HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400.jpg

858 KB

Extraction Summary

9
People
4
Organizations
2
Locations
3
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: News article summaries page, likely a web screenshot or printout, identified by a house oversight bates number.
File Size: 858 KB
Summary

This document is a collection of three news article summaries from a document labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400'. The summaries cover President Trump's interactions with GOP critics over a health-care bill, comments from his Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch, and the effects of his budget on rural programs. Despite the query's framing, the document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein.

People (9)

Name Role Context
Donald Trump President
Mentioned in all three article summaries. Told GOP critics 'I'm gonna come after you' regarding a health-care bill, l...
Harold Rogers Representative (Rep.)
A supporter of the health-care bill who commented on President Trump's remark.
Mike DeBonis Author/Journalist
Co-author of the article about the health-care bill.
Kelsey Snell Author/Journalist
Co-author of the article about the health-care bill.
Robert Costa Author/Journalist
Co-author of the article about the health-care bill.
Neil Gorsuch Supreme Court nominee
Subject of the second article, stated he was offended by President Trump's attacks on federal judges.
Robert Barnes Author/Journalist
Co-author of the article about Neil Gorsuch.
Ed O’Keefe Author/Journalist
Co-author of the article about Neil Gorsuch.
Jose A. DelReal Author/Journalist
Author of the article about Trump's budget and rural programs.

Organizations (4)

Timeline (3 events)

Not specified
President Trump visited Capitol Hill to promote a health-care overhaul bill to members of Congress.
Capitol Hill
Donald Trump Members of Congress
Not specified
Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch was under questioning (likely a confirmation hearing) where he commented on attacks on the judiciary.
Not specified
Not specified
President Trump's budget proposal was released, which targeted rural development programs.
Not applicable

Locations (2)

Location Context
Kentucky's Appalachia

Relationships (3)

Donald Trump Political adversary/colleague GOP critics
Trump admonished GOP critics of his health-care bill.
Neil Gorsuch Nominee/Nominator Donald Trump
Gorsuch is described as President Trump's Supreme Court nominee but also expressed being offended by Trump's attacks on judges.
Harold Rogers Political supporter Donald Trump
Described as a 'supporter of the bill' and commented on the President's remark.

Key Quotes (3)

"I'm gonna come after you"
Source
— Donald Trump (A remark made to GOP critics of the health-care bill.)
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400.jpg
Quote #1
"Oh, he was kidding around. I think."
Source
— Rep. Harold Rogers (A comment in response to President Trump's remark to GOP critics.)
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400.jpg
Quote #2
"'disheartening' and 'demoralizing'"
Source
— Neil Gorsuch (Words used to describe attacks on federal judges.)
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,232 characters)

Trump tells GOP critics of health-care bill: ‘I'm gonna come after you’
The president stormed Capitol Hill to sell the health-care overhaul, using both charm and admonishment to make his case, reassuring skittish members that they would gain seats in Congress if the bill passed. Rep. Harold Rogers, a supporter of the bill, said of the president's remark: “Oh, he was kidding around. I think.”
By Mike DeBonis, Kelsey Snell and Robert Costa • Read more »
Gorsuch says attacks on federal judges are 'disheartening' and 'demoralizing'
Under questioning, Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch reiterated what he had told senators in private — that he is offended by attacks like the ones leveled by President Trump against federal judges who have ruled in cases involving him.
By Robert Barnes and Ed O’Keefe • Read more »
Trump's budget targets rural development programs that provide a quiet lifeline
As a political statement, Trump's budget proposal delighted many small-government conservatives. But voters in Kentucky's Appalachia, an area that supports the president, worry that vital community programs that enhance job prospects and keep towns afloat might suffer.
By Jose A. DelReal • Read more »
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022400

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein document