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Fury at ICE sees Americans funnel millions of dollars to help detainees

Though the Trump administration has declared a crusade to remove “criminal illegal immigrant killers, rapists, gangbangers, and other violent criminals” from the United States, immigrants who are farm workers, expectant parents, recent high school graduates and newlyweds have found themselves swept up in raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Families and friends have increasingly turned to fundraising platforms such as GoFundMe, looking for help with legal fees, living expenses, travel costs and medical bills as loved ones — often primary breadwinners — are detained, deported or await immigration hearings, sometimes hundreds of miles from home.

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'It's a pigsty': GOP split as Trump threatens D.C. takeover

WASHINGTON — Some Republicans on Capitol Hill are all but daring President Donald Trump to take control of the local government that oversees Washington D.C.

Others in the GOP are aghast at the idea, which Trump teased again last week.

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EXCLUSIVE: Trump fans say brothers' El Salvador deportation 'not right'

When Jose and Josue Trejo Lopez landed in El Salvador after their deportation flight in May, they had no idea who would meet them or where they would live.

The brothers, 20 and 19, respectively, said they know no one in the country they left as children nearly a decade before to escape gang violence, coming to the U.S. to seek asylum with their mother, who entered the country illegally.

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'Idiot': Guns pulled as Proud Boys and antifascists clash in park

Militant leftists and Proud Boys clashed on a soccer field in a public park in western Kentucky over the Fourth of July weekend, escalating to members of the two opposing groups drawing firearms, according to video and a police incident report.

The armed confrontation took place on July 5 after antifascist protesters assembled in a parking lot at Thompson Berry Park in Owensboro, Kentucky, and walked towards a double chain-link fence separating the park from the backyard of a private residence where the Proud Boys were gathering.

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'I read summaries': GOP rep admits he's only skimmed bill he's voting on

WASHINGTON – Asked if he had read the version of President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” the U.S. Senate sent back to the House — amid reported GOP consternation about its contents — one senior Republican congressman admitted he hadn't.

“Have you been able to read the entire bill?” Raw Story asked.

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'Complete drivel': Heart doctor tears down GOP's core case for Medicaid cuts

As the Senate staged a voting marathon on amendments to President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” ahead of the July 4 holiday, legislators, academics and physicians warned of the devastation the mega-spending package could cause people reliant on Medicaid.

At least three in four losing coverage would be due to Medicaid cuts in the bill, creating “stress and angst related to having gaps in coverage,” Adrianna McIntyre, an assistant professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, told Raw Story.

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Exposed: How Trump unleashed 'utter turmoil' on prestigious southern school

Just three days after President Donald Trump unleashed a record-breaking flurry of 26 Inauguration Day executive orders, professors at the nation’s largest historically Black college began learning their research funding was threatened, prompting exasperation and concern.

Hundreds of pages of documents obtained by Raw Story through a North Carolina Public Records Law request reveal how administrators and faculty at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, N.C., navigated the cultural hot button issues addressed in Trump’s executive orders — from DEI to immigration — in an attempt to keep federal funding and protect students.

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Militia fear that forced state pullout after Helene puts future aid at risk

Last October, after Hurricane Helene devastated swathes of the U.S. southeast, a surge of misinformation stoked by right-wing public figures fueled open hostility towards the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in affected states.

On the national stage, figures including Donald Trump, the then-GOP presidential nominee, claimed the Biden administration was not helping Republican areas. In remote hollers of western North Carolina, bands of men appeared, equipped for war, asking questions of official responders.

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Exclusive: Militia fears forced medical team to flee hurricane-hit state

Late one night last October, at a church in a remote corner of Yancey County, North Carolina, government emergency medical workers participating in the response to Hurricane Helene gathered medications, records, laptops and radios, threw them into backpacks — and abandoned their field clinic.

More than two weeks after the massive storm ravaged the region, roads were badly damaged. Led by an ambulance, side lights illuminating the winding two-lane highway that follows Big Creek, the group made its way across the state line and into Tennessee.

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Meet the woman poised to be Trump's worst nightmare

WASHINGTON — The Democratic Party is at a crossroads, and Rep. Jasmine Crockett says she’s got the roadmap her beleaguered caucus needs.

The Texas Democrat known for electrifying the internet is only serving her second term in the U.S. House of Representatives, which is why her bid to become ranking member of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee Tuesday is turning heads.

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America's enemies are tricking hobbyists into sharing national secrets: experts

As the U.S. and China race to develop advanced artificial intelligence chips — and as President Donald Trump recently considered broader restrictions on chip technology exports — publicly released technological innovations from hobbyist inventors in the U.S. could be giving foreign adversaries a competitive edge, experts tell Raw Story.

The stakes are high, as governments seek AI advances at unprecedented scale, with defense applications from satellites to stealth aircraft and missiles.

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‘I'm totally stunned’: GOP senator turns on own party over 'bizarre' fixation

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leaders are rushing to pass President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act before their July Fourth recess, but rank-and-file Republicans from both sides of the party are tapping the brakes on the effort.

While conservative hardliners continue calling for steeper spending cuts, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), a far-right conservative himself, has become one of the loudest voices of opposition to proposed changes to how states pay for Medicaid.

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'Fits a profile': Suspect's Christian ties spur fears of more assassinations

Since the fatal shooting of a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband in an act described by a federal prosecutor as a “political assassination,” scrutiny has turned to suspect Vance Boelter’s ties to independent charismatic Christianity, in particular a movement known as the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR).

Boelter is alleged to have posed as a police officer as he gunned down Democratic Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark Hortman, in the early hours of June 14. In a separate shooting, he wounded state Sen. John A. Hoffman, also a Democrat, and his wife, Yvette Hoffman. Investigators say Boelter visited two other lawmakers and had a list of 70 targets, including Democrats, civic leaders and abortion providers.

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