When Donald Trump landed in Ohio this week, he got a taste of the meager Republican super PAC efforts aimed at him: a 47-second Web video clipping together some of his most provocative comments and a small airplane trailing a banner proclaiming, “Ohioans Can’t Trust Trump.” As the combative mogul enters his fifth month at the top of the GOP presidential field, attempts to derail him remain anemic,
During the recent No Labels-hosted Problem Solver Convention in New Hampshire, things got a little uncomfortable. When Joseph Choe, an Asian American college student, stood up to ask a question about South Korea, Donald Trump cut him off and wondered aloud: “Are you from South Korea?” Choe responded, “I’m not. I was born in Texas, raised in Colorado.” His answer prompted laughter from the audience
Which of these 23 things was the MOST Obama’s Katrina’s moment? No one can decide. The debate over what to do about the crisis on the border has been dubbed “Obama’s Katrina” by critics. Here are four incidents that have also been given the moniker of being the president’s “Katrina moment.” (Video: Pamela Kirkland/The Washington Post)
Will Japan’s habit of rewriting its history affect its future? Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister and president of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), gestures as he speaks during an election campaign rally in Tokyo, Japan, on Sunday, Dec. 7, 2014. (Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg) Japan is working hard at forgetting. Its prime minister, Shinzo Abe, suggests in code-talk that Japan was the victim of Wor
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