SmartNews

'Bigoted parents' poised to get 'floating veto' to censor teachers: expert

A Supreme Court showdown is brewing in the world of religious freedom that could hand over certain groups and individuals with a staggering set of new control powers over public education in the country, in a key test of the separation of church and state.

That’s according to Slate legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern, who told readers that the high court will hear arguments in a critical First Amendment case on Tuesday that could surrender censorship rights over LGBTQ+ materials in public schools to religious parents.

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'Very concerning': Experts alarmed as DOGE 'claws deeper' into 'troves' of federal data

Tech billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency task force won approval from the Justice Department to access a sensitive database about immigration cases, The Washington Post reported on Monday evening.

The system in question, known as the Executive Office for Immigration Review's Courts and Appeals System, or ECAS, "is used to store records of immigrants who have interacted with the U.S. immigration system, detailing their name, addresses, previous immigration-court testimony and any history of engagement with law enforcement, among other things," said the report, adding that the Justice Department said “ECAS supports the full life cycle of an immigration case” by maintaining “all records and case-related documents in electronic format.”

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'Keep the poor in poverty?' WSJ editorial jabs late Pope Francis over 'anti-Americanism'

The death of Pope Francis on Monday morning caused an outpouring of good wishes and mourning from people around the world and across the political spectrum — even if President Donald Trump's comments declaring his excitement to go to the funeral were met with a less-than-warm reaction.

But on Monday, the editorial board for the Wall Street Journal sent him off by attacking his economic views.

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Ex-mayor stabbed and husband slain in rampage at their home: police

The first Black mayor of Lewisville, Texas, was stabbed, and her husband was killed at the hands of their grandson in an early morning attack Monday, police said.

Mitchell Blake Reinacher, 23, has been charged with murder and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in connection with the stabbing of longtime Denton County Commissioner Bobbie J. Mitchell and her husband, Fred Mitchell, the Daily Beast reported.

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'Wonderful champions!' Trump gives full-throated endorsement to 2 candidates in same race

President Donald Trump made two endorsements for the same race in a post to his Truth Social platform on Monday evening — giving the nod to two separate politicians for governor of Arizona.

"I like Karrin Taylor Robson of Arizona a lot, and when she asked me to Endorse her, with nobody else running, I Endorsed her, and was happy to do so," wrote Trump. "When Andy Biggs decided to run for Governor, quite unexpectedly, I had a problem — Two fantastic candidates, two terrific people, two wonderful champions, and it is therefore my Great Honor TO GIVE MY COMPLETE AND TOTAL ENDORSEMENT TO BOTH."

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'Stymied at every turn!' Trump whines that Supreme Court 'intimidated' by 'radical' Dems

President Donald Trump railed against the Supreme Court on Monday, which he said has "stymied" him at "every turn."

The Supreme Court recently temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting Venezuelan migrants under the Alien Enemies Act. The high court stressed that the targeted migrants must have a chance to challenge their removal in court.

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'They want us to fight alone': Dozens of groups unite in show of force against Trump

A coalition of 75 civil rights groups on Monday responded to U.S. President Donald Trump's "escalating threats and actions" targeting nonprofit organizations by launching "The Pact: A Civil Rights Coalition Unity Commitment."

Led by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, the groups represent "millions of people of every background in every ZIP code across America, exist to serve our communities, protect rights, and advance opportunity for all," the pact explains. "Today we face a campaign by the government to silence and isolate us, stop us from doing our jobs, and hurt the people we serve."

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'Can’t bully Adam Smith': WSJ conservative editors torch Trump amid market 'meltdown'

President Donald Trump was raked over the coals by the Wall Street Journal editorial board on Monday, over his escalating attacks on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell for not lowering interest rates to his satisfaction.

The conservative board, which has frequently laid into Trump for his tariff wars and other controversial economic policies, is speaking out after Trump attacked Powell as "Mr. Too Late" and accused him with no evidence of manipulating interest rates to interfere in the 2024 presidential election.

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'Bad faith': Pundit says Trump admin 'reaping the results' of its own bad actions in court

President Donald Trump’s administration has its courtroom tactics to blame for bringing a Supreme Court with a conservative super majority hand-picked by the president to issue a stunning pushback of his signature policy that a longtime columnist said took “courage” to do.

“Thank God for the Supreme Court,” the New Yorker’s Ruth Marcus wrote in an opinion piece published Monday, where she made clear that it has been uncommon for her to heap praise on the high court in recent years. “But, at a time when the legislative branch has been shamefully supine and the public has been alarmingly complacent, the federal courts represent the last best hope—at least, until the midterm elections—of combatting Trump’s outrages against the Constitution.”

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It was his fault: Feds blame US-born citizen for making them arrest him

The federal government is blaming a U.S. citizen for his arrest during a traffic stop in Leon County last week under a temporarily blocked state immigration law.

A senior official with the Department of Homeland Security said Monday that Juan Carlos Lopez-Gomez, a 20-year-old born in Georgia, was detained Wednesday after he told a Florida Highway Patrol trooper that he was in the country illegally.

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'It's not a barbecue': Trump mocked over excited post he'll attend Pope's funeral

In a Truth Social post on Monday, President Donald Trump declared, "Melania and I will be going to the funeral of Pope Francis, in Rome."

"We look forward to being there!" he said, excitedly.

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'Severe and long lasting': Harvard takes Trump to court as feud escalates

Harvard University filed a lawsuit Monday against the Trump administration following weeks of presidential threats to slash billions of dollars in federal funding from the elite institution, The New York Times reported.

The legal challenge, filed in Massachusetts federal court, alleges the government let loose a broad attack as “leverage to gain control of academic decision-making at Harvard,” the Times said, adding that similar funding cuts to other major universities were also referenced in the suit.

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'Brainwashed': Analysis rips 'bamboozled' MAGA voters — and warns we all pay 'high price'

President Donald Trump sold the American people a bill of false goods, even from the perspective of people who agree with him politically, editor Michael Tomasky wrote for The New Republic substack — and it's time for his supporters to stop buying what he's selling.

One of the key new examples, he wrote, is Trump saying he'll "take a pass" on the Russian invasion of Ukraine if the two sides can't make a deal. This comes months after he took office a second time and despite his promise he would end the war within 24 hours.

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