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OnPolitics Today: Hannity fans may have smashed their Keurigs too soon

Plus the latest on tax reform, Trump's China return and harassment on the Hill
Fox News host Sean Hannity is seen in the White House briefing room in Washington, DC, on January 24, 2017.

Nothing better sums up politics in 2017 than fans of Fox News host Sean Hannity smashing their Keurig coffee makers this week after Keurig pulled ads from Hannity's show over his support for Roy Moore.

Then, with the K-Cup™ brewers smashed and their black plastic pieces swept away, Hannity himself neared Keurig's conclusion: Maybe Roy Moore, accused of preying on teenagers when he was in his 30s, isn't fit for a Senate seat.

"You must immediately and fully come up with a satisfactory explanation for your inconsistencies," Hannity said Tuesday night, giving Moore a 24-hour timeline. "You must remove any doubt. If he can’t do this, then Judge Moore needs to get out of this race."

Also second-guessing the Republican Senate nominee is reportedly Steve Bannon, the ex-Trump adviser and Breitbart chairman who campaigned on Moore's behalf, according to a report in The Daily Beast.

Meanwhile, in Moore' state of Alabama, one resident received a robocall from a fake Washington Post reporter seeking dirt on Moore. His alleged name? Bernie Bernstein, perhaps an homage to legendary Post reporter Carl Bernstein or — as many on Twitter pointed out — a racist moniker.

It's OnPolitics Today, the daily politics roundup from USA TODAY. Subscribe here.

Trump's 'major announcement': He was 'tremendous' in Asia, basketball players should thank him

President Trump touted a "major announcement' upon his return from Asia, a summary of his trip through the continent which he deemed "a tremendous success." The Wednesday speech came after coverage critical of Trump's buddying up to foreign leaders. "They should realize that these relationships are a good thing, not a bad thing," Trump tweeted that day. (Trump, during the speech, took a Rubio-esque sip of water — requiring two hands, it should be noted.) Trump also on Wednesday bragged about getting three UCLA basketball players off the hook for shoplifting in China. They should thank him, Trump tweeted. The players did.

Latest on taxes: First GOP senator rejects the GOP's plan, plus booze and Weinstein revisions

Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin became the first Republican to reject the Senate GOP's tax plan. “If they can pass it without me, let them,” said Johnson, who thinks the plan unfairly benefits corporations over other businesses. Republicans hold a scant 52-seat majority in the Senate, meaning every defection is critical. Changes to the plan late Tuesday added tax cuts for beer, wine and liquor makers, as well as something one might call a Harvey Weinstein tax to end corporations deducting fees and payments in certain sexual harassment cases. And those tax cuts for families? They're now temporary. But the ones for corporations? Those will stay.

Related: You, dear taxpayer, are footing the legal bill for 10 lawyers fighting off lawsuits on President Trump's private businesses.

No sexual harassment on the Hill: The MeToo Act gets bipartisan support

“Zero tolerance is meaningless unless it is backed up with enforcement and accountability,’’ said Rep. Jackie Speier, a Democrat from California. And with that, the Member and Employee Training and Oversight on Congress Act (read: MeToo Act) was introduced. A group of lawmakers backed the bipartisan bill Wednesday, which would require sexual harassment training for congressional members and staff while putting "whistleblower" protections in place.

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