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'America will suffer': NYT editorial board torches Trump in scathing rebuke

President Donald Trump's decision to fire the Bureau of Labor Statistics director over weak jobs report numbers was torn to shreds by The New York Times editorial board on Tuesday.

The decision, which Trump claims with no evidence is because the statistics were somehow rigged or falsified by Democrats to make him look bad, will only ensure that "America will suffer" from the collapse of trust among federal statistics gatherers and the people who use them, the board wrote.

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'Eyebrows raised' as big name curiously left off Epstein subpoena list

The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed all of the Justice Department documents involved in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, and subpoenaed 10 people it wants to hear from. But that list has sparked questions about a number of people who are not on that list.

CNN reported that the House Oversight Committee wants to speak to former Attorneys General Merrick Garland, William Barr, Jeff Sessions, Loretta Lynch, Eric Holder and Alberto Gonzales; former FBI Director James Comey; former special counsel and FBI Director Robert Mueller; former Secretary of State and first lady Hillary Clinton; and former President Bill Clinton.

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'Fail': CNN cracks up at nuclear expert's brutal takedown of Trump's big plan for the moon

CNN's Brianna Keilar introduced nuclear policy analyst Joe Cirincione to discuss the Trump administration's big plans to put a nuclear reactor on the moon.

She mentioned Cirincione's book, "Nuclear Nightmares: Securing the world before it is too late," before segueing into the subject at hand.

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ICE seizes 11-year-old to force dad’s deportation — despite torture risk

President Donald Trump is trying to deport a Russian man who passed the U.S. screening process for asylum. The U.S. government has also taken away his son.

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, posted an excerpt of a New York Times report revealing that the man fled to the United States after his wife was locked up for her political views.

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Ken Paxton seeks court order declaring that Dem 'runaways' vacated their seats

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced plans to ask a court to determine whether Democrats who fled the state to prevent Republican redistricting efforts had "vacated" their office.

After Democrats denied the Texas House of Representatives a two-thirds quorum for the second day in a row on Tuesday, Paxton released a statement on his intentions to have their seats declared vacant.

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Trump baffles with ‘barrage of friendly fire’ on loyal GOP farmers

American farmers are openly questioning why the Trump administration has betrayed them on so many issues, from tariffs to mass deportations.

The Washington Post editorial board called the onslaught a "barrage of friendly fire," since the majority of farmers are, in fact, "solidly Republican."

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Ghislaine Maxwell 'vigorously opposes' releasing grand jury docs after meeting with DOJ

Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell "vigorously opposes disclosure of the grand jury materials" from her sex trafficking case, her attorney said.

In response to a Department of Justice request to unseal the grand jury materials, Maxwell's attorneys filed court documents on Tuesday, stating that her client would oppose the move.

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'Family separation on steroids': Expert lays into Trump plan to target newborn babies

President Donald Trump's administration has drawn up a draft of guidelines to block non-U.S. citizens from having children on U.S. soil and becoming citizens.

The Constitution details "birthright citizenship" in the 14th Amendment, saying that anybody born on American soil belongs to the nation. The Trump administration has tried to block that with an executive order.

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'Lost in translation': Trump issues threats so 'vague' they bamboozle expert

President Donald Trump boasted that he had extracted a $600 billion "gift" from the European Union after threatening to impose 35-percent tariffs, but an economic analyst cast doubt on whether that money would ever be paid.

The president told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Tuesday morning that he had cut tariffs against the EU to 15 percent in exchange for the payment, which he said could be invested in "anything we want," but CNBC's senior analyst Ron Insana told MSNBC's Ana Cabrera that Trump's tactics were too "vague" to tell if they're effective.

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'Living in a fantasy world': Critics pounce as Trump TV interview goes off the rails

U.S. President Donald Trump gave a lengthy interview to CNBC on Tuesday and critics quickly pounced on the president for telling a large number of false claims on topics ranging from monthly jobs numbers to the price of gas to international trade agreements.

Toward the start of the interview, CNBC host Joe Kernen pushed back on Trump's claims that the Bureau of Labor Statistics had "rigged" job creation numbers against him and debunked a Trump statement that the BLS had covered up negative jobs data revisions under the Biden administration until after the November 2024 presidential election.

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This is what 'really got under Trump's skin' with jobs report: White House insiders

President Donald Trump is still reeling over last week’s ‘awful’ jobs report according to an anonymous White House official, who told CNN’s Alayna Treene Tuesday what specifically “set him off” regarding the report.

Published last Friday, the figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that only 73,000 jobs were created in July, far below the projected 115,000, while also revising job numbers from May and June to be 258,000 lower than initial assessments. Within hours of the report being published, Trump fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, claiming the findings were “rigged.”

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Supreme Court used wrong statute to make monumental birthright citizenship ruling: expert

Conservative legal scholar Jack Goldsmith revealed that the U.S. Supreme Court relied on an incorrectly cited statute to justify its shocking birthright citizen ruling.

Goldsmith, a former United States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel under the George W. Bush administration, wrote that the decision written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett contained a key error, as Slate legal reporter Mark Joseph Stern summarized.

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'Widely disliked' Hegseth ally tried to boot White House liaison out of Pentagon: report

A war has erupted between the Pentagon and the White House over the actions of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's acting chief of staff, according to The Washington Post.

Ricky Buria, a recently retired Marine Corps colonel, reportedly tried and failed to oust Matthew A. McNitt, who coordinates personnel policy as White House liaison at the Pentagon. White House officials "intervened" to prevent Buria from achieving his goal, the report said.

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