Weekend in politics: Kerry in S. Korea, China, Japan, and more
Secretary of State John Kerry is in South Korea on Friday as the region braces for a missile test by North Korea at any moment.
Kerry’s stop in Seoul comes the day after disclosure of a U.S. intelligence report that concludes North Korea probably could arm a missile with a nuclear warhead.
[Kerry visits tense S. Korea amid missile test fears]
Kerry heads to China on Saturday and then to Japan on Sunday.
Back in Washington, Friday is shaping up to be a quiet day:
President Barack Obama will welcome the U.S. Naval Academy football team to the White House to present them with the 2012 Commander in Chief's Trophy;
Vice President Joe Biden will visit the CIA headquarters and speak at a welcome ceremony for new director John Brennan;
House Republicans are poised to approve a measure that would stop the National Labor Relations Board from conducting business until a dispute over Obama's recess appointments to the agency is resolved.
And then there is this for next week’s agenda: The Senate on Tuesday will begin weeks of debate on gun control legislation, and the much-anticipated immigration reform bill is now expected to be unveiled on Tuesday.
Sources: Yahoo News’ The Ticket, ABC News, Associated Press and Reuters.