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Dozens of foreign governments were trying to appeal to the president to have steep tariffs rolled back, but the president and his advisers have indicated negotiations could be difficult.
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(Second column, 9th story, link)
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(Third column, 2nd story, link)
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The chief justice, acting on his own, issued an "administrative stay," a brief pause meant to give the court time to consider the matter. The justices are expected to act in the coming days.
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Inside the department's civil division, litigators are squeezed between judges demanding answers and bosses' instructions to protect the Trump agenda at all costs.
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Judge Paula Xinis gave the Trump administration until midnight Monday to return Kilmar Abrego García. The delay allows time for a full Supreme Court review.
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(Top headline, 11th story, link)
Related stories: WALL STREET WILD! STOCKS VOLATILE... FAKE NEWS SWINGS... DIMON SOUNDS ALARM... ACKMAN WARNS NUCLEAR WINTER... VETERAN INVESTORS SPEAK OUT... DOES DON EVEN WANT A DEAL? Trump Family Cash Registers Ring as Financial Meltdown Plays Out... President Tells Americans 'Don't Be Weak!'
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(Second column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: BEASTS DE-EXTINCTED FOR FIRST TIME... Company behind breakthrough calls itself, 'Evolutionary force'...
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An estimated 1 million protested across the United States and around the world Saturday to tell President Donald Trump and his billionaire ally Elon Musk "Hands Off!" They rallied in opposition to the Trump administration's dismantling of federal agencies and programs, the war in Gaza and attacks on LGBTQ people, immigrants, education, healthcare and reproductive rights. We hear voices from the coordinated "Hands Off!" nationwide protests, described as the largest demonstrations to date since Trump returned to office.
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(Third column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: 'Justice' Struggling to Defend Policies in Court...
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The new duties have brought down oil prices, but cheap oil is bad for the United States these days.
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The Department of Homeland Security is reviewing billions of dollars in grants to make sure cities and states are complying with President Trump's priorities on immigration and diversity.
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(Top headline, 12th story, link)
Related stories: WALL STREET WILD! STOCKS VOLATILE... FAKE NEWS SWINGS... DIMON SOUNDS ALARM... ACKMAN WARNS NUCLEAR WINTER... VETERAN INVESTORS SPEAK OUT... DOES DON EVEN WANT A DEAL? Trump Family Cash Registers Ring as Financial Meltdown Plays Out... President Tells Americans 'Don't Be Weak!'
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Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang were barred entering from the country over the weekend.
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(Top headline, 4th story, link)
Related stories: WALL STREET WILD! STOCKS VOLATILE... DIMON SOUNDS ALARM... VETERAN INVESTORS SPEAK OUT... DOES DON EVEN WANT A DEAL? Trump Family Cash Registers Ring as Financial Meltdown Plays Out... President Tells Americans 'Don't Be Weak!' First Victim of Trade War: Michigan's Economy... Places Where Downturn Has Already Begun...
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Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says he is committed to improving the Indian Health Service. Native American leaders have doubts. "It's shameful," one said.
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The decision to reinstate Gwynne Wilcox and Cathy Harris sets up a potential Supreme Court battle over a decades-old legal limit to presidential power.
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(First column, 9th story, link)
Related stories: RAND PAUL LEADS CHARGE AGAINST TARIFFS... Americans Sitting on Cash Pile as Stocks Reel... Households urged to check jewellery insurance after gold surge...
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(Top headline, 10th story, link)
Related stories: WALL STREET WILD! STOCKS VOLATILE... DIMON SOUNDS ALARM... ACKMAN WARNS NUCLEAR WINTER... VETERAN INVESTORS SPEAK OUT... DOES DON EVEN WANT A DEAL? Trump Family Cash Registers Ring as Financial Meltdown Plays Out... President Tells Americans 'Don't Be Weak!' First Victim of Trade War: Michigan's Economy...
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A fight over the testimony of Elizabeth G. Oyer could have a ripple effect on whether other fired Justice Department lawyers speak publicly about their experiences.
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The chorus of experts issuing warnings include Republican lawmakers, former Trump officials and civil servants who worked under GOP and Democratic presidents.
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The prime minister says the measures are designed to aid the UK motor industry, which has been hit by Trump's tariffs.
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Abtisam Mohamed and Yuan Yang say they were "astounded" to be denied entry to the country while on a trip to visit the West Bank.
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States that were once reluctant to expand Medicaid now have their state budgets tied to the fate of the program by constitutional amendments.
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An attorney general in one of those states said the Trump administration was upending "the promise of progress for future generations."
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Labor unions are battling the Trump administration over its attempts to slash the federal work force and roll back the protections afforded to the civil service employees.
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We speak with New York Immigration Coalition President Murad Awawdeh about a mother and three children who were swept up in an ICE raid not far from the home of Trump's "border czar" Tom Homan in Sackets Harbor, New York, handcuffed and taken to a family detention center in Texas despite having no order of deportation. A protest calling for the family's return is planned for this Saturday, and the mayor has called a state of emergency. Awawdeh also responds to what appears to be a pattern of collaboration with the Trump administration's mass deportation plan among local leaders and institutions in New York, from Eric Adams's mayoral administration to Columbia University. Adams had federal corruption charges against him dropped after agreeing to support increased immigration enforcement, while Columbia had federal funding restored after allowing ICE officers to carry out arrests and searches on campus and in university-owned housing.
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The new documentary The Encampments, produced by Watermelon Pictures and BreakThrough News, is an insider's look at the student protest movement to demand divestment from the U.S. and Israeli weapons industry and an end to the genocide in Gaza. The film focuses on last year's student encampment at Columbia University and features student leaders including Mahmoud Khalil, who was chosen by the university as a liaison between the administration and students. Khalil, a U.S. permanent resident, has since been arrested and detained by immigration enforcement as part of the Trump administration's attempt to deport immigrants who exercise their right to free speech and protest. "Columbia has gone to every extent to try to censor this movement," says Munir Atalla, a producer for the film and a former film professor at Columbia.
We speak with Atalla; Sueda Polat, a Columbia graduate student and fellow campus negotiator with Khalil; and Grant Miner, a former Columbia graduate student and president of the student workers' union who was expelled from the school over his participation in the protests. "Functionally, I was expelled for speaking out against genocide," he says. All three of our guests emphasize their continued commitment to pro-Palestine activism even in the face of increasing institutional repression. The Encampments is opening nationwide in April.
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The Senate approved a separate bill that allows D.C. to continue operating under its current budget, which seemed on track to pass in the House. Senator Susan Collins said it had President Trump's support.
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The largest federal employees union is suing the Homeland Security Department to stop the Trump administration from canceling its contract with T.S.A. workers.
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President Trump's comments on tariffs and Social Security sent something of a chill through the House chamber.
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Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty ImagesSinger-songwriter Rufus Wainwright may have been disturbed by the images of Donald Trump dancing to songs like "YMCA" and "Ave Maria" on stage during a Pennsylvania town hall Monday night as medical emergencies unfolded around him. But he was "mortified" to hear that list also include his cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah."
"Witnessing Trump and his supporters commune with this music last night was the height of blasphemy," Wainwright, who recorded a famous cover of the iconic song, wrote in an Instagram post Tuesday. "I in no way condone this and was mortified, but the good in me hopes that perhaps in inhabiting and really listening to the lyrics of Cohen's masterpiece, Donald Trump just might experience a hint of remorse over what he's caused," he also wrote, "I'm not holding my breath." The singer added that he was "all in for Kamala."
Trump made headlines with his strange choice to stand on stage and listen to music while the crowd stared on at him for nearly an hour at the town hall, as two attendees received medical attention. Instead of continuing the Q&
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The U.S. Justice Department proposed on Wednesday that Congress take up legislation to curb protections that big tech platforms like Alphabet's Google and Facebook have had for decades, a senior official said, following through on U.S. President Donald Trump's bid to crack down on tech giants.
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