Trump News

Mourning Americans contrast Trump approach to late Pope Francis

by Andréa BAMBINO, with Ulysse Bellier in Washington

There was emotion across the United States following the death of Pope Francis, with many mourners contrasting the Argentine pontiff's gentle touch with the harshness of the current US administration.

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'Shred the Constitution': Trump slammed for 'dangerous spin' as admin flouts courts

During a visit to El Salvador, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland) met with Kilmar Ábrego García — the Maryland resident and Salvadoran man who was deported from the United States and is still locked up in a Salvadoran prison. President Donald Trump and his allies are claiming that García is associated with the violent Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) gang, but García's relatives and defenders are countering that there is no evidence linking him to MS-13 and that he was deported without any type of due process.

Van Hollen, now back in the United States, discussed García's case during a Monday, April 21 appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." And he emphasizes that the implications of the case go way beyond García himself.

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Trump shows Hegseth support, blames 'fake news' for 2nd group chat scandal: report

President Donald Trump has privately reinforced to Pete Hegseth his support for the embattled Defense secretary as many call for his removal, according to a report from POLITICO.

The two reportedly spoke after a former Pentagon spokesperson criticized his leadership in a POLITICO op-ed on Sunday. The column claimed that the Pentagon “is in disarray under Hegseth’s leadership.”

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'No additional funding': Trump admin announces cut that could make 60K people homeless

People who rely on Emergency Housing Vouchers to pay their rent are facing upheaval, according to a new report.

A letter from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — and reviewed by The Associated Press — claims funding for the nearly 60,000 people who rely on the vouchers is expected to be used up by the end of next year.

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Larry David mocks capitulation to Trump in brutal parody about a 1939 dinner with Hitler

Many of President Donald Trump's more outspoken critics believe that way too much "capitulating" is taking place —that Trump is genuinely dangerous and deserves total condemnation rather than having a lot list of universities, law firms and tech CEOs who were critical of him in the past trying to make peace with him.

Comedian Larry David has fun with that concept in a satirical op-ed published by the New York Times on April 21. In his op-ed, David describes a fictional dinner with Adolf Hitler in 1939.

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White House begins search for new defense secretary after latest Hegseth scandal: report

The White House is seeking a new leader for the Department of Defense in the wake of Secretary Pete Hegseth's latest controversies.

NPR first reported on Monday that the Trump administration was searching for a new defense secretary.

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'There's a gun in there': Republican lawmaker insists cane carried by Democrat 'is a prop'

Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R-TN) warned that Rep. Al Green (D-TX) could be concealing a gun in his cane after he shook it at President Donald Trump during an address to Congress earlier this year.

The Republican lawmaker made the remarks after FAME Ministries owner Booney Crawford asked her about the behavior of members of Congress behind the scenes.

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'Not supposed to work this way': Analyst claims in-fighting is tearing White House apart

President Donald Trump's White House has become increasingly divided in record time, according to MSNBC's Steve Benen.

In a new piece for MaddowBlog, Benen wrote, "Throughout American history, there have been administrations with rival factions, but those divisions usually take time. On Team Trump, the cracks are bursting into view just three months after Inauguration Day."

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'Covered up': GOP Sen Ron Johnson suggests 9/11 was an inside job

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) joined 9/11 conspiracy theorists who believe that the 2001 terrorist attack was an inside job.

During a Monday interview with MAGA influencer Benny Johnson, the senator noted that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was working to uncover the "truth" about COVID-19.

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'I did not vote for a neutron bomb': Pro-Trump CEO makes major backtrack

Craig Fuller, the CEO of FreightWaves, a freight-focused organization that analyzes the freight and logistics market, has regretted "enthusiastically" supporting President Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 election, warning that the administration's policies are likely to "wipe out supply chains and small businesses within 100 days."

"I did not vote for a neutron bomb to wipe out supply chains and small businesses 100 days in," he wrote on the social platform X on Sunday.

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'Truly galling': Law expert accuses Justice Alito of 'inventing' procedure to help Trump

In a column on Monday, Georgetown University Law School Professor Steve Vladeck told what he believed Justice Samuel Alito got wrong in his dissent over the weekend.

In a 1 a.m. decision Saturday, the Supreme Court temporarily blocked President Donald Trump's and his administration’s ability to use the Alien Enemy Act to remove anyone detained in the Northern District of Texas. But it wasn't until late that night that Alito's dissent to the order was published using dubious reasoning, Vladeck said Monday.

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Trump's 'golfing buddy' allowed to make farce of American diplomacy: right-wing writer

United States Special Envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkof, ‘is clearly out of his depth’ — and is hurting America, according to conservative commentator John Fund.

In a National Review column Monday, Fund questioned the capability and competency of the ‘real estate investor and golfing buddy’ of President Donald Trump.

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'Moment of national emergency': Wisconsin insider details game plan for fighting Trump

Wisconsin, along with Pennsylvania and Michigan, was once considered part of the Democratic Party's "Blue Wall" in presidential elections. But Donald Trump, in 2016, became the first Republican to carry Wisconsin in a presidential race since Ronald Reagan in 1984 — and he won Wisconsin again in 2024 after losing it to Joe Biden in 2020.

Wisconsin — which has a GOP senator (Ron Johnson) and a Democratic senator (Tammy Baldwin) — is, like Pennsylvania and Michigan, neither reliably Democratic nor reliably Republican. Democrats celebrated when liberal Justice-elect Susan Crawford defeated the Elon Musk-backed Brad Schimel in a Wisconsin Supreme Court race by roughly 10 percent on April 1, but during the race, they took nothing for granted.

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