SmartNews

'They can't hide': Democrats team up as they see weak spot — and GOP leaders laugh it off

WASHINGTON — Democrats are on offense, but Republicans are laughing. For now, at least.

Thursday the Democratic Party’s hosting a town hall in the North Carolina district of the GOP leader who coached rank-and-file Republicans to avoid town halls. But Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC) — the head of the National Republican Congressional Committee (or NRCC) — says he’s unfazed.

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'Major red flag': Trump's two 'greatest assets' are reportedly 'becoming liabilities'

President Donald Trump has already fumbled two issues that were crucial to his re-election after less than 100 days on the job, according to a report on voter sentiments.

The president's approval rating on the economy and immigration suggest that voters agreed with his campaign pitch but have been alarmed with his actions on both issues, and an Axios analysis found that this disconnect could collapse the fundamental pillars of his political brand.

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'Insane story': Internet stunned as agents knock on lawyer's door to 'intimidate him'

A new investigative report that reveals how far the Trump administration is willing to take its hardline crackdown on immigration is raising alarms over social media – and also drawing fierce pushback from the legal community.

Journalist Radley Balko reported Wednesday that a Texas lawyer was met at his front door by two plain-clothed men who were not wearing badges and refused to identify themselves one night last month. The visit came days after he provided pro bono legal advice to an immigrant family, according to the report, which added that the attorney, Clay Jackson, believed the agents were responsible for his Wi-Fi being shut off.

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'Looked like a scam': Trump admin asks college employees if they're Jewish

What appeared at first glance to Barnard College employees to be a fake text scheme inquiring whether they were Jewish was confirmed Wednesday by school administrators as a legitimate government text message.

The eyebrow-raising text message hit the personal cellphones belonging to numerous current and past employees on Monday with a survey link “that looked, at first, like a scam,” according to the New York Times.

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'Absolutely blowing it': MSNBC's Rachel Maddow shares key lesson of Trump's first 100 days

As President Donald Trump prepares to mark the first 100 days of his second White House term, MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow shared what she views as the “clear lesson” of the last three months as she dropped news of her own.

The primetime host in the opening minutes of her Wednesday show revealed that her 100-day nightly run would wrap at the end of the month.

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'Foolish': WSJ's conservative editors take a swipe at MAGA media 'echo chamber'

President Donald Trump is finally being battered by the consequences of his own disastrous policy choices, the Wall Street Journal editorial board wrote in a scathing analysis published on Wednesday evening — and the bubble that is the MAGA media sphere is losing its grip over the situation.

One of the nation's most prominent conservative opinion pages, the Journal's editorial board has grown increasingly frustrated with Trump in recent months as he has pushed draconian new tariffs that seek to shatter the international order on trade and risk the collapse of the stock market.

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'Significant vulnerabilities': Trump admin attorney warned against risky $20B plot

The Trump administration had been cautioned that they were treading shaky legal ground as they plotted to block eight nonprofits from using $20 billion in Biden-era climate grants that had already been disbursed, according to a new report in Politico.

But Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin still plowed forward with the plan that terminated the grants completely. His move came less than 48 hours after an EPA lawyer warned in a series of emails last month that the action could leave the Trump administration on the hook for billions in damages if a court ultimately deems the move unlawful, Politico reported.

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'Fed up': CNN reporter 'alarmed' as FEMA sheds 20% of staff facing MAGA attacks

President Donald Trump and tech billionaire Elon Musk have caused a mass exodus of experienced staffers at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA — just in time for what could be a brutal hurricane season, CNN's Gabe Cohen told anchor Jake Tapper on Wednesday.

"What are you learning about these cuts to FEMA?" Tapper asked him.

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Trump signs education orders, including overhaul of college accreditations

Trump signs education orders, including overhaul of college accreditations

by Shauneen Miranda, Iowa Capital Dispatch
April 23, 2025

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a series of education-focused orders Wednesday related to accreditation in higher education, school discipline policies, historically Black colleges and universities, artificial intelligence in education and workforce development.

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Trump’s tariffs 'upend constitutional order' and harm state economies, Dem AGs allege

Trump’s tariffs “upend constitutional order” and harm state economies, Dem AGs allege

by Gloria Rebecca Gomez, Arizona Mirror
April 23, 2025

A dozen Democratic attorneys general, led by the AGs in Arizona and Oregon, filed a lawsuit Wednesday arguing that President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs were illegally implemented and will cause irreparable harm to their constituents.

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Hegseth installed Signal on Pentagon computers where phones banned: report

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had the Signal messaging app installed on his desktop computer in the Pentagon to circumvent poor cell service in the building, according to a new report in The Washington Post, which cited three people familiar with the matter.

The Post report said Hegseth "effectively 'cloned' the Signal app on his personal cellphone" following talks between Hegseth and his advisers on "how they could circumvent the lack of cellphone service in much of the Pentagon and more quickly coordinate with the White House and other top Trump officials using the encrypted app."

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Supreme Court justice just accidentally 'revealed his own homophobia': analyst

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito leapt into proselytizing from the bench on Wednesday — and in doing so, he "revealed his own homophobia" as well as that he didn't understand the basic plot of the children's book he wants to allow parents to force schools to embargo, court watcher Mark Joseph Stern wrote for Slate in an analysis published on Wednesday.

The case in question was Mahmoud v. Taylor, a potential landmark decision about the right of parents to censor LGBTQ content from school curricula.

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Senate lawmaker's exit ignites 'once-in-a-decade fight' on Capitol Hill: report

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) may have just announced his retirement, but the bitter battle to replace his leadership position has already taken off on Capitol Hill, according to a new report in Axios.

Durbin on Wednesday announced that his decadeslong career in the Senate would come to an end with his retirement in January.

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