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Trump is using immigration law to 'criminalize political opposition': legal expert

President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown is about more than just immigrants, legal analyst Leah Litman told MSNBC's Chris Hayes on Friday evening — it's about laying the groundwork to create a police state that can be mobilized against Trump's political opponents.

This follows the incident in New Jersey in which ICE arrested the mayor of Newark during a protest of a private detention facility.

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'Come to regret': GOP lawyer warns MAGA Trump's anti-woke crusade will turn on them

President Donald Trump repeated threats to revoke tax-exempt status from ideological enemies – including Harvard University and Wikipedia – could come back to haunt conservatives, Republican lawyer and historian Joshua Claybourn warned Friday.

In a sharply worded New York Times op-ed, Claybourn took aim at Trump’s escalated threats against his perceived political enemies, writing that while many on the right have cheered the moves as overdue pushback against liberals, the administration is playing with fire.

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Google will pay Texas $1.4 billion to settle privacy suit: state's attorney general

"Ken Paxton says Google will pay Texas $1.4 billion to settle privacy suit" 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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San Francisco trains hit by systemwide outage

San Francisco's main public transport system abruptly shut down Friday morning, stopping all trains in the Bay Area and throwing the morning commute into chaos.

"Due to a computer networking problem BART service is suspended system wide until further notice," said a message on the Bay Area Rapid Transit website.

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US confirms another outage at Newark airport

US authorities said the overstretched airport of Newark, one of three serving the New York metropolitan area, suffered a new 90-second outage early on Friday.

Delays and flight cancellations had already followed an April 28 incident at Newark Liberty International Airport, in which traffic controllers stationed in nearby Philadelphia were unable to communicate with planes.

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'You're gonna be the Pope,' Leo XIV's brother recalls telling him

Louis Prevost is still reckoning with what just happened in his family.

His little brother, Robert Francis Prevost, is now Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope in the Catholic Church's history, an incredible fate for a boy from Chicago who dreamt of becoming a priest.

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Multiple Trump flip-flops leave House GOP facing 'political blowback': report

House Republicans figuring out how to pay for Donald Trump's "big, beautiful" spending bill are in a bind over whether the president will flip-flop on cutting entitlements, according to The New York Times.

So far, Trump has repeatedly claimed, “We’re not cutting Medicaid, we’re not cutting Medicare, and we’re not cutting Social Security."

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Supreme Court is days from hearing what could be most important Trump case this year

The Supreme Court is on the brink of hearing a case with huge ramifications for the legal battles going on at all levels against President Donald Trump's administration and beyond, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.

The case in question is Trump v. CASA, which involves the dispute over Trump's executive order summarily reinterpreting the Fourteenth Amendment to eliminate birthright citizenship in the United States. Lower courts have already ripped Trump's order to shreds, but he wants the Supreme Court to do more than just let him go ahead with the order — he also wants them to limit courts' ability to even issue nationwide injunctions against his orders going forward.

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'Civil war is coming to the Trump movement': Expert says MAGA could soon tear itself apart

President Donald Trump's base of support may soon fracture into two competing far-right factions, according to one expert.

The Wall Street Journal's Joshua Chaffin and Zusha Elinson reported Friday that two camps within the MAGA world are emerging and will likely battle for supremacy during Trump's second term. They wrote that on one side are "tech bros racing to create a new future," with Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk as the quintessential example. On the other side are "conservative Catholics who yearn for an imagined past," like Vice President JD Vance, who seek to upend the liberal establishment and return America to a "bygone era."

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'Sleazy': Columnist slams Trump family for 'no holds barred' grift over new presidency

President Donald Trump and his family have long been dogged by allegations they are abusing the presidency for personal enrichment — and this time around, their schemes are bigger and more brazen than ever, Heather Digby Parton wrote in a scathing analysis for Salon published on Friday.

None of this is anything new, she noted — a series of legal cases under Trump's first term challenged him with violating the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution, as a lot of foreign government activity around Trump properties appeared to be naked schemes to enrich him and his family for favor.

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'Thoroughly debunked': Oklahoma schools chief reamed on MSNBC for pushing election lies

Oklahoma state superintendent Ryan Walters, a far-right MAGA figure who has ordered schools to buy Trump Bibles and called teachers unions "terrorists," faced a dressing down by MSNBC's Antonia Hylton on Friday over new plans to teach Oklahoma students that the 2020 presidential election was rigged — a plan that is already facing legal challenges.

"Let's start with that curriculum," said Hylton. "Why would you want Oklahoma students exposed to thoroughly debunked election conspiracy theories in the classroom?"

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‘Shameful’: MAGA 'outraged' as NY moves to cover Trump prosecutor's legal bills

A new provision in New York’s state budget has drawn MAGA backlash for what supporters of President Donald Trump are calling a “slush fund” to aid New York Attorney General Letitia James by covering her legal expenses.

The budget line sets aside funds for state employees facing prosecution for doing their jobs – a move that appears connected to Trump’s escalating legal retribution against those involved in his past criminal prosecutions, according to the Gothamist. The new reporting came a day after the Trump Justice Department launched a criminal probe against James, who famously won a $454 fraud judgment against the president and his real estate company.

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'Very concerned': Ex-judge sounds alarm over reprimands from Supreme Court justices

In the past week, two U.S. Supreme Court Justices have spoken out to defend the legal profession. On Friday, MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace asked a former judge and Duke Law School professor just what that signals.

"How far outside of normal are we?" Wallace asked retired U.S. District Court Judge Paul Grimm of Maryland.

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