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Mike Johnson and John Thune offer conflicting accounts of DHS shutdown plan on same day

WASHINGTON — Republican leaders in Congress appeared to be on the same page Tuesday about how to fund immigration activities for the next three years as they released a party-line measure that will pave the way for a special process known as budget reconciliation.

But they weren’t unified about another problem — when to clear a bipartisan funding bill for the vast majority of the Department of Homeland Security that would end a shutdown that’s been underway since mid-February.

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Embattled Congress member resigns hours before Ethics Committee set to announce sanctions

A Florida Democratic congresswoman facing a mountain of federal charges and ethics violations resigned from Congress Monday just hours before the House Ethics Committee was set to announce sanctions against her.

Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick's chief of staff confirmed the resignation to NOTUS, which came after months of mounting pressure from both parties to step down.

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‘Something fell apart’: Speculation swirls as JD Vance’s whereabouts in question

Speculation swirled Tuesday as the Trump administration offered conflicting accounts of Vice President JD Vance’s whereabouts, with President Donald Trump saying he had already left for Pakistan for peace talks with Iran, only for the White House to later contradict him.

Early Tuesday morning, Trump told The New York Post that Vance was “heading over now” to Islamabad, Pakistan, for a second round of negotiations with Iranian officials in an attempt to bring about an end to the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. Citing unnamed sources, Axios published a similar report, claiming that Vance was “expected” to depart for Pakistan on Tuesday morning.

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Home state voters overwhelmingly approve of Noem firing: 'She couldn't hang on'

Any hope that fired DHS Secretary Kristi Noem may have about returning to her home state of South Dakota to pick up the pieces and run for office again one day likely expired on Tuesday.

According to South Dakota News Watch reporting on polling conducted by the Chiesman Center for Democracy, roughly 3 in 4 South Dakotans approve of President Donald Trump's decision to fire Noem from her role as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

The polling firm surveyed 500 registered voters across party affiliation between April 7-9 and found that 76 percent of respondents agreed with Trump's move, while 59 percent of South Dakotans disapproved of her performance as head of the DHS.

Noem was already politically vulnerable before the firing. The former governor and former U.S. House representative was on shaky ground when she accepted Trump's DHS nomination — but her reputation was already severely damaged by an admission in her book, "No Going Back: The Truth on What's Wrong with Politics and How We Move America Forward," that she killed an unruly puppy by placing it in a gravel pit and shooting it.

Brad Coker, founder of Mason-Dixon Polling and Strategy, explained how the collapse occurred: "I think she was already starting to slip. Trump gave her a lifeline, and she wasn't able to hold on to the lifeline."

The puppy admission poisoned her standing with voters across the political spectrum. "Republicans have dogs too. It wasn't something that just offended the left," Coker noted, explaining that the brutal disclosure damaged her support even among her own party base.

Trump cabinet said to be paying price for his political trouble: 'When it rains, it pours'

President Donald Trump has removed three Cabinet secretaries in less than four weeks, signaling a White House in crisis as the administration struggles with the Iran war, collapsing approval ratings and soaring gas prices.

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer became the latest casualty Monday afternoon when she was summoned to the White House and given an ultimatum: resign or be fired. She chose resignation, effective immediately, and her departure follows the ousters of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Attorney General Pam Bondi within the previous month, reported MS NOW.

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Gamblers eye these Trump officials for next ousting: 'Turning their attention to the boys'

Prediction markets have started taking bets on the next Trump cabinet member to be removed, according to reports on Tuesday.

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer was the latest to leave the administration and now the third woman to exit President Donald Trump's circle in recent weeks, The Daily Beast reported. Chavez-DeRemer's ousting followed former Attorney General Pam Bondi and former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

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FBI hit with 20-day deadline to fork over docs related to Kash Patel’s alleged drinking

In a public records request filing submitted on Tuesday, the nonprofit watchdog group Democracy Forward gave the FBI 20 days to produce internal records as part of its investigation into FBI Director Kash Patel, who’s been accused of frequent bouts of “excessive drinking” and “unexplained absences.”

Last week, The Atlantic published a bombshell report that included allegations from FBI and Justice Department officials, allegations that Patel’s excessive drinking had “alarmed” his colleagues.

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Senator rips election-denying lawyer protecting Trump: 'You assert privilege willy-nilly'

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) called out former DOJ official Jeffrey Clark after Clark insisted that details surrounding a letter aimed at overturning the 2020 presidential election were legally privileged.

During a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Tuesday, Whitehouse questioned Clark about the letter he had drafted while working for the Justice Department, which he suggested should be sent to Georgia, where President Donald Trump was seeking additional votes to reverse former President Joe Biden's victory.

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Trump squanders 'slam dunk' win with 'colossal misreading' of MAGA base: columnist

President Donald Trump misunderstood what drove voters to reelect him as his MAGA base fractures, an analyst explained on Tuesday.

The Guardian's Moira Donegan described how Trump's most recent publicity stunt revealed how his "fixation on culture-war grievances is a colossal misreading of voters who just want prices to come down." In a recent moment at the White House, 58-year-old grandmother Sharon Simmons arrived to deliver McDonald's to the president. She's been working as a DoorDash app delivery driver to help pay for her husband's cancer treatment and the occasion was aimed to highlight Trump's agenda.

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Shamed Greg Bovino resurfaces with praise for Hitler-loving racist X account

One of the key figures in President Donald Trump's mass deportation plan openly cheered a blog post by a known anti-Semitic and racist social media account Monday, according to a report.

The Daily Beast reported that former Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino shared an April 9 article from the blog American Greatness that argued "mass arrests are the only way forward to mass deportations."

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'Make this make sense': Pete Hegseth flu announcement pilloried as 'imbecilic'

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth loosened the requirement for U.S. troops to receive an annual flu vaccine, and critics questioned his decision.

The Pentagon chief and former Fox News host announced Tuesday that the military would end its mandate requiring the vaccine, which called an "absurd, overreaching" order that serves only to "weaken our war-fighting capabilities."

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Reuters staffer fired after raising alarm over company providing services to ICE

A longtime employee who worked for a division of the conglomerate that owns the Reuters News Agency claims she was dismissed from her job for raising the alarm within the company that it was providing services to the Department of Homeland Security that were being used illegally.

According to NPR reporting, Billie Little, who worked in legal publishing for the company's Westlaw division, was fired shortly after she joined colleagues in flagging potential unlawful use of Thomson Reuters products by ICE.

Little became alarmed after witnessing ICE enforcement activities in Minneapolis. In late January, she followed news reports about U.S. citizens detained by ICE and heightened tensions in the Twin Cities area following shootings. She also heard disturbing accounts from colleagues working at the Thomson Reuters office in Eagan, Minnesota.

"People afraid to go to work, people afraid to take their kids to school, people being followed and all of that," Little recalled to NPR.

When a colleague posted on an internal employee chat claiming Thomson Reuters was a top corporate collaborator with ICE, Little said she felt "sick to my stomach."

Little joined a committee that sent a letter to company management in February demanding transparency. The group flagged that ICE could be using Thomson Reuters products unlawfully and requested greater oversight of the company's Department of Homeland Security contracts.

"Instead of addressing our concerns, our legitimate concerns — instead, they turn toward investigating me," Little told NPR. "And I was instrumental in leading the group. So I think that clearly they were trying to chill [the] activity of workers and that should scare every worker across the country."

Thomson Reuters' main surveillance tool is called CLEAR. According to NPR, the platform aggregates billions of data points on individuals from public and proprietary records, as well as social media. CLEAR also includes images from a network of license plate readers. ICE holds a nearly $5 million contract with Thomson Reuters beginning May 2025 for "license plate reader data to enhance investigations for potential arrest, seizure and forfeiture."

Little initially understood CLEAR was being used to target human traffickers and child exploitation cases — work she could support. But she grew concerned the tool was being deployed far more broadly by ICE "to identify immigrants and protesters without criminal histories."

An archived Thomson Reuters description stated explicitly that CLEAR is "not designed for use for mass illegal immigration inquiries or for deporting non-criminal undocumented persons and non-citizens." This raised question for Little about ICE's use of the platform and if it violates the company's own stated parameters.

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Trump nominee squirms when pressed on false 2020 election claims: ‘You can’t answer?’

President Donald Trump’s pick to succeed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, Kevin Warsh, repeatedly dodged questions Tuesday during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Banking Committee, refusing to acknowledge the president’s election loss in 2020.

During the hearing, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), the top Democrat on the committee, cited remarks from Trump that she said raised concerns.

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