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Trade war set to 'get really ugly' as 'Xi won't back down': Ex-Trump official

As the White House claims they have the ‘upper hand’ in the China trade war, a new POLITICO report is claiming otherwise.

US tariffs on Chinese goods are now at 145 percent. This is up 135 percentage points since February 1, when there was just a 10 percent tariff.

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Foreign countries 'cannot believe what we are doing to ourselves': Morning Joe

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough blasted president Donald Trump for eroding American advantages as he pushes through unpopular and legally questionable policies.

China has been working to build new trade relationships with nations that Trump has slapped with massive tariffs, as foreign universities are recruiting U.S. researchers who have lost jobs thanks to Elon Musk's funding cuts, and the "Morning Joe" host weighed in on the issue from a trip to the United Kingdom.

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MSNBC's Maddow shreds Trump White House for labeling 13-year-old immigrant a 'terrorist'

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow expressed skepticism on her show late Monday at a new report that Trump administration added thousands of migrants to the Social Security Administration's death file — even though they are alive — alleging they all have links to either terrorist activity or criminal records.

The Trump administration directed the agency to add more than 6,000 living immigrants to its "death master file," a database of people who have died and whose Social Security numbers should no longer be used. The move was meant to pressure the immigrants, many of whom were legally allowed into the country under temporary programs established by the Biden administration, into self-deporting from the United States.

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'Retribution or bust’: 'Secretary of Retribution' joins J6 leaders to demand mass arrests

Ivan Raiklin, a retired Army lieutenant colonel who calls himself the “secretary of retribution,” has circulated a so-called “Deep State target list” of President Donald Trump’s political enemies for more than a year now.

Although his promise of spectacular “live-streamed” arrests of hundreds of political figures up to and including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on fancifully concocted charges of treason and other purported violations of law has yet to materialize, Raiklin was able to enlist new allies after Trump vacated the convictions of more than 1,500 Jan. 6 defendants.

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'Impossible to take seriously': Analyst shreds Trump's 'empty' response to Shapiro attack

President Donald Trump's condemnation of an arson attack on Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's residence on Monday earned no applause from an analyst at The Atlantic, who called his response "empty."

When asked about the attack, Trump referred to the suspect as "probably just a whack job" and stressed that "such incidents cannot be tolerated."

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'Political ransom': Expert warns Trump trying to turn Harvard into Trump Univ. 'satellite'

Former NAACP director Cornell William Brooks laid into President Donald Trump's move to freeze billions in federal funding from Harvard University, after the prestigious institution rejected his demands to crack down on the political ideology of its faculty and student body — a similar ultimatum Trump used against Columbia University that that school ultimately complied with.

"We have a wonderful Constitution that contains a First Amendment, which this government, this administration is violating," Brooks told CNN's John Berman. "This is to say, the government does not get to dictate political ideology. It does not get to determine whether faculty or staff or too liberal to conservative to this, to that. The First Amendment has a little something to say about that."

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'Bad news for the White House': Dems now tied with the GOP on key Trump issue

An April poll shows President Donald Trump is losing his biggest polling advantage over Democrats.

“Bad news for the White House per @EchelonInsights,” wrote Snapchat host Peter Hamby. “Dems are now tied with Republicans on the question of who would do a better job on inflation and the cost of living.”

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'They're not going anywhere': Trump's AG appears to break with him on Fox News

President Donald Trump's attorney general appeared to rebuff an opportunity to endorse her boss's recent idea to send Americans convicted of violent crimes to prisons in El Salvador.

Trump reiterated the idea on Monday during an Oval Office meeting with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, in which Trump told reporters, "homegrowns are next," referring to U.S. citizens.

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‘Tortured reading’: Trump team slammed for twisting Supreme Court order to justify move

President Donald Trump has turned a unanimous Supreme Court order for his administration to facilitate the return of wrongly deported Maryland father Kilmar Abrego Garcia from an infamous Salvadoran prison on its head to justify why he doesn't have to do anything, wrote Hugo Lowell in a scathing analysis for The Guardian published on Monday evening.

This follows Trump's White House visit with Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's president, who also refused to lift a finger to return Abrego Garcia, even though he was married to a U.S. citizen, living in America with a work permit, and had no criminal record. During the meeting, Trump aide Stephen Miller said, “The ruling solely stated that if this individual at El Salvador’s sole discretion was sent back to our country, we could deport him a second time.”

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‘Big’: Trump’s effort to mass-revoke parole for migrants blocked

An immigration attorney cheered Monday evening as a judge issued an emergency order to temporarily block the government's effort to suddenly cancel parole and work permits for many migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, who were legally allowed into the United States.

The government told the immigrants they could stay for up to two years, but a new rule under the Trump administration said their legal stay would end early — on April 24 — unless the government decided otherwise. The migrants affected by the rule raced to the courts to stop this from happening.

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'Asteroid striking without warning': Execs stunned by Trump's attack on NPR and PBS

President Donald Trump is now asking Congress to claw back $1.1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — an amount totaling around two years' worth of funding — in his latest budget request, according to The New York Times, leaving media executives blindsided by the attack on public stations.

"The plan is to request that Congress rescind $1.1 billion in federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the taxpayer-backed company that funds public media organizations across the United States, one of the people said," reported Benjamin Mullin, Tony Romm, and Jonathan Swan, noting that the funding "goes to public broadcasters including NPR, PBS and their local member stations. The Trump administration isn’t planning to ask Congress to claw back about $100 million allocated for emergency communications."

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Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston

Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston

"Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

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NY AG reviewing possible insider trading by Trump administration: report

State prosecutors in New York are looking into whether the Trump administration engaged in insider trading, according to a report.

The office of New York Attorney General Letitia James told CNN on Monday it is looking into potential insider trading by officials and associates after Trump announced — then paused — broad tariffs for 90 days.

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