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April 10, 2026
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"Saturday morning, about five miles from the protests, there was a brief standoff between U.S. lawmakers and armed federal officers outside a Minneapolis-area federal building. In social media posts and media interviews afterward, three Democratic congresswomen from Minnesota said they had sought to oversee the conditions at a regional ICE field office, but were allowed in only briefly before officials ordered them to leave. Videos posted by journalists on the scene showed Reps. Ilhan Omar, Angie Craig and Kelly Morrison standing outside the facilityâs gate as a line of federal agents dressed in tactical gear and camouflage initially barred them from entering. A female voice could be heard saying, âIâm a sitting member of the United States Congress,â and asking, âHave you contacted your supervisor?â âIt is deeply disturbing to think what ICE is hiding when they are actively denying members from conducting their oversight authority,â Omar said in a statement Saturday. âWhen people disappear in the darkness, American democracy dies.â Last month, a federal judge temporarily blocked new Trump administration policies restricting members of Congress from making unannounced oversight visits to ICE facilities funded via congressional appropriations bills. In a statement Saturday afternoon, however, Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said the ruling did not apply because the court exempted ICE operations funded by last yearâs One Big Beautiful Bill Act. She said that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem issued fresh orders Jan. 8 reiterating that congressmembers must give seven daysâ notice before visiting ICE detention facilities. âBecause they were out of compliance with this mandate, Representative Omar and her colleagues were denied entry to the facility,â McLaughlin said."
"Providers awoke to devastation that they'd be forced to conduct staff layoffs, program shutdowns, and that services would be halted immediately. The cuts axe overdose prevention, naloxone distribution, school mental health support, and help for pregnant women struggling with substance abuse. âOvernight, our entire backbone and infrastructure of addiction and mental health in this country flipped up on its head,â Hampton said. âThese grants are lifesaving tools that honestly are a good reason why we have started to see a reversal in trends of drug overdoses in this country.â The move comes as overdose deaths finally dropped 27% in 2024 after two decades of climbing rates. "All of us are in a state of complete and utter shock that the administration would take such a reckless action," Hampton said. Legal challenges loom, but Hampton warned the damage is happening now. "People will die. People will die.""
"The Trump administration announced it is suspending $129m in federal benefit payments to Minnesota amid allegations of widespread fraud in the state. The secretary of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Brooke Rollins, shared a letter on Friday on social media that was addressed to Minnesotaâs governor, Tim Walz, and the mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, notifying them of the administrationâs decision and citing investigations into alleged fraud conducted by local non-profits and businesses. âDespite a staggering, wide-reaching fraud scandal, your administrations refuse to provide basic information or take common sense measures to stop fraud. The Trump administration refuses to allow such fraud to continue,â Rollins wrote. Rollins asked Walz and Frey to provide the USDA with justification for all federal spending from 20 January 2025 to the present within 30 days. She is also requiring that all federal payments to the state moving forward require the same justification. âWeâre communicating with state partners to understand the impacts of such a blanket cut to funding meant for residents most in need,â Brian Feintech, a spokesperson for the city of Minneapolis, said in a written statement in response to Rollinsâs letter. âWhatâs abundantly clear is that Minneapolis is the latest target of the Trump administration â willing to harm Americans in service to its perceived political gain.â Minnesotaâs attorney general, Keith Ellison, publicly responded to Rollinsâs post, writing on X: âI will not allow you to take from Minnesotans in need. Iâll see you in court.â"
"The state has also been grappling with how to respond after the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension said the FBI was revoking its access to the case file, scene evidence and witness interviews in Goodâs shooting. Trump administration officials have called the incident a federal matter, but state prosecutors say it falls in their jurisdiction and announced Friday they will conduct their own review of the shooting in an effort to gather evidence the FBI wonât share with them. Video of the hotly contested shooting has gradually emerged, including cellphone footage recorded by the ICE officer as he fatally shot Good. The 47-second recording shows for the first time that RenĂŠe Good spoke to Ross before he shot her, and reveals that, a split second before the gunfire, Goodâs wife urged her to drive away from the scene. It does not show whether Goodâs SUV came into contact with Ross, as the administration contends. Vice President JD Vance said Friday that the video exonerated Ross. âThe reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self defense,â Vance wrote on X. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said Friday that itâs too early for anyone to reach a conclusion about the shooting âin good faithâ because thereâs too much evidence still to be evaluated. How the investigation plays out was on protestersâ minds Saturday. âWar is being waged on our community. Iâm here because sometimes it feels like thereâs not a lot you can do,â said Nora Sonneborn, 28, who lives nearby, works in administration and held a hand-painted sign that said, âMelt the ICE.â She called the FBIâs move to exclude state authorities from the shooting investigation âridiculous.â âA crime was committed in our home and we have every right to investigate,â she said."
"The U.S. experienced negative net migration in 2025 for the first time in at least half a century as a result of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, according to a report released Tuesday by the Brookings Institution. Although the administration has undertaken aggressive removal efforts, the negative number is mostly due to a significant drop in entries into the U.S., the report said. "We estimate net flows of -295,000 to -10,000 for the year," the Brookings study stated. "Though a high degree of policy uncertainty remains, continued negative net migration for 2026 is also likely." The report attributed the shift to combination of the large drop in entries and an increase in enforcement activity leading to removals and voluntary departures. The Trump administration's suspension of many humanitarian programs -- including most refugee programs with the exception of those involving white South Africans -- and a decline in temporary visas also contributed to the negative net migration, the report said. The report's authors estimate there were between 310,000 and 315,000 removals in 2025, a figure lower than what the administration has claimed. Department of Homeland Security officials claim that, so far, more than 600,000 people have been removed during the crackdown. "At 310,000 to 315,000, the 2025 removals are not much higher than the 2024 removals of around 285,000," the report states."
"Experts sounded a dire alarm after the Trump administration pulled the plug on nearly $2 billion in substance abuse and mental health funding, leaving thousands of providers scrambling and patients in a lurch. Up to 2,800 grantees through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration received termination letters immediately â wiping out about 26% of the agency's entire budget with zero warning, The Guardian reported Wednesday. âIt feels like Armageddon for everyone whoâs on the frontlines of the addiction and mental health space,â Ryan Hampton, founder of Mobilize Recovery, a national advocacy organization for people in and seeking recovery, told the outlet. âThe scope of care thatâs disrupted by these grants is catastrophic. Tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of people will die.â"
"On Sunday, Trump reiterated his view that Greenland should come under the control of the United States a day after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was captured in a US incursion and taken to New York to stand trial. "We need Greenland," Trump told journalists on Sunday, stressing that this was necessary for Washington's "national security" and claiming that the island was surrounded "by Chinese and Russian ships." Trump has in the past offered to buy the territory, while not ruling out the use of military force to take it over. Greenland has large quantities of oil, critical minerals and other resources. The territory could also gain economic importance in coming decades as new Arctic shipping routes open due to the melting of polar ice. Greenland already hosts a US military base, and Copenhagen has expressed willingness to allow for the deployment of additional US troops. On Monday, top Trump adviser Stephen Miller described Greenland as "a colony of Denmark," adding "nobody's going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland.""
"The Trump administration is denying state and local officials any access to the investigation into the shooting, offering little hope for a non-partisan probe into what happened. âThey donât have any jurisdiction in this investigation,â Noem said Thursday. She then railed against Minneapolis and Minnesota officials for not doing enough to assist ICE. Her remarks came after Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) Superintendent Drew Evans released a statement saying the U.S. attorneyâs office has barred it from participating in the federal investigation. âWithout complete access to the evidence, witnesses and information collected, we cannot meet the investigative standards that Minnesota law and the public demands,â Evans wrote. âAs a result, the BCA has reluctantly withdrawn from the investigation.â Itâs impossible for Minnesota to do its own investigation without the federal governmentâs cooperation, the stateâs Department of Public Safety commissioner Bob Jacobson explained Thursday. âThey do have all the evidence in the original investigative notes and reports. We have none of that. They have shared none of that with us,â he said. âWe would welcome the opportunity to jump back in to ... find the answers that the public deserves. Without any of that information, without any of that assistance from the FBI or the federal government, we would be at a loss to be able to initiate and conduct a thorough investigation.â Noem said Thursday sheâs already confident the investigation will clear the ICE agent of any wrongdoing. âWe have expected all the policies and procedures of review will be exactly that he acted appropriately to protect his life and the life of his colleagues,â she said Thursday when asked to share more information about him. Following Noemâs remarks, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) said getting a fair outcome from an investigation into the shooting âfeels very, very difficultâ now. âI say that only because people in positions of power have already passed judgment, from the President to the Vice President to Kristi Noem, have stood and told you things that are verifiably false, verifiably inaccurate,â a despondent Walz said at a press conference. âThey have determined the character of a 37-year-old mom that they didnât even know.â"
"Video filmed by the officer who opened fire, identified through official comment and public records as Jonathan Ross, shows Good appearing calm. She is heard telling him, "That's fine, dude, I'm not mad at you" - moments before he opens fire as she drives forward into the street, steering the car away from him. Noem has said he was treated at a local hospital for unspecified injuries and released. The car's front bumper appears in the bystander video to pass Ross before he shot at Good. It is unclear from any of the footage whether the vehicle made contact with him. In any case, Ross is shown remaining on his feet and can be seen walking after the incident, contradicting Trump's assertion on social media that the woman "ran over the ICE officer." The two DHS-related shootings this week have drawn thousands of protesters to the streets of Minneapolis, Portland and other U.S. cities, with many more demonstrations under the banner "ICE Out For Good" planned for Saturday and Sunday. The rallies were being organized by a coalition of groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, MoveOn Civic Action, Voto Latino, and Indivisible, some of which were at the forefront of "No Kings" protests against Trump last year."
"Several thousand protesters gathered at a park coated with fresh snow on Minneapolisâs south side Saturday afternoon, near where RenĂŠe Good lived and was fatally shot. âSay her name: RenĂŠe Good!â they chanted, along with âWe will not put up with ICE!â There were mothers with children and babies in carriers, families and seniors holding homemade signs that read âICE murdered RenĂŠe Good,â and âIndict agent Jonathan Ross,â the man identified through court records as the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer who killed Good. Protesters turned out in cities across the country, including Boston, New York City, Austin and Philadelphia, many organized by progressive group Indivisible and titled âICE Out For Good.â In Minneapolis, the demonstrations in recent days âhave remained peaceful until last night,â Police Chief Brian OâHara said during a news conference Saturday. OâHara said one Friday night protest outside a hotel believed to be housing ICE agents grew tense when some individuals caused property damage and, over the course of the night, threw ice, snow and rocks at officers. Police arrested 29 people and at least one officer sustained injuries after being hit by a chunk of ice, OâHara said. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey urged demonstrators to remain peaceful and to not âtake the baitâ into violent escalation. âWe are meeting a whole lot of despair with a lot of hope,â Frey said Saturday. âWe are doing right. We are being strategic. And yes, for those that arenât being strategic... there are consequences.â"
"The big, macho men from ICE who are storming around American cities like Visigoths are a bunch of cowards. They arm themselves as if they are battling ISIS terrorists in Iraq while the only threat they face is common American citizens with whistles and protest signs. They break into private homes without warrants, they gas school kids, they tackle women on the street, they smash into the cars of American citizens. And one of them summarily executed a mother of three children because -- well, because he could. They think they are tough, but they are punks hiding behind masks. They are poorly-trained thugs dressed up like real soldiers who think they are living out a video game where they get points for assaulting anyone who gets in their way. They are the farthest thing from the real cops who police communities with restraint, discipline and a knowledge of the law.These mercenaries do not serve the country, they serve a regime that excuses their unjustified violence and lies about their lawless actions. President Donald Trump falsely alleges that Renee Good, the mother of three gunned down in Minneapolis by an ICE agent, was a âprofessional agitatorâ who showed âdisrespectâ for law enforcement. His toady press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, who will say any despicable thing to please her boss, accused Good of being âa lunatic.â The Homeland Security boss, Kristi Noem, branded Good a âdomestic terrorist.â There is zero evidence of any of the Trump administrationâs slander. Renee Good was, indeed, out on the street to monitor the actions of ICE, but, as anyone can see in the video taken seconds before she was murdered, she was smiling at the ICE agents and telling them she was not mad at them. Good was, in fact, doing what she had been ordered to do, moving her vehicle out of the way. Trump and his team are even bigger cowards than the cosplay cops they have sent to terrorize immigrants and punish Democratic cities. It takes leaders with maturity and guts to admit fault and accept accountability. The cruel clowns in the White House will never be brave enough to do that."
"The new bill allocates $199.5 million of the total appropriation to VOA and $138 million for USAGMâs operations. Additionally, nonprofit grantees will also be funded through this bill to the tune of $112.5 million for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, $69 million for Middle East Broadcasting Networks, $53.5 million for Radio Free Asia and $40.5 million for the Open Technology Fund. The Trump administration pushed to defund the nonprofit media outlets, but Lamberth has largely restored their funding in court after they all sued. Radio Free Asia previously said it was pausing operations but in recent months has resumed some publishing activities. âWith new funding, if enacted, RFA anticipates ramping up additional news operations that have been paused in the Asia-Pacific region,â RFA spokesman Rohit Mahajan said in a statement. Sen. Brian Schatz (Hawaii), the top Democrat on the state and foreign operations subcommittee, applauded the bipartisan negotiation that led to the bill but expressed worry that it still represented a cut to government broadcasters. âWhile the bill ensures continued funding for our international broadcasting grantees,â he wrote in a statement, âit forces cuts at a time when they are trying to provide critical services in Ukraine, the Middle East, and across the Indo-Pacific.â Schatz and his House counterpart, Rep. Lois Frankel (D-Florida), previously criticized the Trump administrationâs âillegal guttingâ of the agency. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) and Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Florida), the Senate and House appropriations subcommittee chairs, did not respond to requests for comment."
"The University of Pennsylvania was among dozens of US universities to come under federal investigation over alleged antisemitism in the aftermath of the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks and Israelâs subsequent war in Gaza. In response, the university established a taskforce to study antisemitism, implemented a series of measures and shared hundreds of pages of documents to comply with government demands. But the university refused to comply with the EEOCâs July subpoena for personal information of Jewish faculty, students and staff, or those affiliated with Jewish organizations who had not given their consent, as well as the names of individuals who had participated in confidential listening sessions or received a survey by the universityâs antisemitism taskforce. A university spokesperson said in November that âviolating their privacy and trust is antithetical to ensuring Pennâs Jewish community feels protected and safeâ. Instead, the university offered to inform all its employees of the EEOC investigation, inviting those interested to contact the agency directly. But that was not enough for the commission, which brought the university to court to seek to enforce the subpoena. âThe EEOC remains steadfast in its commitment to combatting workplace antisemitism and seeks to identify employees who may have experienced antisemitic harassment. Unfortunately, the employer continues to refuse to identify members of its workforce who may have been subjected to this unlawful conduct,â the EEOC chair, Andrea Lucas, said in a statement at the time. âAn employerâs obstruction of efforts to identify witnesses and victims undermines the EEOCâs ability to investigate harassment.â"
"Sure, technically it belongs to Denmark. But aside from the dozens of Danish soldiers who died alongside U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, what have the Danes really done for us lately? Stephen Miller (from that special category of American military-age males who nevertheless somehow Perpetually Evaded the GWOT, or PEG), Marco Rubio (PEG), Don Jr. (PEG), and Eric Trump (also PEG) all agree Greenland is critical to U.S. national security, and if you have to die for it, thatâs a sacrifice they are fully prepared to let you make. Be advised: Greenland, as part of Denmark, has access to the most formidable fixed and scatterable obstacles known to humankind â which, according to a redacted memo from Epstein to Trump, also double as excellent field-expedient butt plugs."
"We must see it as an ally, not an asset, and focus on continued partnership rather than possession."
"In a joint statement with Frederiksen, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Italian Prime Minister Meloni, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer expressed support for Denmark and Greenland. "Arctic security remains a key priority for Europe and it is critical for international and transatlantic security," the joint statement read. "We and many other Allies have increased our presence, activities and investments, to keep the Arctic safe and to deter adversaries," it added. The seven leaders stressed that Washington "is an essential partner in this endeavour.""
"The Trump administration will withdraw from dozens of international organizations, including the U.N.'s population agency and the U.N. treaty that establishes international climate negotiations, as the U.S. further retreats from global cooperation. President Donald Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order suspending U.S. support for 66 organizations, agencies, and commissions, following his administrationâs review of participation in and funding for all international organizations, including those affiliated with the United Nations, according to a White House release. Many of the targets are U.N.-related agencies, commissions and advisory panels that focus on climate, labor, migration and other issues the Trump administration has categorized as catering to diversity and âwokeâ initiatives. Other non-U.N. organizations on the list include the Partnership for Atlantic Cooperation, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, and the Global Counterterrorism Forum. âThe Trump Administration has found these institutions to be redundant in their scope, mismanaged, unnecessary, wasteful, poorly run, captured by the interests of actors advancing their own agendas contrary to our own, or a threat to our nationâs sovereignty, freedoms, and general prosperity,â Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement. Trump's decision to withdraw from organizations that foster cooperation among nations to address global challenges comes as his administration has launched military efforts or issued threats that have rattled allies and adversaries alike, including capturing autocratic Venezuelan leader NicolĂĄs Maduro and indicating an intention to take over Greenland."
"The U.S. withdrawal could hinder global efforts to curb greenhouse gases because it âgives other nations the excuse to delay their own actions and commitments,â said Stanford University climate scientist Rob Jackson, who chairs the Global Carbon Project, a group of scientists that tracks countriesâ carbon dioxide emissions. It will also be difficult to achieve meaningful progress on climate change without cooperation from the U.S., one of the worldâs largest emitters and economies, experts said. The U.N. Population Fund, the agency providing sexual and reproductive health worldwide, has long been a lightning rod for Republican opposition, and Trump cut funding for it during his first term. He and other GOP officials have accused the agency of participating in âcoercive abortion practicesâ in countries like China. When President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, he restored funding for the agency. A State Department review conducted the following year found no evidence to support GOP claims. Other organizations and agencies that the U.S. will quit include the Carbon Free Energy Compact, the United Nations University, the International Cotton Advisory Committee, the International Tropical Timber Organization, the Partnership for Atlantic Cooperation, the Pan-American Institute for Geography and History, the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies, and the International Lead and Zinc Study Group."
"Civil liberties and migrant-rights groups called for nationwide rallies on Saturday to protest the fatal shooting of an activist in Minnesota by a U.S. immigration agent, as state authorities opened their own investigation of the killing. Protest organizers said more than 1,000 weekend events were planned across the country demanding an end to large-scale deployments of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents ordered by President Donald Trump, mostly to cities led by Democratic politicians. Minneapolis became a major flashpoint of the Republican president's militarized deportation roundups on Wednesday, when an ICE officer shot and killed a 37-year-old mother of three, Renee Good, behind the wheel of her car on a residential street. The violence came soon after some 2,000 federal officers were dispatched to Minneapolis in what ICE's parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, called the "largest DHS operation ever." Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat, condemned the deployment as a "reckless" example of "governance by reality TV.""
"Portland Mayor Keith Wilson, echoing Frey, said he could not be sure the government's account was grounded in fact without an independent investigation. The deployment of agents to Minneapolis follows Trump's recent denunciations of Walz and his state's large population of Somali immigrants over allegations of fraud dating back to 2020 by some nonprofit groups administering childcare and other social-service programs. Good was shot dead just a few blocks from where George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer crushing his neck into the pavement with his knee during a videotaped arrest in May 2020. Floyd's death sparked months of nationwide racial-justice protests during Trump's first term in office. Bystander video of the Minneapolis incident showed masked officers approaching Good's Honda SUV while it was stopped at a perpendicular angle to the street, partially blocking traffic. One agent is seen ordering her out of the car and grabbing onto the driver-side front door handle as the car pulls forward and steers away from the officers, one of whom jumps back and fires three shots into the front of the vehicle as it rolls past."
"In the administrationâs closest brush with acknowledging wrongdoing, J. D. Vance mentioned to reporters Thursday that Ross had been involved in an incident with a vehicle several months ago, during which he was dragged for 100 yards and subsequently required numerous stitches: âSo you think maybe heâs a little bit sensitive about somebody ramming him with an automobile?â These remarks could reasonably be taken to imply that Rossâs decision to shoot Good was an emotional overreaction based on past trauma, but then Vance pivoted: Ross âdeserves a debt of gratitude.â In other words, even if Ross did act in error, Goodâs death still bears the administrationâs stamp of approval."
"âI would like to make a deal the easy way but if we donât do it the easy way, weâre going to do it the hard way. And by the way, Iâm a fan of Denmark too. I have to tell you, they have been very nice to me. Iâm a big fan,â Trump said. He claimed that the move was necessary to prevent Russia or China from taking Greenland at some point in the future. Asked about a recent report that the US was weighing making payments to Greenlanders to convince them to join the US, Trump said, âIâm not talking about money for Greenland yet.â Many Greenlanders have already rejected the idea of accepting money to become part of the US. âNo thank you. Itâs absolutely certain that we donât want that,â one resident of the capital city of Nuuk, Simon Kjeldskov, told Reuters. Another resident, Juno Michaelsen, said: âAny number in the world and we will say no. It belongs to us and only us.â The top Washington-based diplomats for Greenland and Denmark met with White House officials on Thursday. Denmarkâs Ambassador Jesper Møller Sørensen and Greenlandâs head of representation to the US Jacob Isbosethsen met with Trump advisers, diplomats familiar with the matter told CNN. Greenlandâs Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen alongside four other party leaders once again rejected Trumpâs calls to acquire the semi-autonomous territory in a statement release Friday night and seen by Reuters. The leaders said a planned meeting of Greenlandâs parliament, the Inatsisartut, to discuss its response to the Trump administrationâs threats would be brought forward. The date of the meeting has not yet been determined. Greenlandâs parliament last met in November and had been scheduled to meet again on February 3."
"Trump attacks freedom of the press. Over the last year, his administration took more than $1 billion away from public broadcasting; launched investigations into NPR, PBS, ABC, NBC and CBS; and forced media organizations to pay $32 million to settle his lawsuits against them. He has taken 76 federal actions to restrict, punish and revoke journalistsâ credentials. But Trumpâs biggest use of federal force to intimidate and terrorize civil society is his deployment of immigration agents and military troops in U.S. cities run by Democrats. Federal agencies have deported more than 605,000 people over the last year. Trump promised to focus on immigrants convicted of crimes, but his agents have arrested productive and longstanding American residents. As of Nov. 30, nearly 74 percent of the detainees had no criminal convictions. During 2025, 32 people, including children, died while in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Many have been âdisappearedâ to other countries, some to prisons, and denied their constitutional rights to due process. During 2025, the administration stripped legal status from 1.6 million immigrants. Nearly 2 million immigrants âself-deported.â"
"Last week, Americans watched on television as an armed immigration officer shot and killed a frightened mother of three, an American citizen, in Minneapolis. Without the benefit of an investigation, Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other federal officials quickly went public to describe the woman as a rioter and âterroristâ who âweaponized her vehicleâ against the officer, forcing him to defend himself. The American people have also watched the U.S. military kill foreign nationals by simply blowing up 35 boats in the Caribbean, killing at least 115 passengers. The Trump administration claimed the boats were smuggling drugs into America but provided no evidence. Then came the invasion of Venezuela to arrest its leader and bring him to the U.S. for trial. Trump openly admits he wants to seize the countryâs oil reserves, the largest (and some of the dirtiest) in the world. In the style of Russiaâs Vladimir Putin, he wants to turn Americaâs oil billionaires into oligarchs. Time will tell how the entrenched interests in Venezuela react, and whether the invasion escalates into Americaâs latest oil war."
"Lawmakers from both parties and houses of Congress have agreed to provide about $653 million to fund Voice of Americaâs parent agency, rejecting President Donald Trumpâs demand to defund the international broadcaster and shut it down. A bipartisan spending bill released Sunday would allocate $643 million for broadcasting from the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees VOA, plus nearly $10 million for capital improvements. That figure is down from the $867 million appropriated for the agency each of the past two years, but itâs more than four times the $153 million Trump requested that Congress provide to âsupport the orderly shutdown of USAGM operations.â The outlay is included in a broader bipartisan spending deal negotiated by House and Senate appropriators. The package still requires House and Senate approval before heading to Trumpâs desk. âWe understand the realities of the appropriations process, but I am disappointed that Congress is proposing half a billion dollars more in funding than we requested,â Kari Lake, the deputy CEO installed by Trump to shut down the agency, wrote in a statement Monday. âWhile reductions from prior years are a step in the right direction, USAGM can still advance President Trumpâs message and share Americaâs story globally without wasting so much taxpayer money.â"
"The bipartisan commitment to funding USAGM reflects continued congressional support for Americaâs role in promoting the free flow of news and information abroad, a long-standing foundation of its soft power around the world. Congressâs funding proposal comes after a dire year for USAGM. Trump signed an executive order in March calling for the dismantlement of the government agency, which oversees Voice of America and funds nonprofit groups including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Radio Free Asia. To carry out the order, Lake placed more than 1,300 Voice of America staffers on paid administrative leave â many of whom are still not working â and halted broadcasting operations the same month. It was the first time VOA went dark since it was first set up in 1942 to combat Nazi propaganda. In response, VOAâs director, Michael Abramowitz, and a separate group of USAGM staffers sued the Trump administration, arguing that its actions were illegal. Lake, a former Arizona television anchor who lost high-profile races for governor and U.S. Senate in recent years, has defended the cuts and called for the agencyâs eventual elimination. She told Congress in a June hearing that USAGM was âincompetent, corrupt, biased, and a threat to Americaâs national security and standing in the world.â She has also said USAGM is ânot salvageable.â The White House did not respond to a request for comment."
"Unlike in 2024, most removals in 2025 were initiated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection from the country's interior, the report said, as opposed to being initiated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement -- despite the actions of some ICE officers dominating many news headlines. A spokesperson with the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CPB and ICE, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from ABC News. The report's authors also predicted removals will increase in 2026 with funding from President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which the report said will "likely allow for increased infrastructure and staffing to achieve a higher level of enforcement." According to the report, authorities also predict the net migration loss will see certain sectors of the economy experience "unexpectedly weak economic activity," specifically businesses that serve affected immigrant populations. "The slowdown implies weaker employment, GDP, and consumer spending growth," the report states, adding that consumer spending is expected to fall by between $60 billion and $110 billion over 2025 and 2026."
"Several faculty groups have denounced the Trump administrationâs efforts to obtain information about Jewish professors, staff and students at the University of Pennsylvania â including personal emails, phone numbers and home addresses â as government abuse with âominous historical overtonesâ. The US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is demanding the university turn over names and personal information about Jewish members of the Penn community as part of the administrationâs stated goal to combat antisemitism on campuses. But some Jewish faculty and staff have condemned the governmentâs demand as âa visceral threat to the safety of those who would find themselves identified because compiling and turning over to the government âlists of Jewsâ conjures a terrifying historyâ, according to a press release put out by the groupsâ lawyers. The EEOC sued Penn in November over the universityâs refusal to fully comply with its demands. On Tuesday, the American Association of University Professorsâ national and Penn chapters, the universityâs Jewish Law Students Association and its Association of Senior and Emeritus Faculty, and the American Academy of Jewish Research filed a motion in federal court to intervene in the case. âThese requests would require Penn to create and turn over a centralized registry of Jewish students, faculty, and staff â a profoundly invasive and dangerous demand that intrudes deeply into the freedoms of association, religion, speech, and privacy enshrined in the First Amendment,â the groups argued. âWe are entering territory that should shock every single one of us,â said Norm Eisen, co-founder and executive chair of the Democracy Defenders Fund on a press call. The fund is representing the faculty groups along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania and the firm Hangley Aronchick Segal Pudlin and Schiller. âThat kind of information â however purportedly benign the excuses given for it â can be put to the most dangerous misuse. This is an abuse of government power that drags us back to some of the darkest chapters in our history.â The EEOC did not immediately respond to a request for comment."
"The EEOC request prompted widespread alarm and condemnation among Jewish faculty, and earned rebukes from the universityâs Hillel and other Jewish groups. Steven Weitzman, a professor with Pennâs religious studies department who also served on the universityâs antisemitism taskforce, said that the mere request for such lists âinstills a sense of vulnerability among Jewsâ and that the government cannot guarantee that the information it collects wonât fall âinto the wrong hands or have unintended consequencesâ. âPart of what sets off alarm bells for people like me is a history of people using Jewish lists against Jews,â he said . âThe Nazi campaign against Jews depended on institutions like universities handing over information about their Jewish members to the authorities.â âAs Jewish study scholars, we know well the dangers of collecting such information,â said Beth Wenger, who teaches Jewish history at Penn. Itâs not the first time the EEOCâs efforts to fight antisemitism have caused alarm among Jewish faculty. Last spring, the commission texted the personal phones of employees of Barnard College, the womenâs school affiliated with Columbia University, linking to a survey that asked respondents whether they identified as Jewish or Israeli."
"The Trump administration still hasn't released all of the Epstein files as required by law, and is instead exploring more kinetic ways to distract public attention from this uncomfortable fact, sources confirmed today. âAnd we all know the best way to divert attention from domestic problems is to bomb people with funny-sounding names overseas,â said a senior White House official. âSo weâve put together a target list of countries with weak militaries, weird names â or both â that we can hit with our few remaining Tomahawks to make sure the Big Manâs name doesnât pop up in compromising positions in the Epstein documents.â Duffel Blog obtained the target list for Operation PEDO PALADIN, a contingency plan officials say has been sitting in a desk drawer labeled âBreak Glass If Accountability Appears.â According to sources, the president doesnât particularly care which country gets hit first, largely because he canât find any of them on a map anyway."
"Roe labels the issue an âimpossible situationâ since the federal Head Start Act contains many of the words that programs are now being forced to avoid. One of Head Startâs longstanding responsibilities is âto create inclusive and accessible classrooms for children with disabilities,â but now HHS is pushing against the words âdisability,â âdisabilities,â and âinclusionâ in funding applications. With the list now out in the public, Head Start centers could be forced to eliminate the definition of DEI, which the former lead of the Office of Child Care, Ruth Friedman, calls fear. "Grantees are sort of self-selecting out of those activities beforehand because of fear and direction they're getting from the Office of Head Start that they can't do these important research-based activities anymore that are important for children's learning and that are actually required by law," Friedman, who served under former President Joe Biden, said, according to Associated Press. The move is another attack on DEI handed down by President Donald Trump who signed a January 2025 executive order labeling âillegal DEI and DEIA policies not only violate the text and spirit of our longstanding Federal civil-rights laws" but "also undermine our national unity, as they deny, discredit, and undermine the traditional American values of hard work, excellence, and individual achievement in favor of an unlawful, corrosive, and pernicious identity-based spoils system.â Since then, the domino effect targeted college campuses, retail, nonprofits, grants, and more."
"This is not more complicated than the fact that Trump wants a giant island with his name on it. He wouldnât think twice about putting our troops in danger if it makes him feel big and strong. The US military is not a toy."
"Arctic security remains a key priority for Europe and it is critical for international and transatlantic security. NATO has made clear that the Arctic region is a priority and European Allies are stepping up. We and many other Allies have increased our presence, activities and investments, to keep the Arctic safe and to deter adversaries. The Kingdom of Denmark â including Greenland â is part of NATO. Security in the Arctic must therefore be achieved collectively, in conjunction with NATO allies including the United States, by upholding the principles of the UN Charter, including sovereignty, territorial integrity and the inviolability of borders. These are universal principles, and we will not stop defending them. The United States is an essential partner in this endeavour, as a NATO ally and through the defence agreement between the Kingdom of Denmark and the United States of 1951. Greenland belongs to its people. It is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland."
"Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen on Monday said that a US takeover of Greenland would mean the end of the NATO military alliance. On Tuesday, Frederiksen released a joint statement with the leaders of Germany, France, Italy, Poland, Spain and the UK reiterating that European allies were stepping up "to keep the Arctic safe and to deter adversaries." It comes after US President Donald Trump renewed his calls for the large Arctic island, which is an autonomous territory of Denmark, to come under Washington's control. Frederiksen said that "everything would stop" when it comes to cooperation with Washington in the event of a US attack on another NATO member. "If the United States decides to attack another NATO country, then everything would stop â that includes NATO and therefore post-World War II security," Frederiksen said. Meanwhile, Greenland's prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, called for the territory to restore "good cooperation" with the United States and urged Greenlanders not to "panic." "The situation is not such that the United States can conquer Greenland. That is not the case. Therefore, we must not panic. We must restore the good cooperation we once had," Nielsen said while speaking in Greenland's capital, Nuuk. In a social media post on Monday, he called for Trump to give up "fantasies" of annexing Greenland. "That's enough now. No more pressure. No more insinuations. No more fantasies of annexation." "We are open to dialogue," he said. "But this must happen through the proper channels and with respect for international law.""
"Six European allies have rallied to support Denmark following renewed insistence by the US that it must have control over Greenland. "Greenland belongs to its people, and only Denmark and Greenland can decide on matters concerning their relations," the leaders of the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain, and Denmark said in a joint statement. On Sunday, Donald Trump said the US "needed" Greenland - a semi-autonomous region of fellow Nato member Denmark - for security reasons. He has refused to rule out the use of force to take control of the territory, and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen warned on Monday that an attack by the US would spell the end of NATO."
"The Trump administration's recent move to appoint a special envoy to Greenland prompted anger in Denmark. Greenland, which has a population of 57,000 people, has had extensive self-government since 1979, though defence and foreign policy remain in Danish hands. While most Greenlanders favour eventual independence from Denmark, opinion polls show overwhelming opposition to becoming part of the US. Morgan Angaju, 27, an Inuit living in Ilulissat in the west of the country, told BBC Newsbeat it had been "terrifying to listen to the leader of the free world laughing at Denmark and Greenland and just talking about us like we're something to claim". "We are already claimed by the Greenlandic people. Kalaallit Nunaat means the land of the Greenlandic people," Morgan said. He added he was worried about what happens next - wondering whether Greenland's prime minister may suffer the same fate as Maduro - or even about the US "invading our country"."
"The administration previously suspended support for agencies like the World Health Organization, the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees known as UNRWA, the U.N. Human Rights Council and the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO. It has taken a larger, Ă la carte approach to paying dues to the world body, picking which operations and agencies it believes align with Trumpâs agenda and those that no longer serve U.S. interests. âI think what weâre seeing is the crystallization of the U.S. approach to multilateralism, which is âmy way or the highway,ââ said Daniel Forti, head of U.N. affairs at the International Crisis Group. âIt's a very clear vision of wanting international cooperation on Washingtonâs own terms.â It has marked a major shift from how previous administrations â both Republican and Democratic â have dealt with the U.N., and it has forced the world body, already undergoing its own internal reckoning, to respond with a series of staffing and program cuts. Many independent nongovernmental agencies â some that work with the United Nations â have cited many project closures because of the U.S. administrationâs decision last year to slash foreign assistance through the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID. Despite the massive shift, Trump administration officials say they see the potential of the U.N. and want to instead focus taxpayer money on expanding American influence in many of the standard-setting U.N. initiatives where there is competition with China, like the International Telecommunications Union, the International Maritime Organization and the International Labor Organization."
"The withdrawal from the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, or UNFCCC, is the latest effort by Trump and his allies to distance the U.S. from international organizations focused on climate and addressing climate change. UNFCCC, the 1992 agreement between 198 countries to financially support climate change activities in developing countries, is the underlying treaty for the landmark Paris climate agreement. Trump â who calls climate change a hoax â withdrew from that agreement soon after reclaiming the White House. Gina McCarthy, former White House National Climate Adviser, said being the only country in the world not part of the treaty is âshortsighted, embarrassing, and a foolish decision.â âThis Administration is forfeiting our countryâs ability to influence trillions of dollars in investments, policies, and decisions that would have advanced our economy and protected us from costly disasters wreaking havoc on our country,â McCarthy, who co-chairs America Is All In, a coalition of climate-concerned U.S. states and cities, said in a statement. Mainstream scientists say climate change is behind increasing instances of deadly and costly extreme weather, including flooding, droughts, wildfires, intense rainfall events and dangerous heat."
"The USDAâs announcement coincides with a federal ruling that the Trump administration cannot block federal money for childcare subsidies and other programs aimed at supporting low-income families with children from reaching five Democratic-led states, including Minnesota. The Trump administration has targeted Minnesota over the past year over allegations of fraud, specifically going after the stateâs Somali population. Federal prosecutors estimate as much as $9bn has been stolen across schemes allegedly linked to the stateâs Somali population. Trump ended legal protections for Somali immigrants in the state in November 2025, claiming that âSomali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State, and BILLIONS of Dollars are missing. Send them back to where they came from.â Shortly thereafter, Trump went off on both Somalis and Ilhan Omar, the Minnesota congressional representative who is from Somalia and is a US citizen, in a xenophobic rant during a cabinet meeting. âThey contribute nothing. I donât want them in our country, Iâll be honest with you,â the president said. He called Omar âgarbageâ and said âweâre going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our countryâ."
"A month later, in December 2025, the FBI announced that it was deploying additional investigative and personnel resources to âdismantle large-scale fraud schemes exploiting federal programsâ in the state, according to its director, Kash Patel. Patel said the agency had already dismantled a $250m fraud scheme that stole federal food aid meant for vulnerable children during the Covid pandemic in a case that led to 78 indictments and 57 convictions. Last week, Walz announced that he would not run for a third term as Minnesotaâs governor, as his handling of the fraud has fallen under intense scrutiny from Trump and Republicans. In his announcement, Walz acknowledged that the president and his political allies have taken advantage of the crisis to sow further division in the state. âI wonât mince words here,â Walz said. âDonald Trump and his allies â in Washington, in St Paul and online â want to make our state a colder, meaner place.â"
"On Friday night, throngs of demonstrators staged a "noise protest" outside a Minneapolis hotel believed to be lodging a visiting contingent of ICE agents. Video posted by activists on social media showed protesters, some wearing brightly colored inflatable costumes, creating a din by beating on drums, banging pots and pans, yelling through bullhorns and blowing on brass instruments and whistles. Others directed high-power flashlight beams at the hotel's windows. The crowd thinned after yellow-vested state police in riot gear marched into the area and declared an unlawful assembly, CNN reported. Police were responding to "information that demonstrators were no longer peaceful and reports of damage to property," the Minnesota Department of Public Safety said on X. "Dispersal orders were given prior to arrests." At the time she was killed, Good was participating in one of numerous "neighborhood patrols" that track, monitor and record ICE activities, according to family and local activists. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other Trump administration officials said Good was "impeding" and "stalking" ICE agents all day, and that the officer opened fire in self-defense when she tried to ram her car into him in an "act of domestic terrorism.""
"Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, pointed to bystander video he said directly contradicted the federal government's "garbage narrative." Civil liberties advocates said the video showed federal agents lacked any justification for using deadly force. Amid the sharply differing accounts of the shooting, Minnesota and Hennepin County law enforcement authorities said on Friday they were opening their own criminal inquiry of the incident separate from a federal investigation led by the FBI. Some Trump administration officials, including Vice President JD Vance, asserted state prosecutors lack jurisdiction to charge a federal officer with a crime, though legal experts say federal immunity in such cases is not automatic. The crisis atmosphere led Walz - a prominent Trump antagonist who branded Trump and his Republican allies as "weird" during his own run for vice president last year - to put the state's National Guard on alert. Federal-state tensions escalated further on Thursday when a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Portland, Oregon, shot and wounded a man and woman in their car after an attempted vehicle stop. As in the Minneapolis incident, DHS said the driver had tried to "weaponize" his vehicle and run over agents. DHS on Friday identified the wounded driver and passenger as suspected gang associates from Venezuela who were in the U.S. illegally. The agency said the woman had been involved in a prior shootout in Portland but provided no evidence of its allegations against the pair."
"On an unseasonably warm Wednesday in Minneapolis, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot a woman in the face. The many eyes of our everyday panopticon recorded the event from multiple angles. Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mom of three, had stopped her maroon SUV on a snowy street crawling with ICE officials. According to eyewitness reports, multiple men in masks shouted conflicting orders at her: At least one apparently demanded that she exit her vehicle and tried to open her door; another told her to drive away. Good seems to have moved slowly as she tried to maneuver around the agents surrounding her car. After appearing to first wave for someone to move, she reversed slightly and turned away from the agents to continue down the street. An ICE agent who appears to have been knocked back by her front bumper responded by shooting into her vehicle, and shot again as the SUV, suddenly without a conscious driver, [careened] into a parked car ahead. Chaos erupted. A man announcing himself as a physician ran toward the scene to attempt to render first aid, but an ICE agent commanded him to step back. When emergency medical workers finally arrived on foot 15 minutes later, they clumsily pulled Goodâs body from the driverâs seat, leaving behind a blood-soaked airbag. Onlookers immediately rose up in anger and outrage, screaming at the agents and shouting profanities. One man howled âMurderer! Murderer!â over and over again. Goodâs partner, who was near the SUV, can be heard saying through sobs that Good was her wife, that their 6-year-old was at school, and that they were new in town, didnât know anybody, had no one to call for help. The alarm was warranted. Everyone on the scene had witnessed the crossing of a crucial line in Donald Trumpâs mass-deportation project: ICE had just killed an American citizen on American soil. The administration has since declared that the agent âis protected by absolute immunity,â whatever that means, a signal of unconditional support for an agency bloated with thousands of new, heavily armed, and minimally trained recruits, deployed around the country to help achieve Trumpâs goal of deporting 1 million immigrants a year. Events such as Goodâs death set the stage for yet more lethal confrontations, which the administration can be trusted to defend with the same specious pretext. What is now overt, in a way that it hadnât been Wednesday morning, is that these agents are at war with the public, and have been for some time."
"Goodâs killing was the culmination of months of roiling tensions between the Department of Homeland Security and the communities it routinely invades to round up people for summary deportation. Having more than doubled ICEâs workforce in a matter of months, DHS has been fretting theatrically about how these agents are risking âtheir lives to remove the worst of the worst.â In retrospect, those concerns now seem like threatsâa preemptive excuse for maximum violence. The Trump administration instantly characterized Goodâs killing as a matter of self-defense on the part of the ICE agent, whom The Minnesota Star Tribune has identified as Jonathan Ross, a 10-year agency veteran and member of its Special Response Team. Faced with footage of the incident Wednesday night, Trump offered the MAGA gloss on what took place: âShe ran him over.â In fact, videos show that Ross remained upright. In a press conference, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem claimed that Good had been killed because she had been âstalking and impedingâ ICE agents all day, and that she had tried to âweaponize her vehicleâ in an act of âdomestic terrorism.â By Thursday, when White House Spokesperson Karoline Leavitt presented the administrationâs official line, the story had grown more baroque. Leavitt maintained that Good was part of a âlarger, sinister, left-wing movement that has spread across our country, where our brave men and women of federal law enforcement are under organized attack.â Thus Ross, as a target of a dangerous conspiracy, had merely been operating in self-defense."
"Protesters in Minneapolis have since flooded the streets in the thousands, and ICE agents have responded by apprehending some, shoving others to the ground, and spraying chemical irritants in their faces. These incidents have ignited mass demonstrations nationwide, in which protesters have wailed âShameâ and âMurder,â banged drums, screeched from metal whistles, and hoisted signs declaring what is no longer deniable: ICE kills. 'It therefore felt grimly inevitable when the Department of Homeland Security issued a statement Thursday night confirming that Border Patrol officers shot at two people in a targeted traffic stop in Portland, Oregon. âWhen agents identified themselves to the vehicle occupants,â the post on X read, âthe driver weaponized his vehicle and attempted to run over the law enforcement agents.â There is nothing to stop the echoes of this rationale, and we should expect to hear it again and again. There may come a time when the administration dispenses with offering an explanation at all."
"President Donald Trump continued his threats towards Greenland on Friday, as he insisted that if the United States did not act Russia or China could occupy it in the future. Trump said that if he is unable to make a deal to acquire the territory âthe easy way,â then he will have to âdo it the hard way.â âWe are going to do something in Greenland, whether they like it or not, because if we donât do it, Russia or China will take over Greenland, and weâre not going to have Russia or China as a neighbor,â Trump told reporters at the White House. Greenlandâs party leaders, including the opposition, issued a joint statement saying: âWe do not want to be Americans, we do not want to be Danes, we want to be Greenlanders. The future of Greenland must be decided by the Greenlandic people.â The US president and his White House officials have been discussing a range of options on how to bring Greenland under US control amid renewed interest in the strategically significant Danish-controlled territory, and has not ruling out a military intervention. The governments of Greenland and Denmark continue to publicly and privately insist it is not for sale. It remains unclear how other NATO members would respond if the US decided to take Greenland by force. European leaders have warned that such a move would have serious consequences for the military alliance. In a joint statement the leaders of France, Germany, the UK, Italy, Poland and Spain said Greenland belongs to its own people."
"Roberta Sloan, 66, a retired nurse who drove from Rochester, Minnesota, to join the protest in the park on Minneapolisâs south side, said she was frustrated that Omarâs effort to enter the ICE facility was challenged, but glad the congresswomen tried. âThey have every right to be there to see these detention places and how people are being treated,â she said. Sloan was also pleased with how Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolisâs mayor have spoken out against the ICE operation and shooting. âThey are standing up for what Minnesota stands for,â she said, and thatâs why she felt compelled to protest: âTo stand up for those who donât have a voice.â Standing on a nearby snow covered sidewalk, amid a shoulder-to-shoulder crowd, health care worker Peter Prou, 33, of St. Paul, said he was outraged by the shooting and came to fight for justice. âTheyâre taking away all our rights and freedoms. They know itâs murder and theyâre trying to cover it up,â he said of ICE, but added, âThereâs strength in numbers. Thereâs more of us than them.â"
"Our country hasnât been perfect, but it has been self-correcting. It took time for us to acknowledge the unalienable rights of all races and sexes. We have stumbled, fought each other, and sometimes misused our military muscle. But, when we resorted to violence, it was usually to defend liberty at home and abroad. Now, we have stumbled again, installing leaders who donât believe in the founding idea. Freedom threatens them, so they rule by fear. So far, neither our institutions nor our people have mobilized to correct this mistake. President Trump and his people are so emboldened that they donât even bother to hide their ill intentions. They know that if they commit crimes on his behalf, he will pardon them."
"The U.S. is supposed to be different, but Trump sees the world as an extension of himself â a place where bullies gain wealth and power by mistreating others and controlling them with fear."
"The Environmental Protection Agency is taking a major step toward changing its math to favor polluters over people: Itâs going to stop tallying up the dollar value of lives saved and hospital visits avoided by air pollution regulations. Instead, the agency will consider the effects of regulations without attaching a price tag to human life. In particular, the EPA is changing how it conducts the cost-benefit analysis of regulations for two major pollutants, fine particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns â usually referred to as PM2.5 â and ozone. The change was buried in a document published this month analyzing the economic impacts of final pollution regulations for power plants, arguing that the way the EPA historically calculated the economic benefits of regulations had too much uncertainty and gave people âa false sense of precision.â So to fix this, the EPA will stop tabulating the benefits altogether âuntil the Agency is confident enough in the modeling to properly monetize those impacts.â The news was first reported by the New York Times. On X, EPA administrator Lee Zeldin pushed back on the reporting, calling it âanother dishonest, fake news claimâ and that the agency is still considering lives saved when setting pollution limits."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.