architect of a controversial law that requires Kansas voters to provide their birth certificates or other proof of citizenship to register to vote. (Kansas City Star)

— As the Brennan Center for Justice notes, voter fraud is “vanishingly rare.” In 2014, a Washington Post study found that just 31 credible instances of voter fraud occurred between 2000 to 2014 — out of more than 1 billion ballots cast. And researchers at Arizona State University found just 10 cases of fraud between 2000 and 2012.

— In tweets this morning, Trump blamed the panel’s dissolution on Democratic officials who fought the information requests:

— As D.C. begins getting battered by the “bomb cyclone” traveling up the East Coast, the federal government is operating with a two-hour delay, as well as an option for unscheduled leave or unscheduled telework. (OPM)

— Today’s bad weather has already forced closures and delays for the region’s schools. For an updated list of schools’ operating status, check here.

— The monster winter storm has caked southern states in rare and record-breaking levels of snow and ice — including areas that haven’t seen snow in nearly three decades. As the storm continues to churn, forecasters predict it will intensify at an “explosive” pace — battering much of the Northeast in an all-out, wintry assault. (Jason Samenow

— The storm will bring strong winds to the D.C. area starting this morning. The Capital Weather Gang forecasts: “Light snow tapers off this morning from west to east with some afternoon clearing. Accumulations of a dusting to a couple inches in the immediate area are likely. With northwest winds gusting to 35 mph, blowing snow may cause some visibility problems at times. Highs in the mid-to-upper 20s happen in the morning before falling through the afternoon with wind chill readings dropping into the single digits.”

GET SMART FAST:​​

  1. Iran has deployed the elite Revolutionary Guard to quash anti-government protests in three provinces. The guards were instrumental in suppressing Iran’s 2009 protests. (Reuters)
  2. A small fire broke out and was quickly extinguished at Bill and Hillary Clinton’s house in Chappaqua, N.Y. No one was injured in the blaze, which began in a small building on the property used by the Secret Service. (Eli Rosenberg)
  3. A 4.4-magnitude earthquake shook California’s Bay Area. The quake’s epicenter was in Berkeley, and residents of the region reported feeling the shaking in the middle of the night. (San Francisco Chronicle)

  4. The Special Forces soldier killed in Afghanistan earlier this week was hit by small-arms gunfire while on foot patrol. Four other service members were wounded in the incident, which the Pentagon says remains under investigation. (Dan Lamothe)
  5. The winner of the tied Virginia House of Delegates race will be decided by lottery today. Officials will pull a name out of a stoneware bowl designed by a local artist. But the fight will likely continue after the decision because the loser can request another recount. (Laura Vozzella
  6. Washington’s attorney general filed a lawsuit against Motel 6 for allegedly giving immigration officials lists of guests’ names to make arrests. The lawsuit charges that at least six of the hotel chain’s locations provided the lists without any reasonable suspicion, probable cause or search warrants. Agents would then sometimes circle “Latino-sounding” names on the list to target. (Eli Rosenberg)
  7. There seems to be a major vulnerability in almost all processors running your computers and phones that could leave them susceptible to hacking. The news caused stock prices for Intel to drop as the semiconductor maker remained silent. (Bloomberg)
  8. Apple’s decision to offer cheaper battery replacements could result in 16 million fewer new iPhones sold this year, according to a Barclays analyst. The British bank estimated that as many as 77 percent of iPhone users could be eligible for the $29 battery replacement. (CNBC)

  9. A British chef lost her job after she bragged about “spiking” a vegan customer’s meal with animal product. In a Facebook post, the chef complained about cooking for the “pious, judgmental vegan.” (Maura Judkis)
  10. The spouses of two dying memoirists, who each chronicled their final days in best-selling books (“When Breath Becomes Air” and “The Bright Hour”), met and fell in love. The Post’s Nora Krug interviewed the couple about their relationship.

Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-Tex.) waves goodbye to President Trump at the end of a White House event on Dec. 20 to celebrate the passage of tax cuts. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

MEN BEHAVING BADLY:

— Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-Tex.) has not followed through on his public promise to repay $84,000 in taxpayer money used to settle a former staffer’s sexual harassment claim against him, aides confirm. Farenthold pledged in a Dec. 4 radio interview that he would “hand over a check” that week to congressional leadership, but a spokeswoman said he is now waiting to see what changes the House makes to the Congressional Accountability Act before doing so. (CNN)

— “Despite a 2002 law aimed at improving federal accountability in discrimination cases, the system for tracking sexual harassment payments in the executive branch is almost as opaque and bureaucratic as the one governing Congress,” Politico’s Andrew Restuccia, Emily Goldberg and Rebecca Morin report. “Executive branch agencies have settled dozens of sexual harassment cases involving federal workers in recent years, but the resulting taxpayer-funded payments are shrouded in mystery.”

— CBS News fired political director Steve Chaggaris over allegations of “inappropriate behavior” in his past. In a statement to employees, the network said the allegations came to light shortly before the Christmas holiday and were “investigated immediately.” (CNNMoney)

Hoda Kotb will make less than a third of what Matt Lauer did as a host on the “Today” show, Page Six reports: “NBC sources say Kotb landed a $7 million-a-year deal — the same as co-host Savannah Guthrie. Lauer, of course, was getting $25 million a year until he was fired in November for alleged ‘inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace.’ One show insider said, ‘Hoda isn’t complaining about the money. She has landed the big job she always dreamed of, and most definitely deserves. Plus, Matt’s salary reflected the long time he was on the show — 25 years. If things go well, Hoda could ask for more next time if she re-ups her contract. But the figures underline the huge wage disparity at NBC News.’”

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein leaves the Capitol yesterday after meeting with House Speaker Paul Ryan. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

THERE’S A BEAR IN THE WOODS:

— Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and FBI Director Christopher Wray met with House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) to discuss the Trump-Russia dossier. The meeting was requested by Rosenstein and Wray after congressional investigators asked for all documents related to the report. Karoun Demirjian and Matt Zapotosky report: “The meeting … took place just hours before a deadline Wednesday that House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) set for the FBI and DOJ to turn over documents [related to the dossier.] … In the House, Nunes has threatened to issue contempt citations against Wray and Rosenstein for failing to produce documents related to the dossier, which he first subpoenaed in August.

Nunes suggested a deal has been reached: “After speaking to [Rosenstein] this evening, I believe the [committee] has reached an agreement with [Justice] that will provide [it] with access to all the documents and witnesses we have requested,” he said in a statement late last night. “The committee looks forward to receiving access to the documents over the coming days.”

— Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said he would be willing to allow the founders of Fusion GPS to testify publicly in that panel’s Russia probe. His statement followed the founders’ New York Times op-ed, in which they accused congressional Republicans of concealing their full testimony for political reasons. “Senator Grassley has always been and remains for transparency,” a Grassley spokesman said . . . “There are, however, investigative factors that he must consider to temporarily protect certain information in the midst of an ongoing inquiry such as this one, like tainting the memory of other witnesses.” (Politico)

Paul Manafort is seen on the floor of the Quicken Loans Arena at the Republican National Convention. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)

— Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort is suing DOJ and Robert Mueller’s team of prosecutors. In a 17-page complaint filed in federal court, Manafort’s attorneys accused the special counsel of “overreaching” in their criminal indictment, which included charges of money laundering and tax evasion unrelated to his time on the 2016 campaign. Attorneys for Manafort also argued the DOJ exceeded its legal authority by ordering Mueller’s team to investigate both “links and/or coordination” with Russia as well as “any matters that arose or may arise directly from” that investigation. In response, a DOJ spokeswoman said, “The lawsuit is frivolous but the defendant is entitled to file whatever he wants.”

White-collar criminal defense attorney Jeffrey Jacobovitz told Spencer S. Hsu and Matt Zapotosky that it’s common for independent investigations set up by DOJ to have fairly wide jurisdiction. And while it is “not unusual” for a defendant to question the bounds of a special counsel probe, he couldn’t remember a single time the approach succeeded. “Ken Starr started looking at Whitewater and ended up looking at actions related to Monica Lewinsky,” Jacobovitz said.

ON THE HILL:

— Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) was sworn in yesterday, further shrinking Republicans’ majority in the Senate and decreasing their odds of legislative victories before the midterms. David Weigel and Sean Sullivan report: “Jones took his oath of office alongside former vice president Joe Biden, a longtime friend who had urged him to run last year. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) was also sworn in Wednesday to replace former senator Al Franken; she was joined by former vice president Walter Mondale. … Even before it was clear what committees Jones would serve on, the Alabama Democrat was already playing an outsize role. His presence allows Democrats to block any Trump nominee, or any legislation, by winning just two Republican defectors. … Senate Republican aides privately conceded that Jones’s vote will make it nearly impossible to take another run at repealing the Affordable Care Act and may quiet talk of a push for a major entitlement overhaul this year.”

— The meeting between the top four congressional leaders, OMB Director Mick Mulvaney and White House legislative director Marc Short to head off a government shutdown was “surprisingly good,” Mitch McConnell said. Damian Paletta, Erica Werner and Mike DeBonis report: “Multiple lawmakers characterized Wednesday’s hour-long meeting in the office of [Paul Ryan] as a positive start to negotiations, while noting the parties still have disagreements on major issues. Emboldened by the passage of a landmark tax law, Republicans and the White House are demanding a bump in military spending and funding for Trump’s promised wall on the Mexican border. Democrats — empowered because the GOP needs them to pass any spending bill — want protections for undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children and to keep funding in place for social programs.”

— A trio of former DHS secretaries who served under George W. Bush and Barack Obama warned that Congress is running out of time to craft a legislative fix for DACA — opening nearly 700,000 young immigrants to the threat of deportation if they don’t act by March 5. David Nakamura reports: “[Michael Chertoff, Janet Napolitano and Jeh Johnson] are warning lawmakers that they must strike a deal this month or risk running out of time. Even if Congress were to act this month, they cautioned, it would mean a massive undertaking for DHS to be able to launch a new administrative program to accommodate dreamers who are eligible to seek permanent legal status. ‘The realistic deadline for successfully establishing a Dreamers program in time to prevent large-scale loss of work authorization and deportation protection is only weeks away,’ the former secretaries wrote[.]” 

Donald Trump calls out to the media as Mitt Romney leaves Trump National Golf Club Bedminster, N.J. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)

— As Mitt Romney plots his path toward a possible Senate bid, many traditional conservatives are wondering what version of Romney would show up on the campaign trail — the outspoken Trump critic or the man who auditioned to be his secretary of state? “For traditional conservatives yearning for the next anti-Trump Republican, Romney’s entrance on the scene cannot come soon enough,” Paul Kane writes. “They are a beaten band whose ranks are diminished and ailing[.] … It’s possible to envision that by the time the next Congress is sworn in on Jan. 3, 2019, Romney could be the only voice left in the Senate appealing to the collection of neoconservatives and establishment Republicans that never fell in line with Trump.  Less than two years ago, Romney said this of Trump: ‘He’s playing the American public for suckers. He gets a free ride to the White House and all we get is a lousy hat.’ If he winds up in that somewhere-in-between spot in the Senate, it will be a disappointment to those who hailed that speech against Trump in March 2016. It will probably be an even greater disappointment to himself.”

— Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) told a Utah radio program he would support Romney if the former governor runs. “I’m hopeful he’ll run, because he would be just fine,” Hatch said. “And he would certainly be somebody who I think could succeed me into the job. We haven’t spoken in the last few days, but if Mitt decides to run, he knows he’ll have my support.” (CNN)

— Trump has nominated the wife of House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-Calif.) to a senior post at the State Department. Karoun Demirjian reports: “[Marie] Royce, who was nominated to serve as an assistant secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs … was previously appointed to the State Department’s Advisory Committee on International Communications as a representative of the private sector, and has played a role in facilitating various government-sponsored exchange programs[.] But if confirmed, Royce would hold a senior position at the department over which her husband … is chiefly responsible for directing the House’s oversight duties as chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.” A committee aide said Royce played no role in his wife’s selection. When asked if Royce would recuse himself over matters involving his wife’s post, the aide said that “rigorous oversight of the State Department will continue.”

— Jeff Sessions appointed 17 interim U.S. attorneys, including Rudy Giuliani’s law partner as a replacement for the fired Preet Bharara in the Southern District of New York. Matt Zapotosky and Sari Horwitz report: “Geoffrey S. Berman, a law partner of [Giuliani] at the firm Greenberg Traurig and a former federal prosecutor, was named to the interim post at the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, which handles some of the most high-profile cases in the country[.] … The former U.S. attorney there, [Bharara], was particularly prominent and notably did not step down immediately when asked to by Trump with 45 others in March.”

— This month could mark a turning point in Trump’s trade policy. CNBC’s Kayla Tausche reports: “The month is book-ended by contentious trade negotiations with South Korea, beginning Jan. 5 in Washington, and with Mexico and Canada, beginning Jan. 23 in Montreal. By mid-January, [Trump] must decide whether to punish exporters of cheap steel and aluminum that threaten American producers, the subject of a nine-month national security investigation. By late January, [Trump] must decide whether to levy fines on Chinese solar panel producers. A decision on washing machine tariffs is due early February.”

Kim Jong Un visits the Amnokgang Tire Factory in North Korea’s Chagang province.(KCNA/KNS/AFP)

NORTH KOREA WATCH:

— The White House and congressional Republicans defended Trump’s North Korea tweet, as Democrats accused him of ratcheting up tensions with Kim Jong Un. Anne Gearan reports: “‘He’s made repeated threats. He’s tested missiles time and time again for years,’ [Sarah Huckabee Sanders] said of Kim. ‘This is a president who is not going cower down and is not going to be weak and is going to make sure he does what he’s promised to do, and that’s stand up and protect the American people.’ … ‘A nuclear conflict on the Korean Peninsula would be a catastrophe, leading to the deaths of potentially millions of people, including American servicemembers and families stationed there,’ Sen. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) said in a statement, adding that the tweet ‘borders on presidential malpractice.’”

— Trump defended his strategy in North Korea over Twitter this morning:

— The Diplomat’s Ankit Panda and Dave Schmerler analyze North Korea’s failed missile launch in April, which landed in the city of Tokchon and caused significant damage to a complex of buildings: “[I]t is likely that this facility at Tokchon experienced a large explosion upon impact. It’s impossible to verify if the incident caused any loss of life and, given the time of day the test occurred and the location of the impact, it may be likely that few, if any, casualties resulted from the incident. However, as the Google Earth imagery of the incident demonstrates, the Tokchon facility is located adjacent to what appear to be residential and commercial buildings. A slight difference in trajectory could have resulted in an even more catastrophic accident over a populated region.”

— “Waiting for the Bomb to Drop,” by Eliot A. Cohen in The Atlantic: “There are sounds, for those who can hear them, of the preliminary and muffled drumbeats of war. The Chinese are reported to be preparing refugee camps along the North Korean border. Resources are being shifted to observe and analyze the North Korean military. Mundane logistical processes of moving, stockpiling, and updating crucial items and preparing military personnel are underway. Only the biggest indicator — the evacuation of American dependents from South Korea — has yet to flash red, but, in the interest of surprise, that may not happen. America’s circumspect and statesmanlike secretary of defense, James Mattis, talks ominously of storm clouds gathering over Korea, while the commandant of the Marine Corps simply says, ‘I hope I’m wrong, but there’s a war coming.’ … Maybe nothing will happen. Maybe Donald Trump, he of the five draft deferments … will flinch … in which case the United States will merely suffer an epic humiliation as it retreats from as big a red line as a president has ever drawn.”

President Trump, with Vice President Pence by his side, signs an executive order to declare formal recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

THE 25TH AMENDMENT QUESTION:

— “Is Something Neurologically Wrong With Donald Trump?” by James Hamblin in The Atlantic: “[A]fter more than a year of talking to doctors and researchers about whether and how the cognitive sciences could offer a lens to explain Trump’s behavior, I’ve come to believe there should be a role for professional evaluation beyond speculating from afar. … The idea that the president should not be diagnosed from afar only underscores the point that the president needs to be evaluated up close. A presidential-fitness committee … could exist in a capacity similar to the Congressional Budget Office. It could regularly assess the president’s neurologic status and give a battery of cognitive tests to assess judgment, recall, decision-making, attention — the sorts of tests that might help a school system assess whether a child is suited to a particular grade level or classroom — and make the results available.”

Politico’s Annie Karni reports that a Yale psychiatry professor was summoned to Capitol Hill last month to brief lawmakers — including one unidentified Republican senator — on Trump’s mental state: “In private meetings with more than a dozen members of Congress held on Dec. 5 and 6, [Dr. Bandy X. Lee] briefed lawmakers[.] … Her professional warning to Capitol Hill: ‘He’s going to unravel, and we are seeing the signs.’ … Lee, editor of ‘The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump,’ which includes testimonials from 27 psychiatrists and mental health experts assessing the president’s level of ‘dangerousness,’ said that she was surprised by the interest in her findings during her two days in Washington. ‘One senator said that it was the meeting he most looked forward to in 11 years,’ Lee recalled. ‘Their level of concern about the president’s dangerousness was surprisingly high.’”

SOCIAL MEDIA SPEED READ:

Trump retweeted this image with a message for the NFL players protesting during the national anthem:

The Boston Globe’s deputy Washington bureau chief summed up the year so far:

Or, put another way by a Times reporter:

A congressional candidate backed by Bannon distanced himself from Bannon’s comments:

A senior fellow for the German Marshall Fund noted that Bannon wants chaos:

From a former senior adviser to Obama:

From Joe Biden’s former chief of staff:

Pennsylvania’s Democratic senator was happy to see the voter fraud commission go:

Some Twitter users returned to this November 2016 Trump tweet in the wake of the news:

An ABC News social media editor commented on that tweet from Trump:

An NBC News reporter noted that the failure of the voter fraud commission is another humiliation for Mike Pence: 

The former director of the FBI criticized those who haven’t defended the independence of government agencies:

The Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee said the Justice Department should not be totally independent:

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) responded to Trump’s demand that DOJ “act” against Huma Abedin and Comey:

Three vice presidents (one current and two former) attended yesterday’s swearing-in ceremonies at the Senate:

The governor of New Jersey congratulated a new U.S. attorney:

But an NPR reporter pointed this out:

One of our China correspondents heard this startling warning:

The president’s son accused a daytime talk-show host of being part of the “Deep State”:

And CBS News anchor Alex Wagner celebrated her new gig as a host of Showtime’s “The Circus”:

GOOD READS FROM ELSEWHERE:

— Politico Magazine, “How Donald Trump Came Between Mike Pence and Jeff Flake,” by Tim Alberta: “The ascent of the 45th president has left a wreckage of relationships in its wake — neighbors, friends and families divided along lines of partisanship if not political philosophy. Yet there has been no more dramatic divergence than that of Pence and Flake, once ideological soulmates and indivisible comrades who now embody the right’s most extreme reactions to Trumpism.”

— Bloomberg, “America’s Worst Graveyard Shift Is Grinding Up Workers,” by Peter Waldman and Kartikay Mehrotra: “No one knew her real name. At work she was Tiffany Sisneros, until her arm got crushed in a conveyor belt. She filed for workers’ comp as Martha Solorzano, born 1966. The doctor who evaluated her wrote down her last name as Torres. We’ll call her Martha, the name her lawyer uses. Like millions of undocumented immigrants, Martha lived in the shadows. … She worked as a cleaner on the graveyard shift at Tyson Foods Inc.’s cavernous meatpacking plant in Holcomb, Kan. … The only slaughterhouse job worse than eviscerating animals is cleaning up afterward. The third-shift workers, as the cleaners are often called, wade through blood and grease and chunks of bone and flesh, racing all night to hose down the plant with disinfectants and scalding water. The stench is unbearable. Many workers retch.”

— The New Yorker, “Awake Under Anesthesia,” by Joshua Rothman: “We tend to think that being anesthetized is like falling asleep. [But] … the truth is stranger — it’s more like having your mind disassembled, then put together again.”

HOT ON THE LEFT:

“ACLU adds 10-year-old boy, mother to lawsuit against D.C. police in Inauguration Day arrests,” from Keith L. Alexander: “The [ACLU] added a 10-year-old boy [and] his mother to a civil suit it filed against D.C. police, alleging the two were injured while they were protesting [Trump’s] inauguration … In the lawsuit … the ACLU alleges that the woman and her son were ‘peacefully demonstrating’ … when police began spraying demonstrators with pepper spray as rioting broke out. The lawsuit says the police knocked the boy to the ground and his mother was unable to remove him from the melee as she was overcome by the pepper spray. The amended lawsuit also identified 27 police officers, including eight supervisors who the suit alleges unlawfully ordered and participated in the arrests of protesters who were not participating in the riots.”

 

HOT ON THE RIGHT

“Peter Thiel Is Exploring The Creation Of A Conservative Cable News Network,” from BuzzFeed News: “Thiel wants to create a new conservative cable news network and his representatives have engaged the powerful Mercer family to help with funding[.] … [Thiel] had originally explored a plan to create the network along with Roger Ailes, the late founder of Fox News, according to a soon-to-be published book by journalist Michael Wolff. … On May 12 of last year, Ailes was scheduled to fly from Palm Beach, Florida, to New York to meet with Thiel to discuss the launch of a new cable news network[.] … Both men [were] ‘worried that Trump could bring Trumpism down,’ [Wolff writes]. The plan [was that Thiel] would pay for the network. Ailes would come along and bring loyal Fox News talent Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilly[.] … But two days before the meeting, Ailes fell and hit his head. Ailes told his wife, Elizabeth, not to reschedule the meeting before he slipped into a coma, Wolff writes. He died a week later.”

 

DAYBOOK:

Trump has two meetings with Senate Republicans to discuss immigration and his 2018 legislative agenda. He will also present a National Security Medal today and have a meeting with RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel.

Pence will join Trump’s meetings with Republican senators and travel to Capitol Hill for the Senate policy lunch.

Trump is also reportedly planning to attend the college football national championship game in Atlanta on Monday. (David Nakamura)

 

NEWS YOU CAN USE IF YOU LIVE IN D.C.:

— The Wizards defeated the Knicks 121-103. (Candace Buckner)

— More than 5,000 Montgomery County homeowners mailed in their prepaid 2018 property taxes before the tax plan caps the deduction on local taxes. Rachel Siegel reports: “[T]he County Council came out of holiday recess to pass emergency legislation allowing them to do so. … A day after Montgomery approved its bill, the Internal Revenue Service announced taxpayers could deduct prepayments only if their properties had already been assessed for 2018. That means those who prepaid in Maryland, and in neighboring Virginia, are almost certainly out of luck.”

— The Legislative Black Caucus in Maryland’s General Assembly has taken issue with a judicial pick by Gov. Larry Hogan (R). Hogan appointed State’s Attorney Beau Oglesby (R) to serve as a circuit court judge on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, but Oglesby was accused three years ago of repeatedly using the n-word in front of African American law enforcement officers. (Ovetta Wiggins)

— District authorities have begun using dry ice to combat the city’s rat problem. Gerard Brown, who manages D.C.’s rodent control division, said to describe the dry ice’s effect, “The CO2 that emanates from the dry ice suffocates the rats, and their homes become their graves.” (Rachel Chason)

VIDEOS OF THE DAY:

Late night hosts reveled in the feud between President Trump and Steve Bannon:

Sarah Huckabee Sanders answered a question about the president’s “corrupt media awards”:

Even Tallahassee is seeing flurries amid this huge winter storm:

One Florida girl delighted in the snowfall:

And a man in Houston found himself locked in the store he was attempting to rob: