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The administration says restrictions are necessary because the government “lacks the sufficient information to assess the risks they pose to the United States.”
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The memo asserts that former White House aides “abused the power of Presidential signatures” to conceal Biden’s cognitive decline.
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The order purports to restrict the entry of foreign nationals who plan to attend Harvard University.
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An April military commission opinion suppressing torture-tainted evidence is now publicly available.
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The executive order directs the attorney general to “maximize the use of federal resources,” including “military and national security assets,” to “aggressively police crime.”
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Citing the War Powers Resolution, the letter notifies Congress of U.S. military actions taken in Yemen at the direction of the president.
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Emails obtained by Lawfare reveal that DOE instructed employees to gather information on business dealings between contractors and law firms.
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The panel declined to launch a probe of the interim U.S. attorney for an alleged conflict of interest.
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The order imposes a 10 percent tariff on all U.S. imports and additional reciprocal tariffs on approximately 56 countries as well as the EU.
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The Court holds that commingling funds, “without more, cannot satisfy the commercial nexus requirement of the FSIA’s expropriation exception.”
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The executive order directs agencies to work closely with DOGE, limiting “the overbearing and burdensome administrative state.”
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The order also terminates the Presidential Management Fellows Program and several committees across various agencies.