SmartNews

Trump 'wants to put his own stamp on elections' with little known federal agency: report

President Donald Trump wants to “put his own stamp on elections,” according to a new report from the Associated Press.

An executive order, which he signed in March, targets the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC), a little-known independent commission which was designed to “help states update their voting equipment.”

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'Why didn't they fight for it?' Trump shames Ukraine for letting Russia take Crimea

President Donald Trump took aim at Volodymyr Zelensky in a lengthy Truth Social post Wednesday after Ukraine's president said his country would not "legally recognize" the Russian occupation of Crimea.

The United States is promoting a cease-fire agreement contingent on Ukraine's recognition of Russia's control of the Black Sea peninsula that President Vladimir Putin annexed in 2014. Russia staged a full-scale invasion in 2022.

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'Not going to be discussed!' Combative State Dept spokesperson snaps over Ukraine question

State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce grew increasingly combative during a CNN interview Wednesday, when she repeatedly refused to answer a question about a Russia-Ukraine peace deal, exclaiming, "That's not what we're going to do here!"

The confrontation began when anchor Pamela Brown asked about the U.S. threat to walk away from peace talks with Russia and Ukraine over the issue of Crimea.

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'Small warning' from Justice Alito signals even he is feeling 'fear' about Trump: analysis

“The most predictable guessing game in Washington, D.C., in the first three months of Donald Trump's second presidency has focused on not if he will spark a Constitutional crisis, but when,” according to USA Today columnist Chris Brennan.

The writer claimed Democrats have been leading the way in questioning the president, and GOP members, who he believes are “repulsed” by his “penchant for trampling the U.S. Constitution,” are now following.

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Trump aide's CNN interview devolves into standoff as she tries to wrest control from host

A Trump administration spokeswoman tried to take over her own interview with CNN's Pamela Brown in a combative defense of Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce appeared Wednesday morning on CNN's "Situation Room," where she defended Rubio's cuts to the diplomatic corps and his withdrawal from Ukraine peace talks in London. The former Fox News contributor refused to allow Brown to ask follow-up questions without interruption.

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'A headache for Trump': Data expert says 'least-liked' Cabinet pick is hurting President

Defense secretary Pete Hegseth's scandals are becoming a "problem" for president Donald Trump, according to new polling presented by CNN's Harry Enten.

The former Fox News host has been embroiled in an ongoing scandal over his non-secure communications about military operations, and he has already reshuffled top leadership posts just weeks into the job, and Enten told "CNN News Central" that poll numbers show the public has turned against him.

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Musk is no longer 'absorbing heat' for Trump — and 'we are seeing' it in polling: reporter

It’s “easy” to paint Elon Musk as a “villain” while working in DOGE, and he could be “taking the heat” off President Trump in the process, claimed one political analyst on Ana Cabrera Reports Wednesday Morning.

“There's been this coupling between Elon Musk and Donald Trump politically, as we've seen DOGE do its work in these early days of the Trump Administration,” Cabrera said. “The New York Times did a review of several recent polls that found Americans largely like the concept of eliminating fraud and government waste. But they do view Elon Musk and DOGE negatively. Does that have any political consequences for the President himself, who gave Musk so much power to just do whatever he wanted?”

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'Not how the law works': Experts slam 'dinkus' Tom Homan's attacks on wrongly deported man

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump's advisor Tom Homan attacked Kilmar Ábrego García, the Maryland man the government admits was wrongfully deported to a prison in El Salvador.

Homan serves as Trump's "border czar," a position the president invented. Speaking to the press, Homan claimed of García, "He got more due process than Laken Riley got."

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'Dire': Poorest residents of red state abandoned 9 weeks after floods ravaged community

MCDOWELL COUNTY, West Virginia — When the flood water swept through McDowell County, West Virginia, in February, Ashley Rutherford sat in her wheelchair, unable to get out of her home as the water started coming through the doorway. One of her sons put rubber rain boots on her to cover her legs while the water came in.

Nine weeks later, the carpet in the home is still wet. The kitchen’s wooden floor is damp and buckling, and Rutherford’s wheelchair got stuck in a new hole in front of the sink. The downstairs rooms are full of her family’s stuff, crowding the path for her to get around.

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Groundbreaking female Army commander suspended for Trump photo scandal: report

The U.S. Army suspended a Wisconsin female commander after discovering portraits of President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had been flipped around to face a wall, according to an Associated Press report.

Fort McCoy’s website has an undated statement which says, Col. Sheyla Baez Ramirez has been suspended as the base’s garrison commander. The statement did not provide any details as to why, but said the matter was “under review.”

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'Trump chickened out': Conservative writer revels in president's latest 'retreat'

Neoconservative writer Bill Krisol is reveling in President Donald Trump's retreat on economic issues he once vowed he would remain rock solid on upholding.

In an article for The Bulwark, Kristol called Trump's retreat on issues like Chinese tariffs and threats of firing Fed Chair Jerome Powell "a fine sight."

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'Not true': Detained U.S. citizen says DHS lied about him being from Mexico

Jose Hermosillo, a 19-year-old U.S. citizen, accused the Department of Homeland Security of detaining him and then producing a false account claiming he told them he was a citizen of Mexico.

In a Monday post on X, DHS argued that Hermosillo was at fault after he was wrongly detained.

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How the government is quietly repurposing everyone’s data for surveillance

A whistleblower at the National Labor Relations Board reported an unusual spike in potentially sensitive data flowing out of the agency’s network in early March 2025 when staffers from the Department of Government Efficiency, which goes by DOGE, were granted access to the agency’s databases. On April 7, the Department of Homeland Security gained access to Internal Revenue Service tax data.

These seemingly unrelated events are examples of recent developments in the transformation of the structure and purpose of federal government data repositories. I am a researcher who studies the intersection of migration, data governance and digital technologies. I’m tracking how data that people provide to U.S. government agencies for public services such as tax filing, health care enrollment, unemployment assistance and education support is increasingly being redirected toward surveillance and law enforcement.

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