Latest Headlines

California area airport narrowly averts chaos

A Bay Area airport was on the brink of no longer having any air traffic controllers as tense contract negotiations played out over salaries, according to media reports.

The staffing issue that nearly shut down San Carlos Airport is now being scrutinized in the wake of the deadly midair collision Wednesday night at Ronald Reagan National Airport that claimed the lives of all 67 involved.

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Federal judge deals Trump a court blow — citing comments from his press secretary

A federal judge in Rhode Island has blocked President Donald Trump's controversial move to freeze the dispensation of federal grants and funding to nongovernmental organizations — citing in part comments made by his press secretary.

The relief was granted on behalf of numerous Democratic state attorneys general, who sued to block Trump from moving ahead. Trump's order, laid out in a memo by the Office of Management and Budget, had led to widespread chaos as everything from the Medicaid portal to organizations like Meals on Wheels were unsure if they would get funding to stay open.

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FBI purge may affect more law enforcement than previously thought: reporter

President Donald Trump is purging the FBI, but the number of law enforcement agents who will be fired could be more extensive than initially thought.

NBC News reporter Ryan Reilly said the goal of the Trump team is to purge any FBI agent who had their hands on anything involving Jan. 6. Given the sheer number of defendants, a full three-fourths of the FBI worked on those cases, which would mean just 25% of the FBI staff would be left to handle federal law enforcement investigations.

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'Absolutely furious': Pioneering female astronomer’s legacy rewritten amid diversity purge

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

During his first presidential term, Donald Trump signed a congressional act naming a federally funded observatory after the late astronomer Vera Rubin. The act celebrated her landmark research on dark matter — the invisible, mysterious substance that makes up much of the universe — and noted that she was an outspoken advocate for the equal treatment and representation of women in science.

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FAA workers pushed to find ‘higher productivity jobs’ 24 hours after deadly crash: report

Just 24 hours after the worst U.S. aviation disaster in decades, employees at the Federal Aviation Administration received a mass email encouraging them to search for more productive jobs outside of government.

That’s according to a new report in The New York Times, which added that the email sent by the Office of Personnel Management just before 8:30 p.m. Thursday urged FAA employees – including air traffic controllers – to act on an offer to resign sent across federal agencies earlier in the week.

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'Excuse me': Trump gets snippy with reporter as he doubles down on DEI claim

President Donald Trump got snippy with reporters Friday afternoon who questioned his claims that diversity programs contributed to a mid-air collision this week that killed 67 people in Washington, D.C.

Speaking to reporters while signing another executive order that will usher in 25% trade tariffs on all imports coming in from Mexico and Canada, Trump doubled down on his claim.

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Mark Robinson drops libel suit against CNN over reporting on pro-Nazi internet posts

Disgraced former North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson is moving to drop his libel lawsuit against CNN for an explosive story last year that effectively destroyed his MAGA campaign for governor, Politico reported on Friday.

Robinson had filed the suit last October, in the final weeks before losing the election to Democratic state Attorney General Josh Stein, who carried the race by double digits even as President Donald Trump won the top of the ballot.

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'People will die': Trump admin says it lifted ban on humanitarian aid — it's not true

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

On Friday morning, the staffers at a half dozen U.S.-funded medical facilities in Sudan who care for severely malnourished children had a choice to make: Defy President Donald Trump’s order to immediately stop their operations or let up to 100 babies and toddlers die.

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FBI agents in Trump probes facing dismissal: reports

FBI agents who participated in the investigations that led to now-abandoned criminal charges against President Donald Trump are expected to be fired, US media reported Friday.

Dozens of FBI agents involved in the probe of Trump supporters who stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 and some supervisors are also "being evaluated for possible removal as soon as the end of Friday," CNN said, quoting people briefed on the matter.

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'Great concern': Musk aides reportedly lock career civil servants out of computer systems

The aides Elon Musk brought to help him purge the federal workforce have locked staffers of a U.S. government human resources agency out of the computer systems with millions of employees' personal information.

Reuters cited two agency officials revealing that Musk, who has not been hired, appointed, or confirmed to any government position, is at work trying to cut $2 trillion from the annual U.S. budget. Musk would still need to find over $1.3 trillion in additional cuts if every federal employee was cut. The cost of the entire federal workforce in 2022 was approximately $271 billion, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.

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'Nail-gnawing uncertainty': ​Analyst lays out '​wild ride' Trump is set to give lawmakers

Critics of President Donald Trump's tariff proposals, both left and right, are hoping that he will change his mind. But Trump is doubling down and saying that as soon as this Saturday, February 1, he may impose across-the-board 25 percent tariffs on all goods entering the United States from Canada and Mexico — both of which are major trading partners.

Tariffs are not universally popular among Republicans; Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky), former GOP leader in the U.S. Senate, is a major critic of them. And tariffs, according to Semafor reporters Burgess Everett and Shelby Talcott, are one of the ways in which Trump "is taking the Republican Congress on an economic wild ride."

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Trump pick forced to update ethics pledge as 'conflict of interest' endangers confirmation

Late January brought Senate confirmation hearings for some of President Donald Trump's most controversial nominees: Kash Patel (Trump's pick for FBI director), Tulsi Gabbard (Trump's nominee for Director of National Intelligence), and anti-vaxxer conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is hoping to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) was among the Senate Democrats who aggressively grilled RFK Jr. during his confirmation hearing on Wednesday. Warren hammered the HHS Secretary-designate on his lawsuits against drug makers. Now, Politico is reporting that Kennedy "will give up his financial stake in an ongoing lawsuit over the HPV vaccine Gardasil" if confirmed.

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'Flashing red warning light': Analyst lists many ways Trump could be blamed for D.C. crash

President Donald Trump is trying to blame everyone and everything but his own administration for the deadly plane crash between an American Eagle regional jet and Blackhawk helicopter over D.C. — and he has no leg to stand on, Dana Milbank wrote for The Washington Post on Friday.

"No one yet knows what caused the crash, but Trump didn’t hesitate to blame what he said were Joe Biden’s and Barack Obama’s 'mediocre' and 'lower' standards for air traffic controllers," he wrote.

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