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As President Donald Trump tries to elude oversight in Congress for his actions, including recent dealings with Ukraine, Trump's personal lawyers have made a far-reaching claim that could remove a judicial check on a president's alleged transgressions.Trump's lawyers have argued in a federal case to be heard Wednesday that the Constitution shields the president from any criminal investigation -- not just from actual prosecution -- while he holds office.Among their legal justifications, Trump lawyers quote a 2009 law review essay written by now-Supreme Court Justice 583
At least 50,000 American license plate numbers have been made available on the dark web after a company hired by Customs and Border Protection was at the center of a 178
As the United States heads toward another presidential election in 2020, social media plays an even bigger role than in previous elections as information is published, shared, tweeted — and "likes" may matter.Does a person's social media following signal how well he or she may do as we get closer to deciding who will appear on the ballot?There are several candidates with big followings: Namely Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. But other candidates are on their heels.Let's take a look at the current number of followers the candidates have, as of Tuesday, March 19, 2019. Note that some have personal verified pages and secondary pages for the candidacy. These numbers reflect their personal, verified pages.In order from highest to lowest Instagram followers:DONALD TRUMP 805
Breaking overnight: Detectives bust a man for sneaking 84 lbs of marijuana packaged in #xmas wrapping paper into @Fly_Nashville. More details on @NC5 this morning. #Nashville #BNA pic.twitter.com/raLnOsy9SL— Mo Haider (@mhaider_NC5) December 17, 2019 262
As President Donald Trump continues to make clear that he wants to kill the Affordable Care Act, new research suggests that a big part of the ACA -- the expansion of the Medicaid program -- was linked with fewer cardiovascular-related deaths in counties where expansion took place.Between 2010 and 2016, counties in states where Medicaid expanded had 4 fewer deaths per 100,000 residents each year from cardiovascular causes after expansion, compared with counties in non-expansion states, according to the research. The findings were presented at the 564