SmartNews

'Worse than Afghanistan' — but good for portfolio: Trump is cashing in on cities he hates

President Donald Trump has purchased the debt of state and local governments that he's been vocally critical of, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal.

The disclosure of more than 500 municipal bonds in Trump's portfolio was submitted to the Office of Government Ethics in August.

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Leaked memo reveals UK and the EU plan to defy Trump with own deal

The United Kingdom and the European Union have reached a trade agreement — despite President Donald Trump's tariff agenda.

Politico reported on Monday that a leaked draft revealed a “new strategic partnership” between London and Brussels, centered on maintaining "global economic stability and their mutual commitment to free and open trade."

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Fourth grader reports racial slur — principal calls cops on parents and expels boy

The parents of a Black student in Oregon who reported being called a racial slur asked the school principal at the private school what she planned to do about the incident — and she called police and expelled the son, according to a report.

The father of another child who reported hearing the slur told Oregonlive that Tresa Rast, the principal at The Madeleine School, suggested that the student had made up what he'd heard and recommended therapy so he could be “deprogrammed” from anti-racist training she said he had received while previously attending public school in Portland.

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Texas GOP bill would exempt police from deadly conduct charges after wrongful killings

"Texas lawmakers want to exempt police from deadly conduct charges" 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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'Tremendous costs': DOGE's blunders on track to cancel out any savings from its cuts

Tech billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) task force was originally promised to find $2 trillion in savings to the taxpayers — a figure swiftly revised to $1 trillion, and then more recently to a far more modest $150 billion. The problem, wrote Zeeshan Aleem for MSNBC, is that we're now getting to savings so low they don't even offset the extra money DOGE is costing the government with its own blunders and dysfunction.

This follows a New York Times report which reveals just how expensive DOGE's operations, and changes to the government, have been to taxpayers: "The Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit organization that studies the federal work force, has used budget figures to produce a rough estimate that firings, re-hirings, lost productivity, and paid leave of thousands of workers will cost upward of $135 billion this fiscal year. At the Internal Revenue Service, a DOGE-driven exodus of 22,000 employees would cost about $8.5 billion in revenue in 2026 alone, according to figures from the Budget Lab at Yale University."

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'They overreached': Newsmax judicial analyst slams DOJ 'jihad' on arrested judge

Newsmax judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano asserted that President Donald Trump's Department of Justice "overreached" when agents arrested Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan for allegedly helping a migrant escape from immigration authorities.

On Monday, Napolitano noted that the ICE agents did not have an arrest warrant for the migrant in question.

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Nike caught in lie as it brags about factory work conditions

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Series: Nike’s Gold Standard:Testing Nike’s Corporate Responsibility Claims

More in this series

Reporting Highlights

  • What Nike Says: The world’s largest sports apparel maker says its suppliers pay workers 1.9 times the minimum wage on average, based on partial data for the workforce.
  • What We Found: A payroll sheet for one Cambodian factory reveals few people making that much, even after years on the job.
  • What It Means: Workers told ProPublica their wages weren’t enough to make ends meet and that they needed to work overtime just to keep up.

These highlights were written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

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'This is huge!' MAGA goes into conniptions as Trump forces truck drivers to speak English

MAGA fans are rejoicing on social media in favor of President Donald Trump's plan to sign an executive order requiring commercial truck drivers to speak English.

Breitbart News reported that Trump would sign the order Monday evening because "President Trump believes that English is a non-negotiable safety requirement for professional drivers." Last month, Trump designated English as "the official language of the United States."

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Republican cornered into admission amid barrage from CNN's Wolf Blitzer: 'Not doing well'

Republican Congressman Ryan Zinke (MT) came under a barrage from CNN's Wolf Blitzer, sidestepping multiple questions before being cornered into admitting, "America is not doing well economically."

“Does the president need to change course dramatically right now?” Blitzer asked.

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Dozens of African migrants reported killed in US airstrike in Yemen

A U.S. missile strike in Yemen killed at least 68 African migrants and injured dozens more, according to Houthi rebels.

Photographs and video taken by a Reuters journalist at the migrant detention center showed emergency responders frantically trying to rescue survivors and remove the dead from the collapsed building in the rebel-held city of Saada, reported the Washington Post.

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White House official dodges questions as China calls bluff on Trump phone call claims

It remains unclear whether President Donald Trump spoke with President Xi Jinping about tariffs on China and both sides continue to give different answers.

Last week, Trump told reporters that he was "actively" negotiating with China on a tariff deal, according to The Los Angeles Times. However, China responded, denying the claim, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent contradicted the president, stating that talks have yet to begin.

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Trump administration dismisses all voting rights cases and fires investigators

Appointees in President Donald Trump's administration at the Department of Justice have ordered the dismissal of all voting rights cases and removed managers of the division responsible for overseeing them.

Sources told The Guardian that all active cases in the voting rights section were expected to be dropped. The move comes less than a month after Harmeet Dhillon, a Trump ally, was appointed to lead the Civil Rights Division.

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'I’m not involved in that': Trump blames low-ranking officials as policy prompts outrage

President Donald Trump washed his hands of one of his most controversial policies and blamed it on lower-ranking officials.

The president sat down for an extended interview with The Atlantic's Ashley Parker and Michael Scherer, who wrote that he seemed to acknowledge that his executive powers have limits, even as he continually seeks to expand them, and they added that Trump seemed to understand the Constitution would not allow him to disregard a judicial order.

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