This document is a data file of news snippets from The New York Times, dated around September 21-23, 2018, and bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028470' footer. The content discusses the origin of the 25th Amendment, the UK Labour Party's debate on a second Brexit referendum led by Jeremy Corbyn, and concerns about President Trump's foreign policy at the U.N. General Assembly. The document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or any of his known activities.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| President John F. Kennedy | Former U.S. President |
Mentioned in relation to the 25th Amendment, which was added to the Constitution after his assassination.
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| Jeremy Corbyn | Labour Party Leader |
Mentioned as showing reluctance to call a second Brexit referendum but facing increasing pressure to do so.
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| President Trump | U.S. President |
Mentioned in the context of the U.N. General Assembly, where his advisers worried about his enthusiasm for engaging w...
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| Jeff J Mitchell | Photographer |
Credited for a photo from Getty Images Europe.
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| Doug Mills | Photographer |
Credited for a photo from The New York Times.
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| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| The New York Times |
Source of the news articles.
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| Getty Images Europe |
Source of a photograph.
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| Labour Party |
British opposition political party holding its annual meeting to discuss Brexit.
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| E.U. (European Union) |
Mentioned in the context of Brexit negotiations with the UK.
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| U.N. General Assembly (United Nations) |
Location of a meeting where President Trump's advisers were concerned about his actions.
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| HOUSE_OVERSIGHT |
Appears as a footer/Bates number on the document, likely referring to a U.S. congressional committee that collected t...
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| Location | Context |
|---|---|
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Location of the Labour Party's annual meeting.
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Mentioned as an adversary President Trump might engage with.
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Mentioned as an adversary President Trump might engage with.
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Mentioned in a URL related to Theresa May and Brexit.
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Complete text extracted from the document (5,049 characters)
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