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'They're not going anywhere': Trump's AG appears to break with him on Fox News

President Donald Trump's attorney general appeared to rebuff an opportunity to endorse her boss's recent idea to send Americans convicted of violent crimes to prisons in El Salvador.

Trump reiterated the idea on Monday during an Oval Office meeting with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, in which Trump told reporters, "homegrowns are next," referring to U.S. citizens.

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‘Tortured reading’: Trump team slammed for twisting Supreme Court order to justify move

President Donald Trump has turned a unanimous Supreme Court order for his administration to facilitate the return of wrongly deported Maryland father Kilmar Abrego Garcia from an infamous Salvadoran prison on its head to justify why he doesn't have to do anything, wrote Hugo Lowell in a scathing analysis for The Guardian published on Monday evening.

This follows Trump's White House visit with Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's president, who also refused to lift a finger to return Abrego Garcia, even though he was married to a U.S. citizen, living in America with a work permit, and had no criminal record. During the meeting, Trump aide Stephen Miller said, “The ruling solely stated that if this individual at El Salvador’s sole discretion was sent back to our country, we could deport him a second time.”

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‘Big’: Trump’s effort to mass-revoke parole for migrants blocked

An immigration attorney cheered Monday evening as a judge issued an emergency order to temporarily block the government's effort to suddenly cancel parole and work permits for many migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, who were legally allowed into the United States.

The government told the immigrants they could stay for up to two years, but a new rule under the Trump administration said their legal stay would end early — on April 24 — unless the government decided otherwise. The migrants affected by the rule raced to the courts to stop this from happening.

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'Asteroid striking without warning': Execs stunned by Trump's attack on NPR and PBS

President Donald Trump is now asking Congress to claw back $1.1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — an amount totaling around two years' worth of funding — in his latest budget request, according to The New York Times, leaving media executives blindsided by the attack on public stations.

"The plan is to request that Congress rescind $1.1 billion in federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the taxpayer-backed company that funds public media organizations across the United States, one of the people said," reported Benjamin Mullin, Tony Romm, and Jonathan Swan, noting that the funding "goes to public broadcasters including NPR, PBS and their local member stations. The Trump administration isn’t planning to ask Congress to claw back about $100 million allocated for emergency communications."

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Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston

Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston

"Trump officials cut planning grant for Texas high-speed rail between Dallas and Houston" 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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NY AG reviewing possible insider trading by Trump administration: report

State prosecutors in New York are looking into whether the Trump administration engaged in insider trading, according to a report.

The office of New York Attorney General Letitia James told CNN on Monday it is looking into potential insider trading by officials and associates after Trump announced — then paused — broad tariffs for 90 days.

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Trump hasn't given any 'clear rationale' for his tariffs: GOP senator

Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA), normally a fierce supporter of President Donald Trump, expressed some hesitation about tariffs when pressed Monday afternoon by CNN's Jake Tapper.

Trump's plan calls for 10 to 49 percent import duties on virtually the entire rest of the world — with the rate calculated by how much of a trade deficit the United States has with each country. Bowing to market panic and discontent from his party, he pared things back temporarily, announcing that for 90 days, all countries except China would only face the minimum of 10 percent.

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'Alarming': Small colleges bullied into silence as Trump poses 'existential threat'

As the Trump administration freezes billions of dollars in federal funds at the nation's most elite universities, some smaller colleges serving large numbers of diverse and low-income students are watching with existential dread, fearing that the administration will come for their federal funds if they speak out against President Donald Trump's sweeping executive orders.

Tribal colleges and universities and minority serving institutions are particularly vulnerable when it comes to potential federal funding cuts, threatening some schools’ very existence or, at the very least, leading to jobs cuts and the shutdown of research and student programs, current and former university administrators across the country tell Raw Story.

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'Bin Laden was also a father': DHS official compares wrongly-deported dad to terrorist

Department of Homeland Security assistant public affairs secretary Tricia McLaughlin doubled down on the accidental deportation of Maryland family man Kilmar Ábrego García to a Salvadoran megaprison on Fox News' "The Will Cain Show" Monday — baselessly claiming that García is a known gang member and even comparing him to al-Qaeda founder and Sept. 11 mastermind Osama bin Laden.

Despite the Trump administration's attorneys admitting the deportation had been in error in court documents, and despite the Supreme Court upholding a lower court order to "facilitate" Ábrego García's return, President Donald Trump and El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele, boasted in a White House meeting earlier in the day that no such return would happen.

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'Not a drill': Conservative warns US in midst of 'genuine emergency' with Trump

Charlie Sykes, political commentator and former editor-in-chief of the website The Bulwark, said Monday afternoon that the United States is in an "emergency" situation.

MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace noted on her show that during an Oval Office press availability with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele on Monday, Trump "seemed very proud of the fact that he was defying a 9-0 Supreme Court ruling to facilitate the return of a man his own administration admits was wrongfully deported."

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Trump blocked in effort to deport another Columbia activist and permanent US resident

A judge on Monday blocked the Trump administration from deporting a Palestinian student and legal permanent resident of the United States who is pursuing graduate studies at Columbia University.

Earlier in the day, Mohsen Mahdawi was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, agents during what he thought was a naturalization interview in Vermont. Mahdawi took an outsized role in pro-Palestinian protests on Columbia's campus and co-founded the Palestinian Student Union at Columbia alongside fellow activist Mahmoud Khalil, who was recently detained by immigration authorities.

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'This is human trafficking': Civil rights attorney sounds alarm at Trump's latest antic

A civil rights attorney sounded the alarm Monday afternoon, warning the Trump administration is essentially engaged in what he called "human trafficking."

Trump publicly said he would like to deport American citizens who are violent offenders to El Salvador, where they would then serve their prison sentences under a deal with the Salvadoran government. Trump made the remarks during a White House meeting with El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele.

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'Lawless': Trump reamed for defying another court order

President Donald Trump was ordered by U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, a judge he appointed, to stop the blacklisting of The Associated Press from White House press briefings and functions over their refusal to adopt Trump's renaming of the Gulf of Mexico, calling it a "brazen" assault on the First Amendment.

But the president appears to be flouting the order.

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