update - Fed'l judge blocks Nat'l Guard deployment to Illinois

mandrill

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British newspaperThe Telegraph has written a scathing rebuke of President Donald Trump's "anti-tourism" measures, saying they have turned America into "one of the world's least welcoming countries."

"Donald Trump’s anti-tourism measures and a federal lock down are making travel to the States increasingly fraught – and that’s a shame," writes TheTelegraph's Robert Jackman.



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Thegovernment shutdown, Jackman sarcastically says, is good news, because "you shouldn’t encounter any problems getting to America in the first place, given that both airport security and border control are deemed essential services (and thus are expected to be running as normal)."

For visitors to Washington D.C., "on nearby Capitol Hill, the visitor centre has already closed down in what will be a crushing blow for any West Wing obsessives," he says.

And while national parks can't shut down like a visitor's center can, Jackman says, "Europe has history, while America has geography – meaning that the Grand Canyon and Zion National Park are as important to America’s tourism sector as stately homes are to ours."

"Now just imagine if Blenheim Palace had to warn visitors to stay away because [Prime Minister] Keir Starmer had suspended its funding until MPs agreed to pass his budget," he writes.




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Wondering if the Trump administration has become "too cavalier"when it comes to America's tourism industry, Jackman notes that "it wouldn’t be the first time that the White House had chosen to sacrifice the US tourism sector in order to pursue its wider Maga agenda."

One example Jackman cites is Trump's "enthusiasm to tighten visa rules – including those which apply to standard tourists – to extreme ends in order to reduce any risk of illegal immigration," and the new requirement "for certain visa applicants to deposit a hefty fee (at least $250, and up to $10,000 in some cases) to prove they won’t abscond when they enter the States."

And though these fees don't apply to British tourists, Jackman says, they do "send a strong sign as to where Trump’s priorities lie."

Another example of America pulling away the welcome mat is seen in "travelers being detained and deported for what most of us would consider careless behavior at worst," such as a 28-year-old Welsh tourist who was detained for 19 days whenimmigration officials discovered she was planning to undertake voluntary work in the US in return for free boarding.




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The scrutiny of tourists' social media feeds has also turned off visitors and been cause for confusion, Jackman says, because "given the President himself has called for those expressing anti-American views to have their visas revoked, it’s hardly implausible that a border officer might jump the gun a bit."

Just last week, when the NFL announced Puerto Rican megastar Bad Bunny as the Super Bowl's halftime headliner, homeland security secretary Kristi Noem warned that only “law-abiding Americans” should attend, insisting immigration authorities will be patrolling the stadium.

"Did Secretary Noem mean to imply that non-nationals aren’t welcome at one of the biggest sporting events in America?" Jackson ponders. "You can understand why some travllers – particularly those from south of the border – might think twice about making the trip to California."


As the numbers continue to show plummeting rates of tourism in hot spots like Las Vegas, Miami and California, based on Trump's policies and international tourist reaction to them, things are only expected to get worse, Jackman says.

"You’d think that a President who has spent five decades leveraging his own personal brand to such brilliant effect would see the value in protecting America’s reputation for friendliness to tourists," he says.

"Instead the White House seems content to sit back while friendly foreigners are turned off by a barrage of negative stories about what might await them if they make the trip," he adds.


Trump sacrificed US tourism for his MAGA agenda — and it 'could get worse'
 

mandrill

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President Donald Trump hit out at Democrats with a rabidly partisan attack during a meeting with a foreign leader on Tuesday, dubbing the opposition party as “insurrectionists” and threatening to give his budget director free rein to slash government jobs and programs as he answered questions alongside Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in the Oval Office.



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Trump was in the middle of a long-winded soliloquy about the benefits of his Big Beautiful Bill tax cut and spending package when he laid into Democrats for having opposed the legislation.

“I was greatly helped by our speaker, Mike Johnson and by the Senate. I'll tell you what, John Thune has been — both of those guys have been incredible ... because these Democrats are like insurrectionists ... they're so bad for our country, so their policy is so bad for our country,” he said.

Trump was also asked whether his administration intends to honor a law he signed during his first term, the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019, which requires furloughed workers to be paid “at the earliest date possible after the lapse in appropriations ends.”

Although the law is clear on the subject, the Office of Management and Budget recently rewrote their shutdown guidance to cast doubt on whether workers will be made whole after going without pay since last Tuesday.



President Donald Trump and Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney meet in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., October 7, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein (REUTERS)
Trump replied that it would “depend on who we’re talking about” and blamed Democrats for having “put a lot of people in great risk and jeopardy” while suggesting that some workers don’t deserve back pay.

“For the most part, we're going to take care of our people. There are some people that really don't deserve to be taken care of, and we'll take care of them in a different way,” he ominously said.



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Trump’s implicit threat not to pay federal workers despite the clearly written law enacted during his first four years in the White House is consistent with a long history of failing to pay contractors and vendors during his many years as a businessman and hotel/casino operator.

In 2016, USA Today reported that he’d stiffed “hundreds of people” including carpenters, painters, dishwashers, and even attorneys who worked for him.

He told the newspaper at the time that he’d routinely “deduct” from what he owed vendors if he disliked their work.

“Let’s say that they do a job that’s not good, or a job that they didn’t finish, or a job that was way late. I’ll deduct from their contract, absolutely,” Trump said.

Pressed further on whether federal workers will be paid as the law requires, Trump later told reporters: “I follow the law and what the law says is correct.”



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The president’s comments came on the seventh day of the first government shutdown since a 35-day lapse in appropriations during his first term.

Hundreds of thousands of workers were furloughed or forced to work without pay starting one week ago when legislators failed to advance a Republican-authored temporary funding bill, with most Democratic senators stating that they won’t vote for any legislation that doesn’t extend tax credits that help approximately 10 million Americans purchase health insurance.

Trump has threatened to use the temporary shutdown to permanently gut programs favored by Democrats and fire federal workers who his supporters view as “deep state” members opposed to him and his administration.

During his sit-down with Carney, he threatened to allow Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought to begin slashing things “pretty soon” when asked if he has a list of programs to eliminate.


“We have a lot of things that we're going to eliminate and permanently eliminate,” he said.

The president described Vought, a longtime GOP activist who was depicted as the Grim Reaper in an AI-generated video he posted over the weekend, as a “very serious person” who is currently “sitting there and getting ready to cut things.”

When pressed further on whether there’s a list of programs to cut, he said he’d be able to reveal it “in four or five days” if the shutdown continues.

“If this keeps going on, it'll be substantial, and a lot of those jobs will never come back,” he said.


Trump labels Democrats ‘insurrectionists’ as he threatens ‘Grim Reaper’ Vought to start cutting American jobs in ‘4 to 5 days’
 

mandrill

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Florida Republican State Rep. Kevin Steele has filed a bill ordering every public university and college campus in the Sunshine State to rename a nearby road after the late conservative activist Charlie Kirk or risk losing funding.

Kirk, the influential 31-year-old founder of Turning Point USA, was killed by a sniper’s bullet while debating students on the campus of the University of Utah Valley in Orem, Utah, on September 10.



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Steele filed his bill to honor Kirk in the Florida House of Representatives on Tuesday; however, there is no Senate counterpart so far.

Should his legislation pass, any institution that failed to comply with its terms would face losing the funding it receives from the state within 90 days.

“State funds shall be withheld from any state university or Florida College System institution whose board of trustees fails to redesignate the roadway or portion of a roadway listed above within 90 days after the effective date of this act,” it declares.

“This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.”

The bill lists the exact roadways it expects to be redesignated, giving all 40 in alphabetical order.

Another state GOP lawmaker, Juan Carlos Porras, last month filed a bill of his own to rename a portion of a busy thoroughfare in Miami-Dade County as “Charlie Kirk Memorial Avenue.”


New College of Florida has already announced that it is commissioning a statue of Kirk for its campus (New College of Florida)

New College of Florida has already announced that it is commissioning a statue of Kirk for its campus (New College of Florida)
Porras’s legislation arrived on September 23, the same day the Lake County Commission unanimously approved a resolution to redesignate Schofield Road, connecting Lake County to Orange County, in memory of Kirk.

The activist’s murder a month ago has provoked President Donald Trump’s administration to pursue a clampdown on left-wing protest organizations it accuses of promoting domestic terrorism, as a heightened state of tension persists between Republicans and Democrats.



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While Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, said at his memorial service in Arizona that she forgives her husband’s killer, Trump himself has continued to rebuke his political enemies in heated terms, particularly in response to the ongoing government shutdown, which has seen him taunt the opposition leadership with memes rather than seek to set an example by finding common ground.

Trump has not ruled out honoring Kirk with a national holiday, while Florida GOP Rep. Anna Paulina Luna has called for a statue to be erected in his honor at the U.S. Capitol in tribute.

One has already been commissioned at the New College of Florida.


Florida universities will be required to rename a campus road after Charlie Kirk or risk losing state funds, according to proposed law
 

mandrill

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Aug 23, 2001
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ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — Michael Nachmanoff has built a quiet reputation in the federal courthouse in northern Virginia — a onetime public defender turned judge known for methodical preparation and a cool temperament. On Wednesday, he finds himself at the center of a political storm: presiding over the Justice Department’s prosecution of former FBI Director James Comey.



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Confirmed to the bench by President Joe Biden in 2021, Nachmanoff was randomly assigned to the case after a Virginia grand jury indicted Comey last month on charges including obstruction of a congressional proceeding. The assignment instantly drew President Donald Trump’s attention. Trump, long fixated on Comey, blasted him as a “Dirty Cop” and derided Nachmanoff as a “Crooked Joe Biden appointed Judge” while celebrating the charges as “JUSTICE FOR AMERICA!”

Despite the political noise, lawyers who know Nachmanoff say he is unlikely to be swayed.

“Whatever his personal politics are, I do not think that they will enter the courtroom,” said longtime Virginia defense attorney Nina Ginsberg, who has tried cases before him. “He’s confident enough in his ability to judge fairly that I don’t think he’s going to be influenced by politics or the media coverage.”



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Nachmanoff, 57, came to the bench after more than a decade as the Eastern District of Virginia’s top federal public defender, where he argued and won a Supreme Court case that helped reduce racial disparities in crack cocaine sentencing. He served six years as a magistrate judge, handling some politically tinged cases. In 2019 he oversaw the first appearances of Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, associates of Trump ally Rudy Giuliani, releasing them on $1 million bonds. More recently, he refused to block the CIA from firing Dr. Terry Adirim, a Pentagon physician targeted by Trump allies over the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

“He was an aggressive advocate, the kind of lawyer who left no stones unturned,” Ginsberg said of the judge. She said he conducts his courtroom in an even-handed, respectful manner.

Timothy Belevetz, a defense lawyer and former federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia, said Nachmanoff was “always a worthy adversary.”

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“He’s been around the courthouse for years and years and years,” Belevetz said. “He’s very well-respected. He’s very smart, he’ll give parties a fair shake, he listens to the arguments.”

Comey was charged late last month with lying to Congress. Days earlier, Trump appeared to urge Attorney General Pam Bondi to prosecute the former FBI director and other political enemies.

Comey himself has acknowledged the political backdrop but expressed confidence in the court system. In a video after his indictment, he said: “My heart is broken for the Department of Justice but I have great confidence in the federal judicial system, and I’m innocent. So let’s have a trial.”

The clash between Trump and Comey has been building for years. Trump fired the FBI director in 2017, just months into his first term, as the bureau investigated Russian interference in the 2016 election. Since then, the former president has repeatedly called for Comey’s prosecution and, in the days before the indictment, publicly pressed Bondi to act.


For lawyers who’ve worked with Nachmanoff, that kind of political noise is unlikely to matter. They point to his long record of independence and constitutional rigor. “Federal public defenders are renowned for their fidelity to the Constitution and due process,” said Lisa Wayne, executive director of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

She said the White House should welcome Nachmanoff’s involvement as a safeguard “against the appearance of partisan political attacks.”

___

Associated Press write

Veteran defense lawyer turned judge oversees case against ex-FBI Director Comey
 

mandrill

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ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — James Comey pleaded not guilty Wednesday in a criminal case that has highlighted the Justice Department's efforts to target adversaries of President Donald Trump, with lawyers for the former FBI director saying they plan to argue the prosecution is politically motivated and should be dismissed.




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The arraignment lasted less than half an hour, but it was nonetheless loaded with historical significance given that the case has amplified concerns the Justice Department is being weaponized in pursuit of the Republican president's political enemies and is operating at the behest of an administration determined to seek retribution.

Comey's not guilty plea to allegations that he lied to Congress five years ago kick-starts a process of legal wrangling that could culminate in a trial in a few months at the federal courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, just outside of Washington. Defense lawyers said they intend to ask that the case be thrown out before trial on grounds that it constitutes a vindictive prosecution and plan to challenge the legitimacy of the appointment of the prosecutor who filed the charges just days after Trump hastily appointed her to her position.



FILE - Former FBI director James Comey speaks during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, in Washington, June 8, 2017. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)© The Associated Press
“It’s the honor of my life to represent Mr. Comey in this matter,” one of Comey's lawyers, Patrick Fitzgerald, a longtime friend who served with him in President George W. Bush's Justice Department, said in court on Wednesday.

The indictment two weeks ago followed an extraordinary chain of events that saw Trump publicly implore Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against Comey and other perceived adversaries of the president. Trump also replaced the veteran attorney who had been overseeing the investigation with Lindsey Halligan, a White House aide who had never previously served as a federal prosecutor but had been one of his personal lawyers.



Family of former FBI Director James Comey and others, arrive at federal court in Alexandria, Va., Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)© The Associated Press
Halligan rushed to file charges before a legal deadline lapsed despite warnings from other lawyers in the office that the evidence was insufficient for an indictment. She sat at the prosecution table but did not address the judge.

In a sign of the unusual nature of the case, the two prosecutors who have signed on to handle it are both based in North Carolina as opposed to the elite Eastern District of Virginia, which Halligan now leads.



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What the indictment says

The two-count indictment alleges that Comey misled the Senate Judiciary Committee on Sept. 30, 2020 when he was asked whether he had authorized any associate to serve as an anonymous source to the news media related to investigations of either Trump or 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.



Patrice Failor, wife of former FBI Director James Comey, arrives outside federal court in Alexandria, Va., Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)© The Associated Press
Comey has denied any wrongdoing and has said he's looking forward to a trial, which the judge set for Jan. 5, though that date will be subject to change.

The two-count indictment charging him with making a false statement and obstructing a congressional proceeding does not identify the associate or say what information may have been discussed with the media, making it challenging to assess the strength of the evidence or to even fully parse the allegations.



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Though an indictment is typically just the start of a protracted court process, the Justice Department has trumpeted the development itself as something of a win, regardless of the outcome. Trump administration officials are likely to point to any conviction as proof the case was well-justified, but an acquittal or even dismissal may also be held up as further support for their long-running contention the criminal justice system is stacked against them.

The judge was nominated by Biden

The judge randomly assigned to the case, Michael Nachmanoff, was nominated to the bench by President Joe Biden's Democratic administration and is a former chief federal defender. Known for methodical preparation and a cool temperament, the judge and his background have already drawn Trump's attention, with the president deriding him as a “Crooked Joe Biden appointed Judge."



FILE - The Albert Bryan United States Courthouse is photographed Sept. 26, 2025 in Alexandria. Va. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)© The Associated Press
He signaled in court Wednesday that he intended to push the case toward trial and would not permit unnecessary delays.


Several Comey family members were in court for his arraignment, including his daughter Maurene, who was fired by the Justice Department earlier this year from her position as a federal prosecutor in Manhattan, as well as Troy Edwards Jr., a son-in-law of Comey's who minutes after Comey was indicted resigned his job as a prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia — the office that filed the charges.


Comey is not the only Trump foe under investigation. Others include New York Attorney General Letitia James and Sen. Adam Schiff of California. Lawyers for James and Schiff, both Democrats, call the investigations meritless.

Trump and Comey's fraught relationship

The indictment was the latest chapter in a long-broken relationship between Trump and Comey.

Trump arrived in office in January 2017 as Comey, appointed to the FBI director job by President Barack Obama four years earlier, was overseeing an investigation into ties between Russia and Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.

The dynamic was fraught from the start, with Comey briefing Trump weeks before he took office on the existence of uncorroborated and sexually salacious gossip in a dossier of opposition research compiled by a former British spy.


In their first several private interactions, Comey would later reveal, Trump asked his FBI director to pledge his loyalty to him and to drop an FBI investigation into his administration’s first national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Comey said Trump also asked him to announce that Trump himself was not under investigation as part of the broader inquiry into Russian election interference, something Comey did not do.

Comey was abruptly fired in May 2017, with Trump later saying he was thinking about “this Russia thing” when he decided to terminate him. The firing was investigated by Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller as an act of potential obstruction of justice.

Comey in 2018 published a memoir, “A Higher Loyalty,” that painted Trump in deeply unflattering ways, likening him to a mafia don and characterizing him as unethical and “untethered to truth.”


Trump, for his part, continued to angrily vent at Comey as the Russia investigation led by Mueller dominated headlines for the next two years and shadowed his first administration. On social media, he repeatedly claimed Comey should face charges for “treason” — an accusation Comey dismissed as “dumb lies” — and called him an “untruthful slime ball.”

___

Tucker reported from Washington.

Comey pleads not guilty as lawyers signal intent to argue Trump foe's case is politically motivated
 

mandrill

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It’s a shame they don’t play entrance music for witnesses at U.S. Senate hearings.

Attorney General Pam Bondi came to the Senate Judiciary Committee to praise Donald Trump — and make sure no one tried to bury him — and she spent four defiant hours doing just that. Bondi, famous for choreographing her endless Fox News cameos, surely wishes she could have rolled out more production values on Tuesday.


Just imagine the potential.

“Pam Bondi strolled to the witness chair wearing a MAGA hat to the beautiful sounds of Tammy Wynette’s “Stand By Your Man,” Sean Hannity could have reported. “If that didn’t bring tears to your eyes, you’re some radical leftist or squish. Definitely not human.”

Unfortunately, Bondi had to settle for lip syncing the words. But in a MAGA movement so sexist as to publicly embrace submissiveness as a special virtue for its women — even though the men are just as pathetic — Bondi outdid herself.

Want more breaking political news? Click for the latest headlines at Raw Story.

Bondi “dodged questions on 14 topics” — which you have to admit is pretty impressive — according to the Washington Post’s scorecard. Here’s just a smattering of Bondi’s groveling devotion to her man:



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・Bondi stated, “My attorneys have done incredible work advancing President Trump’s agenda and protecting the Executive Branch from judicial overreach” — arguably the most blatant rejection of any pretense of DOJ independence from the presidency ever recorded in the Senate.

・When asked by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) if the Epstein investigation files included incriminating photos of Trump with half-naked young women, Bondi didn’t say no — she chose to attack the senator instead.

・She told Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL): “I wish you loved Chicago as much as you hate President Trump. And, currently, the National Guard are on the way to Chicago. If you’re not going to protect your citizens, President Trump will.”

・When questioned about reports that former FBI Director James Comey’s indictment came shortly after President Trump publicly called for his prosecution, Bondi refused to discuss any conversations she had with the White House, repeatedly stating, “I am not going to discuss any internal conversations with the White House.”



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・Bondi declined to discuss internal conversations with the White House about National Guard deployments or DOJ decisions — then turned and attacked Democrats for politicizing law enforcement.

・Declined to answer Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI) about whether she was firing career prosecutors solely because they worked on January 6 cases Trump doesn’t like.

・When pressed by Sen. Whitehouse on $50,000 in cash delivered to Trumpborder czar Tom Homan, she wouldn’t confirm or deny — instead telling him, “Senator, you’re welcome to talk to the FBI.”

Confrontational hearings between officials of any administration and senators are hardly new. But the degree to which Bondi disrespected the process — apparently in keeping with Trump’s new playbook in which witnesses attack the character of adversarial senators rather than respond to their questions — is in a league of its own.


Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) afterwards called it “possibly a new low for attorneys general testifying before the United States Congress,” saying, “Her apparent strategy is to attack and conceal. I have never seen anything close to it in terms of the combativeness, the evasiveness and sometimes deceptiveness.”

It really shouldn’t be that much of a surprise. October marks the 12th anniversary of Bondi’s first act of public fealty to Trump. Back then, she was Florida’s attorney general and he was just a famous guy whose Trump University happened to be getting sued by the state of New York as a fraudulent “sham.”

Here’s how a Palm Beach Post editorial described what took place in October 2013:

Just days after Ms. Bondi’s office announced that it might join a lawsuit against Mr. Trump and his school, Mr. Trump’s foundation cut a $25,000 check to a Bondi re-election committee. Despite the timing, the political committee found nothing amiss. It kept the money and Ms. Bondi decided not to participate in the lawsuit.
Twelve years later, it was hardly Bondi’s first Trump rodeo when she bent the knee at the Senate hearing. It won’t be the last.

But she’ll be hard pressed to surpass the unintended irony she displayed in personally attacking Trump nemesis Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) rather than answering any of his questions.


“If you worked for me, you would have been fired because you were censured by Congress for lying,” Bondi told Schiff, without a hint of self-awareness.

Talk about a government shutdown. If Trump’s inner circle was subjected to that standard, he would be obligated under the Bondi standard to utter his famous “You’re fired!” to every single one of them.

Including, most definitely, Pam Bondi.

Recommended Links:
The lies have it: how Trump's most loyal trooper reached a new low | Opinion
 

mandrill

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President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Illinois Governor JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson “should be in jail” for pushing back against his federal immigration enforcement in the city.

The president accused the Democratic leadership of “failing to protect” Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who Trump has sent to Chicago to conduct sweeping raids as part of his mass deportation agenda.



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Pritzker and Johnson have opposed Trump sending in federal law enforcement to the city and refused to comply with the president’s request for National Guard troops to protect immigration officers – though Trump overruled their objections over the weekend, sending the Texas National Guard in.

“Chicago Mayor should be in jail for failing to protect Ice Officers! Governor Pritzker also!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Pritzker responded on X, promising he will “not back down” and claiming Trump is “on the path to full-blown authoritarianism.”

Johnson responded, telling CNN’s The Situation Room, “This is not the first time Donald Trump has called for the arresting of a Black man, unjustly. I’m not going anywhere.”

“This president is unstable, unhinged, a double-minded individual that, quite frankly, is a threat to our democracy,” Johnson said.

Trump has previously called for his political opponents to be jailed, such as New York City’s Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani or his former presidential race opponent, Hillary Clinton.

Since returning to the White House in January, Trump’s Justice Department has opened investigations or sought indictments against perceived enemies like former FBI Director James Comey and former Obama administration officials.



Chicago residents have taken to the streets to protest Trump’s deployment of federal law enforcement in the city (AP)
The Trump administration claims that Pritzker and Johnson’s efforts to limit federal officers' presence in Chicago are putting immigration agents in danger but the Democrats say it’s their efforts to limit the chaos imposed by the White House.

“Their plan all along has been to cause chaos, and then they can use that chaos to consolidate Donald Trump’s power,” Pritzker said Monday during a news conference.


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Tensions are rising in Chicago between residents and federal law enforcement as immigration authorities use aggressive tactics to arrest and deport the highest number of undocumented people possible.

Over the weekend, a woman was shot and wounded by federal Border Patrol agents. The Department of Homeland Security said it occurred after authorities were boxed in and rammed by vehicles.



Trump has sent members of the Texas National Guard to Chicago to protect immigration law enforcement as they conduct raids (Getty Images)
The woman has been charged for allegedly ramming a vehicle but her attorney said body camera footage shows authorities taunting her before the shootout.

Pritzker and Johnson have taken action to limit Trump’s enforcement in the state and city.

Pritzker filed a lawsuit Monday to try to stop Trump from federalizing the Illinois National Guard and sending troops into Chicago. Hours later, Trump sent members of the Texas National Guard into Chicago.



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Johnson also signed an executive order prohibiting ICE and other federal agents from using city property for civil immigration enforcement.


Trump calls for Illinois governor and Chicago mayor to be tossed in jail for not giving in to his takeover plans
 

mandrill

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A federal judge has found that the Trump administration's Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Chicago are violating a 2022 consent decree by conducting arrests without a warrant and without proper risk assessment.

According to a report by Block Club Chicago, the ruling stems from a suit filed in March alleging "that such arrests violated a three-year consent decree banning warrantless arrests unless agents have probable cause to believe someone is in the United States unlawfully and is a flight risk."



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Also Read: ‘Retribution agenda’: GOP senators laugh and shrug over Trump’s vicious shutdown cuts

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings handed down the ruling initially on Tuesday, finding the National Immigration Justice Center and Illinois American Civil Liberties Union had shown 22 ICE arrests violated the consent decree — a matter which drew attention the next day by American Immigration Council fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick in a post on X.

"BIG development in Chicago," wrote Reichlin-Melnick, a frequent critic and watchdog of immigration arrests. "A federal judge finds that ICE was violating a 2022 settlement by conducting warrantless immigration arrests without individualized assessments as to whether targets were 'likely to flee.' He extends the settlement through February 2026 as a result."





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This comes soon after the right-wing majority on the Supreme Court opened the floodgates to allow, at least for the time being, the explicit use of racial profiling in immigration arrests in California, with Justice Brett Kavanaugh providing what experts widely criticized as a dismissive and unrealistic argument for why excessive force in these cases didn't matter.

It also comes as Trump ramps up his threats to send not just immigration agents to Chicago, but the military as well, prompting furious pushback from city and Illinois state officials. Trump has responded by demanding that officials who criticize his policies, like Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, to be imprisoned.


Trump's ICE found to be violating legal agreement by federal judge
 

mandrill

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U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is dismissing any prospect of a comprehensive auto deal with Canada, according to three sources in the room when he made the comments.

Lutnick made the comments during a discussion under Chatham House Rules at the Eurasia Group’s Canada-U.S. Summit in Toronto on Wednesday, one day after the second in-person meeting in Washington between U.S. President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Mark Carney.

According to the sources, Lutnick said the U.S. could continue buying parts from Canada, “but that’s about it.”


The U.S. has had 25 per cent tariffs on all foreign-made autos since April. In the case of Canadian auto exports, for those that comply with the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), the levies apply to the non-American components.

Those levies are stacked on a slate of other tariffs on Canadian goods, including all goods that are not CUSMA-compliant, as well as sectoral tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper.

Canada also has countermeasures in place, including 25 per cent on autos that are not covered by CUSMA.

According to sources, Lutnick also said Canada should “come second” to the U.S. on autos.


Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday, Trump said that the Americans “want Canada to do great,” but there’s also a point at which the two countries want the same business.

“It’s a tough situation, because we want to make our cars here,” Trump said. “At the same time, we want Canada to do well making cars. So, we’re working on formulas, and I think we’ll get there.”

While Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc did not offer up any tangible outcomes from Tuesday’s meeting, he categorized it as “successful,” “positive,” and “effective.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, meanwhile, has been vocal in his opposition to Trump’s tariffs. In response to Lutnick’s comments, he told reporters on Wednesday that the auto sector needs to “be prepared.”

“As I’ve always said, the Auto Pact has been around since the 1960s, you can’t unscramble an egg, you have to make the omelette larger,” Ford said.

“I would say it’s a massive threat,” he also said. “(Lutnick would) only say it if the president gave him the green light.”

Canada, U.S. should renegotiate CUSMA bilaterally: Lutnick
Also according to sources in the room, Lutnick said in his personal opinion Canada and the U.S. should cut Mexico out of their trade deal renegotiations to ink a new agreement bilaterally.

Both Canada and the U.S. have launched consultations on CUSMA, with the trade agreement already set for review next year.

Also addressing the Eurasia Summit later Wednesday, Carney said part of the negotiations is finding areas where there is “alignment of interest,” which could include bilateral agreements.

“There’s going to be, (in) my view, some bilateral deals — there already are — alongside (CUSMA), that it’s not an either-or necessarily,” he said. “And that’s one of the realities of the negotiations.”

Speaking to reporters last month in Mexico City, the prime minister seemed to dismiss the idea of working against Mexico in the renegotiations.

“We are going to cooperate directly. As we always have, CUSMA is strength together. It’s strength of the three countries together,” Carney said.

Keystone XL brought up during White House meeting
According to someone with knowledge of the discussions, the abandoned expansion of the Keystone Pipeline was raised in Tuesday’s meeting between Carney and Trump.

The project was raised in the context of linking energy between the two countries and more energy cooperation, and the conversation was only in the context of getting relief on steel and aluminum tariffs, according to the source.

The news was first reported by CBC News.

Asked on Parliament Hill upon his return from Washington on Wednesday whether he and Trump have agreed to revive Keystone XL, Carney said the two had “a very good discussion on a wide range of issues.”

In a press release on Wednesday, the Prime Minister’s Office wrote that the two leaders discussed “key priorities in trade and defence.”

“The leaders identified opportunities for material progress in trade in steel, aluminum, and energy, and directed their teams to conclude this work in the coming weeks,” the statement reads.

A spokesperson for South Bow, which owns the Keystone pipeline, said the company is “not privy” to discussions between the two governments.

“South Bow is supportive of efforts to find solutions that increase the transportation of Canadian crude oil,” spokesperson Solomiya Lyaskovska wrote in an email to CTV News. “We will continue to explore opportunities that leverage our existing corridor with our customers and others in the industry.”

Expanding the Keystone pipeline was first proposed under former U.S. president George W. Bush, but was quashed by his successor, Barack Obama.. Trump revived the project during his first term, but it was later cancelled by former president Joe Biden.

With files from CTV News’ Vassy Kapelos, Rachel Aiello, Brennan MacDonald and Siobhan Morris

 

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The Trump administration must reveal what kinds of security clearances have been granted to Elon Musk, a New York federal court ruled Wednesday.

“The public has an interest in knowing whether the leader of SpaceX and Starlink holds the appropriate security clearances,” Judge Denise Cote wrote.



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The ruling came in a suit brought byThe New York Times against the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency after the newspaper petitioned the agency last year, under the Freedom of Information Act, about the billionaire tech mogul’s clearances.

The agency repeatedly rejected the request, arguing it could constitute an unwarranted invasion of Musk’s privacy.

In her ruling, the judge wrote that Musk’s public status as a “special government employee” - leading the Trump administration’s DOGE cost-cutting program - as well as the billionaire’s own public comments on his security clearance and personal life, outweighed these concerns.

She pointed to disclosures from Musk seen by millions on social media, including a February post where he wrote: “I’ve had a top secret clearance for many years and have clearances that themselves are classified.”



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She also noted Musk’s past comments about drug use, including a 2023 admission he occasionally used ketamine, a federally controlled substance. The judge also pointed to a 2024 statement from the billionaire that after he smoked marijuana during a podcast appearance, NASA conducted regular drug testing.

“Musk’s numerous public statements regarding his own drug use and contacts with foreign leaders only enhance the public interest in disclosure,” Cote added in her ruling.

The Independent has contacted SpaceX, Musk’s main company doing business with the federal government, for comment.

The court decision gives the government until October 17 to submit potential redactions to the security clearance document sought by the paper.

Wednesday’s ruling is the latest legal question hanging over Musk’s controversial tenure in the White House, which ended in May.



Elon Musk’s companies like SpaceX do billions of dollars of business with the federal government (AP)
DOGE has prompted scores of lawsuits, and the Trump administration has faced additional scrutiny for Musk’s unusual position as a “special government employee,” which allowed him to sidestep some federal disclosure rules.

At the beginning of Trump’s term, federal officials appeared unable or unwilling to disclose who was actually leading DOGE, even as the effort sought to shutter agencies, access sensitive data, and slash billions in federal spending.



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A judge accused DOGE leadership of trying to “escape” the “obligations that accompany agencyhood” — including being subject to the Freedom of Information Act, the Privacy Act and the Administrative Procedures Act — “while reaping only its benefits.”

In February, the administration announced that Amy Gleason, a former senior adviser to the U.S. Digital Service, the agency renamed the U.S. DOGE Service, was formally in charge, even though Musk appeared to remain DOGE’s de facto driving force.


Judge forces Trump administration to tell what security clearance Musk had when he oversaw DOGE and cost cutting
 

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An Antifa expert at Rutgers University says that he was forced to flee the US after receiving death threats from Turning Point USA activists.

The assistant teaching professor was branded “Dr Antifa” on a petition, which also claimed he was a “financier” for the left-wing movement while calling for him to be removed from the faculty at the New Jersey school.



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Bray wrote a bestselling book named Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook, which the petition on Change.org described as being “heavily regarded in communist and anarchist groups.”

The petition was launched in the weeks following the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.

Shortly after the shooting, Bray’s home address was revealed on social media, with the New York Times reporting that a flurry of death threats aimed at the Antifa expert flooded in thereafter.

One threat, seen by the Washington Post, included a vow to kill him in front of his students. The prompt led Bray to take his wife and two children to Spain. He says he will continue to teach his students remotely from Europe.

“My role in this is as a professor,” Bray said in an interview. “I’ve never been part of an antifa group, and I’m not currently.

“There’s an effort underway to paint me as someone who is doing the things that I’ve researched, but that couldn’t be further from the truth.”

The assistant teaching professor has worked at Rutgers since 2019 and says that he feels “so bummed” about not being able to “spend time” with his students.



There has been a surge in support for Turning Point USA following Charlie Kirk’s assassination (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)© (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
Meanwhile, right-wing activists have cheered his flight from America. One described it as a “total patriot victory” on X.

However, many of Bray’s colleagues have slammed the petition launched by the Rutgers chapter of Turning Point USA as an effort to “suppress the speech, teaching and scholarship of faculty who do not conform to their movement’s politics.”



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In a statement released by the American Association of University Professors, Bray’s colleagues also described the petition’s description of him as an “affront” to both “academic freedom” and “Turning Point’s self-proclaimed commitment to a culture of open debate.”

Antifa is a decentralized movement, with no distinguishable leadership or structure.



Turning Point’s founder Charlie Kirk was a vocal supporter of Donald Trump (Getty Images)
Included in the petition filed against Bray was a post made by the Antifa expert on the social media app Bluesky.

“I could say that antifa is neither ‘terrorist’ nor an ‘organization,’ but MAGA does not care about facts…this is just about mobilizing a broad label to expand repression and accelerate the march to fascism,” the post read.


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Despite this, President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to designate the left-wing movement as a “domestic terrorist organization.” He claims that “radical left rhetoric” has led to a spike in political violence.

Critics have branded the president’s order a “witch hunt against Trump’s political adversaries” and have pointed to the president's own comments about feeling “hate” for his enemies.

The Independent has contacted Mark Bray, Rutgers University and Turning Point USA for further comment.

Rutgers University’s Antifa expert says he fled US for Spain over MAGA death threats
 

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom has attacked President Donald Trump as “Dozy Don,” sharing a brief clip of the commander-in-chief appearing to close his eyes during a White House Antifa roundtable on Wednesday.

Newsom has weaponized his official Press Office X account and his own Instagram account in recent months to launch ruthless parodies of Trump’s own eccentric posting style.



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His latest effort is an obvious nod to the president’s own cruel broadsides against his predecessor, Joe Biden, whom he regularly referred to as “Sleepy Joe” as part of his argument that the Democrat was too old to serve a second term at 81 years of age.

Now, the oldest occupant of the White House, himself at 79, Trump has an undeniably exhausting schedule. He did appear to perk up when Secretary of State Marco Rubio informed him during the same event that Israel and Hamas were close to agreeing on a peace deal for Gaza. The president subsequently announced this last night, inviting fresh calls for him to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.

MAGA mainstays JD Vance and Kid Rock have previously revealed that Trump is in the habit of calling them at odd hours of the night, and Attorney General Pam Bondi recently reflected on his apparent lack of sleep during a recent appearance on The Katie Miller Podcast.



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“None of us can keep up with him; we always joke,” she said. “I don’t know how he does it. I mean, none of us know when he sleeps. He’s working all the time, and it’s just constant for him.

“There aren’t enough hours in the day for any of us,” she added.

The president’s personal physician said during his first term in 2018 that he only sleeps for four to five hours a night, well short of the seven to nine hours recommended for men of his age.

The National Institute on Aging said that “many older people don’t sleep well” and are more likely to take medications affecting their slumber.

A good night’s sleep is essential for humans to function well during the day, the NIA states, and “can help you learn, create new memories, respond quickly, solve problems, pay attention, make decisions, and be creative.”



California Gov. Gavin Newsom has trolled Trump remorselessly on social media this summer (AP)
But Trump has previously dismissed the need for rest, telling his supporters on the campaign trail: “You know, I’m not a big sleeper. I like three hours, four hours, I toss, I turn, I beep-de-beep, I want to find out what’s going on.”

Newsom, who is nearing the end of his second term and is expected to run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028, has emerged as his party’s most potent critic of Trump this year, not least through his online mockery.



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Appearing on CBS’s The Late Show with Stephen Colbert last month, the governor unveiled his new range of merchandise spoofing the president and his MAGA movement, which includes a T-shirt showing Rock, Tucker Carlson, and the late Hulk Hogan praying over him in a pose borrowed from Michelangelo and red baseball caps bearing the legend: “Newsom Was Right About Everything!”

Newsom said the thinking behind his “novel” strategy to deploy humor against the administration, breaking with Democratic “stiffness,” was to “put a mirror up to Trump and the absurdity of what’s going on in this country, the absurdity of Donald Trump, the absurdity of these networks [like Fox News] playing into it.”

His most recent satires have included spoofs of Trump’s health concerns, mock adverts for his own line of “Newsom wine,” and ridicule over the president’s “Escalatorgate” disaster at the United Nations.


Gavin Newsom targets ‘Dozy Don’ as president appears to fall asleep during Antifa roundtable
 

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Federal agents are temporarily blocked from firing rubber bullets, tear gas and other chemical munitions at protesters and journalists in Chicago following a lawsuit from press associations and faith leaders accusing Donald Trump’s administration of “a pattern of extreme brutality.”



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A restraining order from District Judge Sara Ellis blocks federal officers from using riot control weapons and other force against clearly identified members of the press as well as protesters and faith leaders who aren’t posing any immediate threat to law enforcement.

Ellis also specifically blocked officers from firing munitions that “strike the head, neck, groin, spine, or female breast, or striking any person with a vehicle,” as well as “pulling or shoving a person to the ground, tackling, or body slamming” demonstrators who aren’t harming others.

The order follows testimony from reporters and demonstrators that federal agents “indiscriminately” fired on protesters, including an incident captured on video where officers defending an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility struck the head of a Presbyterian minister with pepper bullets that knocked him to the ground.



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Thursday’s order arrived as another federal judge in Illinois considers whether to ban the president’s deployment of National Guard troops to the state, as the administration surges federal agents and sends the military into other Democratic-led states and cities after a wave of protests against Trump’s anti-immigration agenda.

Illinois District Judge April Perry is considering a lawsuit from state and city officials who accused the administration of relying on “flimsy pretext” to send troops into Chicago, where protests erupted after federal agents “repeatedly shot chemical munitions at groups that included media and legal observers” while “dozens of masked, armed federal agents … paraded through downtown Chicago in a show of force and control.”

Last week, Oregon officials similarly sued the administration, arguing that the president’s threats to send in the troops are “wholly pretextual” and designed to stir up unrest to justify boots on the ground.



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On Sunday, a Trump-appointed judge argued that relatively small protests in Portland did not justify the use of federalized forces that imperil Oregon’s sovereignty

But a three-judge federal appeals court panel – including two judges appointed by Trump — appeared prepared Thursday to strike down the order, teeing up a potential Supreme Court battle over the president’s authority to federalize troops.

“These are violent people,” Department of Justice attorney Eric MacArthur told the panel Thursday. “This is unsustainable … The president is entitled to say ‘enough is enough’ and bring in the National Guard.”



The order follows Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Illinois as judges are considering mounting legal challenges to block the president from sending the military into Democratic-led states and cities (REUTERS)
The lawsuit from Chicago reporters, protesters and faith leaders accuses the Trump administration of unconstitutional threats to their First Amendment rights and religious freedoms with so-called less lethal weapons causing “serious injuries,” while “some are being randomly singled out for arrest” and detained inside an ICE facility where they “are detained incommunicado for hours.”


“No legitimate purpose exists for this brutality or for these arrests,” lawyers for the plaintiffs wrote this week. “The officers are not physically threatened. No government property is threatened. Defendants are acting to intimidate and silence the press and civilians engaged in protected First Amendment activities.”



A lawsuit from reporters, protesters and faith leaders accused the Trump administration of deploying federal agents who exercised a ‘pattern of extreme brutality’ with indiscriminate use of riot control weapons, arrests and use of force cuasing serious injuries to civilians (REUTERS)
Last month, the Rev. David Black — dressed in black and wearing a clerical collar while standing with demonstrators — was hit with chemical agents while praying in front of the ICE facility in Broadview, a Chicago suburb that has emerged as a flashpoint for protests against the administration.


The order from Judge Ellis prevents federal agents from “using any riot control weapon” without “at least two separate warnings.”

Her order also blocks officers from “seizing or arresting any non-violent protester who is not resisting a lawful crowd dispersal order, unless there is specific probable cause to believe that the individual has committed a crime” for which an arrest is warranted.

All federal agents must also have “visible identification” that is “affixed to their uniforms or helmets and prominently displayed, including when wearing riot gear,” unless they are undercover.

Ellis directed Homeland Security officials to “widely disseminate” her order to federal agents.

In a statement to The Independent, Homeland Security assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the agency “is taking reasonable and constitutional measures to uphold the rule of law and protect our officers.”


“We remind members of the media to exercise caution as they cover these violent riots and remind journalists that covering unlawful activities in the field does come with risks — though our officers take every reasonable precaution to mitigate those dangers to those exercising protected First Amendment rights,” she added.

“Anyone who actively obstructs law enforcement in the performance of their sworn duties will face consequences, which could include arrest,” she said.
No rubber bullets, no body slamming and no attacking journalists: Judge lays down rules for Trump’s federal agents in Chicago
 

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A U.S.-chartered deportation flight carrying roughly 100 people to Iran departed from Louisiana on the Trump administration‘s order despite widespread concerns that the deportees could face persecution upon arrival.

Trump’s order


A U.S.-chartered deportation flight carrying about 100 people departed Louisiana for Iran. By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
According to recent reports, the flight is part of a broader arrangement between Washington and Tehran, marking one of the first direct deportation operations to Iran in years. Outlets cited unnamed officials from both countries confirming the deal.

Denied asylum


By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
Most passengers on board had been denied asylum or had not yet appeared before an immigration judge to present their cases, the report said. An Iranian foreign ministry official told the Tasnim News Agency that additional flights are expected to follow, ultimately sending around 400 Iranians back over the coming months. “In the first phase, they decided to deport 120 Iranians who entered the U.S. illegally, mostly through Mexico,” said Hossein Noushabadi, a spokesperson for Iran’s foreign ministry.

Human rights groups


The operation is reportedly part of a bilateral deal between Washington and Tehran. By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
Immigrant advocates and human rights groups condemned the operation, warning that deportees had little ability to contest their removal and could face imprisonment or other reprisals in Iran, where the government maintains a harsh record on dissent and minority rights. “The fact that a deportation flight is being chartered to Iran underscores the grave civil rights violations being inflicted on Iranian nationals here in the United States,” said Jamal Abdi, president of the National Iranian American Council. “Our understanding is all these individuals agreed to be deported to Iran when facing a terrible choice: endure deplorable treatment in some of the worst prison conditions in the United States with little hope for release, be deported to a third country where they don’t speak the language, or return to Iran.”

Trump and Iran


Human rights advocates warn that deportees had little chance to challenge removal. By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
At least 16 people have died in U.S. immigration detention so far this year, putting 2025 on track to become one of the deadliest years for detainees in decades. The agreement represents a rare act of cooperation between the two countries, whose relations have been severely strained under the Trump administration, which launched airstrikes against Iranian nuclear facilities in June. The U.S. continues to face criticism for deporting people to countries with documented human rights abuses, including recent removals to Venezuela, Eswatini, Libya and South Sudan.

Trump admin sends 100 Iranians back to Tehran in secret deal
 

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President Donald Trump has escalated tensions with U.S. military leadership, saying he would immediately dismiss any generals or admirals he found unsuitable during a meeting of top officers.

Trump vs. Generals

By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
Speaking to reporters on the White House lawn before departing for Quantico, Virginia, Trump declared, “I’m going to be meeting with generals and with admirals and with leaders, and if I don’t like somebody, I’m going to fire him right on the spot.” The president’s comments came ahead of a rare in-person gathering of senior U.S. military officials from around the world, described by the White House as an “esprit de corps” event. Trump and War Secretary Pete Hegseth used the occasion to unveil sweeping cultural and structural reforms aimed at tightening discipline and reversing what they called the military’s “woke” tendencies.

Personal loyalty to Trump

By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
Trump’s remarks underscored a growing emphasis on personal loyalty and ideological alignment within his administration. He framed the overhaul as a necessary correction to restore the armed forces’ traditional ethos. “You have to have unbelievable people,” he said. “When they’re not good, when we don’t think they’re our warriors, you know what happens? We say, you’re fired. Get out.”

Hegseth’s speech

By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
Before Trump’s arrival, Hegseth delivered a blistering address warning officers who disagreed with the administration’s new direction to step aside. “If the words I’m speaking today are making your heart sink, then you should do the honorable thing and resign,” he said. He accused some leaders of being “inculcated with the culture of previous administrations,” referring to what he called “the Department of Woke.” Added Hegseth, drawing murmurs from the crowd, “We are done with that s***.” He directed officers to enforce stricter grooming standards, declaring, “No more beards, long hair, superficial individual expression.” He also announced new mandates for daily exercise, heightened physical fitness benchmarks and reforms to oversight and complaint systems. “No more anonymous complaints, no more legal limbo,” he said.

Political correctness

By: MEGA© Knewz (CA)
When Trump later took the stage, the reception was notably subdued. “I’ve never walked into a room so silent before,” he joked, prompting some laughter. “If you don’t like what I’m saying, you can leave the room. Of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future.” Declaring an end to political correctness in the armed forces, Trump pledged his full backing to service members. “We’re a team,” he said. “And so my message to you is very simple: I am with you. I support you and, as president, I have your backs 100 percent.” He added, “You’ll never see me even waver a little bit,” extending his promise of support to police officers and firefighters as well.

Trump threatens to fire top military leaders 'on the spot' if he doesn't like them
 
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