Politics: Afternoon Edition: Will Roberts write the majority opinion in health case?

If you have difficulty viewing this newsletter, click here to view as a Web page.
Click here to view in plain text.
The Washington PostTuesday, June 26, 2012
Politics Afternoon Edition
Advertisement
Get The Washington Post on your iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch at itunes.com/apps/thewashingtonpost

HEADLINES

  1. Will Roberts write the majority opinion in health case?

    After the Arizona ruling, most believe that Chief Justice Roberts will be writing the majority opinion in the Affordable Care Act decision.
    » Read full article

  2. Primary day: Five things to watch for

    THE FIX | Voters in Colorado, New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah head to the polls today for primaries and runoffs.
    » Read full article

  3. DNC organizers drop Charlotte speedway from itinerary

    Organizers of the Democratic National Convention announced they are moving the CarolinaFest 2012 kickoff event on Labor Day from the Charlotte Motor Speedway to Uptown Charlotte, in the center of the city.
    » Read full article

  4. Senate should hold firm on VAWA provisions, Murray says

    2CHAMBERS | The House and Senate have passed competing versions of the Violence Against Women Act, which outlines how federal support for programs to combat domestic violence and sexual assault should be structured.
    » Read full article

  5. Condoleezza Rice for VP? It's so not happening.

    THE FIX | Buzz surrounding her as a potential VP pick overlooks the fact that she's repeatedly said she is not interested in the job.
    » Read full article


QUOTE OF THE DAY

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) arguing in favor of adding key provisions in the Violence Against Women Act that are opposed by Republicans in the House:

"Where a person lives, their immigration status or who they love should not determine whether or not perpetrators of domestic violence are brought to justice"



MULTIMEDIA

Gallery: The Supreme Court gets political

With a ruling on health-care law imminent, here are other instances when the high court has dipped into political fights.


Advertisement
Get The Washington Post, your way.
Want to stay on top of the latest news, features, commentary and more? Here's how:
Mobile: Alerts: Social Media:
Applications
Web site
E-mail
SMS
RSS Feeds
Facebook
Twitter
SEND TO A FRIEND UNSUBSCRIBE E-NEWSLETTER CENTER GET HELP
Washington Post Digital
E-mail Customer Care
1150 15th Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20071
©2012 The Washington Post

Privacy Policy

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Megyn Kelly -> Pete Hegseth responds to 2017 rape accusation. 🔥

FOLLOW THE MONEY - Billionaire tied to Epstein scandal funneled large donations to Ramaswamy & Democrats

Readworthy: This month’s best biographies & memoirs