Live updates: Trump's legislation hangs in the balance as he feuds with Elon Musk
President Donald Trump is continuing to try to shore up support in the Senate for his massive tax and immigration package as he feuds with Elon Musk over the impact the legislation will have on the national debt. Trump has spent much of the week lobbying wavering Republican senators to support the bill, which narrowly passed the House last month and includes much of his second-term legislative agenda. On Friday, Trump plans to sign more executive orders and participate in a swearing-in ceremony for the Navy secretary before heading to his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Across the government, the Trump administration is scrambling to rehire many federal employees dismissed under DOGE's staff-slashing initiatives after wiping out entire offices, in some cases imperiling key services such as weather forecasting and the drug approval process.
Immigrants from the dozen countries targeted by President Donald Trump's travel ban have put down roots in all 50 states, many escaping violence or political instability in their homelands. They left spouses, children and friends behind, hoping one day to be reunited.
Overnight, those hopes have been shattered. Even plans for visits to or from relatives — for graduations, weddings or funerals — are now very uncertain.
Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie (R), an ally turned critic of President Donald Trump, says he recently reached out to another target of the president's ire: rock legend Bruce Springsteen.
Springsteen opened his European tour by calling Trump 'unfit.' The president fired back, dismissing The Boss as a 'dried out 'prune' of a rocker.' As a regular Trump punching bag, Christie could relate.
When the Trump administration tried to take away Harvard's ability to enroll foreign students, the university filed a lawsuit, and a federal judge blocked the order the next day.
But even as that case — and another lawsuit the university has filed against the administration — winds through the courts, President Donald Trump had already made his next move, with a proclamation Wednesday aiming to keep international students out of Harvard.
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