- What you missed on Sunday Kos …
- Racism in Great Britain: 'Windrush generation' got a day, but pain and suffering hasn't gone away, by Denise Oliver Velez
- The final score as Sarah Sanders exits White House: Sanders, 1, the press: 0, by Eric Boehlert
- The NRA is falling apart, one bad shot at a time, by Sher Watts Spooner
- The migrant deaths aren't in the camps: they're in the desert and the Rio Grande, by Frank Vyan Walton
- Thanks to the Supreme Court, defending real elections will be a core issue in 2020, by Ian Reifowitz
- A community read: The Mueller report, Part II, by Susan Grigsby
- My son's hair shouldn't limit his future—but it could, by Rouchan Meadows Fernandez
- Meet the Press host disappoints serious journalist Chuck Todd, by Jon Perr
- Democrats: Stop apologizing, by Mark E Andersen
- Trump is fomenting war with Iran. That's the entire story, by Laurence Lewis
- When people have to pay a discrete tax to fund it, war is less popular, by David Akadjian
- Democrats had better be careful when touting student loan forgiveness proposals, by Egberto Willies
Earlier this month, retired New York police detective Luis Alvarez delivered a heartbreaking plea to Congress to extend the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, which provides financial assistance to first responders who had developed illnesses after responding to the 2001 terrorist attacks.
On Saturday, his family confirmed that the New York Police Department veteran had died at 53, having succumbed the cancer he developed years after working at Ground Zero. His legacy is cemented in his advocacy for his fellow first responders. Politicians and activists vowed on Saturday to continue the fight in his name.
Sarah Sanders is likely to hit the speaking circuit and write a book after leaving the White House on Friday, and she'll move to Arkansas in August as the prelude to a possible 2022 run for governor, sources tell Axios.
Details: We hear the book will be billed as an account of her life in politics and experience inside the Trump administration, which she sees as very positive.
Guadalajara had been enjoying a sweaty summer for the past few weeks until the weekend brought a shocking surprise.
The Mexican city woke up Sunday morning to more than 3 feet of ice in some areas after a heavy hailstorm swept through the region.
More than 50 e-scooters and a few bikes were pulled from the Willamette River in downtown Portland Tuesday and Wednesday by a county sheriff’s office dive team. The divers noticed the scooters in the river last month.
On today’s Kagro in the Morning show: Greg Dworkin helps us catch up after the debates and another embarrassing jaunt abroad for Trump. The word of the day is: disjunctive. With just days to go until July 4th, Trump's still reviewing fabric swatches. But get ready for the next big grift: VIP tix.