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5 things to know for April 8: Deportations, Gaza mass grave, Gun control, Military official fired, Measles outbreak

5 things to know for April 8: Deportations, Gaza mass grave, Gun control, Military official fired, Measles outbreak

Yahoo08-04-2025
The DC Circuit Court of Appeals has reinstated two former top federal labor protection officials who were fired by the Trump administration — even though they worked for independent government agencies. With the return of Cathy Harris, chairwoman of the Merit Systems Protection Board, and Gwynne Wilcox, a member of the National Labor Relations Board, a quorum has been restored and their offices may once again process cases involving federal employment disputes.
Here's what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On with Your Day.
The Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a significant victory yesterday when it ruled that he may invoke the 1798 Alien Enemies Act and give immigration officials the wartime authority to rapidly deport alleged gang members. The unsigned decision also noted that going forward, people who are deported should be told they are subject to the act so they have 'reasonable time' to bring habeas complaints. By granting Trump's request, the high court tossed out a district judge's order, which temporarily blocked the president from enforcing the act against five Venezuelans who sued. Chief Justice John Roberts also temporarily paused a court-imposed midnight deadline to return Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to the US. ICE mistakenly deported the Maryland man to El Salvador where he was placed in a notorious mega-prison. The Trump administration has conceded in court filings that Abrego Garcia was deported 'because of an administrative error' but claims it cannot get him back because he's in Salvadoran custody.
Newly released audio and video contradicts the Israeli military's account of the March 23 attack on first responders in southern Gaza. On that day, an ambulance crew in Rafah disappeared, prompting the dispatch of a convoy of emergency vehicles. The fate of those emergency workers would also remain a mystery for over a week until rescue teams were allowed into the area. That's when they discovered a mass grave containing the bodies of 15 first responders and their crushed emergency vehicles. The Israel Defense Forces claimed the convoy was moving suspiciously, without headlights or flashing lights, toward Israeli troops and that members of the emergency teams were militants. But a video found on one of the bodies showed the convoy's lights were on, their vehicles were clearly marked and the rescuers were wearing reflective emergency responder uniforms when the Israeli troops opened fire. The IDF said it has begun re-investigating the incident.
The Supreme Court declined to rule on the constitutionality of a New York law that requires residents to have 'good moral character' to carry handguns. The law defined that term as 'having the essential character, temperament and judgment necessary to be entrusted with a weapon and to use it only in a manner that does not endanger oneself or others.' The court's decision, which was a victory for New York officials and gun control groups, also left in place most of the state's ban on carrying weapons in 'sensitive' public locations, such as government buildings, schools, hospitals, stadiums and Times Square. Gun rights groups had challenged the law, claiming it was too broad.
President Trump has fired Vice Adm. Shoshana Chatfield, the US military representative to the NATO Military Committee, according to Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee. It was not immediately clear why Chatfield was fired. The Senate unanimously confirmed her to the post in December 2023. A Navy pilot, Chatfield earned her 'wings of gold' in 1989 and was deployed in helicopter detachments to the western Pacific and the Arabian Gulf. According to her official bio, Chatfield was the recipient of numerous honors, including the Distinguished Service Medal, the Bronze Star and commendation medals from the Navy, Army and Air Force. She also taught political science at the US Air Force Academy and was the first female president of the US Naval War College. Her firing was just the latest in an ongoing purge of senior military brass.
As the ongoing measles outbreak continues to spread, the public health response has been hindered by cuts to federal funding and staffing. Since the start of the year, at least 631 measles cases have been reported in the US and two children have died. Yet, only three members of the CDC are currently meeting with state and local officials to determine how to respond to the multi-state outbreak. Last week, the Trump administration announced sweeping layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services, including an estimated 2,400 at the CDC. Additionally, over $11 billion in grants to state and local health departments were pulled back. As a result, New Mexico terminated contracts for 20 workers who were helping with vaccine orders and more than 50 immunization clinics in Dallas were canceled.
Florida wins NCAA men's basketball championshipThe Gators came from behind last night to defeat the Houston Cougars 65-63. This is Florida's third national title; it would've been Houston's first.
Celebrity feud endsMadonna says she and Elton John 'finally buried the hatchet' over the weekend after trading barbs for decades. When she went backstage following his performance on 'Saturday Night Live,' John reportedly asked for her forgiveness — and she gave it.
Saturday … what a day'Happy Days' stars Ron Howard, Henry Winkler, Anson Williams and Don Most reunited last Saturday at Steel City Con outside of Pittsburgh. The cast joined a panel discussion about their hit TV series and were honored by the Allegheny County Council, which declared April 5 as Happy Days Day.
Tracy Chapman is backAnd she's belatedly celebrating the 35th anniversary of her self-titled debut album by re-releasing it in vinyl. The usually reclusive singer last returned to the limelight at the 2024 Grammys to perform her hit song 'Fast Car' with country star Luke Combs, who also released a cover of it.
Archaeologists uncover ancient king's tombThe massive limestone burial chamber was discovered in January in Abydos, Egypt. Although it did not contain skeletal remains, researchers say it's likely the resting place of a mystery king who ruled between 1640 and 1540 BC.
$75,000That's how much the NBA fined Memphis Grizzlies star Ja Morant for making a gun gesture with his fingers during a game. This was the second time he'd made the gesture despite being warned not to do so.
'We're just getting screwed.'
— Matthew Schodorf, the owner of Café de Leche, a coffee shop in Los Angeles, on how businesses that sell coffee in the US will be affected by President Trump's tariffs.
Check your local forecast here>>>
Missing 2-year-old found in MichiganWatch the moment police located the toddler in a ditch near an interstate.
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Bessent: Trump tariffs set to ‘boomerang back' to higher rates if deals not reached
Bessent: Trump tariffs set to ‘boomerang back' to higher rates if deals not reached

The Hill

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Bessent: Trump tariffs set to ‘boomerang back' to higher rates if deals not reached

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Sunday that countries will see their respective tariff rates 'boomerang back' on Aug. 1 to the higher levels announced three months ago, if they don't strike a deal with the U.S. sooner. In Sunday show interviews, Bessent doubled down on President Trump's comments Friday, in which the president told reporters that the 'reciprocal' tariffs — first announced on April 2 and then paused for 90 days a week later — would officially take effect on Aug. 1, not July 9, when the 90-day pause is set to expire. 'We'll see,' Bessent said on CNN's 'State of the Union,' when asked 'what happens' on July 9. 'I'm not going to give away the playbook because we're going to be very busy over the next 72 hours.' Bessent said Trump will 'be sending letters to some of our trading partners, saying that if you don't move things along, then on Aug. 1, you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level.' 'So, I think we're going to see a lot of deals very quickly,' the secretary continued. 'And, you know, Dana [Bash], we're going to send out probably 100 letters to small countries where we don't have very much trade, and most of those are already at the baseline 10 percent.' Bessent insisted, however, that the new effective date is neither a new deadline nor a pause on the original deadline announced three months ago. 'It's not a new deadline,' Bessent said on CNN. 'We are saying, this is when it's happening. If you want to speed things up, have at it. If you want to go back to the old rate, that's your choice.' In an interview on 'Fox News Sunday,' anchor Shannon Bream asked if it is 'fair' to call the new date a 'bit of a pause.' 'I don't think it's a bit of a pause because I think what's happened is, there's a lot of congestion going into the home stretch,' he said. Trump has 'created maximum leverage' ahead of the deadline to strike a deal to stave off the higher reciprocal tariffs, Bessent told her. 'So, by telling our trading partners that they could boomerang back to the April 2nd date, I think it's really going to move things along the next couple of days and weeks,' Bessent said.

Hassett on healthcare coverage cuts: ‘Best way to get insurance is to get a job'
Hassett on healthcare coverage cuts: ‘Best way to get insurance is to get a job'

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hassett on healthcare coverage cuts: ‘Best way to get insurance is to get a job'

National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said the best way for people to get health insurance is to get a job while discussing the massive tax cut legislation, which dramatically upends health care, signed into law by President Trump. During an appearance on CBS News's 'Face The Nation,' Hasset was asked about Americans' concerns that about 12 million Americans could lose Medicaid coverage, according to a report by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). However, Hasset said that the CBO made a similar claim when the Trump administration aimed to add work requirement waivers to Obamacare in 2017, stating that the number of insured people increased instead. 'The bottom line is, the best way to get insurance is to get a job,' he said. 'And we've got a 'big, beautiful bill' that's going to create a lot of job creation and a lot of insurance, and the CBO is just not accounting for that.' The bill enacts the country's first-ever requirement for adults under the age of 65 — including low-income parents of children older than 14 — to prove they work, volunteer or attend school at least 80 hours per month. 'The idea that that's going to cause a massive hemorrhaging in availability of insurance doesn't make a lot of sense to us,' he said. Hassett also claimed that 5 million of those who are losing insurance have other insurance, which he says the CBO did not take into account 'They're people who have two types of insurance,' he added. 'And so therefore, if they lose one, they're still insured.' Hassett insisted that no one will lose their insurance. 'It's sound budgetary politics. And I think that nobody's going to lose their insurance,' he said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Harvard professor union will ‘strongly' oppose any deal between school and Trump, members say
Harvard professor union will ‘strongly' oppose any deal between school and Trump, members say

Boston Globe

time26 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Harvard professor union will ‘strongly' oppose any deal between school and Trump, members say

Now, with the university in secretive negotiations as it seeks to stave off Already, the group is pursuing multiple legal challenges to the Trump administration. Members have held rallies, signed petitions, and published op-eds decrying Trump's attacks on institutional independence. 'I expect that the AAUP and the faculty will react very strongly against any sort of deal, precisely because the independence of the university is vital to everything we do,' said classics professor Richard Thomas, an at-large member of Harvard's AAUP chapter. Union members say they're concerned about the university's approach to its talks with Trump. Though the president has said Harvard has Advertisement Harvard officials did not respond to a request for comment for this article. Harvard's faculty cannot support any deal made without their input, the university's AAUP president Kirsten Weld told the Globe. She argues that Harvard administrators never should have entered Trump's negotiations in the first place, because no private university should take orders from the government or make sacrifices to appease it. 'The red line of academic freedom — the university has already crossed that by allowing what is happening now to happen," said Weld, a history professor. 'The federal government has put a gun to the head of the university and is demanding an ever shifting set of changes, some of which are baldly illegal.' Harvard professors don't have the right to collective bargaining because a Professors would 'strongly' protest deal In April, universities nationwide celebrated Harvard President Alan Garber for refusing to agree to an Advertisement But Garber may have to make some concessions in order to get a deal with Trump, who has called for drastic reforms. Over the past several months, his administration has slashed around $2.8 billion in federal funding from Harvard, and prevented international students from traveling to the United States to study at the school. Vincent Brown, an at-large member of Harvard's AAUP chapter, said that if a deal is announced, members will likely call an emergency meeting to discuss potential next steps. The AAUP chapter would take a vote on any sort of collective action in response to a Trump deal, Brown said. A walkout is not off the table, but it's too soon to predict how professors will want to respond, he said. The timing of the negotiations and subsequent deal, which come when most professors are on summer break, is making organizing challenging, members told the Globe. 'Everybody is very keen to maintain our ability to teach our students, conduct our research, and run our university without government interference,' Brown said. No matter what kind of deal emerges, Harvard's AAUP chapter can count on the unwavering support of the national AAUP, president Todd Wolfson told the Globe. 'I one hundred percent support faculty taking collective action to respond to what they think are fundamental threats to Harvard, to their own work, or to higher education at large — period, end of sentence," Wolfson said last week. Crimson Courage, a Harvard alumni group advocating for institutional independence in the face of Trump's threats, also said they support faculty opposition to a deal with the White House. 'We have the backs of the professors because they should be able to conduct research without having any restrictions on their topics,' said Evelyn Kim, a Harvard alumna who studied sociology. Advertisement Professors not involved in negotiations Harvard AAUP members said they've had to receive news of closed-door negotiations in Washington, D.C. through reporting in national media outlets, as opposed to receiving updates from university officials. Top Harvard officials are setting an alarming precent by not including faculty and students in negotiations over how the university operates, Wolfson said. 'One would assume they're in advanced negotiations with the Trump administration, and the fact they have not talked to their faculty about it is alarming,' Wolfson said. Most Harvard professors oppose negotiating with Trump on university policies, Brown said, citing a 'The most important thing that we can say is that 70-plus percent of the faculty do not want to strike a deal that they don't think the Trump administration will respect anyway,' Brown said. 'So we're going to start from that position of plurality and then figure out what we're going to do.' Claire Thornton can be reached at

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