Harvard, Apple and Trump
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From day to day, Donald Trump’s second term often seems like a roman candle of grievance, with the administration spraying attacks in all directions on institutions and individuals the president considers hostile.
Frustrated by judicial rulings during his second term, President Trump and allies have lashed out at the courts in a growing pressure campaign.
Since Mr. Trump’s embrace of the new Syrian leader, Israeli airstrikes on the country have subsided. Israel has launched more than 700 attacks on Syria in the months since Islamist rebels toppled the dictator Bashar al-Assad, one of them a recent airstrike that landed just feet from the presidential palace in Damascus.
In Washington, Congressional Republicans, including all from Texas, passed what President Trump has called the "big, beautiful bill." It makes permanent the tax cuts approved during the President's first term.
Cameron Hamilton's dismissal was seen as punishment for his testimony about FEMA, a view the White House did not contradict. But sources familiar with the situation told Reuters that Trump's allies already wanted him out.
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As President Trump blurs the lines between politics and business — and threatens steep tariffs on trade partners — governments feel compelled to favor Trump-related projects.
The U.S. deported a Guatemalan man to Mexico while he was seeking asylum for fear of being harmed in those countries, court documents said.
On Friday the president threatened a 50% tariff on the European Union and a 25% levy on smart phones if companies failed to move production to the U.S.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement that lifting the sanctions would “advance Syria’s recovery and reconstruction efforts” and “facilitate the provision of electricity, energy, water, and sanitation, and enable a more effective humanitarian response” in the country.
The Trump administration on Friday night withdrew its request to pause an order by a federal judge in San Francisco that blocked the federal government from implementing large-scale reductions in […]
President Donald Trump signed four nuclear energy-related executive orders on Friday that will speed up reactor testing, allow the Departments of Energy and Defense to build nuclear reactors on federally owned land,
President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" is heading to the Senate. When will no tax on overtime, tips begin? What to know.
Veterans, in particular, are seeking free legal work from firms that cut deals with the White House like Skadden, Kirkland & Ellis and Paul Weiss.