The Note: Mueller's import grows as wait on report continues
Robert Mueller's report looms large even with the special counsel wrapped.
The TAKE with Rick Klein
President Donald Trump used an occasion this week to remind people that he's in charge.
"There's only one person that's running it," he said, responding to a question about immigration policy.
But while Trump appears to be taking control of his administration, Robert Mueller's report looms large even with the special counsel having wrapped up his work.
The arrest of Julian Assange and the indictment of former Obama White House counsel Gregory Craig serve as reminders that things Mueller stirred up won't settle themselves down. And we still haven't heard any last words from the Southern District of New York.
Attorney General William Barr, in stating "spying did occur" on the Trump campaign, has raised the stakes around what Mueller actually found. The time between Barr's summary and the actual release of the Mueller report has been long enough for expectations and perceptions to do a few 180s.
Trump has again this week shown his power to direct the political narrative. But running Washington doesn't mean controlling what matters.
The RUNDOWN with MaryAlice Parks
There's has been near-constant conversations about age and generational divides within the electorate since the latest democratic primary began.
Do democrats really want someone young? Why then do former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders keep ranking near the top of the polls? Is that just because voters know their names -- or something else?
Is Mayor Pete Buttigieg too young? Does Beto O'Rourke still count as young? Do older Americans care about the stories and allegations of unwanted touching lobbed against Biden? Do younger voters care about issues like climate change or gun control?
Over the course of this presidential campaign, there will be debate, strategy and polling on all of this. Going into those conversations, keep in mind some key facts about what makes millennials distinct -- facts that should change how candidates try to talk to them.
From our most recent ABC News/Washington Post poll at the start of the year: Millennials -- Americans between the ages of 23 to 38 -- differ from their elders in substantial ways, politically and demographically. They're more racially diverse, less religious and more apt to live in urban areas. Specifically, by 14 percentage points, they are less apt to be white; by 15 points they are more likely to reside in urban areas; and by 13 points they are less apt to live in rural areas. Finally, by 13 points they are more likely to cite no religious affiliation.
The TIP with Adam Kelsey
While Democratic presidential hopefuls carve out positions on a range of issues, in some surveys, the majority of voters are telling pollsters that their main interest is simple: Who will beat Trump?
The easiest way to showcase that? Start campaigning in the states that could deliver a blue victory come November 2020. Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada are still as popular as ever, but it shouldn't be a surprise that O'Rourke and Sen. Amy Klobuchar made early trips to Wisconsin and Michigan, two states that favored Trump by fewer than 35,000 total votes. Or that Sanders is about to cover similar ground on Friday and appear in Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Plenty of ink has been spilled on the rise of the Democratic Party's left wing and its influx of progressive ideas, but even the Socialists will tell you that, unlike in 2016, it'll be worth compromising on a candidate if it means replacing the current administration. Though if Sanders can demonstrate crossover, swing-state appeal this weekend, the emerging left might be able to argue that he alone could kill two birds with one campaign.
ONE MORE THING
Georgetown University could become the first college in the nation to mandate a fee to benefit descendants of slaves.
Students on Thursday voted by almost a 2-to-1 margin to approve such a referendum, which still must be approved by the university to go into effect.
If enacted, students would pay an extra $27 per semester.
In 1838, Georgetown Jesuits sold 272 slaves when the university was in a financial bind.
THE PLAYLIST
ABC News' "Start Here" podcast. Friday morning's episode features ABC News' James Meek, who brings us up to speed on the long, strange journey of Julian Assange, leading up to his arrest Thursday in London. Then ABC News White House Correspondent Karen Travers explains why President Donald Trump is suddenly saying he "doesn't know much about" Wikileaks after bringing it up multiple times on the campaign trail in 2016. http://apple.co/2HPocUL
ABC News' "The Investigation" podcast.In this special episode, "The Investigation" takes listeners inside the Ecuadorian Embassy and the tiny room that Julian Assange called home over the past seven years. ABC News Senior Executive Producer Chris Vlasto, along with ABC News investigative reporters Matt Mosk and James Meek, speak with documentary filmmaker Sean Langan, who spent nearly 50 hours visiting with Assange. https://apple.co/2IoPIY4
FiveThirtyEight's "Politics Podcast." The FiveThirtyEight team discuss the results of the "How Good Are FiveThirtyEight Forecasts?" project, which assesses the accuracy of a decade's worth of FiveThirtyEight forecasts in politics and sports. Fortunately, it turns out they're well calibrated. https://53eig.ht/2KukGAO
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY
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Download the ABC News app and select "The Note" as an item of interest to receive the sharpest political analysis every weekday.