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White House says Trump 'stands strongly' behind Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth

Three U.S. officials told NBC News that information the defense secretary shared in a group chat that included his wife and brother came from a top general’s secure messages.

What's happening today

  • White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Donald Trump "stands strongly" behind Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who lashed out this morning after new reporting on his use of the Signal chat app to discuss military plans in a group that included his wife and brother.
  • Trump this afternoon eased up on his criticism of Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, saying he has "no intention of firing him." Trump's recent attacks on Powell over interest rates rattled markets, which showed signs of improvement after he signaled Powell would remain in his post.
  • During oral arguments this morning, the Supreme Court appeared likely to rule for parents who objected on religious grounds to books made available in a school district's elementary schools that feature stories about gay and transgender characters.

Congressional Democrats meet with Mahmoud Khalil and Tufts student at ICE detention centers

Syedah Asghar and Zoë Richards

A group of congressional Democrats met with Mahmoud Khalil, a detained Columbia graduate student, and Rümeysa Öztürk, a detained Tufts student, and others during their visit to ICE detention centers in Louisiana today.

At a news conference after their visit, Rep. Troy Carter, D-La., said many of the detainees "spend an inordinate amount of time in tears."

"They were shaken. They were visibly upset and afraid. They have very small cots that are very uncomfortable, very stiff," Carter said. "Many of them complained of back pain since being here; they get an hour or two outside to recreate and enjoy fresh air, but then they’re back inside."

Carter also described the facilities as “chilly," saying detainees had “complained of it being extremely cold” and were denied additional blankets.

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., said that Öztürk has “suffered multiple asthma attacks” and that detainees are “not getting the medical attention which they need and deserve.”

Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., blasted authorities for denying Khalil's request for permission to see his wife, who was giving birth to their son.

"It’s also the cruelty I just want to point out," McGovern said. "It could have been for five hours or could have been for a day. He was denied that."

Kennedy calls Covid vaccine recommendation for kids 'dubious' when asked about any potential policy shifts

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. said the recommendation of Covid-19 vaccines for children "was always dubious" when he was asked in a Fox News interview tonight about whether he’s considering removing them from the government's list of recommended vaccines.

“The recommendation for children was always dubious, and it was dubious because kids had almost no risk for Covid-19," Kennedy told Fox News host Jesse Watters.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services, makes recommendations for states and insurers about what vaccines to cover, including childhood vaccinations. Insurance companies are mandated to cover recommended vaccines.

Before he was confirmed for his Cabinet role, Kennedy said he "won't take away anybody's vaccines." He later promoted vaccine hesitancy in claims about immunity and treatments for measles amid a recent outbreak.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro says Trump called him a week after arson attack

Zoë Richards

Brittany Kubicko

Zoë Richards and Brittany Kubicko

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said today that Trump called him over the weekend to discuss the arson attack on the governor’s home in Harrisburg roughly a week after the incident.

Shapiro said that Trump called Saturday morning and that he was “very gracious.”

“I appreciated that the president called me,” Shapiro, a Democrat, told reporters at the annual Easter Egg Hunt in Harrisburg. “I actually didn’t take his call because it came from his cellphone and I didn’t have that number in my phone, so I didn’t know who it was. As soon as I heard his message, I called him right back.”

“He was very gracious,” Shapiro said, adding that Trump asked about his wife and children as they “talked for a couple minutes about what transpired at the residence.”

Read the full story here.

Judge rips DOJ for not answering questions in Abrego Garcia case

The judge presiding over the case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the man the Trump administration said it mistakenly deported to a prison in El Salvador, blasted the Justice Department today for failing to answer questions about the case.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis, who ordered the Trump administration last week to answer questions about how Abrego Garcia ended up in the Salvadoran prison and the efforts it has taken to get him out, said today that some of the administration's responses are "vague, evasive and incomplete" and a “willful and bad faith refusal to comply with discovery obligations.”

She said the Justice Department had declined to answer one of the questions because it claimed it was based on the “false premise that the United States can or has been ordered to facilitate Abrego Garcia’s release from custody in El Salvador.”

“Defendants—and their counsel—well know that the falsehood lies not in any supposed 'premise,' but in their continued mischaracterization of the Supreme Court’s Order. That Order made clear that this Court 'properly required the Government to ‘facilitate’ Abrego Garcia’s release from custody in El Salvador and to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador,'” Xinis said.

She also ripped the Justice Department over its refusal to answer other questions by claiming various privileges "without proving any supporting information or analysis" as legally required.

"If Defendants want to preserve their privilege claims, they must support them with the required detail. Otherwise, they will lose the protections they failed to properly invoke,” Xinis wrote in her ruling.

The administration did provide some new information in its filing — it said the U.S. ambassador to El Salvador had been in touch with a Salvadoran "representative" about Abrego Garcia's health and whereabouts. "With respect to any other communications, disclosing any diplomatic discussions regarding Mr. Abrego Garcia could negatively impact any outcome,” the Justice Department said in its filing.

Xinis said that response "does not nearly satisfy their obligation to provide all relevant, nonprivileged information with specificity." 

She ordered the Justice Department to provide the specific legal and factual answers by 6 p.m. ET tomorrow.

Trump softens tone on negotiating with China

Tara Prindiville

Zoë Richards

Tara Prindiville and Zoë Richards

Asked today whether he plans to play hardball with China amid tariff negotiations, Trump suggested just the opposite, saying the United States will "be very nice."

"I‘m not going to say, ‘Oh, I’m going to play hardball with China. ... I’m going to play hardball with you, President Xi!’ No, no, we’re going to be very nice." Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

"They’re going to be very nice, and we’ll see what happens. But ultimately, they have to make a deal, because otherwise they’re not going to be able to deal in the United States. So we want them involved, but they have to, and other countries have to, make a deal," he added.

Trump also indicated that existing 145% tariffs on Chinese imports “will not be anywhere near that number” after the two trading partners arrive at an agreement.

Musk says his work with DOGE will probably 'drop significantly' starting in May

Steve Kopack and Zoë Richards

Elon Musk said on a Tesla earnings call this afternoon that he'll be spending less time working with the Department of Government Efficiency.

"Starting probably in next month, May, my time allocation to DOGE will drop significantly," Musk said, adding that he anticipates continuing to advance DOGE's work for the duration of Trump's term.

"I’ll have to continue doing it for the remainder of the president’s term, just to make sure that the waste and fraud that we stop does not come roaring back," Musk said. "So I think I’ll continue to spend a day or two per week on government matters, or as long as the president would like me to do so, and as long as it is useful. But starting next month, I’ll be allocating far more of my time to Tesla."

The White House has said Musk is functioning as a special government employee. According to a Congressional Research Service report, such employees are restricted to working no “more than 130 days during any period of 365 days.”

Trump told reporters this month that he wants Musk “to stay as long as possible." Asked for a departure date, he said, “I would think a few months.”

Trump says he has no intention of firing Jerome Powell as Fed chair

Trump said he has no plans to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell but insisted that Powell should lower interest rates.

“If he doesn’t, is it the end? No, it’s not,” Trump said, adding that he has “no intention to fire him.”

The exchange-traded funds that track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite indexes jumped after Trump’s comments. Both were up around 1.5% in after-hours trading at 5:30 p.m. ET.

Trump has ratcheted up his attacks on Powell as he urges him to cut rates, writing on social media this week that the U.S. economy risks slowing “unless Mr. Too Late, a major loser, lowers interest rates, NOW.”

Trump says period of economic transition could 'be a little while'

Trump said this afternoon that it could “be a little while” before the economy stabilizes in the wake of the sweeping global tariff agenda he launched this month.

“This is a transition period, and it’s going to be a little while,” Trump said when he was asked about the U.S. trade dispute with China and the progress of talks to lower tariffs between the two countries.

He said the current 145% rate on goods imported from China “will not be anywhere near that number,” expressing confidence that Washington and Beijing would reach an agreement.

Judge orders Voice of America programming to resume

A federal judge in Washington ordered the Trump administration today to restore Voice of America programming and to let the employees who work for the agency that runs it to go back to work.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth said in a ruling that the administration went way too far and that it is “likely in direct violation of numerous federal laws.” It had sought to largely shut down the U.S. Agency for Global Media after Trump signed an executive order that called for trimming the agency to the "maximum extent consistent with applicable law."

“The defendants had no method or approach towards shutting down USAGM that this Court can discern,” Lamberth wrote. “They took immediate and drastic action to slash USAGM, without considering its statutorily or constitutionally required functions as required by the plain language of the EO, and without regard to the harm inflicted on employees, contractors, journalists, and media consumers around the world. It is hard to fathom a more straightforward display of arbitrary and capricious actions than the Defendants’ actions here.”

The cuts also “reflect a hasty, indiscriminate approach: for example, the Networks received the termination letters on the exact same day that President Trump signed the Third Continuing Resolution appropriating line-item funds to the Networks through the end of the fiscal year,” Lamberth wrote. “Certainly, disbursing congressional appropriations are statutorily required, and the agency axed them the very same day they were enacted.”

The administration had countered in court filings that the Agency for Global Media is “still standing,” an assertion that Lamberth said “strains credulity.”

He wrote that Voice of America "has cultivated an audience of 425 million listeners who rely on VOA’s output—particularly in areas of the world where a free press is otherwise unavailable."

Now, as "a result of the defendants’ actions, VOA is not reporting the news for the first time in its 80-year existence."

Lamberth ordered that Agency for Global Media employees be returned to the status they had before the March 14 executive order, and he ordered the government to restore the grants the agency provides to Radio Free Asia and Middle East Broadcasting Networks. He also asked for monthly status reports to ensure the government is complying with his order.

Everett Kelley, the president of one of the labor unions involved in the court challenge, hailed the ruling, saying, "This preliminary injunction will allow these employees to get back to work as we continue the fight to preserve their jobs and critical mission.”

GOP Rep. Andy Barr jumps into Kentucky Senate race to replace Mitch McConnell

Republican Rep. Andy Barr announced he’s running for the Senate in Kentucky, pursuing the seat long held by retiring Sen. Mitch McConnell.

Barr sought to highlight his support for Trump, who hasn't yet made an endorsement in the race, as he launched his campaign in the red state.

“I’m running for Senate to help President @realdonaldtrump save this great country!” he wrote on X, alongside a video announcement. “Together, we’ll deport the illegals, end this DEI nonsense, and lock up the sickos who allow men into girls locker rooms.”

Barr will face at least one opponent in the GOP primary, former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron. Businessman Nate Morris has also said he was "seriously" looking at running for the Senate or governor next year.

The New York Times didn't libel former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, jury finds

The Associated Press

A jury concluded today that The New York Times did not libel former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for an error in a 2017 editorial that she says damaged her reputation.

The jury deliberated a little over two hours before it reached its verdict after lawyers for Palin and the newspaper delivered closing arguments at a Manhattan federal court civil trial that was in its second week.

Palin testified yesterday that death threats against her increased and her spirits drooped after an editorial about gun violence said her political action committee had contributed to political rhetoric that enabled an atmosphere of violence.

The Times corrected the article less than 14 hours after it was published.

Read the full story here.

Trump must give some Venezuelan migrants 21 days’ notice before deportations, judge rules

Reuters

A federal judge in Colorado directed the Trump administration today to give Venezuelan migrants detained in the state 21 days’ notice before any deportations under a law historically used only in wartime and to inform them of their right to challenge their removal.

In a written ruling maintaining a temporary block within Colorado on deportations under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, U.S. District Judge Charlotte Sweeney said the administration must tell the migrants in a language they understand that they have the right to consult a lawyer.

During a hearing yesterday, Sweeney expressed skepticism that the 24 hours’ notice the administration had pledged to provide would satisfy the Supreme Court’s order April 7 requiring that migrants be given the opportunity to challenge their removals in court.

Read the full story here.

In private remarks, Bessent sees China tariff standoff as unsustainable, foresees mutual de-escalation

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, speaking at a private investor summit today, predicted a near-term de-escalation in the U.S.-China tariff dispute, according to a person in the room. Bessent noted that negotiations with Beijing have not yet begun but described the mutual embargoes as unsustainable, the person said.

According to the person in the room, Bessent said that he was optimistic the two sides could eventually reach a deal but that China needs to be ready to make one.

Bloomberg News first reported Bessent's comments.

Three more prosecutors in Eric Adams case resign, saying they did nothing wrong after suspensions

Jonathan Dienst, Tom Winter and Ryan J. Reilly

Three federal prosecutors have chosen to resign instead of admit wrongdoing following suspensions over their handling of the dropped federal corruption case against New York Mayor Eric Adams, saying it is the Trump administration’s handling of the case that was wrong, according to a letter seen by NBC News.

Celia Cohen, Andrew Rohrbach and Derek Wikstrom are assistant U.S. attorneys who were suspended after they refused to take part in the Justice Department’s move to drop the prosecution of Adams. A federal judge ordered the case permanently dropped last month so the charges couldn’t be used as “leverage” over Adams, who is cooperating with the Trump administration’s immigration priorities.

Read the full story here.

Rubio announces major State Department cuts

Alexandra Bacallao

Rebecca Shabad

Alexandra Bacallao and Rebecca Shabad

Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced a comprehensive reorganization of the State Department, including massive cuts to staffing and closures of offices.

Rubio said in a statement that the department has been "bloated, bureaucratic and unable to perform its essential diplomatic mission in this new era of great power competition."

"The sprawling bureaucracy created a system more beholden to radical political ideology than advancing America’s core national interests," he said.

According to a fact sheet shared with State Department staff members, several offices will either be closed or folded into other departments. Among the offices that will be shuttered is the Office of Global Criminal Justice, which focuses “on issues related to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide.” 

A State Department official said the plan addresses the State Department's headquarters in Washington and doesn't affect U.S. foreign missions.

"This is also not a personnel plan. This is a plan about structure and framework. And I think personnel plans will follow, and I think there will be certain reductions in forces, but those are in subsequent stages of this," the official added.

Press secretary says Trump 'stands strongly' behind Hegseth

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump "stands strongly behind Secretary Hegseth" amid reports the defense secretary shared military plans related to a strike in Yemen with his wife and his brother in a second Signal group chat.

Leavitt said the reports are a "smear campaign" against Hegseth, adding that "a lot of people" in Washington reject the "monumental change" she said Hegseth is bringing to the Pentagon.

"Let me reiterate, the president stands strongly behind Secretary Hegseth in the change that he is bringing to the Pentagon, and the results that he’s achieved thus far speak for themselves," Leavitt said at a briefing this afternoon.

Pressed for details about Hegseth's promise to prosecute former Pentagon employees who he says leaked information to the media, she said: "You have to ask the FBI. You have to ask the Department of Justice on what they plan to do."

Supreme Court appears poised to rule for parents who objected to LGBTQ content in elementary schools

Reporting from Washington

The Supreme Court appeared likely to rule for parents who objected to books made available in a school district’s elementary schools that feature stories about gay and transgender characters.

Members of the 6-3 conservative majority, which often backs religious rights, seemed sympathetic during the lively 2½-hour oral argument toward the parents' claims that the Montgomery County Board of Education violated their religious rights by failing to provide an opt-out for their children.

Some justices indicated that they thought the board’s refusal to provide an opt-out might have been motivated by hostility toward religion.

Read the full story here.

Republican lawmaker to meet with El Salvador president in May

Syedah Asghar and Kyle Stewart

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., the president of the Congressional El Salvador Caucus, said she has accepted an invitation to meet with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele.

The invitation says the meeting will be May 8 at the Presidential House in San Salvador. In her post, Luna slammed Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., for drinking “margaritas with a cartel member” and said her visit will focus on “the partnership between our nations, advancing shared commitments to safety, freedom, and national pride.”

Luna's office did not immediately respond to a request for more details. The office of the Democratic co-chair, Vicente Gonzalez, did not immediately respond to a question about whether he received an invitation.

Al Gore likens the Trump administration’s ‘attacks on liberty’ to Nazi Germany

Former Vice President Al Gore rebuked the Trump administration in remarks at a climate crisis conference Monday night, comparing its “ongoing attacks on liberty” to Nazi Germany.

In his comments at the San Francisco Climate Week conference, Gore argued that the Trump administration’s “scale and scope of the ongoing attacks on liberty are literally unprecedented.”

“With that in mind, I want to note that before I use what is not a precedent, I understand very well why it is wrong to compare Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich to any other movement — it was uniquely evil, full stop. I get it, but there are important lessons from the history of that emergent evil,” Gore said.

Read the full story here.

Law firm that struck deal with Trump says it had little choice

One of the law firms that reached a deal with the Trump administration to head off punitive executive orders said in a letter to Democratic lawmakers that it felt it had little choice.

In response to a letter from Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland inquiring about the Trump deals with law firms, Brad Karp of the prominent firm Paul Weiss wrote that the EO “posed an unprecedented threat” to the firm and an “existential risk.”

“Because so many of the matters we handle on behalf of our clients, across practice areas, require productive interaction and engagement with the federal government—and because so many of our clients also value a productive relationship with the federal government and have significant commercial relationships with the federal government- we immediately understood that the effects of the executive order would destroy the firm, even if we ultimately prevailed in court,” Karp wrote.

Part of the firm's agreement was to provide the administration tens of millions of dollars in free legal work for causes the president supports, but Karp said the administration "will not determine what matters we take on. We obviously could not ethically have agreed to such a condition.”

Another of the firms that struck a deal was Wilkie Farr & Gallagher LLP. K. Lee Blalack II of O’Melveny & Myers LLP, who is representing the firm, told the lawmakers in a letter that his client’s agreement “is consistent with Wilkie’s practices and core values, including client service and serving as a steward for the Firm’s employees, its clients, and the broader community.”

Blalack wrote that Wilkie “received outreach from the Administration in late March” and “began discussions with the Administration about a potential alternative resolution” to head off a Trump EO. He added that "nothing in the agreement will require our client to change course with respect to its values or its operations."

Kirkland’s W. Neil Eggleston wrote that under the agreement, they would “continue to operate with the merit-based philosophy that is and has always been the essence of Kirkland and to provide substantial pro bono services on a non-partisan basis.”

In a joint statement, Blumenthal and Raskin said the responses were "inadequate" and troubling. "These responses only deepen our concern about what conditions are in place to coerce these firms into providing free legal services to the President’s pet causes — and what other provisions of their agreement these firms may be hiding," the statement said.

Supreme Court rules on immigration case

Today, the Supreme Court ruled that when a noncitizen’s voluntary-departure period ends on a weekend or public holiday, a “motion to reopen” filed the next business day is sufficient to avoid the penalties for failure to depart.

This case was about calculating deadlines in immigration cases, especially when the deadline falls on a weekend or legal holiday. The high court has decided that the deadline being pushed to the next business day is sufficient. 

“Who is right on this question of statutory interpretation matters greatly to people like Mr. Monsalvo,” the court writes of the petitioner in the opinion of the court. “Not only does it affect the time one may have to reopen immigration proceedings. As we have seen, it also affects an individual’s exposure to detention, removal, and fine, and carries with it serious ramifications for his ability to seek lawful status for years into the future.”

This is a 5-4 decision, with Gorsuch, Roberts, Sotomayor, Kagan and Jackson in agreement. 

Longer hair, nails at home, fewer facials: How economic warning signs are flashing at the salon

In the suburbs of Chicago, Bonnie Conte didn’t see the wave of spring break pedicures she’s used to. In Brooklyn, New York, aesthetician Kijana “Yaya” Simuel saw 75% of her clients cancel their appointments the week Trump announced his global tariffs. And Guy Lacey, who sells his products to salons, said those stores are seeing clients going longer between haircuts.

Salon owners and other beauty professionals across the country said they are seeing a shift in behavior among their clients in recent weeks — as economists, investors and CEOs have been warning about an economic slowdown following widespread tariffs declared by Trump. It’s a shift in behavior that is not only hurting salon workers’ paychecks but also could be a warning sign for the wider economy.

Read the full story here.

Dueling rallies outside the Supreme Court

Lawrence Hurley

Victoria Ebner

Lawrence Hurley and Victoria Ebner

Ahead of oral arguments at the Supreme Court today, dueling rallies took place outside the court, with around 60 LGBTQ activists holding rainbow colored umbrellas and one holding a sign saying, “I will not stay silent.”

Activists carry rainbow umbrellas outside the Supreme Court on April 21, 2025.
Activists carry rainbow umbrellas outside the Supreme Court.Lawrence Hurley / NBC News

A few yards away, a group of around 40 people supporting the challengers held signs that read “Let parents parent” as one Montgomery County parent, Wael Elkoshairi, spoke.

“Parents’ rights trump everything,” he said.

Read the full story here.

Hegseth argues he didn't do anything wrong in second Signal chat

Hegseth this morning doubled down on his argument that he didn't do anything wrong in the second Signal chat involving military plans in Yemen that was revealed this week.

"What was shared over Signal, then and now, however you characterize it, was informal, unclassified coordinations for media coordination, other things. That’s what I’ve said from the beginning," he said in an interview on Fox News.

Hegseth said that he takes the classification of information seriously and it's important to safeguard it. He again pushed the idea that the new reporting about the second Signal chat was improperly disclosed to the media by former employees who are "attempting to leak and sabotage the president's agenda and what we're doing."

"Everything we do here is aboveboard," he said. "We're for the war fighters. We're for the president and none of this is based in reality."

The defense secretary, who didn't directly deny that he shared the sensitive information with his wife and his brother, said that the leak investigation into the former employees is ongoing. He said that once evidence is sufficiently gathered, it will be handed over to the Justice Department "and those people will be prosecuted if necessary."

Abrego Garcia's team blasts government for 'producing nothing of substance' in court-ordered filings

Attorneys for Kilmar Abrego Garcia and Justice Department attorneys have requested a conference today with Judge Paula Xinis in the Abrego Garcia case, regarding the government’s court-ordered discovery that was due at 5 p.m. yesterday. 

Abrego Garcia’s team is arguing that the government has responded to its discovery requests by “producing nothing of substance.”

“Its document production consists entirely of public filings from the dockets, copies of Plaintiffs’ own discovery requests and correspondence, and two non-substantive cover emails transmitting declarations filed in this case," the attorneys said. "Its interrogatory responses are similarly non-responsive.”

They also allege the government has refused to answer questions and provide documents, citing privileges without submitting formal claims to those assertions.

Abrego Garcia’s team says it has invited the government to “meet and confer” several times, regarding these issues (meet informally without the judge present), but the government has declined.

Justice Department employees contend they have put forward “a good-faith effort to provide appropriate responses to both Plaintiffs’ Interrogatories and Request for Production.”

This morning, Joseph Mazzara, acting general counsel of the Department of Homeland Security, will be deposed in this case, behind closed doors. The two parties are asking for a meeting with Xinis on these issues immediately after that deposition. 

Info Pete Hegseth shared with wife, brother came from top general’s secure messages

Courtney Kube and Gordon Lubold

WASHINGTON — Minutes before U.S. fighter jets took off to begin strikes against Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen last month, Army Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, who leads U.S. Central Command, used a secure U.S. government system to send detailed information about the operation to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

The material Kurilla sent included details about when U.S. fighters would take off and when they would hit their targets — details that could, if they fell into the wrong hands, put the pilots of those fighters in grave danger. But he was doing exactly what he was supposed to: providing Hegseth, his superior, with information he needed to know and using a system specifically designed to safely transmit sensitive and classified information.

But then, Hegseth used his personal phone to send some of the same information Kurilla had given him to at least two group text chats on the Signal messaging app, three U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the exchanges told NBC News.

Read the full story here.

Vance bashes 'the West' while praising India in speech in Jaipur

Rebecca Shabad

Caroline Kenny

Rebecca Shabad and Caroline Kenny

Vice President JD Vance slammed Western countries today in a speech in Jaipur while praising India and its prime minister, Narendra Modi.

Vance said there are countries in the world that have a “flatness, a sameness, a desire to be like everyone else in the world,” while India has a "vitality" focused on the future.

It's a "striking contrast to the West," he said, adding that it's "stricken with fear" about the future.

Vance said Modi is a "special person" and tough negotiator and said that his wife, Usha, whose parents are from India, is a celebrity there.

The vice president has repeatedly denounced Western allies in other speeches abroad, arguing that they've taken advantage of the U.S. and that the alliances have worked against America's interests.

Rep. Haley Stevens launches Michigan Senate run, criticizing ‘chaos’ of Trump’s tariffs

Rep. Haley Stevens, D-Mich., launched her campaign for Senate today, joining a Democratic primary that is shaping up to be one of the most competitive in the country next year in a tightly divided state also set to be a competitive Senate battleground in the midterm elections.

Stevens joins state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and former Wayne County Health Director Abdul El-Sayed in the Democratic primary for retiring Democratic Sen. Gary Peters’ seat, which Democrats must hold to have any hope of capturing the Senate majority next year.

Stevens launched her run by focusing on the state’s crucial auto industry, while also taking aim in her announcement video at Trump, who carried Michigan by 1 percentage point in November.

Read the full story here.

White House says Harvard has lost the privilege of accessing taxpayer funding

Gabe Gutierrez

Rebecca Shabad

Gabe Gutierrez and Rebecca Shabad

In response to Harvard's lawsuit against the Trump administration over the cutting off of federal funding, the White House says that the Ivy League school has lost the privilege of accessing taxpayer funding.

“The gravy train of federal assistance to institutions like Harvard, which enrich their grossly overpaid bureaucrats with tax dollars from struggling American families, is coming to an end," White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said.

He continued, "Taxpayer funds are a privilege, and Harvard fails to meet the basic conditions required to access that privilege.”

Harvard sues federal government over funding freeze

Harvard University sued the Trump administration yesterday after the federal government said it was freezing $2.2 billion in grants and sought what university officials described as “unprecedented and improper” control over the Ivy League institution.

“The consequences of the government’s overreach will be severe and long-lasting,” Harvard President Alan Garber said in a message yesterday announcing the lawsuit.

Read the full story here.

Supreme Court weighs parents’ objections to LGBTQ content in elementary schools

Reporting from Washington

The Supreme Court today considers the latest dispute that pits religious rights against LGBTQ rights as the justices weigh objections made by parents over books made available in a school district’s elementary schools that feature stories about gay and transgender characters.

At issue are books included in the English language arts curriculum in Montgomery County, Maryland. The dispute arose in 2022 after the school board in Montgomery County, a large and diverse jurisdiction just outside Washington, D.C., decided that it wanted more storybooks reflecting LGBTQ stories to better reflect the people who live there.

Read the full story here.

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