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Republicans revolted over a Senate measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security and passed a rival bill, dimming the chances of a quick end to the crisis crippling airports.
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President Trump signed a memo ordering that Transportation Security Administration employees be paid out of existing funds during the Department of Homeland Security shutdown. The order came after a deal to fund the agency stalled in Congress.
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Senate Democrats have said the plan is "dead on arrival" in the upper chamber.
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At a Saudi event, the president said Iran was "begging to make a deal," seemingly unaware of reports that an Iranian strike on a Saudi base had injured American troops.
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The White House remains committed to achieving all of its war objectives despite a lack of NATO support.
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The bill excludes funding for ICE and Border Patrol but restores it for federal airport security workers. The House could consider the package on Friday.
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The number of Republicans departing the House this cycle is one of the highest since 1930.
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The Trump administration had asked the court to dismiss the charges, describing them as an example of "weaponized federal overreach" by the Biden administration.
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(Second column, 8th story, link)
Related stories: USA BREAKDOWN: AIRPORT LINES STRETCH INTO WEEKEND... House rejects 'Homeland' funding bill... Shutdown continues... Senators on Easter break...
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Bitter rifts have opened over the defense secretary's campaign to reverse policies that he says are prejudiced against white officers.
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The SAVE America Act, which the president wants to use to address issues like voting and transgender surgeries, allows him to try to shift the conversation from worries over inflation and war.
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We examine claims justifying its restrictions, comparisons to current voting laws and warnings about its potential impact.
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Women in their 60s and beyond will likely play a key role in choosing which Democrat will face Senator Susan Collins: Gov. Janet Mills, 78, or Graham Platner, 41.
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Juries in California and New Mexico have found the tech giants Alphabet and Meta liable for knowingly causing harm to children and teens who used their social media platforms. Over the course of the trials, documents revealed that tech companies were well aware of the addictive properties of their social media products and exploited these properties to increase their profits. "They take advantage of the undeveloped frontal cortex of young people and their emotional need for validation by showing them things, not that they want to see, but what they can't look away from," says attorney Matthew P. Bergman, who represented the plaintiffs in the California case. Youth advocate Zamaan Qureshi, who testified in the New Mexico case against Meta, says the verdicts indicate that "Meta's house of cards is falling, and it is absolutely clear that they will be held accountable."
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Bipartisan talks continued, but a deal to reopen the department remained elusive ahead of a major spring travel weekend, and as lawmakers looked toward their own two-week break.
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Rami Khouri, Palestinian American journalist and distinguished public policy fellow at the American University of Beirut, speaks with Democracy Now! about the historical context of Western colonialism in the Middle East amid the war against Iran. Khouri says the U.S.-Israeli attack is the latest act "causing people across the world to look at the idea of … Western liberal democratic tradition as a hoax."
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