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Trump's 'coronation' ceremony intended to subdue GOP lawmakers: Morning Joe panel

Donald Trump's post-inaugural rally was intended to project "royal" authority to keep Republican lawmakers in line, according to MSNBC's Joe Scarborough.

Bitterly cold temperatures forced his swearing-in ceremony indoors at the Capitol rotunda, and he held a celebration afterward at the Capital One Arena, where thousands gathered to hear the new president speak and sign executive orders while surrounded by law enforcement groups and marching bands.

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'Will not follow an unconstitutional order': Dem governor vows to defy key Trump action

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is striking a defiant tone after President Donald Trump issued an executive order that purports to rescind birthright citizenship.

Politico reports that Pritzker slammed the Trump order rescinding birthright citizenship, which was established in the United States by the ratification of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1868.

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Trump's Jan. 6 pardons put one of his nominees at risk: Morning Joe

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough predicted that Donald Trump's pardon of his violent Jan. 6 supporters could endanger the chances of at least one of his nominees to be confirmed.

The newly inaugurated president issued blanket pardons to U.S. Capitol riot defendants, including those convicted of attacking law enforcement officers, within hours of being sworn in to a second term in office, and the "Morning Joe" host wondered how that brazen move would impact Senate confirmation hearings for his nominees.

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Immigrant rights groups sue Trump over attack on 'cornerstone of our democracy'

A coalition of immigrant rights groups sued the Trump administration on Monday over the newly inaugurated president's executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship, a move that campaigners and legal experts condemned as both immoral and flagrantly unconstitutional.

The lawsuit was filed by several branches of the ACLU, the Asian Law Caucus, the State Democracy Defenders Fund, and the Legal Defense Fund on behalf of groups with members whose children born in the United States would be denied citizenship under President Donald Trump's new order, which runs up against the clear text of the 14th Amendment and more than a century of legal precedent.

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Two former FirstEnergy execs indicted on federal racketeering charges

A federal grand jury has indicted Charles E. Jones, 69, of Akron and Michael Dowling, 60, of Massillon, on one count each of participating in a racketeering (RICO) conspiracy.

According to the Southern District of Ohio, the two are accused of using “bribery, money laundering and obstruction to increase the company’s stock price and enrich themselves.”

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Trump’s executive orders can make change – but are limited and can be undone by the courts

Before his inauguration, Donald Trump promised to issue a total of 100 or so executive orders once he regained the presidency. These orders are expected to reset government policy on everything from immigration enforcement to diversity initiatives to environmental regulation. They also aim to undo much of Joe Biden’s presidential legacy.

Trump is not the first U.S. president to issue an executive order, and he certainly won’t be the last. My own research shows executive orders have been a mainstay in American politics – with limitations.

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GOP will get 'bowel-stewing panic' from 'flatly indefensible' Trump actions: conservative

Conservative Jonah Goldberg on Tuesday had a warning for Republicans who believe that President Donald Trump's mass pardon of violent January 6th rioters will fade away from the news.

During a panel segment on the pardons, Goldberg slammed both former President Joe Biden and Trump for enacting what he described as "flatly indefensible" pardons on Monday.

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DeSantis declares state of emergency because of winter storm

Gov. Ron DeSantis has declared a state of emergency ahead of the winter storm forecast to bring snow and ice storms to North Florida this week “to protect the communities, critical infrastructure, and general welfare of Florida.”

The order empowers the Division of Emergency Management to coordinate the state and local response to the weather, expected to include up to four inches of snow in the Panhandle and one-quarter inch of ice from the eastern Panhandle through the Suwanee River Valley, auguring tree damage, downed power lines, and frozen-over roads and bridges.

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Omaha officials: Local police won’t go out of way to find undocumented immigrants

OMAHA — The mayor and police chief of Nebraska’s biggest city signaled Monday that City of Omaha law enforcement officers will not “seek out” individuals to check on immigration status.

Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert speaks at City-County Building. (Cindy Gonzalez/Nebraska Examiner)

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'WTF?' World reacts to Trump's vow of U.S. expansionism

While the global far-right cheered President Donald Trump's return to the White House on Monday, world leaders, elected officials, activists, and others from across the rest of the political spectrum reacted with trepidation as the Republican vowed to expand the nation's territory for the first time in nearly 80 years and threatened the sovereignty of a U.S. trade and security partner.

In his second inaugural address, Trump promised a foreign policy that "expands our territory," as well as the renewed pursuit of "Manifest Destiny"—the 19th-century belief that God intended the United States to control the continent from coast to coast—beyond Earth by "launching American astronauts to plant the stars and stripes on the planet Mars."

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Musk says critics need 'better dirty tricks' after salute row

Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk said Tuesday his critics needed "better dirty tricks" after a row erupted over a gesture he made at an inauguration event for US President Donald Trump that some likened to a Nazi salute.

The X, SpaceX and Tesla chief appeared on stage at the Capital One Arena in Washington, where supporters of the newly inaugurated president had gathered for a rally.

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'Please let us in': Trump crackdown leaves migrants in tears

by Herika Martinez with Zina Desmazes in Tijuana

Margelis Tinoco broke down in tears after her asylum appointment was canceled as part of a sweeping immigration crackdown announced by US President Donald Trump on his first day in office.

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Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial

by Joe JACKSON

Prince Harry's hotly anticipated lawsuit trial against a British tabloid publisher alleging it carried out unlawful information gathering will start Tuesday, after years of legal wrangling during which dozens of other claimants settled.

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