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Closing summary

This concludes our live coverage of the second Trump administration for the day. Here are the latest developments:

  • A senior federal judge blocked the Pentagon from enforcing a new policy that bars reporters who refused to sign a pledge to only publish authorized information.

  • Confronted with increasing oil prices as a result of the joint US and Israeli attack on Iran, the treasury department’s office of foreign assets control is temporarily lifting sanctions on Iranian oil sales.

  • Donald Trump said this week that he was “shocked” by Iran’s response to being attacked by the United States and Israel. “Nobody expected it.” But one expert on Iran, who left the White House National Security Council last year after the conservative activist Laura Loomer asked Trump to fire him, publicly predicted Iran’s response in an article four days before Trump started the war.

  • US Southern Command announced that US forces carried out another “ lethal kinetic strike” on a suspected drug-smuggling boat in the Eastern Pacific.

  • The Trump administration is considering occupying or blockading Iran’s Kharg Island to pressure Iran into reopening the strait of Hormuz, according to Axios.

Updated

Trump said 'nobody expected' Iran's response to US strikes, but a former staffer Laura Loomer wanted him to fire did

Earlier this week, Donald Trump sought to cast Iran’s response to being attacked by the US and Israel as impossible to predict.

“They hit Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait. Nobody expected it. We were shocked. They fought back,” the president told reporters on Monday.

Asked later if he was “surprised that nobody briefed you ahead of time that that might be their retaliation?” Trump replied: “Nobody. Nobody. No, no, no. No, the greatest experts – nobody thought they were going hit – I wouldn’t say friendly countries, they were like neutral.”

However, there was at least one person who did publicly predict that possible response from Iran, four days before Trump announced the US attack.

Writing on the website of Foreign Affairs on 24 February, Nate Swanson, who severed as a director for Iran on the National Security Council from 2022 until 2025, and took part in talks with Iran led by Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner last year, wrote:

Tehran could target global oil flows and international shipping, sending energy prices up and creating a serious political liability for Trump. Iran may well encourage the Houthis to resume attacking ships transiting the Red Sea. The country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has also been preparing to selectively seize adversary ships in the Strait of Hormuz. If conflict with the United States deepens, Iran may seriously consider targeting the Gulf Arab states’ energy infrastructure directly. In 2019, during Trump’s last “maximum pressure” campaign, Iran directly attacked Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq oil processing facility, the world’s largest. That assault appeared to be designed to damage easily replaceable components, thus limiting the consequences to the global energy supply. But if Tehran instead assaulted infrastructure that it knows would take longer to repair, the results would be much more damaging. The relationships between Iran and the Gulf Arab states are stronger now than they were then, but Tehran knows that Gulf leaders carry real influence with Trump and could appeal to him to back down if they came under pressure.

Iran may be weak. But it still has ways to inflict real pain on the United States—and much more incentive to try than it did before.

In an interview with Foreign Affairs a week into the attack, Swanson, who joined the state department during the George W Bush administration, said that there essentially was no National Security Council in the Trump White House now.

The Trump administration definitely does decision-making differently. I mean… from Bush on, you had really a system set up where the National Security Council would basically coordinate amongst different agencies and then kind of bring all these different voices to the president to make decisions. And this administration is definitely different than even the first Trump administration where you still had that process…

I do think the president relies on a very small group of advisers to make decisions. These are relatively well-known. Secretary [of State] Rubio, [Special Envoy] Steve Witkoff, [White House Chief of Staff] Susie Wiles, the Vice President JD Vance. So, I mean, he relies on these people for advice. So it’s not like he’s doing this all on his own. But I think what is unique is the process is just different. You can see a scenario where maybe he’s not getting all the information he needs.

And I think second, though, is, also unique to the president himself, is he likes to be lobbied and pitched on ideas. So he’s very willing to take information from outside sources as equally valuable.

Swanson left the White House in 2025, after Laura Loomer, the far-right activist with influence over Trump, mounted a determined campaign to have him fired by Trump, for, supposedly having contributed to Barack Obama in 2012, and then taken part in the diplomatic effort that led to the Iran nuclear deal in 2015.

“President Trump’s mandate is clear: restore strength, accountability, and patriotism to our government. Nathanael Swanson, with his entrenched Democrat ties, Obama-era promotions, and involvement in the disastrous Iran deal, represents the kind of bureaucratic resistance that undermines this mission,” Loomer wrote on 27 May 2025.

“To protect America’s interests and ensure a foreign policy that puts our nation first while taking the Islamist threat of Iran seriously, President Trump must act decisively to remove Swanson from the Iran negotiation team”.

One month later, Trump ordered the bombing of Iranian enrichment facilities and claimed to have “obliterated” its nuclear program.

Eight months after that, Trump decided to launch an all-out assault on Iran during renewed talks, and the Iranians responded in exactly the way Swanson predicted.

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The hyperactive press office of California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, criticized Donald Trump, and the treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, for lifting sanctions on Iranian oil exports on Friday in response to spiking oil prices caused by the US assault on Iran, and Iran’s retaliatory move to close the strait of Hormuz, choking off 20% of the world’s oil supply.

“This is blood oil,” Newsom wrote on social media. “Trump and Bessent have betrayed the American people and our soldiers.”

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Sarah Palin's 2008 convention speech hinted that Iran could close the strait of Hormuz

Earlier this week, when he was asked, at an event related to his hostile takeover of the Kennedy Center, about Iran creating havoc in the global oil market by closing the strait of Hormuz in response to being attacked by the US and Israel, Donald Trump suggested Iran shutting down up to one-fifth of the world’s supply of oil and gas was really not his problem.

After noting that other countries, like China and Japan, were much more reliant on oil imports through what he called “the straits”, Trump said: “It always bothered me that we’re protecting them, and we don’t need ‘em.”

“We didn’t need ‘em before we started, uh, ‘dig we must’. Uh, ‘dig me wust’ [sic], that’s the Trump policy of lots of oil,” the president said after apparently reaching for and failing to find his campaign slogan, “Drill, baby, drill” in the recesses of his memory.

The fact that the president apparently forgot the three-word slogan for the unchecked exploitation of oil resources that he had mentioned in his inaugural address last year, and in a speech last month, led some observers to suggest that the slip was evidence that the nearly 80-year-old president now leading the US in war is in cognitive decline.

Some support for that theory was offered by the commentator Keith Olbermann who pointed out that “Dig we must – for a growing New York” was a slogan used by Con Edison, the New York City utility company, when it had to dig up the streets in Trump’s childhood. That slogan can still be seen online in a New York Daily News photograph from 1957, when Trump was 11, and in a documentary by Shirley Clarke about the construction of a skyscraper at 666 Fifth Avenue, when Trump was 13. (That skyscraper would later be owned by, and nearly ruin, the family of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.)

But digging back into the recesses of recent political history for the origins of the slogan “Drill, baby, drill” reveals that, when it was popularized by Sarah Palin during her failed 2008 campaign for the vice-presidency, it was a call for US energy independence motivated, in part, by an awareness of how easy it would be for Iran to close the strait of Hormuz and cut off 20% of the world’s oil and gas.

In her 2008 convention speech, Palin said that American energy independence was necessary for many reasons, the first of which was, “To confront the threat that Iran might seek to cut off nearly a fifth of world energy supplies”.

A month later, in the 2008 vice-presidential debate, after Joe Biden criticized the McCain-Palin ticket for ignoring alternative energy sources and suggesting “the only answer is drill, drill, drill”, Palin replied with what she seemed to think was a zinger: “The chant is ‘drill, baby, drill,’ that’s what we hear all across the country at our rallies.”

US temporarily lifts sanctions on Iranian oil

Confronted with increasing oil prices as a result of the joint US and Israeli attack on Iran, the treasury department’s office of foreign assets control announced on Friday that it is temporarily lifting sanctions on Iranian oil sales, issuing a 30-day license: “Authorizing the Delivery and Sale of Crude Oil and Petroleum Products of Iranian-Origin Loaded on Vessels as of March 20, 2026”.

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Key event

Donald Trump has arrived at his Florida beach club and has no more public events scheduled until Sunday, when he is slated to visit Memphis for a roundtable discussion of what the White House calls “the incredible achievements” of the federal task force he sent there to help police the city.

During his flight to Florida, Trump whiled away the time posting on his own social media platform claims that the US is “getting very close to meeting our objectives” and is considering “winding down” its war on Iran.

He also suggested other nations should be responsible for securing the safe passage of commercial ships that carry one-fifth of the world’s supply of oil and gas through the strait of Hormuz, the vital gateway to the Gulf that Iran has closed in response to the attack by the US and Israel.

“The Hormuz Strait will have to be guarded and policed, as necessary, by other Nations who use it — The United States does not!” Trump posted, in his idiosyncratic style, which seems to borrow from German by capitalizing nouns.

“If asked, we will help these Countries in their Hormuz efforts, but it shouldn’t be necessary once Iran’s threat is eradicated,” the president added, in an abdication of responsibility for the market chaos he has unleashed that it unlikely to reassure traders.

Just before he departed Air Force One, the president also took time to repeat his call for the state of Colorado to free a former Colorado county clerk, Tina Peters, who is serving a nine-year sentence for tampering with her county’s election equipment in search of the mythical election fraud Trump claimed existed in 2020.

Trump’s post on Peters was brief, but included at least four lies:

The Great State of Colorado, and a pathetic RINO District Attorney, together with the Radical Left Governor, gave a wonderful woman named Tina Peters, a 73-year-old Gold Star Mom, who has cancer, nine years in prison because, as a Republican Voting Official, she went after the Democrats for cheating in the 2020 Presidential Election. So, she went after them for cheating, and these SLEAZEBAGS put her in jail.

As the Colorado news anchor Kyle Clark explained on Wednesday, when Trump made the same false claims: “Peters is 70 (not 73), does not have cancer, was sentenced by a judge in Mesa County (not the Governor), and did not expose fraud in the 2020 presidential election.”

Trump’s characterization of Colorado’s governor, Jared Polis, as “Radical Left” also ignores the fact that Polis said this month that he would consider granting Peters clemency.

Updated

White House video shows Japan's prime minister laughing at trolling image of Biden as autopen

As Americans die in a war launched, according to a senior intelligence official who resigned this week, on false pretenses, the president remains focused on what he sees as a vital issue: making fun of his predecessor.

That’s the inescapable message of an official White House video documenting the prime minister of Japan’s visit on Thursday, which shows that she laughed at a trolling portrait of Joe Biden as an autopen during a guided tour of Donald Trump’s ‘Presidential Walk of Fame’.

There is no sign in the highlight reel of the visit that a vital issue of global security was discussed by the two leaders: namely Trump’s demand that Japan should ignore its US-drafted constitution and send naval vessels to an active war zone to help force open the strait of Hormuz that Iran closed in response to being attacked by the US and Israel.

Instead, the video features the Japanese leader, Sanae Takaichi, praising Trump and laughing at the mockery of Biden Trump had installed on the exterior wall of the White House.

A White House highlight reel of the Japanese prime minister’s visit features her laughing at an image intended to troll Joe Biden.

Federal judge says Pentagon restrictions on reporters are illegal, says press needs freedom to press military on lies

A senior federal judge has blocked the Pentagon from enforcing a new policy that bars reporters who refused to sign a pledge to only publish authorized information from the US military’s headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.

The ruling, that the new Pentagon credentialing policy violates the journalists’ constitutional First Amendment rights, came from a US district judge, Paul L Friedman, who was appointed to the bench by Bill Clinton, but previously served as an assistant US attorney during the Nixon administration, and as an associate independent counsel for the Iran-Contra investigation during the presidency of George H W Bush.

Friedman’s 40-page ruling on Friday came in response to a New York Times lawsuit against the Pentagon and defense secretary Pete Hegseth.

The current Pentagon press corps is comprised manly of correspondents for far-right outlets that agreed to the policy.

The senior judge made his position clear in the first paragraph of the opinion, which read:

A primary purpose of the First Amendment is to enable the press to publish what it will and the public to read what it chooses, free of any official proscription. Those who drafted the First Amendment believed that the nation’s security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech. That principle has preserved the nation’s security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now.

Friedman, who just turned 82, said during oral argument in the case: “We’ve been through, in my lifetime… the Vietnam War, where the public, I think it’s fair to say, was lied to about a lot of things. We’ve been through 9/11. We’ve been through the Kuwait situation, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay. A lot of things need to be held tightly and secure… but openness and transparency allows members of the public to know what their government is doing in times of peace and more important, in times of war”.

That, he added, is “what the First Amendment is all about”.

“I think the public has a right to know a lot of things as [elections] approach and think about what their elected leaders in the legislative branch and the executive branch are doing,” the judge said.

At the end of his opinion, Friedman noted that there have to be limits of sharing classified information during war time, but the ongoing war in Iran makes it even more vital that the public has information about what the military is doing. The judge wrote:

The Court recognizes that national security must be protected, the security of our troops must be protected, and war plans must be protected. But especially in light of the country’s recent incursion into Venezuela and its ongoing war with Iran, it is more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is doing—so that the public can support government policies, if it wants to support them; protest, if it wants to protest; and decide based on full, complete, and open information who they are going to vote for in the next election.

Updated

Pentagon bombs another suspected drug smuggling boat, killing two people

US Southern Command announced on Friday that US forces carried out another “ lethal kinetic strike” on a suspected drug-smuggling boat in the Eastern Pacific on Friday.

After the strike, the military said that there were three survivors and it “immediately notified U.S. Coast Guard to activate the Search and Rescue system for the survivors”.

The coast guard said in a statement that made no mention of the attack that one of its ships had recovered two dead bodies and one survivor, and transferred them to the Costa Rican coast guard.

The strikes on suspected drug traffickers, by a military command headquartered across the street from Donald Trump’s Doral, Florida golf course, have been described as illegal by experts in international law, but the Pentagon appears to have changed strategy since the first attack in September when it ordered a follow-on strike to kill survivors.

Killing survivors has been considered a textbook example of a war crime since 1945, when the victorious allies in the second world war prosecuted a Nazi U-boat crew for killing shipwreck survivors.

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Trump promotes voter ID act, dismisses concerns about gas prices and falling stock market

As his war on Iran sends the stock market plunging and gasoline prices rising, Donald Trump paused en route to his Florida beach club to shout familiar taking points about how very well things are going, a reporters strained to hear him over the din of construction on the White House ballroom on Friday afternoon.

Speaking about the war, the president again implied, falsely, that Iran was on the verge of creating a nuclear weapons, which his director of national intelligence contradicted this week in testimony to Congress.

“We’re not giving a nuclear weapon to terrorist thugs,” Trump said, nonetheless.

He also cast doubt on the prospect of a quick end to the war, saying: “We can have dialogue, but I don’t want to do a ceasefire… You don’t do a ceasefire when you’re literally obliterating the other side.”

Asked if he was concerned about rising fuel costs for Americans, after Iran responded to the the joint US and Israeli attack by closing the strait of Hormuz, cutting off 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas supply, Trump said: “No, I expected worse. I really thought oil prices would go much higher when I did this.”

“We just set every record, every record in the book, with Dow, with the S&P,” the president continued, apparently suggesting that the US stock market was in such good shape before the attack that the sharp drops this week, with the Dow hovering around 45,500 on Friday was not a concern. “Dow at 50,000, S&P at 8,000, 7,000, at levels, at speed that nobody’s ever seen before,” the president said, with a note of instant nostalgia for the levels the stock market hit just before his attack on Iran.

Just one month ago, Trump’s attorney general, Pam Bondi, sought to deflect questions about the Epstein files by repeatedly telling lawmakers: “The Dow is over 50,000 right now. The S&P at almost 7,000, and the Nasdaq smashing records. That’s what we should be talking about.”

“But I said I have to go off that path and I have to take a little journey,” Trump said Friday. “But we had to go off on a circuitous path and take care of business, and we are in the process of doing it and I’ll tell you I think we’re weeks ahead of schedule.”

The president then went on to advocate for the voter suppression legislation, the Save America act, Republican are struggling to pass in the Senate.

“I hear it’s going- look, it should be an easy pass, but we need Democrat votes,” Trump also said, referring to the 60-vote threshold to push the legislation to make it harder for US citizens to register to vote, and restrict vote-by-mail, through the Senate.

“They don’t want to approve voter ID because they cheat,” Trump aid of Democrats who are concerned that the measure, supposedly aimed at preventing non-citizens from voting, a problem that appears not to exist, would make it much harder for citizens to cast ballots. “They want to cheat, Peter!” the president shouted at his favorite Fox News correspondent, Peter Doocy.

Despite Trump’s effort to blame Democrats for refusing to pass the legislation, Senate Republicans have voiced their opposition to killing the filibuster to force the legislation through.

On Thursday, Thom Tillis, a Republican senator from North Carolina, announced that he would not support removing the 60-vote threshold, and criticized the crackdown on vote-by-mail, which is used by several Republican-run states, including Utah, Florida, Alaska, and Montana.

“Now, speaking of something that’s more pleasant,” Trump added as he changed the subject without skipping a beat, “you hear that? It’s going to be the greatest ballroom anywhere in the world, nothing like it.”

Given the loud helicopter noise it was hard to say if anyone could hear the construction noise Trump seemed to be talking about. “They just started today one of the biggest pours of concrete that’s ever been seen in Washington.”

“I love the sound of concrete,” the president added.

Updated

Summary of the day so far

  • Donald Trump spent the morning putting pressure on Congress to pass his bills by posting on his Truth Social platform, emphasizing that there is “nothing more important” for the US at the moment than voter ID.

  • The Trump administration is considering occupying or blockading Iran’s Kharg Island to pressure Iran into reopening the strait of Hormuz, according to a report in Axios. The report cited four sources who all spoke under the condition of anonymity.

  • The US state department established a new bureau to oversee responses to natural disasters and humanitarian crises around the world, capping the Trump administration’s dramatic overhaul of foreign aid, a senior department official told the Associated Press.

  • Trump’s presidential transition team repeatedly intervened in UK prime minister Keir Starmer’s decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US, Politico reported. The president’s aides reportedly told Starmer’s national security adviser and former chief of staff Morgan McSweeney that they wished for Mandelson’s predecessor Karen Pierce to remain in the post.

  • The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said that it is investigating 13 states that require state-regulated health insurance plans to cover abortion services. While HHS did not list the states, the Associated Press reported that the 13 states with the coverage requirements are California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington.

  • The White House released a broad framework for Congress to “pre-empt state AI laws” that would slow down development, after significant lobbying from Silicon Valley to curtail liability and instate an industry-friendly national standard for the regulation of the fast-moving technology.

  • Joe Kent, the former director of the National Counterterrorism Center and a far-right political figure who stepped down from his position on Tuesday in protest of the war in Iran, spoke about his resignation and the ongoing investigation into him over an alleged leak of classified information, saying he has a “mission” to stop the Iran war.

Updated

Brian Kemp, the Republican governor of Georgia, signed a legislative package on Friday to suspend the state’s fuel taxes for 60 days, making Georgia the first state to take direct action against the soaring pump prices triggered by the ongoing war with Iran.

The measure provides immediate relief by temporarily waiving the state’s 33-cent-per-gallon gasoline tax and 37-cent-per-gallon diesel tax. The move was part of a duo of financial relief bills fast-tracked through the state legislature this week to offset rising costs currently affecting Georgia households and businesses.

“Today is just the latest step we’re taking and it’s one that will help all Georgians as they work to make ends meet,” Kemp said at the state capitol before signing the bill into law.

Updated

Clergy will be allowed to minister to immigrants in a holding facility at the headquarters of the Trump administration’s enforcement surge in Minnesota after US district judge Jerry Blackwell granted an injunction requested on Friday by Minnesota branches of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the United Church of Christ and a Catholic priest who had sued the Department of Homeland Security, according to the Associated Press.

Under his ruling, clergy will be allowed in-person pastoral visits to all detainees at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building south of Minneapolis, the site of frequent protests over the roughly 3,000 federal officers who were brought into the state during the crackdown.

The government says the enforcement surge officially ended in February and restrictions have eased since. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) called the building a short-term holding facility, and not the kind of long-term detention center where clergy visits are normally allowed.

Updated

A Nevada judge on Friday temporarily blocked prediction market operator Kalshi from offering events contracts that would allow the state’s residents to place financial bets on its platform related to sports entertainment, and elections.

The Carson City district court judge Jason Woodbury issued a temporary restraining order at the behest of the Nevada gaming control board that will prevent Kalshi from continuing to operate in the state without a license.

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Joe Kent, former counter-terrorism chief, says he has a 'mission' to stop Iran war

Joe Kent, the former director of the National Counter-terrorism Center and a far-right political figure who stepped down from his position on Tuesday in protest of the war in Iran, spoke about his resignation and the ongoing investigation into him over an alleged leak of classified information.

In an interview on Friday with journalist Megyn Kelly, Kent said he feels “very confident in what I’m doing right now. I think I have a mission. I think it is to do everything I can to stop this war.”

Regarding the investigation into him, he said he is “not concerned because I know I did nothing wrong. Of course, I am concerned because we’ve all seen the FBI and the full weight of the government come down on individuals,” adding: “That has me a little bit concerned, but I know the truth, and the facts are on my side.”

Kent went on to say that the investigation “does anger” him, but “it’s all just to be expected. I knew this was going to happen. I know their playbook. I think we’re all very familiar with their playbook.”

Updated

The Chicago transit agency on Friday sued the Trump administration after the White House in October froze $3.1bn in funding for major Chicago subway projects, saying it was an act of political retaliation, Reuters reported.

The suit, filed in the US district court in Chicago, said the federal government is attempting “to hold hostage billions of dollars in federal grants for crucial infrastructure projects in the City of Chicago”.

The suit says the frozen grants, which were approved during the administration of former president Joe Biden, are crucial to modernize and expand the “L”, Chicago’s system of elevated and underground trains.

Updated

Donald Trump has reinstated his endorsement of Jeff Hurd, a Republican House representative of Colorado, nearly a month after the president rescinded his support in response to Hurd’s vote to repeal the administration’s tariffs on Canada.

To resolve the primary conflict in Colorado’s third congressional district, Trump revealed that Hurd’s GOP challenger, Hope Scheppelman, has agreed to suspend her campaign. In exchange, both Scheppelman and her husband have been offered positions within the Trump administration.

“Together with them, we decided that Congressman Jeff Hurd, of Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District, should in no way, shape, or form, be impeded from winning the District in that the Democrat alternative is a DISASTER for our Country,” Trump wrote. “Therefore, I will be fully supporting Jeff’s Re-Election to the House of Representatives, giving him my Complete and Total Endorsement!”

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Absences among Transportation Security Administration (TSA) airport security officers fell slightly on Thursday to 9.8% nationwide, but were much higher at some major airports, the government said on Friday.

The absenteeism rate among the 50,000 TSA officers fell from 10.2% on Wednesday but was significantly higher at major airports on Thursday, including 29% at New York’s JFK, 27% at New Orleans, Baltimore Washington at 23%, 32% at Atlanta and over 30% at both Houston airports, the Department of Homeland Security said.

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The justice department filed a new lawsuit on Friday against Harvard University, saying its leadership failed to address antisemitism on campus, creating grounds for the government to freeze existing grants and seek repayment for grants already paid.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Massachusetts, is another missive in a protracted battle between the Trump administration and the elite university.

“The United States cannot and will not tolerate these failures,” the justice department wrote in the lawsuit. It asked the court to compel Harvard to comply with federal civil rights law and to help it “recover billions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies awarded to a discriminatory institution”.

The lawsuit also asks a judge to require that Harvard call police to arrest protesters blocking parts of campus and to appoint an “independent outside monitor”, approved by the government, to ensure it complies with court orders.

Updated

US health department investigates 13 states that require insurance plans to cover abortion

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said on Thursday that it is investigating 13 states that require state-regulated health insurance plans to cover abortion services.

HHS officials said in a news release that the department’s office for civil rights (OCR) is looking into the states for allegedly violating the federal Weldon amendment, which prohibits federal funding for programs or state or local governments that “subjects any institutional or individual healthcare entity to discrimination on the basis that the healthcare entity does not provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer for abortions”.

“OCR launches these investigations to address certain states’ alleged disregard of, or confusion about, compliance with the Weldon amendment,” Paula Stannard, director of the OCR, said in the announcement. “Under the Weldon amendment, healthcare entities, such as health insurance issuers and health plans, are protected from state discrimination for not paying for, or providing coverage of, abortion contrary to conscience. Period.”

While HHS did not list the states, the Associated Press reported that the 13 states with the coverage requirements are California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington.

Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey’s governor, criticized the investigations in a statement on Thursday, calling the investigation “nothing but a fishing expedition wasting taxpayers’ money”.

I will fight tooth and nail to defend and protect New Jerseyans’ abortion rights against attacks from Donald Trump, or anyone else. New Jersey requires health insurance plans to follow all applicable laws, including protecting women’s reproductive freedom.

In Vermont, Kaj Samsom, the commissioner of the Vermont department of financial regulation, said that the agency stands “firmly behind the law in question and the protections and choice it provides Vermonters” and “does not believe that it has unlawfully coerced or discriminated against any insurer related to the coverage of abortions as outlined in the [federal government’s] request”.

More on this story here:

Trump releases AI policy for Congress to pre-empt state rules

The White House released a broad framework today for Congress to “pre-empt state AI laws” that would slow down development, after significant lobbying from Silicon Valley to curtail liability and instate an industry-friendly national standard for the regulation of the fast-moving technology.

“The federal government is uniquely positioned to set a consistent national policy that enables us to win the AI race and deliver its benefits to the American people,” the White House said in an announcement accompanying the release.

“The administration looks forward to working with Congress in the coming months to turn this framework into legislation that the president can sign.”

The framework explicitly calls on Congress to pre-empt any state laws that regulate the way models are developed penalize companies for the way their AI is used by third parties, and it supports limiting the liability of AI developers due to harms from AI systems. It also instructs lawmakers not to create any new federal agencies to regulate AI.

The legislative blueprint also includes a half-dozen guiding principles for lawmakers, focusing on protecting children, preventing electricity costs from surging, respecting intellectual property rights, preventing censorship and educating Americans on using the technology.

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Fuel spikes, flight delays and storms threaten US spring break travel

Spring breakers in the US could see their long-awaited trips to party destinations disrupted by a trifecta of issues: airport security delays, high gas prices, and chaotic weather.

The potential for flight delays comes as US airlines expect that they will see a record-shattering spring travel season. Airlines for America, an aviation industry group, said that 171 million passengers are expected to fly – a 4% increase from the 2025 spring travel period.

US airlines are expected to transport 2.8 million passengers every day between 1 March and 30 April. Airlines will provide 2% more flights and seats, the group said.

But Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents working at the nation’s airports have gone weeks without pay, spurring long security lines at some travel hubs. Several airline CEOs have made public entreaties to end the impasse.

The Department of Homeland Security, which includes the TSA, has not been funded since mid-February. Democrats said they will not vote to approve DHS’s operations unless Republicans agreed to new rules governing federal agents’ manner of immigration enforcement.

Congressional Democrats want federal agents to show identification and cease wearing masks – and to stop detaining people on the street.

“It’s not sustainable, and what’s going to happen is lines are just going to continue to get longer and longer as spring breaks goes on,” Cameron Cochems, vice-president of American Federation of Government Employees Local 1127 and a lead TSA officer based in Boise, Idaho, told the Hill.

“What’s going to happen is longer wait times. Passengers are going to get more frustrated. They’re going to take their anger out on, who do you think? Us,” Cochems also reportedly said. “We’re not the ones in charge of any of this, and so they’re going to continue to push back on us.”

Here’s the full story:

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CBS News announced today that it is laying off dozens of employees and ending CBS News Radio – its nearly 100-year-old radio service – as part of a strategic restructuring.

The news was announced in a memo to staffers from its editor-in-chief, Bari Weiss, and president, Tom Cibrowski. Employees will be informed by the end of the day if their job has been affected, the two executives said in the memo.

The cuts are expected to affect 6% of a roughly 1,100 person staff, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. Earlier reports had put the cuts at closer to 15%.

The CBS News Radio team and about 700 affiliated stations were informed that the radio service will end on 22 May 2026.

Read more about it here:

The father of a US military member killed in the Iran war has contradicted Pete Hegseth’s claim that bereaved families urged him to “finish” the job in the Middle East.

Hegseth, the defense secretary and a former weekend Fox News host, told reporters at a Pentagon briefing on Thursday that he had spoken with relatives of all six service members killed in last week’s refueling tanker crash during a “dignified transfer” of their remains at Delaware’s Dover air force station the night before.

“What I heard through tears, through hugs, through strength and through unbreakable resolve, was the same from family after family. They said, ‘Finish this. Honor their sacrifice. Do not waver. Do not stop until the job is done,’” Hegseth said.

However, on Thursday night, Charles Simmons, the father of Tech Sgt Tyler Simmons, 28, from Ohio, said he had no such conversation.

“I can’t speak for the other families. When he spoke to me, that was not something we talked about,” he told NBC News.

Read more about it here:

Trump also thanked Brendan Carr, the FCC chair, in his remarks on Friday.

“I also want to thank FCC chairman Brendan Carr, perhaps the most powerful man in this room,” Trump said. “You are doing some job. He’s trying to make the fake news real and respected again, which is not an easy job, but you’re doing a really amazing job.”

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Trump began his remarks on Friday at the commander-in-chief trophy presentation at the White House, where he is presenting the trophy to the navy football team while discussing Iran.

“I want to begin by just saying we’re doing extremely well in Iran,” Trump said. “The difference between them and us is they had a navy two weeks ago, they have no navy any more, it’s all at the bottom of the sea. Fifty-eight ships knocked down in two days, and we have the greatest navy anywhere in the world, it’s not even close.

He continued: “So we are doing really well. We’re not going to let them have nuclear weapons, because if they had them, they’d use them, and we’re not going to let that happen. Should have been done a long time ago by other presidents.”

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Donald Trump is currently speaking at a White House event, where he is set to present the commander-in-chief’s trophy to the navy football team.

The team won the 2025 series against the army and the air force.

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Representative Lauren Boebert, the longtime Maga supporter, has publicly broken with the Trump administration over its latest military spending request, citing the economic struggles of her constituents as her primary reason for opposition.

In an interview with CNN, Boebert stated she would not support the Pentagon’s $200bn war supplemental, a massive funding package intended to sustain the ongoing conflict with Iran. The package is aimed at replenishing US munition stockpiles and funding Operation Epic Fury, but Boebert argued that such a high price tag is unjustifiable while people in Colorado face a rising cost of living.

“I am a ‘no’. I’ve already told leadership I am a ‘no’ on any war supplementals. I am so tired of spending money elsewhere,” Boebert said. “I am tired of the industrial-war complex getting all of our hard-earned tax dollars. I have folks in Colorado who can’t afford to live. We need America-first policies right now, and that? I’m not doing that.”

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US federal prosecutors in Manhattan and Brooklyn have launched early-stage criminal investigations into the Colombian president, Gustavo Petro, focusing on alleged ties to international drug trafficking, sources familiar with the matter told the New York Times.

The inquiries involve specialized narcotics prosecutors alongside agents from the DEA and Homeland Security Investigations. The inqueries are reportedly examining whether Petro held undisclosed meetings with traffickers and if his presidential campaign solicited or accepted illicit donations from criminal organizations.

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US to deploy of thousands of additional troops to the Middle East, officials tell Reuters

The US military is deploying thousands of additional marines and sailors to the Middle East, three US officials told Reuters on Friday.

One of the officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the USS Boxer, along with the marine expeditionary unit onboard, were departing the west coast of the US about three weeks ahead of schedule.

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Trump pressures Congress to pass strict voter ID and farm bills

Donald Trump has spent the morning putting pressure on Congress to pass his bills by posting on his Truth Social platform, emphasizing that there is “nothing more important” for the US at the moment than voter ID.

“THE SAVE AMERICA ACT MUST BE PASSED BY THE SENATE. THERE IS NOTHING THAT IS MORE IMPORTANT FOR THE U.S.A. Voter I.D., Proof of Citizenship, etc. Get it done and watch all of the good things that will happen!!!” the president wrote.

In a separate post, he stated “CONGRESS, PASS THE FARM BILL, NOW!”

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The supreme court is likely to announce at least one opinion this morning at 10am ET. Some of the high-profile cases currently before the court include Trump v Cook, which centers on Trump’s attempt to remove Lisa Cook, the first Black woman to serve on the Federal Reserve board of governors; Trump v Slaughter, which, similar to the Cook case, involves the president’s firing of Federal Trade Commission (FTC) commissioner Rebecca Slaughter; and Louisiana v Callais, a landmark redistricting case that could determine the remaining strength of the Voting Rights Act.

Though it’s unclear which decisions will be made this morning, we’ll bring them to you as they come.

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Does the US have a vaccine advisory committee? The answer became surprisingly murky on Thursday, as former members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and health officials made contradictory statements following a federal judge essentially invalidating the committee and their recent decisions on Monday.

According to a former member of the committee who asked not to be identified to discuss sensitive matters, the ACIP will continue to exist without the 13 members who were stayed by Judge Brian Murphy on Monday – and officials plan to start the process over again with new members.

The judge found that the members had not gone through the necessary process to join the committee, and he put on hold their membership and all decisions the committee made in the past year. The judge also put on hold an unprecedented move in January by US health officials to make major changes to the routine childhood immunization schedule. That means all 17 vaccines are once again fully recommended, including the birth dose of the hepatitis B vaccine.

But confusion about the future of the committee still abounds, even among its former members.

Read more:

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The White House released a framework on artificial intelligence (AI) on Friday that aims to ensure protections for children as part of a national plan to regulate developments in the field.

“The Trump Administration is committed to winning the AI race to usher in a new era of human flourishing, economic competitiveness, and national security for the American people,” the White House page reads. “Achieving these goals requires a commonsense national policy framework that both enables American industry to innovate and thrive and ensures that all Americans benefit from this technological revolution.”

As part of the framework, the administration asserts that parents should be the primary managers of their children’s digital lives and is urging Congress to provide them with new “account controls” to protect privacy and regulate screen time.

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Trump considering plans to occupy or blockade Iran's Kharg Island – report

According to a report in Axios, the Trump administration is considering occupying or blockading Iran’s Kharg Island to pressure Iran into reopening the strait of Hormuz. The report, which we have not yet been able to independently verify, cited four sources who all spoke under the condition of anonymity.

“He wants Hormuz open. If he has to take Kharg Island to make it happen, that’s going to happen. If he decides to have a coastal invasion, that’s going to happen. But that decision hasn’t been made,” a senior administration official told Axios.

“We’ve always had boots on the ground in conflicts under every president, including Trump. I know this is a fixation in the media, and I get the politics, but the president is going to do what’s right,” a second senior official said. No decision has been made yet, the official said.

Kharg, a five-mile-long coral island in the Gulf about 16 miles from the mainland, is a key processing hub for Iran, through which 90% of the country’s oil exports typically flow. The island had been largely left untouched by the US-Israeli attacks during the first two weeks of the war.

But the US bombed the island’s military installations last week, although it left the oil export facilities untouched. Donald Trump warned he would reconsider the decision not to target oil facilities if Iran or other countries “do anything to interfere” with the safe passage of ships through the strait of Hormuz.

The vital waterway has effectively been blocked since Iran began attacking ships in response to US and Israeli attacks, resulting in a huge jump in oil prices.

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US veteran charged with ‘conspiracy’ over ICE protest refuses to plead guilty

A US military veteran arrested on federal conspiracy charges after participating in a June 2025 protest against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) told the Guardian he refuses to plead guilty and is ready to face justice.

The right to protest is “supposed to be fundamentally American”, said Bajun Mavalwalla, who walked foot patrols as US army sergeant in the horn of Panjwai, the birthplace of the Taliban and one of the most dangerous parts of Afghanistan’s Kandahar province.

“It’s among the rights that when I joined the military, I thought I was joining to protect,” he said. “You can’t do it violently. You can’t do it in a way that harms other people, but you have a right to stand up for what you believe in.”

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State department forms new humanitarian bureau after foreign aid overhaul

The US state department on Friday established a new bureau to oversee responses to natural disasters and humanitarian crises around the world, capping the Trump administration’s dramatic overhaul of foreign aid, a senior department official told the Associated Press.

Trump officials and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency dismantled the US Agency for International Development after taking office in January 2025, firing thousands of officials and canceling most of its grants before it was absorbed into the state department, Reuters reported.

The official told the AP the new Bureau of Disaster and Humanitarian Response would be staffed by about 200 officials, operate in 12 hubs around the world and receive roughly $5.4bn a year in funding.

It would narrowly focus on “life-saving” aid rather than things like climate projects and what the official called “social causes.“

It would also oversee global food security, said the official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity ahead of the announcement.

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IRS glitch masked $51m in political donations, watchdog says

A technical glitch at the understaffed Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is masking millions of dollars in campaign contributions to state-level election groups, including key governor and attorney general races, a campaign finance watchdog has told the Guardian.

A total of $51m for the second half of 2025 remains unaccounted for due to this technical error, according to the Center for Political Accountability (CPA), a non-profit that tracks corporate spending.

Researchers at the CPA noticed the discrepancy in February, when donor and spending lists from the year before are typically made public after a 31 January deadline. But so far, the disclosures remain blank.

The gaps come as these organizations face another filing deadline just weeks away, with no sign that the error will be fixed by then.

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Trump’s team tried to block appointment of Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to US, reports say

Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog.

Donald Trump’s presidential transition team repeatedly intervened in UK prime minister Keir Starmer’s decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US, it has been reported.

The president’s aides told Starmer’s national security adviser and former chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, on more than one occasion, that they wished for Mandelson’s predecessor Karen Pierce to remain in post, Politico reported this morning.

According to a source close to the president, the message was conveyed during a meeting in December in Palm Beach in December 2024.

Later the same month, the transition team called Powell to tell them they were unhappy with Pierce’s treatment and did not support Mandelson’s appointment.

Politico reported:

Trump’s aides were particularly exercised that Mandelson could be made ambassador after he had made disparaging public remarks about the president in the past, according to both officials.

Trump’s chief of staff Susie Wiles is understood to be one of those unhappy with Mandelson’s appointment, with one source saying she saw him as “arrogant” and rude to staff.

Mandelson was ultimately sacked just nine months into the job after new details emerged about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted child sex offender.

In February, more files were released that revealed the peer was passing information to the convicted sex offender while he was business secretary, including market-sensitive information that sparked the criminal investigation.

In other developments:

  • Donald Trump created an extremely awkward moment for Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, in the Oval Office on Thursday when he responded to a question from a Japanese reporter about why the US attacked Iran without warning allies like Japan, by joking about Imperial Japan’s surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.

  • Japan’s prime minister said later she explained to Trump that Japan’s ability to deploy military forces overseas, as he wants, is still limited by the constitution drafted for Japan by the United States after the second world war.

  • A federal arts commission approved the final design for a 24-karat gold commemorative coin bearing Donald Trump’s image to celebrate the US’s 250th birthday on 4 July.

  • The John F Kennedy Presidential Library foundation announced on Thursday that it is awarding Profile in Courage awards to staunch opponents of Donald Trump: the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell and the people of the Twin Cities of Minnesota.

  • Senator Thom Tillis, the North Carolina Republican who has shown a willingness to cross Trump since he announced that he will not run for re-election, said he will not vote to eliminate the filibuster to force changes to US election law.

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