Thursday, September 21, 2017

OnPolitics Today: Zuckerberg accepts Congress' friend request

Facebook let marketers use terms like "Jew hater."
 
usatoday.com
with Josh Hafner
OnPolitics Today: Zuckerberg accepts Congress's friend request
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg pledged the company would

 

Russian-linked entities bought 3,000-plus ads to sway the presidential election via Facebook, that little website you visit daily that, until this week, let customers target their ads to attract self-described "Jew haters." 

That's not a great look for Facebook and wannabe president Mark Zuckerberg, who on Thursday caved to Congress and agreed to fork over Russia-linked ads to lawmakers. (Bob Mueller, the investigator slowly circling President Trump's friends and family, received similar data, too.)

Both Democrats and Republicans want a piece of Facebook: Lawmakers on the left say it's grown too powerful, while those on the right dislike the company's public and progressive stances on immigration and other social issues. 

"I'm not going to sit here and tell you we're going to catch all bad content in our system," Zuckerberg said Thursday on Facebook. "We don't check what people say before they say it, and frankly, I don't think our society shouldn't want us to."

It's OnPolitics Today, the daily politics roundup from USA TODAY. Subscribe here.

Is Donald Trump a 'mentally deranged U.S. dotard'? Depends on whom you ask.

If you ask Kim Jong Un, then, yes, Trump is totes a mentally deranged dotard. So the North Korean leader said, threatening to "tame" Trump "with fire" for the U.S. president's comments to the United Nations regarding North Korea. Trump on Thursday announced he would increase pressure on North Korea by punishing those who do business with it. That set the stage for months (years?) of nuclear-tinged uncertainty. Sounds great!

Also at the U.N.: Trump lectured African leaders on Nambia -a country that doesn't exist.

Mueller?  ... Mueller? ... Mueller? 

It's tough to know just what Robert Mueller is up to, but he's reportedly pummeled the White House with requests for documents tied to former FBI Director James Comey and Michael Flynn, Trump's former adviser. The White House has complied, even as Mueller investigates Trump for possible obstruction of justice. But Trump could still fire Mueller, and experts want Congress to keep any evidence from being destroyed. 

GOP's latest health care effort comes down to one woman

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski is feeling the heat from all sides as Republican senators try once more to repeal and replace Obamacare ahead of a Sept. 30 deadline , Eliza Collins reports. The GOP needs 50 votes to pass the repeal legislation, and it's a few shy. That makes Murkowski, a Republican who's never backed a repeal attempt, a key target. The vote comes next week on what's called the Graham-Cassidy bill, which would fund states to devise their own health care systems. 


Elsewhere in politics

Trump supporters hate Democrats, until Trump works with them
Trump's NASA pick ignores scientists, climate change
Trump could doom workers in Supreme Court labor cases
Investigate Tom Price's travels? Democrats say yes

 

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