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The Trump administration began a trade investigation Thursday into whether dozens of countries have policies to combat forced labor.
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The threats to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz are complicating President Trump's calculations about how and when to end the war.
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(Top headline, 8th story, link)
Related stories: Strait of Hormuz must remain closed, new supreme leader says... Ayatollah 'obsessed with end of days'... But is he in coma? No proof of life... Trump Told Tankers to 'Show Some Guts.' Then They Were Bombed... BESSENT: Not 'militarily possible' to escort now... How Iran could launch attacks on US soil... Russia Continues to Rake In Billions...
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(First column, 10th story, link)
Related stories: 'Dubai is finished': Expats say they will leave and never come back... Luxury apartment block rocked by blast... UAE steps up crackdown on filming as 21 charged... The Don Dances as the Gulf Burns... Dozens of service members in Kuwait suffer serious injuries,... War Propaganda Now Made for Algorithm. Journalism Can't Keep Up...
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The lopsided vote to approve the measure was a rare bit of election-year bipartisanship on a major affordability issue, but G.O.P. disputes and President Trump's disinterest have left its fate uncertain.
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The Trump administration released a video on X using footage of Ray Lewis, Chad Ochocinco and other former NFL players juxtaposed with war footage.
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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said it was "unfortunate" that the move could benefit Russia, but maintained that it was only for the short term.
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A breakdown of the tools Iran has to maintain pressure on Trump.
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(Second column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: MAGA Continues Eating Its Own...
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The Trump administration is curbing animal experiments in response to shifts in public opinion, technological advances, years of animal rights advocacy and the work of a conservative activist.
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By suing Republican states and making sharp reversals in old cases, the Trump administration is using courts to fast-track major shifts in policy.
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Democracy Now! recently sat down with Agnès Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty International and a former United Nations special rapporteur, while she was in New York City to mark International Women's Day and attend the U.N.'s annual conference on women's rights. Callamard responded to the assassination of Iraqi feminist Yanar Mohammed, U.S. sanctions against U.N. special rapporteur Francesca Albanese and the rise of Christian nationalism under the Trump administration.
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The president has yet to make an endorsement in the contest between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton as he tries to push the Senate to pass a bill requiring voters to show identification at the polls.
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The new findings come after the Trump administration in January took the unprecedented step of overhauling the CDC's routine childhood immunization schedule.
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The U.S. is sending more troops and fighter jets to the Middle East as the regional war expands four days after the U.S. and Israel assassinated Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and struck sites across Iran. At least 787 people have died so far in Iran, according to local authorities. Iranian American journalist Negar Mortazavi says the feeling on the ground is of "horror and anxiety" and that U.S. officials don't seem to understand that "starting a war with Iran is going to potentially be even more difficult and challenging than the war in Iraq, which already was a big failure on the U.S. side."
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In a victory for the fossil fuel industry, a set of Obama-era rules that required the federal government to regulate the emissions of six greenhouse gases is being reversed by the Trump administration. The changes would undo the legal basis of the fight against global warming, as well as remove industrial reporting obligations and roll back emissions standards for cars and trucks. Environmental engineer Gretchen Goldman helped author those emission standards while working for the Department of Transportation under the Biden administration. Now as the president of the Union of Concerned Scientists, she says their repeal will not only increase what drivers pay at the pump but also set U.S. innovation back on the world stage. "We're really seeing the abdication of U.S. leadership on climate, and that has huge implications, both for our immediate ability to reduce heat trapping emissions globally … but also in terms of our standing and contribution in the world."
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