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Tariff revenue was always unlikely to be sufficient to cover the cost of his raft of promises, but the president still seemed to describe it as essentially limitless.
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Like many Democratic primaries, the fight for the right to challenge a Republican House member in the Rio Grande Valley comes down to a choice, shift left or choose the party's favorite for November.
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The trio warned of immediate chaos over refunds and trade deals. They also provided President Trump with a list of other possible avenues for imposing tariffs.
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Journalist Jeremy Scahill says the Trump administration's vision for the Gaza Strip is of a continued "colonial apartheid regime" with Israel and U.S. interests controlling the lives of millions of Palestinians in perpetuity. "Palestinians are being told that they must completely surrender," says Scahill. President Trump chaired the first meeting of his so-called Board of Peace this week, a body established for Gaza but whose remit has already expanded.
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(Third column, 3rd story, link)
Related stories: UK BLOCKS FROM USING BASES...
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(Third column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: AS DOJ GOES MIA! PEDO ISLAND HAD SPECIAL PRIVILEGES... WEXNER WARNED TO KEEP MOUTH SHUT...
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The government took in more from tax receipts than expected, official data suggests.
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Eight thinkers on the lasting impact of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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(Main headline, 3rd story, link)
Related stories: ROBES REBUKE THE DON HIS TARIFFS ARE ILLEGAL! **LIVE UPDATES** $175 BILLION REFUNDED TO NATIONS?
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Senate Democrats traveled to Kyiv and Odessa to show solidarity with the war-torn nation and make the case that the United States should do more, including imposing harsh sanctions on Russia.
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President Trump is the first to invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to set tariffs on imported goods from more than 100 countries.
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What the U.S. secretary of state laid bare about the Trump worldview.
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(Second column, 5th story, link)
Related stories: Top-secret Air Force jet spotted near Area 51...
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(Second column, 6th story, link)
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Brazil's president hopes to cooperate on AI, critical minerals, and more.
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Baroness Kidron tells the BBC the PM has being "late to the party" in regulating social media.
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President Trump has installed allies — including his former receptionist — on the boards and commissions tasked with overseeing the project.
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At the inaugural meeting of his new organization, President Trump also endorsed a divisive foreign leader and heard an attack on his former prosecutor, Jack Smith.
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As tensions mount between the Trump administration and the courts, the judge called "shameless" a claim by officials that her earlier order was not binding.
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The co-worker, who no longer works for Representative Tony Gonzales, shared screenshots of the text exchange with The New York Times. Mr. Gonzales accused his Republican primary challenger of being behind the revelation.
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(Second column, 7th story, link)
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(Top headline, 2nd story, link)
Related stories: ROYALS ROCKED... ARRESTED FOR MISCONDUCT IN PUBLIC OFFICE... FACES LIFE IN PRISON... KING: LAW MUST TAKE ITS COURSE... UPDATES...
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President Donald Trump's sparsely attended Board of Peace meeting set a mission to stabilize Gaza, but plans beyond that remain murky.
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The former prince was pictured leaving a police station on Thursday evening, as police say searches in Norfolk have ended.
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In selecting the Virginia governor, Democrats turned to a centrist former congresswoman whose winning campaign last year showed how their party's candidates can succeed in the Trump era.
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The change is part of the administration's broad effort to target refugees and tighten pathways for immigrants to legally enter or remain in the United States.
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U.K. police have arrested the former Prince Andrew, the brother of King Charles, on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was previously sued in 2021 by Epstein survivor Virginia Giuffre, who accused him of multiple instances of sexual assault when she was underage. The lawsuit was settled out of court shortly after it was filed, but Mountbatten-Windsor was allowed to keep his royal title and privileges at the time. Those were recently stripped following revelations about the extent of his friendship with the American serial sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Their friendship has been widely known to the public since at least 2008, when Epstein was first convicted for soliciting a minor for sex.
British authorities are now reportedly investigating whether Mountbatten-Windsor shared confidential government information with Epstein in 2010 while serving as a U.K. trade representative. "This is a story about sex trafficking, about the abuse of numerous women, and it seems like where justice might be brought, it's on a different charge, which is sharing confidential information with a powerful person," says Novara Media's Michael Walker.
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Following violent and indiscriminate sweeps of immigrant communities across the United States, the number of people in ICE detention has increased 75% since President Trump returned to the Oval Office. Yet, as the number of lawsuits against the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign skyrockets, the federal government has continued to jail people indefinitely. Although judges across the U.S. have handed down more than 4,400 rulings of illegal detentions of immigrants since October, very few of these rulings have been acted upon. Reuters reporter Brad Heath says the unprecedented "pile-up" of tens of thousands of cases is straining the capacity of the rapidly shrinking staff at the Department of Justice and further delaying the release of immigrants from ICE jails.
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We continue our conversation with attorney Laura Marquez-Garrett and victim advocates Lori Schott and Lennon Torres about their fight to hold tech giants accountable for the damaging and even deadly effects of social media addiction on children and young adults. We're also joined by Frances Haugen, a former Facebook employee who blew the whistle on several of the company's harmful and manipulative practices in 2021. Haugen says mega-rich tech "oligarchs" like Mark Zuckerberg cared about teenagers only as people who could bring others onto the platform. "They worried about public perception, not the actual health of the kids," says Haugen, adding that companies like Zuckerberg's Facebook "under-invested in the safety of children," ignoring years of warnings about the psychological impacts of their products on child development in favor of "optimiz[ing] for spending more and more time on these platforms."
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The ruling out of Minnesota marks a new level of judicial concern about the Trump administration's lack of compliance with judges' orders in immigration cases.
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Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are accusing the Justice Department of covering up the names of co-conspirators of the deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as fallout from the Epstein files grows across the globe. Millions of pages remain unreleased. As many prominent U.S. figures evade accountability following mentions in the Epstein files, a number of European figures have resigned for their relationships with Epstein. "The most extraordinary and worrying thing of what is going on in the United States is the scale of normalization that is happening, in which the press is absolutely a structural part of this," says Carole Cadwalladr, award-winning investigative journalist. "I have been shocked — deeply, deeply shocked — by the absence of headlines."
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Two of the Democrats' rising stars, Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico, are seeing if a red state should be won courting disaffected Republicans or focusing on the party's base.
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The new strategy for lowering consumer drug costs targets pharmaceutical companies, but doesn't let Medicare negotiate.
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