2016-05-21

By Mike Allen (@mikeallen; mallen@politico.com) and Daniel Lippman (@dlippman; dlippman@politico.com)

Good Saturday morning. The 141st Preakness Stakes is tonight; post time is 6:45 p.m.

DRIVING THE WEEK: Obama departs at 12:55 p.m. for a week in Vietnam and Japan (16,000 miles, per AP) – “Obama’s Asian nuclear nightmare: Fueled by Trump's rhetoric and North Korea’s threats, Japan and South Korea are eyeing nuclear weapons of their own,” by Michael Crowley: “Obama’s visit next Friday to Hiroshima, which was incinerated by a U.S. atomic bomb in August 1945, will promote a message diametrically opposite from Trump’s. ‘It’s an opportunity to focus the world’s attention on the need to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and seek a world without them,’ said deputy national adviser Ben Rhodes. ...

“[A]fter the Iran deal averted what Obama predicted would be a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, Asia suddenly looms large as an atomic danger zone. ... Recent satellite imagery suggests that North Korea may be building a new tunnel in preparation for its fifth nuclear test. Officials in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan are losing patience with international efforts to thwart Pyongyang’s program. ... And those governments increasingly fret that the U.S. ... may become a less reliable ally.” http://politi.co/1OR5JVw

TOP TALKER – “Review: ‘Weiner’ is riveting fly-on-the-wall filmmaking,” by AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck: “new film about Anthony Weiner and the implosion of his 2013 New York mayoral run amid a revival of his sexting scandal ... Director Josh Kriegman once worked for Weiner ... Weiner clearly hoped Kriegman and co-director Elyse Steinberg would be documenting an inspiring comeback. ... Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin[,] ... let the filmmakers keep going. ...

“[I]t makes for riveting filmmaking -- as a portrait of a campaign in crisis, of a fascinatingly flawed politician, and especially of a marriage. Watch Abedin’s face as she stares at Weiner on the day the scandal breaks anew, disappointed and stunned, with no words spoken and none necessary. ... ‘Weiner,’ an IFC Films release, is rated R ... ‘for language and some sexual material.’ Running time: 100 minutes.” Review http://bit.ly/1Tu5lep ... Trailer http://bit.ly/1TqJ6DQ

THE NARRATIVE – “Why Donald Trump’s poll numbers are surging: He makes major gains among Republicans, while Clinton drops among Democrats,” by Steven Shepard: “The Trump Bump has arrived. ... The main reason for Trump’s surge over the past few weeks? ... [R]ank-and-file Republican voters are lining up behind Trump in large numbers, closing the gap with Clinton’s support among Democrats, which had been higher.” http://politi.co/1U5Gk9a

--WSJ A1, bottom of page, “Trump Is Closing Deal With Republican Elite,” by Kristina Peterson and Siobhan Hughes, with Rebecca Ballhaus: “‘You’re better off riding the beast than trying to ignore it,’ said Stewart Verdery, the founder of lobbying and public-affairs firm Monument Policy Group and a former Senate Republican aide. ... On Capitol Hill, attendance is growing at a weekly meeting of Mr. Trump’s House GOP supporters and his campaign advisers.” http://on.wsj.com/257KNgR

CHASER – “Trump’s campaign dwarfed by Clinton’s: New FEC reports show that the likely Democratic nominee will start with a huge infrastructure advantage,” by Ken Vogel and Isaac Arnsdorf: “Through the end of last month, ... Trump’s campaign had spent less than a third as much Clinton’s ($57 million to $182 million) and had assembled a staff about one-tenth the size of her (70 employees to 732), with a fraction as many offices (Trump last month paid $101,000 in rent vs. $328,000 for Clinton).” http://politi.co/257Ljvo

--“Sanders outraised Clinton in April after all: New FEC reports contradict earlier claims, but also show Clinton building towards the general election,” by Isaac Arnsdorf and Ken Vogel: “Clinton entered this month with a healthy $30 million in the bank, but her campaign did not take in more money than Bernie Sanders’ in April, contradicting earlier assessments and calling into question suggestions that her fundraising had overtaken his small-dollar fundraising juggernaut. Clinton’s main campaign committee directly received $25.1 million last month, compared with $26.9 million raised by Sanders’ campaign.” http://politi.co/258249H

“TRUMP CASH ... campaign investment tops $43 million,” by AP’s Chad Day and Julie Bykowicz: “Trump ... reported spending about $56 million during the primary [$43 million of his own] ... Trump’s largest expense in April, about $2.6 million, was for advertisements. The campaign also spent more than $930,000 on direct mail. Other big-ticket items included roughly $585,000 in airfare paid to Trump’s TAG Air ... [H]e reported about $1.7 million in donations last month ... largely from people buying Trump's campaign merchandise, including the red ‘Make America Great Again’ ball caps, and giving online through his campaign website.

“[T]he filings ... show that when Cruz dropped out, money wasn't the issue: He had $9.4 million in his campaign coffers at the end of April, just days before his defeat May 3 in the Indiana primary prompted him to end his bid. At the time, Cruz said he left the race because he saw no path forward.” http://bit.ly/1TtEkrk

--“Trump once revealed his income tax returns. They showed he didn’t pay a cent,” by WashPost’s Drew Harwell: “The disclosure, in a 1981 report by New Jersey gambling regulators, revealed that [he] had for at least two years ... taken advantage of a tax-code provision popular with developers that allowed him to report negative income. ... A few years earlier, he had told the New York Times he was worth more than $200 million.” http://wapo.st/1NCHSbO

UPDATE: Paul Manafort says that his comment about change and Trump – made Thursday at a meeting of top GOP congressional officials, and cited in yesterday’s Playbook -- referred to Trump’s negatives, during an exchange about the candidate’s favorable-unfavorable numbers. Manafort said the point he made was: “His negatives are going to be changing over the course of the next couple of weeks, as Republicans come home. They’re changing as we speak.”

POST-PRESIDENCY PLANNING -- “Obama records destined for library could go into storage in Hoffman Estates,” by Chicago Tribune’s Katherine Skiba: “A federal agency could move into an old furniture store in Hoffman Estates in October to start processing records and artifacts from the Obama White House ... In its new incarnation, it would be the workplace of employees with the National Archives and Records Administration who are processing Obama presidential records and artifacts. Archivists would work at the old furniture store as the Obama Presidential Center is being built on Chicago's South Side. The center is expected to open in 2021.” http://trib.in/1YLlD3N

BITE DU JOUR -- Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid sat down with MSNBC’s Joy Reid for her new 10 a.m. weekend program “AM Joy,” with a two-part interview airing this weekend. Reid said Sanders is “coming back to the Senate. ... I think that he has the ability to be a tremendously more powerful Senator in our caucus than he was. He was not patsy to begin with. He can be something much more than what he was.”

TOP TWEETS -- @BuzzFeedAndrew: “The candidate running for president who once said in an ideal world no one would have guns just got endorsed by the NRA. ... “‘The Republicans walk the @NRA line and refuse even limited restrictions,’ - @realDonaldTrump, late 1999.” ... @KatyTurNBC: “LaPierre: If bad guy w gun came into *this room*, he’d find out what good guys w guns could do. **note: no guns allowed in this room.” ... @realDonaldTrump, Dec. 17, 2012: “President Obama spoke for me and every American in his remarks in #Newtown Connecticut.” ... Jenna Johnson (@wpjenna): “NRA plays clip of Hillary Clinton speaking about gun control -- but ‘accidentally’ plays the clip of her barking during their first try” ...

... @betsy_klein: “Attendees for Trump at NRA convention can’t bring their guns to the Hall. ‘Leave them in your car,’ volunteer says + there’s a knife check” ... @samsteinhp: “Just called up Trump’s Mar-a-Lago. Receptionist tells me it’s a gun-free club” ... @politico: “.@realDonaldTrump on his sons: ‘They have so many rifles and so many guns that sometimes even I get concerned.’” 9-sec. video http://bit.ly/1svD3XM

COMING ATTRACTIONS: L.A. Times A1, below fold, “U.N. may pick its first woman to lead” beginning Jan. 1 (with possible Hillary inauguration that month) -- Tracy Wilkinson at United Nations: “For the first time since the U.N. was founded in 1945, the 193 member states will choose a new secretary-general in a relatively open and apparently transparent election. ... Voting ... starts later this year, and the new term starts Jan. 1 ...

“Those vying for the post include at least four women ... [N]ine candidates have thrown their hats in the ring, and a few more are expected ... Speculation is rampant that someone of the stature of, say, Angela Merkel, chancellor of Germany, could be recruited.” http://lat.ms/1OFoF3T

SNEAK PEAK – JANE MAYER’s “Political Scene” feature in next week’s New Yorker, “Sting of Myself: Amateurish spies like James O’Keefe III attempt to sway the 2016 campaign”: “With cash streaming into dark-money groups, negative campaigning is a growth industry.” http://bit.ly/1RecDyc ... Audio of O’Keefe http://bit.ly/257JsGZ

--“James O’Keefe Outs Himself in George Soros investigation” -- Q&A with Breitbart’s Joel B. Pollak: http://bit.ly/1YLRdyz

DAVID PETRAEUS/MICHAEL O’HANLON op-ed in WSJ, “Take the Gloves Off Against the Taliban”: “Some might reasonably ask, after 15 years of war in Afghanistan, why do we need to keep at it? The answer is simple—because Afghanistan, effectively the eastern bulwark in our broader Middle East fight against extremist forces, still matters. ... Simply waging the Afghanistan air-power campaign with the vigor we are employing in Iraq and Syria ... will very likely make much of the difference between some version of victory and defeat.” http://on.wsj.com/1YLOiWo

STUART ROY and HAZEN MARSHALL, of Strategic Action Public Affairs and Mitch McConnell’s office, are featured doing CrossFit with FamousDC’s Kathryn Lyons in a new “Famous Five” segment -- 5-min. video http://bit.ly/1qzAwdS

SPOTTED: Amy Walter of Cook Political Report, scootering last night in McPherson Square, zig-zagging past a prom party ... former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and husband, Captain Mark Kelly, last night taking in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s masterpiece, Hamilton in “The Room Where It Happens”

HOT VIDEO – “Former Miss Universe Accuses Donald Trump of Fat Shaming: ‘He Called Me Miss Piggy’” – 2-min. “Inside Edition” video http://ietv.co/1Re3qGb

CLICKERS -- “The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics,” edited by Matt Wuerker – 12 keepers http://politi.co/256Mdbz ... “This week in politics according to 13 crazy Vines” – Politico: “The House gets unruly. Bernie wins Oregon. And Bryan Cranston impersonates Trump.” http://politi.co/20gce4H

GREAT WEEKEND READS, curated by Daniel Lippman:

--“The empty brain,” by Robert Epstein in Aeon Magazine: “Your brain does not process information, retrieve knowledge or store memories. In short: your brain is not a computer.” http://bit.ly/25e4C9V (h/t Longreads.com)

--“Does Power Really Corrupt?” by Matthew Sweet in 1843 Magazine, from The Economist: “An argument about whether powerful people behave better or worse than others is shaking the world of experimental psychology.” http://bit.ly/1U4xIjn

--“Conservatives Anonymous,” by Andy Kroll in California Sunday magazine: “In liberal Hollywood, Republicans have formed one of the industry’s most influential (and most discreet) political organizations.” http://bit.ly/1rZGWEj (h/t Longform.org)

--“Double Cross,” by Kevin Poulsen in Wired: “The Ukrainian hacker who became the FBI’s best weapon -- and worst nightmare.” http://bit.ly/1Xo9hjn

--“The End of the End of the World,” by Jonathan Franzen in The New Yorker: “An uncle’s legacy and a journey to Antarctica.” http://bit.ly/1TMScKG

--“Work It,” by The New Yorker’s Alexandra Schwartz, reviewing three recent books on romance: “Is dating worth the effort?” http://bit.ly/1s0RPpn

--“Trump’s People,” by Paul Wood, who was a foreign correspondent for 20 years at the BBC covering many wars, in the June issue of Harpers: In-depth interviews of Trump’s “fans in Florida, New Hampshire, and Iowa”. http://bit.ly/1Re11LK

--“The Hidden Workforce Expanding Tesla’s Factory,” by Louis Hansen in the San Jose Mercury News: “The automaker’s urgent upgrade of its Fremont facility benefited from cheap, imported workers, but did the companies involved flout visa and labor laws?” http://bayareane.ws/1Re1gXb

--“Soon We Won’t Program Computers. We’ll Train Them Like Dogs,” by Jason Tanz in June’s Wired: “[I]f the world is a computer, then the world can be coded. Code is logical. Code is hackable. Code is destiny. These are the central tenets (and self-fulfilling prophecies) of life in the digital age.” http://bit.ly/1TvImRg ... See the cover. http://bit.ly/1XFyfLF (h/t TheBrowser.com)

--“A Jew Becomes a Star” in Tablet Magazine: “In an excerpt from Neal Gabler’s new biography of Barbra Streisand [“Barbra Streisand: Redefining Beauty, Femininity, and Power”], the Broadway actress chases her career-making Fanny Brice role.” http://bit.ly/27J7MB3 ... $15.85 on Amazon http://amzn.to/1VehPcn

--“The foul reign of the biological clock,” by Moira Weigel in The Guardian: “It seems like the concept of the biological clock has been with us forever. In fact, the metaphor was invented in the late 1970s. And it has been used to reinforce sexist ideas ever since.” http://bit.ly/1OEutLe (h/t ALDaily.com)

TRANSITIONS: Rick Limardo has joined the Ways and Means Committee as coalitions director, from National Association of Manufacturers, where he was director of gov’t relations.

THE TALK OF WALL STREET ... “Unloved bull market: It’s been a year since latest record,” by AP Business Writer Stan Choe in N.Y.: Today “is the one-year anniversary of the stock market’s record high [when the] Standard & Poor’s 500 index reached its latest high of 2,130.82 ... Since then, it’s come close to beating it, only to veer lower ... Last month it came within about 1 percent of the record ... After a horrendous start to the year, the worst on record for the market, stocks have clawed back the ground they lost ... since 2016 began.

“As of [yesterday], the S&P 500 was barely positive for 2016. It would need to gain another 4 percent to match the high it reached a year ago. More gains may be on the way, strategists along Wall Street say, though the forecasts are largely for only modest gains, and rocky ones at that.” http://apne.ws/1TxBh2K

ENGAGED! Ms. Michael McCollum, senior regional finance director at Team Ryan, to Mr. Jon Adams, digital director at NRSC. Jon proposed at the Jefferson Memorial. The couple met at the RNC vs. DNC Softball game. After the proposal, they went to Duke’s Grocery for drinks with both families and their close friends. Pic http://bit.ly/1NDw4pv

THE PRESIDENT’S WEEK AHEAD: This “afternoon, the President will depart Washington ... en route Joint Base Elmendorf, Anchorage, Alaska on his way to Hanoi, Vietnam. ... [T]he President will arrive at Joint Base Elmendorf, where Air Force One will refuel. On Sunday evening, the President will arrive in Yokota Air Force Base, Fussa, Japan, where Air Force One will refuel. On Monday, in the morning, the President will arrive in Hanoi, Vietnam. While in Hanoi, the President will participate in an arrival ceremony and take an official photo with President Tran Dai Quang of Vietnam at the Presidential Palace.

“Afterward, the President will participate in a bilateral meeting with President Quang. Following this meeting, the President will meet with the chairwoman of the National Assembly Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan. Afterward, the President will participate in a press conference with President Quang and attend the state luncheon. Later in the afternoon, the President will participate in a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc of Vietnam. In the evening, the President will participate in a bilateral meeting with General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong of the Communist Party of Vietnam. ...

“On Tuesday, the President will meet with Embassy personnel and families. Later in the morning, the President will meet with members of civil society. In the afternoon, the President will deliver remarks on U.S.-Vietnam relations at the National Convention Center. Following his remarks, the President will depart Hanoi en route Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. While in Ho Chi Minh City, the President will tour the Jade Pagoda. ... [H]e will tour the DreamPlex Coworking Space and deliver remarks at an event focused on entrepreneurship ...

“On Wednesday, the President will meet with U.S. consulate staff and family members. Afterward, the President will participate in a Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI) town hall. In the afternoon, the President will depart Vietnam en route Ise-Shima, Japan, where he will remain overnight. On Thursday, the President will visit the Ise-Jingu Shrine. In the afternoon, the President will attend meetings at the G-7 summit.

“On Friday, the President will attend a G-7 meetings on energy, climate and the prosperity of Asia. In the afternoon, the President will participate in a family photo with outreach guests and attend a working lunch on development issues. Later in the afternoon, the President will depart Tokoname en route Hiroshima, Japan. While in Hiroshima, the President will deliver remarks and participate in a wreath laying ceremony at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial. The President will also meet with service members at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakune, Japan. In the evening, the President will depart Hiroshima, Japan en route Washington.”

THE VICE PRESIDENT’S WEEKEND: Today, “the Vice President will depart Wilmington, Delaware en route West Point, New York. At 10:00 AM, the Vice President will deliver the commencement address at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. This event is open press. Afterwards, the Vice President will depart West Point, New York en route Wilmington, Delaware. At 5:45 PM, the Vice President will attend an event for Representative John Carney; Dr. Biden will also attend. This event at Chase Center will be closed press. On Sunday, the Vice President will be in Wilmington, Delaware. There are no public events scheduled.”

BIRTHWEEK (was yesterday): George Condon ... Mary Bruce ... (was Thursday): Mike Reilly, partner and political ad man at MVAR Media, turned the big 3-0 (h/t Chris Stelmarski)

BIRTHDAYS: Beth Dozoretz (hat tip: Autumn) ... Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) is 65 ... Gillian Reagan, managing editor for POLITICO States ... Mike Viqueira, an Al Jazeera America and NBC alum ... Reilly Balderston … AP’s Deb Riechmann, a Jayhawk … former U.S. Sen. George Lemieux … Michael Gartland, City Hall reporter for the NY Post ... Rebecca Leber, writing on politics and the planet as a Grist news editor and a TNR alum ... Tom Allon, City and State CEO, is 54 ... Fred Frommer, head of the sports biz practice at Dewey Square and an AP alum … Mosheh Oinounou, EP for CBSN ... Joshua Henne of White Horse Strategies ... Steven Newmark, senior health policy advisor and counsel for the NYC Mayor’s office ... Bill Black ... Abigail P. Gage ... Doug Randall ...

... Jeffrey Kluger, editor at large for TIME (h/ts Jon Haber) ... Krista Ritacco ... Politico’s Ross Rattanasena ... Becca Shaw, who recently relocated to Cleveland to serve on RNC’s Committee on Arrangements, is 29 (h/t The Framily) ... Baupost Group’s Seth Klarman (h/t Jewish Insider) ... Politico alum Maria Devarakonda ... Rebecca “B” Shaw, deputy chief of staff and LD for Rep. Chris Gibson (R-NY) ... Hampton Cokeley in Sen. Shelley Moore Capito’s office ... Brandon Pollak, director of global affairs at 1776, is 36 ... Mary Ann Gomez, president and CEO of the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute ... Jennifer Treat ... Susan Hansen ... Kathryn Carlson ... Robert Opacki (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) ... Ken Herman … Lani Miller ... Emily Bucci ... Ed Keegan is 55 ... rhythm-and-blues singer Ron Isley (The Isley Brothers) is 75 ... Mr. T is 64 ... actress Sarah Ramos is 25 (h/ts AP)

THE SHOWS, from @MattMackowiak, filing from Austin:

--NBC’s “Meet the Press”: New NBC/WSJ national poll numbers; Hillary Clinton; Mark Cuban; roundtable: Helene Cooper, Robert Draper, Joy Reid and Alex Castellanos

--ABC’s “This Week”: Bernie Sanders; Ed Royce; Adam Schiff; roundtable: Donna Brazile, Matthew Dowd, Bill Kristol and Cokie Roberts

--CBS’s “Face the Nation”: Bernie Sanders; Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger; Fran Townsend; former NTSB chair Mark Rosenker; new CBS News battleground tracker general election polling from Florida and Ohio with analysis from CBS News elections director Anthony Salvanto; roundtable: Molly Ball, Ezra Klein, Ed O’Keefe and Ramesh Ponnuru

--“Fox News Sunday”: Jeh Johnson; Michael McCaul and Jeff Sessions; roundtable: Brit Hume, Kirsten Powers, Michael Needham and Juan Williams

--CNN’s “State of the Union” (9am ET / 12pm ET): Bernie Sanders; Peter King; roundtable: Xavier Becerra, Marsha Blackburn, S.E. Cupp and Bill Press

--CNN’s “Inside Politics” with John King (SUN 8am ET): Roundtable: Jonathan Martin, Julie Pace, Matt Vier and Nia-Malika Henderson

--Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures” (10am ET / 9am CT): Newt Gingrich; Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco president and CEO John Williams; roundtable: Tony Sayegh, Ed Rollins and Julie Roginsky

--Fox News’ “MediaBuzz” (SUN 11am ET / 10am CT): Betsy Woodruff; The Washington Times’ Kelly Riddell; Joe Trippi; Brit Hume; Tucker Carlson; Bob Woodward

--CNN’s “Reliable Sources”: (SUN 11am ET): Roundtable: Carl Bernstein, John Avlon and Jane Hall; Marty Baron; Ari Fleischer; the Los Angeles Times’ Mary McNamara and Poynter’s Jim Warren

--CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS”: (SUN 10am, 1pm ET): Peter Bergen; author and New York Times Magazine contributor Robert Worth (“A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS”); George Shultz

--Univision’s “Al Punto” (SUN 10am ET / 1pm PT) Actress and former Miss Universe Alicia Machado; writer and Mexican political analyst Dr. Denise Dresser; Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen; author, journalist and television host Jaime Bayly (“El Niño Terrible y La Escritora”)

--C-SPAN: “The Communicators” (SAT 6:30pm ET): FCC Commissioner Tom Wheeler (D), questioned by Bloomberg BNA’s Lydia Beyoud ... “Newsmakers” (SUN 10am ET): Mac Thornberry ... “Q&A” (SUN 8pm & 11pm ET): Author and Vanity Fair columnist Michael Kinsley (“Old Age: A Beginner’s Guide”)

--MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation with Rev. Al Sharpton”: (SUN 8-9am ET): Jeff Weaver; Joel Benenson; U.S. Senate candidate Deborah Ross (D-NC); author and retired NYPD deputy inspector Corey Pegues (“Once a Cop”); Fordham’s Christina Greer; Susan Del Percio

--MSNBC’s “The Place for Politics”: (SUN 9-10am ET): Nina Turner; Alexis Levinson; Abby Phillip; Alex Roarty

--MSNBC’s “AM Joy”: (SUN 10am-12pm ET): Harry Reid; Voto Latino’s Maria Teresa Kumar; E.J. Dionne; Perry Bacon; Dana Milbank; USC’s Jane Junn; The Los Angeles Times’ Kuris Lee; the University of California-Riverside’s Karthick Ramakrishnan; author and Terror Asymmetrics Project executive director Malcolm Nance (“Defeating ISIS”); Stratega Consulting CEO and American University’s Hillary Mann Leverett

--MSNBC’s “The Place for Politics”: (SUN 12-1pm ET): Jeremy Peters; Robert Costa; Howard Dean; Susan Del Percio

--MSNBC’s “The Place for Politics”: (SUN 1-2pm ET): Josh Barro; the University of Texas’ Victoria Defrancesco; former Romney campaign health care advisor and the Manhattan Institute’s Avik Roy

--PBS’s “To the Contrary” with Bonnie Erbé: Roundtable: Eleanor Holmes Norton, the Center for American Progress’ Sarah McBride, the Washington Examiner’s Ashe Schow and GOP strategist Jennifer Higgins

--SiriusXM’s “No Labels Radio” (SAT 10am ET & 6pm ET, SUN 1PM ET): Host Jon Huntsman moderates an in-studio panel featuring No Labels executive director Margaret Kimbrell and Politico’s Seung Min Kim. The panel will discuss the 2016 Presidential Election, regulatory reform, making government work, and the EgyptAir crash with Joe Manchin, Garret Graves and former Special Adviser for the transition in Syria Fred Hof.

--Sinclair’s “Full Measure” with Sharyl Attkisson (SUN 10am ET on WJLA and airing on Sinclair stations nationwide): Trump sits down with Sharyl to answer some rarely-asked personal questions.

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