Trump picks health secretary Donald Trump has chosen a prominent critic of Obamacare as his secretary of health and human services, casting fresh doubt over the future of the Affordable Care Act. Congressman Tom Price of Georgia, an orthopedic surgeon who has long been a leading congressional voice in opposition to Barack Obama's healthcare reform legislation, was confirmed on Tuesday as the president-elect's pick. It came at the beginning of a day that vice-president-elect Mike Pence told reporters would produce "a number of very important announcements" concerning the presidential transition. Donald Trump selects Tom Price as secretary of health and human services
Bannon's Hollywood days John Patterson takes a look at the Hollywood career of Trump's chief strategist Steve Bannon's – or Stephen K Bannon as he's known on IMDb. Bannon, who has a record of promoting antisemitic, anti-Muslim and misogynistic content while overseeing the "alt-right" website Breitbart News, made money through an early investment in Seinfeld, and later took to writing and producing his own films including, Hillary: The Movie, and the Sarah Palin biopic The Undefeated. Bannon's "movies aim to give the illusion of authority and thoroughness, and they dig deep into the negatives on their enemies (Clinton Cash) and the positives on their idols (Palin biopic The Undefeated)," Patterson writes, "without ever offering countervailing opinions or contrary evidence. No alternative opinion is wanted or sought. Only haters need apply." For haters only: watching Steve Bannon's documentary films Democrats 'must return to the left' The Democrats must abandon their centrist tendencies and return to the left if they are to win back the white working class, Thomas Frank argues. Frank says this election was a rebuke of centrist policies, which are predicated on promise of victory, and implores Democrats to learn this lesson and pivot to the left. However, he has little hope that they will. How the Democrats could win again, if they wanted In case you missed it The newborn universe may have glowed with light beams moving much faster than they do today, according to a theory that overturns Einstein's century-old claim that the speed of light is a constant. Theory challenging Einstein's view on speed of light could soon be tested
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