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Blurred posts, banned accounts: Abortion groups decry Meta 'suppression'

by Issam AHMED

Blurred posts, downranked searches and deleted accounts: Since President Donald Trump's election, groups sharing information about abortion pills say they have faced a surge in online censorship—hindering their ability to reach women urgently seeking the procedure.

Reproductive rights organizations accuse Meta of leading the latest wave of digital suppression on Instagram and Facebook, drawing attention to CEO Mark Zuckerberg's pledge to refocus on free speech.

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Trump shakes up Justice Department he accused of 'weaponization'

by Chris Lefkow

Abrupt firings, senior officials demoted, and career employees left reeling -- US President Donald Trump is taking a sledgehammer to a Justice Department he accuses of unjustly prosecuting him.

Special Counsel Jack Smith, who brought two criminal cases against Trump, resigned before the Republican could fulfill his campaign pledge to fire him, but more than a dozen members of his team were sacked on Monday.

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'He'll stiff you': Senator warns federal workers Trump's 'buyout' offer is bogus

Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) has an urgent warning for federal workers considering President Donald Trump's buyout offer: it's bogus.

According to CBS News Capitol Hill correspondent Alan He, Kaine issued his warning on the Senate floor on Tuesday, following reports of the buyout proposal. "The President has no authority to make that offer," said Kaine. "There's no budget line item to pay people who are not showing up for work ... If you accept that offer and resign, he'll stiff you."

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Trump's pick to head intelligence doesn't believe in protecting it: WSJ editorial board

President Donald Trump's pick to serve as director of national intelligence, former Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, was scorched by the Wall Street Journal editorial board on Tuesday, over her seeming lack of concern for the security of state secrets.

Gabbard, who was a Democrat until two years ago, has faced accusations of promoting Russia-backed conspiracy theories about U.S. intelligence and has long been one of the Trump nominees that the Senate GOP is most skeptical about.

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'Not a happy departure': Famed NY Times columnist sounds off after abrupt exit

Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist who recently retired from The New York Times after 25 years, tried to set the record straight Tuesday about his abrupt exit, blasting the paper for what he felt were increasingly unnecessarily tight editorial controls that resulted in "sober, dull opinion pieces."

Krugman — who gave a bleak farewell last month — minced no words in opening his latest piece, posted to his blog "The Contrarian."

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‘Wake up America:’ Trump slammed over ‘shameful’ decision to revoke top general’s security

Political observers from both sides of the aisle didn’t hold back unloading on President Donald Trump’s decision to revoke former Gen. Mark Milley’s government-funded security detail, which newly minted Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was poised to announce he is “immediately pulling,” according to media reports.

Milley, the retired U.S. Army general and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, became the latest in a growing list of former Trump administration officials turned critics who have had their security protections ended in the days after Trump returned to the White House last week.

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'Reminiscent of Stalin': Experts alarmed as Musk allies take over key federal agency

A cohort of subordinates of tech billionaire Elon Musk have taken over an important federal agency, in a move that according to WIRED Magazine unnerves experts, and "one official found reminiscent of Stalin."

People working in the government report "that the highest ranks of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) — essentially the human resources function for the entire federal government — are now controlled by people with connections to Musk and to the tech industry. Among them is a person who, according to an online résumé, was set to start college last fall. Scott Kupor, a managing partner at the powerful investment firm Andreessen Horowitz, stands as Trump’s nominee to run the OPM. But already in place, according to sources, are a variety of people who seem ready to carry out Musk’s mission of cutting staff and disrupting the government."

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Trump says he’s sending water to LA. It’s actually going to megafarms.

"This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here."

While President Donald Trump has issued a flurry of far-reaching decrees during his first week in office, one relatively niche issue has received a disproportionate share of the president’s ire and attention: California water policy. That might make sense if the remedies he’s pursuing could help stem deadly fires like those that have killed at least 29 people in the Los Angeles area in recent weeks. Indeed, the president has claimed that “firefighters were unable to fight the blaze due to dry hydrants, empty reservoirs, and inadequate water infrastructure.”

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'When you let AI write your Executive Orders': Critics react after Trump's court loss

Very quickly after President Donald Trump's Office of Management and Budget ordered a freeze on federal grants, U.S. District Judge Loren AliKhan issued a temporary pause on the order, leaving funding in place until at least next week as other litigation against the policy proceeds.

The pause of the funding freeze, which experts widely believe to be illegal and which threw hundreds of federal agencies and grant-funded non-governmental organizations like Meals on Wheels into chaos and uncertainty, triggered a sigh of relief and mockery of Trump from lawmakers and other commenters on social media — but did not quite tamp down worries about what might be on the horizon for this fight.

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Trump administration offers to pay every federal worker to resign: report

President Donald Trump’s promise to tighten federal spending is set to hit roughly 2 million federal employees Tuesday who will start receiving emails allowing them to take a “deferred resignation,” according to media reports.

The resignation buyouts include a severance package of approximately eight months’ pay with benefits – a move that a senior administration official told NBC News could save the government around $100 billion.

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'Fantastic!' MAGA cheers as Trump touts order to ban 'barbaric' gender-affirming care

President Donald Trump declared Tuesday he signed an executive order to ban what he called the "chemical castration and medical mutilation" of children in the United States.

The president said the order intends to protect the nation’s youth, as he labeled gender-affirming care as a "barbaric" practice that has harmed countless lives.

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'Trump administration is in trouble': Ex-GOP lawmaker slams latest action creating ‘havoc’

Former Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA) on Tuesday went after President Donald Trump’s attempt to freeze federal grant funding and offered a warning for the new administration.

“The executive [branch] has very little authority to impound money or even freeze it on a temporary basis,” Dent said. “So, I think that the Trump administration is in trouble.”

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OpenAI tailors version of ChatGPT for US government

OpenAI on Tuesday launched a bespoke version of its ChatGPT artificial intelligence tool for use by the United States government.

Big money government contracts are often tech firm targets, and OpenAI already boasts some 90,000 users of ChatGPT across federal, state and local governments in the United States.

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