Edward-Isaac Dovere

Trump blows his deadline on anti-hacking plan

President-elect Donald Trump was very clear: “I will appoint a team to give me a plan within 90 days of taking office,” he said in January, after getting a US intelligence assessment of Russian interference in 2016’s elections and promising to address cybersecurity. April 20, President Trump hits his 90-day mark. There is no team, there is no plan, and there is no clear answer from the White House on who would even be working on what. It’s the latest deadline President Trump’s set and missed — from the press conference he said his wife would hold last fall to answer questions about her original immigration process to the plan to defeat ISIS that he’d said would come within his first 30 days in office.

Insiders game out Clinton's Cabinet

HillaryClinton's inner circle insists that any talk about what her administration would look like is premature. But the conversations are happening anyway. Here’s Politico’s rundown of some of the most prominent chatter, based on conversations with top Democrats, people who speak regularly to Clinton and her senior aides, as well as leaders in their respective fields.

Chief of staff: a choice between Cheryl Mills, Clinton’s chief of staff at the State Department, and Tom Nides, Clinton’s deputy secretary of state for management
Press secretary: Brian Fallon
Senior advisors: Jake Sullivan, Minyon Moore, Jennifer Palmieri, Huma Abedin, Neera Tanden, Ann O’Leary, Maya Harris, Robby Mook, and Marlon Marshall
Secretary of State: Wendy Sherman, Bill Burns, Nick Burns, Kurt Campbell, Strobe Talbott, or James Stavridis, if Sec John Kerry isn’t asked to continue.
Attorney General: Tom Perez, Janet Napolitano, Jennifer Granholm, or Tony West
Commerce: Gov Terry McAuliffe (D-VA) or Export-Import Bank President Fred Hochberg