Latest Headlines

'Going to court right away': NY's attorney general lines up legal rematch with Trump

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) announced Tuesday that New York Attorney General Letitia James will "go to court right away" to challenge the federal aid freeze instituted by President Donald Trump's Office of Management and Budget.

A White House budget office memo called for a freeze on federal dollars being spent by 5 p.m. on Tuesday. It effectively puts a hold on multiple government operations until the agencies can ensure they comply with the removal of "DEI (diversity equity and inclusion) woke gender ideology and the Green New Deal."

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New backlash over Trump plan to move people out of Gaza

by Michael BLUM

An idea floated by U.S. President Donald Trump to move Gazans to Egypt or Jordan faced a renewed backlash Tuesday as hundreds of thousands of Gazans displaced by the Israel-Hamas war returned to their devastated neighborhoods.

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'This is reckless!' Angry House Dem unleashes on Trump for putting constituents at risk

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) on Tuesday angrily condemned President Donald Trump's decision to pause all federal grants and loans in a move that many critics have called flatly illegal.

Appearing on Jim Acosta's show on CNN, DeLauro outlined the danger facing many of her constituents from Trump's unprecedented actions.

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Kristi Noem calls human beings 'dirtbags' as she cosplays as ICE agent in New York City

Kristi Noem began her tenure as Department of Homeland Security secretary by dressing up as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent and calling human beings "dirt bags."

In an X post on the official DHS secretary account, Noem shared a five-second video of herself wearing an ICE vest.

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'100% illegal': Fired labor official vows to fight Trump in court

President Donald Trump's latest attempt to purge government officials is blatantly illegal, according to experts — and all but certain to trigger a lawsuit.

This week, the president moved to clean house at the National Labor Relations Board, the agency responsible for investigating and adjudicating claims of violations of labor union law in the workplace. In addition to firing general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, a progressive labor watchdog who has protected workers from noncompete agreements and anti-union captive meetings, Trump has also dismissed NLRB board member Gwynne Wilcox, one of two Democratic members at the agency, per Bloomberg News.

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'Reads like a hostage note': Trump order flagged as 'massive fraud' by ex-official

A former official in the government's Office of Management and Budget denounced a temporary pause to all grants and loans disbursed by the federal government as "a massive fraud" carried out by its not-yet-confirmed director Russell Vought.

Topher Spiro, who served as associate director of health care programs under former president Joe Biden, flagged the two-page document signed by the executive agency's acting director, Matthew Vaeth, as legally questionable and highly suspicious.

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Transgender woman sues Trump over transfer to men's prison

A transgender woman inmate serving her sentence in a women's federal prison sued the Trump administration on Sunday, arguing that Republican U.S. President Donald Trump's recent executive order narrowly defining sex violates the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment, is "motivated by discriminatory animus" toward trans people, and forces "dangerous transfers to men's facilities."

A redacted copy of the lawsuit—which was filed by an inmate in an unspecified low-security federal prison identified as "Maria Moe"—claims Trump's January 20 executive order stating that it is henceforth federal policy "to recognize two sexes, male and female" violates her constitutional rights.

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'Our children will suffer': Doctor hammers GOP for risking lives to back Trump

Dr. Paul Offit, the director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, went on CNN Tuesday to shred Republicans who are willing to fall in line and confirm anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to run the Department of Health and Human Services.

During his appearance on the network, host Brianna Keilar asked Offit if he believed recent assurances made by Kennedy that he wasn't against the administration of vaccines.

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'Lies are exposed': Analyst slams Trump over crime doublespeak

President Donald Trump ran as a law and order candidate who would crack down on crime — but that was always a farce from the start, Amanda Marcotte wrote for Salon Tuesday.

And she added his first week in office suggests he will in fact make crime significantly worse.

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Plan to put $1K bounty on heads of immigrants sparks fury in Missouri

A confrontational legislative hearing Monday — with a witness calling a state senator a fascist and lawmakers battling over whether the state should put a bounty on undocumented immigrants — set the tone for this year’s debate on immigration and the state’s role in border security.

The most aggressive approach, in a bill filed by state Sen. David Gregory, would award a $1,000 bounty for tips that result in the arrest of a person present in the United States without authorization. Gregory, a Republican from Chesterfield, wants to authorize bounty hunters, usually employed by bail bond businesses to catch absconders, to track down people identified in tips.

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'Shock-and-awe': Morning Joe claims Trump doesn't care if latest actions are breaking laws

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough called out many of President Donald Trump's first moves as likely to be overturned by legal challenges — but he said they still signaled the direction he wanted to take the government.

The U.S. Department of Justice on Monday fired more than a dozen officials who worked on special counsel Jack Smith's investigations into the president after he lost the 2020 election, and NBC News justice and intelligence correspondent Ken Dilanian described the move as unprecedented and possibly unlawful.

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Truth Social CEO loses court fight over claims his family hired undocumented workers

One of President Donald Trump's most litigious associates just lost in court yet again.

According to Law & Crime, former Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) was handed a blow by a federal appeals court, which upheld a lower court's ruling that gave summary judgment in favor of journalist Ryan Lizza and Hearst Magazines, which he sued for defamation after they reported about undocumented labor at his family's dairy farm. The lower court had ruled that the story was "substantially true."

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'My phone has been blowing up': Reporter details massive chaos unleashed by Trump orders

President Donald Trump's order pausing all federal grants and loans has created chaos around the country as charities, universities, and other institutions now have no idea if they will have the resources they need to complete their missions.

Washington Post reporter Jeff Stein revealed on X Tuesday morning that "my phone has been blowing up over the past 10 hours like crazy" ever since Trump unilaterally halted the disbursement of funds that had been passed by the United States Congress.

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