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The president's name did not come up as he watched the arguments over his birthright citizenship executive order from the public viewing gallery.
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The chancellor says the US president does not have a "clear plan" to exit the conflict.
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(Top headline, 7th story, link)
Related stories: Supreme Court: Case to limit birthright citizenship... President accused of trying to bully judges to their faces! HE STORMS OUT OF HEARING... Chief Justice Challenges DOJ... 'New world. Same Constitution'... Sotomayor: Do You Want to 'Unnaturalize People?' RUBIO MAY NEED TO SURRENDER PASSPORT; Neither parent was citizen at time of his birth... Asian Immigrants Would Be Hit Hardest...
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President Trump appeared in court, watching as key members of the court's conservative majority raised questions about his efforts to limit birthright citizenship.
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"Look at that gas pump," a new ad from a liberal group says. It is targeting Representative Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin over his support for the war effort.
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(Top headline, 7th story, link)
Related stories: Supreme Court: Case to limit birthright citizenship... President accused of trying to bully judges to their faces! HE STORMS OUT OF HEARING... Chief Justice Challenges DOJ... 'New world. Same Constitution'... Sotomayor: Do You Want to 'Unnaturalize People?' Asian Immigrants Would Be Hit Hardest...
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The department's public affairs office is seeking 30-second "selfie videos," part of a push to pressure lawmakers to strike a deal.
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Experts warn that enforcing President Trump's order to limit birthright citizenship would require building an expensive and fragmented verification system.
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(Third column, 3rd story, link)
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The case could redefine who is considered American in ways not seen for more than 150 years.
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(First column, 12th story, link)
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(First column, 6th story, link)
Related stories: SURVEY: Most Just 3 Months Away From Collapse... Are we facing food shortages?
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(Main headline, 5th story, link)
Related stories: SEDER AND SIRENS OIL PRICE COULD BANKRUPT AIRLINES UAE TO JOIN FIGHT GROUND INVASION THIS WEEKEND? STRIPPERS SPILL DEPLOYMENT DATE IRAN DENIES TRUMP 'CEASEFIRE'
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The slow-moving A-10 "Warthog" is a so-called close-air support plane that could be used to help U.S. ground forces seize territory near the Strait of Hormuz.
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It's even more complicated than capturing a Venezuelan president.
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President Trump's presence in the court puts him face to face with justices whom he has tried to bully and intimidate.
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U.S. commanders have kept many troops away from bases in the region to protect them from Iran's ballistic missile attacks.
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As Christians around the world prepare to celebrate Easter Sunday, we go to Palestine to speak to Reverend Munther Isaac, pastor of the Lutheran Church in Ramallah and director of the Bethlehem Institute for Peace and Justice, located in the city of Jesus Christ's birth. This year's Easter preparations come against the backdrop of the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran, which many Christian nationalists in the U.S., including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, are framing in extremist religious terms. Reverend Isaac calls the Christian Zionism espoused by Hegseth and others "a theology of war, of violence" and highlights the efforts of Pope Leo XIV, the U.S.-born head of the Catholic Church who has come out stridently against both the war and Hegseth's rhetoric, to promote peace in the region.
Isaac also comments on Israeli authorities' recent attempt to prevent the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on Palm Sunday due to Israel's ban on gatherings at religious sites during the war. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly granted access to the church following global backlash. But, "do we really need permission from an occupying authority?" asks Isaac. "Israel does not have sovereignty over, should not have sovereignty over Jerusalem. … We have been worshiping here for centuries, uninterrupted."
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We take a look at how war in the Middle East is impacting the environment in "one of the most water-stressed regions in the world," with Kaveh Madani, the renowned U.N. scientist, former Iranian politician and recipient of the 2026 Stockholm Water Prize. Madani discusses threats to civil water infrastructure in the Gulf region, how the Strait of Hormuz crisis highlights consumer countries' overreliance on oil and gas, and his prize-winning work on the global effects of "water bankruptcy." Madani ties the antiwar and climate struggles together and calls for wider popular resistance to the long-term environmental harms of global warfare. "All the weapons that have been produced have had carbon footprints — the missiles that fly, the jets, the tanks that are burned, the oil fields that are being attacked and the gas fields that are being burned. All of these are producing a lot of greenhouse gas emissions," he says. "They are going to impact us in the long term."
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Increases in the National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage mean 2.7 million workers will be paid more from April.
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An emerging Republican plan to skirt a Democratic filibuster and fund an entire department without congressional appropriations would be the latest example of surrendering power to the White House.
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Despite political tensions between the US and UK, the King will travel to Washington next month.
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The government's effort to collect the names and phone numbers of Jewish people on campus as it investigates antisemitism has upset some people who worry about how the information will be used.
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In the tiny town of Castlewood, S.D., where everyone knows the Noems, the prevailing sense was that people can't help but feel bad for Bryon Noem after a tabloid photo leak.
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Four visiting senators urged Taiwan to break an impasse over a $40 billion budget proposal, highlighting concerns in Washington about the threat from China.
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(First column, 1st story, link)
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After resisting calls for public hearings for weeks, House Republicans have called the secretary of defense to testify at a budget hearing in late April for the first time since the attacks on Iran began.
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The Trump administration says the United States has struck 11,000 targets in Iran since the U.S.-Israeli war on the country began. Critics have questioned the accuracy of the Maven system, the artificial intelligence system used by the military to speed up the process of identifying targets.
"Imagine Google Earth for war, a map of war with white dots, infused with information like elevation, coordinate, what is precisely there, whether it's friendly or foe," says Katrina Manson, a reporter for Bloomberg News and author of Project Maven: A Marine Colonel, His Team, and the Dawn of AI Warfare.
The Pentagon launched Project Maven in 2017. Google was an initial partner, but the company pulled out after over 3,000 Google employees signed a letter opposing the work. The big data firm Palantir then took over the project and has run it ever since.
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A memo that President Trump signed on Friday ordering the Department of Homeland Security to pay T.S.A. officers did not specify whether they would be paid on a regular schedule.
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Speaker Mike Johnson said a vote would happen late Friday night on an eight-week measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
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As the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran continues, we look at how the Pentagon is using artificial intelligence in its operations. The system, known as Project Maven, relies on technology by Palantir and also incorporates the AI model Claude built by Anthropic. Israel has used similar AI targeting programs in Iran, as well as in Gaza and Lebanon.
Craig Jones, an expert on modern warfare, says AI technology is helping militaries speed up the "kill chain," the process of identifying, approving and striking targets. "You're reducing a massive human workload of tens of thousands of hours into seconds and minutes. You're reducing workflows, and you're automating human-made targeting decisions in ways which open up all kinds of problematic legal, ethical and political questions," says Jones.
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Police reforms will take center stage in Congress on Wednesday as Senate Republicans unveil their effort to address racial disparities in law enforcement and Democrats in the House of Representatives advance their own, more sweeping proposal.
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The Democratic National Committee's council on climate change irked party leadership when it published policy recommendations this month that ventured beyond presidential candidate Joe Biden's plan, according to three people familiar with the matter.
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