To understand the Ohio congressman鈥檚 prominent and pugnacious role in defending President Trump, it helps to know a bit about wrestling.
Today鈥檚 five hand-picked stories cover the Republican point man on impeachment, Delaware鈥檚 efforts to make a fairer justice system, resilience amid the Venice floods, a Lebanese warlord鈥檚 path to progress, and Venezuela鈥檚 musical gift to Argentina.聽
First, a homeowners' association in San Antonio, Texas, figured they were justified in asking the Simonis family to remove their Christmas decorations from the front lawn. After all, who puts out an inflatable snowman on Nov. 1? Way too early, right?
But here鈥檚 the catch: Claudia Simonis is eight months pregnant with their third child. The couple figured they鈥檇 get the decorations up sooner rather than later. When the HOA disagreed, Ms. Simonis posted聽 on the neighborhood Facebook page.聽
I鈥檓 not a fan of the ever-earlier commercial creep of Christmas. But in my book pregnant moms get a pass on most things. And homeowners' associations can be obnoxiously rules-oriented. It turns out this HOA has no written rules about the timing of holiday decorations. And the Simonis family has apparently spurred a minirebellion: Some neighbors are backing them by putting Christmas decorations on their own lawns.聽
We鈥檙e not talking a pro-democracy protest movement here 鈥 more of a social-media fueled Inflated Santa Spring. But there鈥檚 something irresistible about that kind of neighborly support and etiquette disobedience.
Too early for whimsical representations of joy? Maybe. But that little robot snowman that goes on my newsroom desk each year 鈥 I just pulled it out.