Like his father-in-law, Donald Trump, Jared’s business expertise was supposed to be one of the things qualifying him to work as a senior adviser in the White House, where he has been tasked with making the government run more smoothly and bringing peace to the Middle East.

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Wells Fargo finds another 1.4 million scam accounts

September 2016 was an innocent time at Wells Fargo. Sure, the bank had just admitted that as many as 2.1 million fake accounts might have been made in customers’ names without said customers’ knowledge. And yes, then-C.E.O. John Stumpf was forced to show up to Congress and testify on the matter, having his internal organs rearranged, figuratively speaking, by Senator Elizabeth Warren in the process. But most people, Stumpf included, probably thought the scandal would be big news for a week or so before it died down and life would get back to normal. Now, as its anniversary approaches, those same people are probably assuming that, at this point, there will never be a time in which Wells Fargo won’t be constantly issuing press releases in which it is forced to disclose either a new way in which Wells clients had been taken for a ride or provide further details about a previously disclosed scam that makes things sound so much worse. After a summer in which the San Francisco bank also admitted that hundreds of thousands of customers had been charged for auto insurance they didn’t need and paid $108 million to settle allegations that it charged military veterans hidden fees, the bank has said that its previous estimate of 2.1 million (in the original scam accounts scandal) was just a tad off.

In a press release published on Thursday, the bank announced that after expanding its “third-party review of retail banking accounts dating back to the beginning of 2009”—previously it had only looked into the period between May 2011 to mid-2015—it has revised its estimate of the number of fake accounts created from 2.1 million to 3.5 million. (For some reason, Wells Fargo chose not to expand the scope of its review back to 2002, the year, Bloomberg notes, that an internal investigation showed executives first knew about the misconduct and started firing people for it.)

Even before Wells Fargo amended its estimate by 1.4 million, lawmakers like Warren and Representative Maxine Waters were demanding heads roll, in addition to the heads of John Stumpf, who “resigned” a month after the scandal came to light, and community bank chief Carrie Tolstedt, who left the bank in July 2016 and was retroactively fired last April. Today’s news presumably has lawmakers mentally composing statements demanding the bank fire everyone from VP on up, or simply dissolve the company and turn its San Francisco headquarters into a giant ball pit.

Surprise: ending DACA wouldn’t just be bad from an ethical standpoint

Earlier today, Axios’s Mike Allen reported that the president is in a bit of a pickle re: making the decision to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a.k.a. DACA, the Obama-era policy protecting undocumented immigrants who arrived in the United States as children from deportation. Trump’s view is that the program is illegal and one of his big campaign promises was to not only kick illegal immigrants out of the country but to sharply curtail legal immigration. On the other hand, scrapping DACA would literally tear families apart, and Trump is facing serious pushback from the corporate world, with whom he is on thin ice after Charlottesville and whose support he needs to get tax reform passed.