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update - Preservation Trust sues Trump over "illegal" east Wing demolition

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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Trump sued over East Wing demolition in new legal battle meant to crush his grand ballroom dreams


The National Trust for Historic Preservation on Friday sued President Donald Trump over the destruction of the White House's East Wing, calling his ballroom project 'unlawful.'

The suit, filed in the US District Court for the District of Columbia, argued that Trump and other top administration figures, skipped over processes that they were required to do by law when bulldozing the East Wing earlier this fall.



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The preservationists' lawsuit was filed Friday because construction on Trump's ballroom continues, but plans have yet to be submitted to the National Capital Planning Commission, which is required by the National Capital Planning Act, the Trust argued.

'No president is legally allowed to tear down portions of the White House without any review whatsoever - not President Trump, not President Biden, and not anyone else,' the filing said. 'And no president is legally allowed to construct a ballroom on public property without giving the public the opportunity to weigh in.'

When a construction project goes through the NCPC, there's traditionally a period for public comment.

The lawsuit also pointed out that no environmental review has been completed, nor has Congress approved construction, with the National Trust for Historic Preservation arguing that needed to happen because the White House is situated on federal parklands.



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The lawsuit names Trump, along with Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and the acting heads of the General Services Administration, which manages federal buildings, and the National Park Service, among the defendants.

'President Trump's efforts to do so should be immediately halted, and work on the Ballroom Project should be paused until the Defendants complete the required reviews - reviews that should have taken place before the Defendants demolished the East Wing, and before they began construction of the Ballroom - and secure the necessary approvals,' the filing said.


President Donald Trump approved the demolition of the East Wing without going through the proper channels, a new lawsuit alleges from a top historic preservation group. A piece of machinery crashes through the East Wing wall in October

President Donald Trump approved the demolition of the East Wing without going through the proper channels, a new lawsuit alleges from a top historic preservation group. A piece of machinery crashes through the East Wing wall in October

Pictures from last week show the East Wing entirely gone and a large crane hovering over the White House complex as work on President Donald Trump's ballroom continues, despite no design being finalized

Pictures from last week show the East Wing entirely gone and a large crane hovering over the White House complex as work on President Donald Trump's ballroom continues, despite no design being finalized
The White House swiped back Friday afternoon saying that everything has been done above board.

'President Trump has full legal authority to modernize, renovate and beautify the White House - just like all of his predecessors did,' spokesperson Davis Ingle told the Daily Mail.



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Trump and White House officials have also argued that the ballroom won't cost taxpayers a dime, as it's being constructed using private donations.

A White House source also told the Daily Mail that the administration still planned to submit the ballroom plans to the NCPC 'at the appropriate time when they are ready.'

Ahead of the East Wing's demolition, Trump appointed White House Staff Secretary Will Scharf to chair the NCPC.

Scharf, a lawyer by trade, argued that NCPC doesn't oversee demolitions, only construction, which allowed the East Wing to be torn down without any government oversight.

The move riled up historic preservations and veterans of the first ladies offices, which were housed there.

As a large crane hovers over the White House and Melania Trump complains to her husband about noise, as he recently relayed to a crowd, the blueprints for Trump's ballroom have yet to be finalized.


The White House did not reveal that the East Wing would be completely torn down when unveiling the ballroom project, but workers started tearing at the facade in October

The White House did not reveal that the East Wing would be completely torn down when unveiling the ballroom project, but workers started tearing at the facade in October

The last remnant of the East Wing, the booksellers room where guests were announced during White House state dinners, was photographed in late October. It appears that structure has been destroyed too

The last remnant of the East Wing, the booksellers room where guests were announced during White House state dinners, was photographed in late October. It appears that structure has been destroyed too

Construction crews work in the area where the East Wing once stood earlier this month. Friday's lawsuit could further delay the project after the head architect was replaced

Construction crews work in the area where the East Wing once stood earlier this month. Friday's lawsuit could further delay the project after the head architect was replaced
The Washington Post reported last week that the president had replaced the ballroom's architect James McCrery II after clashing over the size of the building, though the two men are still on good terms.

Architect Shalom Baranes has been chosen to lead the project.

The Architect's Newspaper reported Thursday that 29 architects who are part of the 'historic preservation community' signed onto a letter urging Baranes to ditch the project due to the White House demolishing the East Wing without public comment, among other transgressions.


'The Trump administration has destroyed a significant portion of our country's most significant treasure by demolishing the historic East Wing of the White House,' the letter read.

A representative for Shalom Baranes Associates did not immediately respond to the Daily Mail's request for comment.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,691
132,128
113
DOJ seeks to oust judge ahead of DHS contempt hearing: report


The Department of Justice (DOJ) filed paperwork on Friday seeking the ouster of U.S. District Judge James Boasberg before he can hold a contempt hearing aimed at Department of Homeland Security officials who ignored his legal directive on deportations.

At the center of the dispute is Boasberg ordering DHS to halt deportation flights containing immigrants months ago, which was ignored by Donald Trump administration officials. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, in recent days, said she overruled the judge.



Noem, who was grilled mercilessly by Democrats in a hearing on Thursday that concluded when she walked out on questions by claiming she had to get to a meeting that had already been cancelled, is at the center of next week's court hearing.

According to a report from The Hill, Attorney Pam Bondi's DOJ is asserting that there is a “strong appearance that the district judge is engaged in a pattern of retaliation and harassment, and has developed too strong a bias to preside over this matter impartially.”


The filing contends, “This long-running saga never should have begun; should not have continued at all after this Court’s last intervention; and certainly should not be allowed to escalate into the unseemly and unnecessary interbranch conflict that it now imminently portends.”

Boasberg is expected to hear testimony from former DOJ employee Erez Reuveni, who turned whistleblower about the refusal to halt flights that took more than 100 Venezuelans to a high-security prison in El Salvador, where Noem notoriously had her photo taken in front of prisoners at a later date.

According to the Hill, “The testimony will inform Boasberg as he considers referring Trump administration officials for criminal contempt after finding his March order to turn around deportation flights being carried out under the AEA was violated.”

You can read more here.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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Florida plows ahead with push to roll back certain vaccine mandates for schoolchildren


PANAMA CITY BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Florida officials are plowing ahead with a proposal to roll back certain vaccine mandates for the state's schoolchildren, after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis called for the state to become the first in the nation to eliminate all school vaccination requirements.



FILE - Vaccines are advertised outside a pharmacy in Miami, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)© The Associated Press
Pediatricians, infectious disease physicians and teachers have decried the push to undermine vaccines, which for generations have been a cornerstone of public health policy for keeping children and adults safe from potentially deadly — but preventable — diseases.

Experts have warned that doing away with the mandates could allow for a dangerous resurgence of preventable childhood diseases and deaths, amounting to a reversal of one of the greatest advancements in public health history.

Dozens of parents, physicians, educators and advocates crowded into a hotel conference room in Panama City Beach on Friday to testify on a rule change proposed by the Florida Department of Health that would eliminate requirements that Florida children receive the hepatitis B, varicella and Haemophilus influenzae type b or Hib vaccines in order to attend public or private K-12 schools. The proposal also does away with a requirement for the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine for children attending child care facilities.


Larry Downs of Pensacola, Fla., testifies against childhood vaccine mandates at a public hearing held by Florida’s Department of Health on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025 in Panama City Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Kate Payne)

Larry Downs of Pensacola, Fla., testifies against childhood vaccine mandates at a public hearing held by Florida’s Department of Health on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025 in Panama City Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Kate Payne)© The Associated Press
Other state mandates related to vaccines for polio, mumps, tetanus and other diseases are enshrined in Florida law and would require legislative action to be rolled back.

Pediatrician Eehab Kenawy, who practices in Panama City, detailed two unvaccinated children his hospital has cared for in the past six months, both of whom contracted Hib, which can cause severe infections and brain swelling.



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“One child unfortunately succumbed at four months of age. No vaccines," Kenawy said.

The mother of another Hib patient, a two-and-a-half-year-old, begged to have her child vaccinated after the child developed a grave brain infection, Kenawy said.

"Quote unquote, mother's words: ‘please give my child every vaccine you can,' " he said. “This is what we're seeing.”

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, who has long clashed with the medical establishment, has cast current requirements in schools and elsewhere as “immoral” intrusions on people’s rights that hamper parents’ ability to make health decisions for their children.

All U.S. states and territories require that children attending child care centers and schools be vaccinated against a number of diseases, including, measles, mumps, polio, tetanus, whooping cough and chickenpox.

All states allow exemptions for children with medical conditions that prevent them from receiving certain vaccines. Most also permit exemptions for religious or other nonmedical reasons.

Emotional public hearing

Friday's public hearing grew emotional at times, as parents and activists opposed to the mandates heralded the importance of personal freedom, while longtime physicians recalled hospital wards full of gravely sick children in the years before the widespread availability of vaccines.

When pediatrician Paul Robinson trained at Vanderbilt University in the 1980s, he cared for countless children “suffering from diseases we now prevent,” including Hib.

“It didn't cause mild illness. It caused children to die,” Robinson said, recalling the survivors who were left with “deafness, paralysis or lifelong neurologic injury.”

The policy being pushed by the state's surgeon general is “dangerous,” he added.

Jamie Schanbaum's legs and fingers were amputated after she contracted meningitis as a 20-year-old college student in Texas. She traveled from Brooklyn, New York, to testify in support of vaccines, recounting her seven-month hospital stay as she battled the vaccine-preventable disease and the challenges of living without her limbs.


“No one should go through this experience,” Schanbaum said.

“How about the relearning to use my hands? Feed myself? Wipe myself? This is the reality of what it’s like to survive something like this,” she added.

Rise of vaccine skepticism

Vaccination efforts across the country and around the world have stalled in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw an explosion in vaccine skepticism. Florida's proposal comes as U.S. Department of Health Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has worked to reshape the nation’s vaccine policies to match his long-standing suspicions about the safety and effectiveness of well-established shots.

Mary Helms, a mother and grandmother from Apalachicola, Florida, referenced Kennedy as she voiced her “full support” for rolling back the mandates.

“Medical choice and medical freedom in all ways is a God-given and sovereign human right,” Helms said.


Susan Sweetin's voiced filled with emotion as she described her then-newborn son being rushed off for a hepatitis B shot that she said “injured” him. Sweetin is a marketing executive for the National Vaccine Information Center, a group connected to Kennedy.

“This is not informed consent. That is coercion. Vaccines should never be tied to a child’s education,” Sweetin said.

Asked if the state consulted national medical experts such as the American Academy of Pediatrics on the rule development, a department representative declined to answer directly, stating: “the rule language is grounded in policy based on considerations that favor parental rights and medical freedom.”

Measles outbreak in South Carolina

Florida's push comes as a monthslong measles outbreak continues in South Carolina, almost entirely among school-age children.

State health officials there have said 116 of the 126 cases have been in children under 18, with two-thirds of them in children from age 5 to 17.


The outbreak has been centered in Spartanburg County, where just 90% of students have all the vaccinees required to be in school — one of the lowest rates in South Carolina. The state has a religious exemption for vaccines, and almost all of the unvaccinated students use it.

___

Associated Press writer Jeffrey Collins contributed from Columbia, South Carolina. Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Kate Payne, The Associated Press
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,691
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US admiral leading US troops in Latin America steps down


MIAMI, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The admiral in charge of U.S. military forces in Latin America retired two years early on Friday, amid rising tensions with Venezuela that include Wednesday's seizure of an oil tanker and more than 20 deadly strikes on suspected drug-smuggling boats.

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Three U.S. officials and two people familiar with the matter told Reuters that Admiral Alvin Holsey was pushed out by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Two officials said Hegseth had grown frustrated with Southern Command as he sought to flex U.S. military operations and planning in the region.

One official confirmed that discussion of whether Hegseth would dismiss Holsey surfaced roughly two weeks before the surprise announcement of his departure.

Holsey announced on October 16 his intention to step down in December.

He has not publicly explained his early retirement. In remarks at his retirement ceremony on Friday morning, he was upbeat as he reflected on his 37-year-long career. Speaking between rows of palm trees at Southern Command headquarters in Miami, he called on the United States to keep standing by fellow democracies that share U.S. values.


"We must always be there for like-minded partners, like-minded nations who share our values: democracy, rule of law and human rights," Holsey said.

Some officials have privately speculated that he opposed the recent U.S. strikes on suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean. However, in a closed-door meeting with senior lawmakers on Tuesday, Holsey insisted that his decision had nothing to do with the operations in his command, according to comments by Republican Representative Mike Rogers published in Politico.

Holsey formally handed over command to his deputy, Air Force Lieutenant General Evan Pettus, during a ceremony that extolled his accomplishments in uniform.

"You're an extraordinary human who has always led with your heart, your head and gone all in (for) every single day of your service," said General Dan Caine, who became the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in April after his predecessor was fired.

Pettus will serve as acting head of U.S. Southern Command.

One source familiar with the matter said President Donald Trump is expected to nominate Lieutenant General Frank Donovan, vice commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, as Holsey’s successor, subject to Senate confirmation. The source cautioned that the nomination has not yet been formalized and could change.

Holsey's premature retirement is rare but not unprecedented. In 2008, Central Command commander Admiral William Fallon also retired a year into his term overseeing U.S. forces in the Middle East after making comments about Iran and other issues that irked the Bush administration.


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Holsey is the latest in a series of senior officers to leave their positions since Hegseth took over the Pentagon. Some departures have been abrupt, including those of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, C.Q. Brown, and the top naval officer, Lisa Franchetti, who was the first woman to hold that post.

MONROE DOCTRINE REVIVAL?

The Trump administration has signalled a major shift in foreign policy over the last few months. A strategy document released this week called for reviving the 19th-century Monroe Doctrine, which declared the Western Hemisphere to be Washington's zone of influence.

A major U.S. military buildup of warships in the Caribbean - including the deployment of an aircraft carrier strike group - has underscored that policy shift, along with new U.S. training deployments to a revived jungle school in Panama.

Trump has also intensified pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a close ally of Russia and China whom Washington accuses of drug trafficking. Maduro denies the allegations and has said the U.S. military buildup aims to topple him and seize Venezuela's oil resources.


The U.S. Coast Guard's seizure of an oil tanker on Wednesday was the first interdiction of Venezuelan crude amid U.S. sanctions that have been in force since 2019. Reuters reported on Thursday that the United States is preparing to intercept more ships carrying Venezuelan oil.

Trump's military operations against alleged drug smugglers have been under intense scrutiny following a September 2 decision to launch a second strike on a suspected drug boat in the Caribbean.

The Defense Department's Law of War Manual forbids attacks on combatants who are incapacitated, unconscious or shipwrecked, as long as they abstain from hostilities and do not attempt to escape. The manual cites firing upon shipwreck survivors as an example of a "clearly illegal" order that should be refused.

The Trump administration has framed the attacks as a war with drug cartels, calling them armed groups and saying the drugs being carried to the United States kill Americans.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart in Miami; Additional reporting by Idrees Ali in Washington; Editing by Ros Russell and Matthew Lewis)
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,691
132,128
113
Why applicants for Trump immigration 'Gold Cards' could be out $1M


The Trump administration this week launched the president’s immigration “gold card,” a program allowing applicants to pay $1 million to become lawful permanent residents, but legal experts warn all that money could go down the drain for these hopefuls because the initiative rests on flawed legal reasoning and could be struck down in court.


Other Trump tweaks to the immigration system like a new $100,000 fee for H-1B applicants have already spawned major lawsuits, and if the gold card melts down in a court battle, applicants would face a slim chance of ever getting their money back, Shev Dalal-Dheini, senior director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, told Axios.

“At the very minimum, they’d have to sue the U.S. government to get it back,” she said.

In addition to applicants being out $1 million, a court challenge could also imperil the status of people who have already gotten their gold cards.

Critics warn that the gold card program, which gives applicants permanent residency through EB-1 and EB-2 visas usually reserved for people with extraordinary abilities like famous academics or artists, exceeds the president’s legal powers. Congress, they say, can create new immigration law, not the president.

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, called the whole process “VERY illegal” in a post on X this week.

“The Trump admin says anyone who pays $1 million will be deemed to have ‘exceptional business ability’ and become eligible for an employment-based immigrant visa,” he wrote. “But there's nothing stopping someone from just getting a loan or using parents' money.”

“Of course, nothing exemplifies the Trump ethos more than ‘every rich person is exceptional at business,’” he added, “but that doesn't change the fact that people who are getting this visa will not necessarily meet the legal requirements, and could risk deportation under a future admin.”

The Independent has contacted the White House and State Department for comment.



After an Afghan national allegedly shot two National Guard troops in Washington, D.C. last month, the Trump administration furthered tightened access to the immigration system for applicants from a variety of countries (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
Legal concerns aside, the administration looks set to continue tilting the immigration system away from the most vulnerable and toward the wealthiest applicants.

The White House says a $5 million “platinum card” is on the way giving foreigners temporary residence in the U.S. without being subject to U.S. taxes on foreign income.

After an Afghan national allegedly shot National Guard troops in Washington, the administration froze all asylum decisions, ordered the review of green cards from a series of mostly impoverished nations on his so-called travel ban list, and indefinitely blocked immigration applications from Afghans.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,691
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Trump's DOJ sues Georgia's Fulton County for 2020 voting records amid president's fixation


The Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division announced a lawsuit against a Georgia county, where President Donald Trump faced charges for election interference until recently.

In a statement on Friday, the DOJ said it was suing Fulton County in Georgia, along with four states — Colorado, Hawaii, Massachusetts, and Nevada — for voting records from the 2020 election. Trump lost in all of the localities that were sued.


"States have the statutory duty to preserve and protect their constituents from vote dilution," Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon said in a statement. "At this Department of Justice, we will not permit states to jeopardize the integrity and effectiveness of elections by refusing to abide by our federal elections laws. If states will not fulfill their duty to protect the integrity of the ballot, we will."

Trump has long claimed that the 2020 election was rigged against him.


An October subpoena demanded "all used and void ballots, stubs of all ballots, signature envelopes, and corresponding envelope digital files" from Fulton County.

According to the complaint, the Fulton County Clerk's office has not responded to the subpoena.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
86,691
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113
Kristi Noem recommends full travel ban


Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said she is recommending a sweeping travel ban on countries she claims pose a threat to the United States, following a deadly attack near the White House that has intensified scrutiny of immigration and national security policies.


Noem’s remarks came after President Donald Trump directed a reexamination of green cards issued to individuals from 19 countries, part of a broader shift in the administration’s immigration stance. The move follows a recent shooting in Washington, D.C., involving an Afghan immigrant who left two National Guard members shot, one fatally. In a recent post to X, Noem said, “I just met with the President. I am recommending a full travel ban on every damn country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies. Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat and the unyielding love of freedom — not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our hard-earned tax dollars, or snatch the benefits owed to AMERICANS. WE DON'T WANT THEM. NOT ONE.”

When contacted for comment on the post and which countries could be affected, the Department of Homeland Security told Newsweek that it “will be announcing the list soon.” It remained unclear at the time of publication what Noem meant by a “full travel ban” or how such a policy would be implemented.

The recommendation comes amid growing debate over border security, refugee admissions and immigration vetting procedures. Tensions have escalated following the fatal shooting of National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom and the critical wounding of Staff Sergeant Andrew Wolfe on November 26. According to authorities, the suspect, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, entered the United States in 2021 through a humanitarian resettlement program for Afghans who assisted U.S. forces and was granted asylum earlier this year by the Trump administration.


President Trump addressed the issue in a post on Truth Social, writing in part: “I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover, terminate all of the millions of Biden illegal admissions, including those signed by Sleepy Joe Biden's Autopen, and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States.” Following the president’s announcement, DHS and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services halted all Afghan immigration processing and launched a “full-scale, rigorous reexamination” of green card holders from 19 countries, including Afghanistan, Haiti, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, Venezuela and others.
 

nottyboi

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May 14, 2008
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DOJ seeks to oust judge ahead of DHS contempt hearing: report


The Department of Justice (DOJ) filed paperwork on Friday seeking the ouster of U.S. District Judge James Boasberg before he can hold a contempt hearing aimed at Department of Homeland Security officials who ignored his legal directive on deportations.

At the center of the dispute is Boasberg ordering DHS to halt deportation flights containing immigrants months ago, which was ignored by Donald Trump administration officials. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, in recent days, said she overruled the judge.



Noem, who was grilled mercilessly by Democrats in a hearing on Thursday that concluded when she walked out on questions by claiming she had to get to a meeting that had already been cancelled, is at the center of next week's court hearing.

According to a report from The Hill, Attorney Pam Bondi's DOJ is asserting that there is a “strong appearance that the district judge is engaged in a pattern of retaliation and harassment, and has developed too strong a bias to preside over this matter impartially.”


The filing contends, “This long-running saga never should have begun; should not have continued at all after this Court’s last intervention; and certainly should not be allowed to escalate into the unseemly and unnecessary interbranch conflict that it now imminently portends.”

Boasberg is expected to hear testimony from former DOJ employee Erez Reuveni, who turned whistleblower about the refusal to halt flights that took more than 100 Venezuelans to a high-security prison in El Salvador, where Noem notoriously had her photo taken in front of prisoners at a later date.

According to the Hill, “The testimony will inform Boasberg as he considers referring Trump administration officials for criminal contempt after finding his March order to turn around deportation flights being carried out under the AEA was violated.”

You can read more here.
NOEM is a ewffing loony. I hope she end up in jail or sued into oblivion.
 
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