Tag Archives: Donald Trump

Van Hollen: If Trump ‘Can Trample the Rights of One Person, the Rights of All of Us Are at Risk’

Friday on MSNBC’s “Deadline,” Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) said if President Trump and his administration “can trample the rights of one person, the rights of all of us are at risk,” while discussing the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia to face criminal charges.

Van Hollen said, “This is a victory for due process. It’s a victory for the Constitution. It should not have taken this long. I mean, as you indicated, the Trump administration dragged its feet for a very long time, ignored a 9-to-0 order from the Supreme Court. But it’s important that Abrego Garcia now come home and have his due process rights upheld in a court of law.”

He added, “You know, I’ve said repeatedly, repeatedly, this is not about the man, Abrego Garcia. This is about his constitutional rights and really the rights of all of us. If President Trump and his administration can trample the rights of one person, the rights of all of us are at risk. So they didn’t want to do it. They said he’d never set back foot back in the United States again. But I think because of the pressure from the courts and from others. They realize that not following the Constitution, at least in this instance, was the wrong path. I don’t know if this is going to be a prelude to complying with other court orders, but at least this is a good day for the rule of law.”

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Battenfeld: Wu now Trump public enemy number one, posing dilemma for Kraft

While Kraft, a Democrat, has repeatedly said he’s never supported Trump, Wu has cornered the son of Patriots owner Robert Kraft to take stronger action to defend himself.

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Appeals court allows Trump to ban AP from smaller spaces for now

A federal appeals court is allowing the Trump White House to ban the Associated Press from the Oval Office and other restricted spaces for now in a ruling that blocked a lower court’s ruling that claimed the ban was unconstitutional. 

In a 2-1 order, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia granted in part a stay of the lower court’s April 8 ruling that declared the content-based ban unconstitutional. Both of the judges who ruled in the administration’s favor were nominated by President Trump in his first term. 

“We grant in part the government’s motion for a stay pending appeal,” Judge Gregory Katsas and Judge Neomi Rao wrote. “The White House is likely to succeed on the merits because these restricted presidential spaces are not First Amendment fora opened for private speech and discussion. The White House therefore retains discretion to determine, including on the basis of viewpoint, which journalists will be admitted. Moreover, without a stay, the government will suffer irreparable harm because the injunction impinges on the president’s independence and control over this private workspaces.” 

The White House has already assumed control of the White House press pool access and rotation so that wire outlets, including the Associated Press, are not in spaces like Air Force One or the Oval Office as frequently as they once were. 

The AP, which says its news reporting reaches roughly 4 billion people daily, filed its lawsuit against three senior White House officials after it was informed in February that it would no longer be allowed in places like the Oval Office and on Air Force One as part of the press pool until the AP revised its influential Stylebook to use the name Gulf of America instead of Gulf of Mexico.   

The Stylebook is a writing and editing guide that is used by newspapers, magazines and other media outlets throughout the country. It covers a wide range of topics, from abbreviations of state names to describing ages to jargon used in different sports.    

In a social media post following Friday’s ruling, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote, “As we’ve said all along, the Associated Press is not guaranteed special access to cover President Trump in the Oval Office, aboard Air Force One, and in other sensitive locations. Thousands of other journalists have never been afforded the opportunity to cover the President in these privileged spaces. Moving forward, we will continue to expand access to new media so that more people can cover the most transparent President in American history rather than just the failing legacy media. And by the way @AP, it’s still the Gulf of America.”  

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WATCH: Trump’s Full Press Gaggle Aboard Air Force One from Breitbart’s Vantage Point

BEDMINSTER, New Jersey — Breitbart News captured the entirety of President Donald Trump’s press gaggle aboard Air Force One on Friday, in which he discussed a number of topics, ranging from the “One Big Beautiful Bill” to Elon Musk.

Breitbart News is part of the president’s travel pool this weekend and was aboard Air Force One to capture video and ask questions as he traveled from Joint Base Andrews to Bedminster, New Jersey.

At one point, Breitbart News asked the president for his thoughts on the Senate potentially removing House-passed Medicaid cuts that could hurt Trump supporters who go to hospitals in rural areas.

“We did speak about that. We’re really talking about waste, fraud, and abuse,” Trump said in the sky-set press gaggle.

“And Sen. [Josh] Hawley is a great senator, good guy, and I did speak to him,” Trump added. “And we want to make sure that doesn’t hurt anybody, you know, because it is about waste, fraud, and abuse — that’s the only thing, and everybody wants that.”

Trump also spoke about how Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare are cherished in the bill in response to another question from Breitbart News.

“We cut $1.6 trillion … not billion, trillion, out of the budget, and yet we haven’t affected anybody. We’re going to save and totally cherish Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. The Democrats are going to destroy it, and they’ll destroy it. We’re going to save it and make it stronger than ever before,” he said.

“So Medicare, Medicaid — [Democrats] just make statements … We’re not touching it, other than waste, fraud, and abuse,” he added.

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What’s at stake as Trump and Musk feud publicly



What’s at stake as Trump and Musk feud publicly – CBS News










































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There’s no sign that a reconciliation is possible between President Trump and Elon Musk after the two traded insults in public view. Scott MacFarlane reports there is a lot of money and political power at stake.

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Gavin Newsom Threatens to Block California Tax Payments to Federal Government

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) threatened Friday that his state would stop tax payments to the federal government, after news reports suggested President Donald Trump was thinking of cutting funds to the state.

As Breitbart News noted earlier in the day, reports emerged suggesting that the Trump White House was considering cutting federal funding to California due to its challenges to, and defiance of, federal policy.

Breitbart News reported:

President Donald Trump is reportedly considering ways to pull more federal funding from the State of California, as Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) continues to defy White House policies, despite needing money.

California is suffering a large budget deficit for the second year in a row, with the state’s Medicaid program borrowing money to stay afloat. Newsom has also asked the federal government for $40 billion in fire relief.

But Newsom is also enthusiastically suing the Trump administration over many of its policies, often seeking the kinds of nationwide injunctions that would stop those policies everywhere, not just in California.

Trump had already threatened California’s federal sports funding after the state defied a federal transgender policy that bars biological males from competing in girls’ sports. And this week, the U.S. Department of Transportation suggested the administration could claw back billions of dollars in federal spending wasted on the state’s troubled high-speed rail project.

But Democrats have argued that California should be allowed to oppose federal policies while benefiting from federal spending, especially given the state’s large contributions to federal revenues. And they have pushed back against the idea of conditioning fire aid on policy changes.

It is not clear what constitutional authority Newsom has to withhold federal taxes on behalf of individuals, businesses, and other entities within the state. Trump’s authority to withhold funding is far clearer.

A tax revolt by California would recall the “nullification” doctrine popular in some Southern states before the Civil War. It could also trigger a tax revolt by Californians against their own state taxes, which are very high.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of Trump 2.0: The Most Dramatic ‘First 100 Days’ in Presidential History, available for Amazon Kindle. He is also the author of The Trumpian Virtues: The Lessons and Legacy of Donald Trump’s Presidency, now available on Audible. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.



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US, Chinese officials to meet in London next week for new round of trade talks

By SEUNG MIN KIM, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senior U.S. administration officials will meet with a Chinese delegation on Monday in London for the next round of trade negotiations between Washington and Beijing, President Donald Trump said Friday.

The meeting comes after a phone call between Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, which the U.S. president described as a “very positive” conversation as the two countries attempt to break an impasse over tariffs and global supplies of rare earth minerals.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will represent the U.S. side in the trade talks.

“The meeting should go very well,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Friday afternoon.

Speaking to reporters on Air Force One Friday, Trump said Xi had agreed to restart exports of rare earth minerals and magnets to the U.S. which China had slowed, threatening a range of U.S. manufacturers that relied on the critical materials. The was no immediate confirmation from China.

The Thursday conversation between Trump and Xi, who lead the world’s two biggest economies, lasted about an hour and a half, according to the U.S. president. The Chinese foreign ministry has said Trump initiated the call.

The ministry said Xi asked Trump to “remove the negative measures” that the U.S. has taken against China. It also said that Trump said “the U.S. loves to have Chinese students coming to study in America,” although his administration has vowed to revoke some of their visas.

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Supreme Court halts lower court orders requiring DOGE to hand over information about work and personnel

Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday halted lower court orders that required the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency to turn over information to a government watchdog group as part of a lawsuit that tests whether President Trump’s cost-cutting task force has to comply with federal public records law.

The order from the high court clears DOGE for now from having to turn over records related to its work and personnel, and keeps Amy Gleason, identified as its acting administrator, from having to answer questions at a deposition. Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.

“The portions of the district court’s April 15 discovery order that require the government to disclose the content of intra–executive branch USDS recommendations and whether those recommendations were followed are not appropriately tailored,” the court said in its order. “Any inquiry into whether an entity is an agency for the purposes of the Freedom of Information Act cannot turn on the entity’s ability to persuade. Furthermore, separation of powers concerns counsel judicial deference and restraint in the context of discovery regarding internal executive branch communications.”

The Supreme Court sent the case back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for more proceedings.

Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily paused the district court’s order last month, which allowed the Supreme Court more time to consider the Trump administration’s bid for emergency relief. A district judge had ordered DOGE to turn over documents to the group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, by June 3, and for Gleason’s deposition to be completed by June 13.

The underlying issue in the case involves whether DOGE is subject to the Freedom of Information Act. CREW argues that the cost-cutting task force wields “substantial independent authority,” which makes it a de facto agency that must comply with federal public records law.

The Justice Department, however, disagrees and instead claims that DOGE is a presidential advisory body housed within the Executive Office of the President that makes recommendations to the president and federal agencies on matters that are important to Mr. Trump’s second-term agenda. 

DOGE’s agency status was not before the Supreme Court, though the high court may be asked to settle that matter in the future. Instead, the Trump administration had asked the justices to temporarily halt a district court’s order that allowed CREW to gather certain information from DOGE as part of its effort to determine whether the task force is an advisory panel that is outside FOIA’s scope or is an agency that is subject to the records law.

The judge overseeing the dispute, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper, had ordered DOGE to turn over certain documents to the watchdog group by June 3 and to complete all depositions, including of Gleason, by June 13.

Mr. Trump ordered the creation of DOGE on his first day back in the White House as part of his initiative to slash the size of the federal government. Since then, DOGE team members have fanned out to agencies across the executive branch and have been part of efforts to shrink the federal workforce and shutter entities like the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Institute of Peace.

DOGE has also attempted to gain access to sensitive databases kept by the Internal Revenue Service, Social Security Administration and Office of Personnel Management, prompting legal battles.

In an effort to learn more about DOGE’s structure and operations, CREW submitted an expedited FOIA request to the task force. After it did not respond in a timely manner, CREW filed a lawsuit and sought a preliminary injunction to expedite processing of its records request. The organization argued that DOGE was exercising significant independent authority, which made it an agency subject to FOIA.

Cooper granted CREW’s request for a preliminary injunction in March and agreed that FOIA likely applies to DOGE because it is “likely exercising substantial independent authority much greater than other [Executive Office of the President] components held to be covered by FOIA.”

He then allowed CREW to conduct limited information-gathering, which the watchdog group said aimed to determine whether DOGE is exercising substantial authority that would bring it within FOIA’s reach. A federal appeals court ultimately declined to pause that order, requiring DOGE to turn over the documents sought by CREW.

In seeking the Supreme Court’s intervention, Solicitor General D. John Sauer said CREW is conducting a “fishing expedition” into DOGE’s activities. He warned that if Cooper’s order remains in place, several components of the White House, such as the offices of the chief of staff and national security adviser, would be subject to FOIA.

“That untenable result would compromise the provision of candid, confidential advice to the president and disrupt the inner workings of the Executive Branch,” Sauer wrote. “Yet, in the decisions below, the court of appeals and district court treated a presidential advisory body as a potential ‘agency’ based on the persuasive force of its recommendations — threatening opening season for FOIA requests on the president’s advisors.”

But lawyers for CREW told the Supreme Court in a filing that the Justice Department’s position “would require courts to blindly yield to the Executive’s characterization” of the authority and operations of a component of the Executive Office of the President.

They said adopting the Trump administration’s approach to DOGE would give the president “free reign” to create new entities within the Executive Office of the President that exercise substantial independent authority but are shielded from transparency laws.

“Courts would be forced to blindly accept the government’s representations about an EOP unit’s realworld operations, unable to test those representations through even limited discovery,” CREW’s lawyers wrote. “It is that extreme position, not the discovery order, that would ‘turn[] FOIA on its head.'”

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Elon Musk’s Dad Sides with President in ‘Silly’ Feud: Trump ‘Will Prevail’

SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s father Errol Musk said Friday on Al Arabiya English’s “Global News Today” that President Donald Trump will “prevail” in the public feud with his son.

Musk said, “It seems a bit silly to me.”

Host Tom Burges Watson said, “Do you think this is a bump in the road, or do you think this is the end of the road for the relationship between your son and Mr. Trump?”

Musk said, “Just a bump in the road. It will fizzle out in a few days.”

He continued, “I haven’t spoken to him, but I did send him a message, you know, telling him to make sure this fizzles out.”

Musk added, “I think there’s a bit of tiredness here. But, I would say that, in some ways, you know, it’s good that the older person sees that even at the highest levels, people struggle. You know, it’s not just in your home with your own family, but at all levels, people struggle to find common ground with each other. And, I think that’s all we’re seeing now. Trump, of course, will prevail because he has been voted in by the majority of the people in America. I’ve just spent three weeks in America. The people on, I would like to say 80%, but actually 100% behind Trump.”

 

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Kennedy Center cancels week of events celebrating LGBTQ rights

Organizers and the Kennedy Center have canceled a week’s worth of events celebrating LGBTQ+ rights for this summer’s World Pride festival in Washington, D.C., amid a shift in priorities and the ousting of leadership at one of the nation’s premier cultural institutions.

Multiple artists and producers involved in the center’s Tapestry of Pride schedule, which had been planned for June 5 to 8, told The Associated Press that their events had been quietly canceled or moved to other venues. And in the wake of the cancellations, Washington’s Capital Pride Alliance has disassociated itself from the Kennedy Center.

“We are a resilient community, and we have found other avenues to celebrate,” said June Crenshaw, deputy director of the alliance. “We are finding another path to the celebration…but the fact that we have to maneuver in this way is disappointing.”

The Kennedy Center’s website still lists Tapestry of Pride on its website with a general description and a link to the World Pride site. There are no other details.

The Kennedy Center did not respond to a request from the AP for comment.

The move comes on the heels of massive changes at the Kennedy Center, with President Trump firing both the president and chairman in early February. Mr. Trump replaced most of the board with loyalists, who then elected him the new Kennedy Center chairman.

President Trump looks at a theater in the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ REACH extension on March 17, 2025, in Washington, D.C. After shunning the annual Kennedy Center Honors during his first term in the White House, Mr. Trump staged a takeover of the storied music, theater and dance institution by purging the bipartisan board of Biden appointees, firing the center’s president and making himself the new chairman in February.

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The World Pride event, held every two years, starts in just under a month — running from May 17 through June 8 with performances and celebrations planned across the capital. But Trump administration policies on transgender rights and comments about Kennedy Center drag performances have sparked concern about what kind of reception attendees will receive.

“I know that D.C. as a community will be very excited to be hosting World Pride, but I know the community is a little bit different than the government,” said Michael Roest, founder and director of the International Pride Orchestra, which had its June 5 performance at the Kennedy Center abruptly canceled within days of Mr. Trump’s takeover.

Roest told the AP he was in the final stages of planning the Kennedy Center performance after months of emails and Zoom calls. He was waiting on a final contract when the president posted on social media Feb. 7 of the leadership changes and his intention to transform the Kennedy Center’s programming.

Immediately the Kennedy Center became nonresponsive, Roest said. On Feb. 12, he said, he received a one-sentence email from a Kennedy Center staffer stating, “We are no longer able to advance your contract at this time.”

“They went from very eager to host to nothing,” he said. “We have not since heard a word from anybody at the Kennedy Center, but that’s not going to stop us.”

In the wake of the cancellation, Roest said he managed to move the International Pride Orchestra performance to the Strathmore theater in nearby Bethesda, Maryland.

Crenshaw said some other events, including a drag story time and a display of parts of the AIDS Memorial Quilt, would be moved to the World Pride welcome center in Chinatown.

Monica Alford, a veteran arts and culture journalist and event planner, was scheduled to organize an event June 8 as part of Tapestry of Pride, but said she also saw communication abruptly end within days of Trump’s takeover.

Alford has a long history with the Kennedy Center and organized the first-ever drag brunch on the Kennedy Center rooftop in 2024, and said she regarded the institution — and its recent expansion known as The Reach — as “my home base” and “a safe space for the queer community.”

She said she was still finalizing the details of her event, which she described as “meant to be family-friendly, just like the drag brunch was family-friendly and classy and sophisticated.”

She said she mourns the loss of the partnership she nurtured with the Kennedy Center.

“We’re doing our community a disservice — not just the queer community but the entire community,” she said.

Roest said he never received an explanation as to why the performance was canceled so late in the planning stages. He said his orchestra would no longer consider performing at the Kennedy Center, and he believes most queer artists would make the same choice.

“There would need to be a very, very public statement of inclusivity from the administration, from that board, for us to consider that,” he said. “Otherwise it is a hostile performance space.”

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