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G.O.P. leaders succeeded in pressuring fellow senators who initially supported the measure that would have limited President Trump's military authority in Venezuela.
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Montana officials defended the actions of law enforcement officers who did not have a warrant when they responded to a possibly suicidal Army veteran.
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The agent shot a Venezuelan man who was resisting arrest, an official said. Protesters and law enforcement officers clashed for hours, as city officials urged people to go home.
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Mary Peltola's entry into the Alaska Senate race is a building block in an electoral strategy Democrats have been working on for months.
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Interviews with veteran prosecutors illustrate how the president's pardons have frustrated Justice Department personnel, who can spend years building a case.
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A day after funding termination notices went out to more than 2,000 programs nationwide, the administration reversed itself and reinstated the money.
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Denmark's foreign minister left the White House complex saying that his country had a "fundamental disagreement" with President Trump, as several NATO countries sent troops to Greenland.
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The Justice Department and whistle-blowers accused the major health insurer of overbilling the government for about $1 billion under the private plans.
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Diplomats from Denmark and Greenland agreed to set up a "high-level working group" after the White House talks, but said there was little consensus so far.
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Months after the partisan clash that led to the longest shutdown in history, lawmakers have agreed on spending bills that look far different from what the president wanted.
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Faisal Islam says the Labour argues the difference in its plans this time is that the planning has come first.
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(Third column, 11th story, link)
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(Top headline, 1st story, link)
Related stories: Emergency Alerts in Washington, NYC...
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"It's legal intimidation and physical intimidation meant to get you to shut up," said Sen. Elissa Slotkin, who organized the November video on disobeying illegal orders.
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Trump is escalating his immigration crackdown as he gears up for a second year back in office.
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(Third column, 13th story, link)
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(First column, 19th story, link)
Related stories: Dem Under Federal Investigation After Video About Refusing Illegal Orders... Rep. Jason Crow contacted by DOJ... Mark Kelly's battle with Hegseth prompts presidential talk... Inside Schumer's plot to retake Senate...
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A panel in Los Angeles sided with Gov. Gavin Newsom in a decision that will help Democrats counter Republican gerrymandering in Texas. Republicans are expected to appeal.
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Federal officials said the move was meant to discourage immigration by people who they deemed likely to rely on public benefits.
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The Christmas attack did not target the Islamic State, observers say.
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(Second column, 4th story, link)
Related stories: FBI RAIDS WASH POST REPORTER'S HOME... HIGHLY UNUSUAL AND AGGRESSIVE... PHONE AND WATCH SEIZED...
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As the United States pursues gunboat diplomacy, Europe and South America are choosing cooperation instead.
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The question in the case was not a mail-in ballot rule itself but whether political candidates have the right to challenge the rules governing the vote count in their election.
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A new report finds the number of people in ICE detention has nearly doubled in Trump's first year back in office, driven by indiscriminate arrest policies that have locked up more and more people without criminal records, "an unprecedented situation for immigration detention." We break down the numbers with Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council, which published the report. Reichlin-Melnick explains that ICE's annual budget has approximately quintupled, even as 2025 marked the agency's deadliest year so far. Four more people have already died in detention in just the first two weeks of 2026. "Crucially, all of this has been slower than they wanted," he adds. "Their hope was to have over 100,000 people in detention by today; they've hit 70,000."
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(First column, 2nd story, link)
Related stories: Inside Schumer's plot to retake Senate...
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The former congresswoman is the latest top-tier recruit for Democrats, who face a difficult Senate map this year as they try to retake control of the chamber.
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The vote to open a war powers debate, a pair of attempted veto overrides and a split on health care suggested a greater appetite among Republicans to challenge the president.
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After an immigration agent fatally shot a woman, Minnesotans have called for the officer to be prosecuted. But previous attempts to charge federal officers at the state level have failed.
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As the Trump administration expands its immigration crackdown nationwide, President Trump is simultaneously creating new pathways for wealthy noncitizens to obtain U.S. visas. Earlier this week, Trump officially launched a program allowing affluent visitors to fast-track permission to live and work in the United States. For a $1 million payment, applicants can receive a so-called Trump Gold Card, which promises to speed up U.S. residency applications "in record time." The administration says it will also soon offer a $5 million "Trump Platinum Card" that would allow participants to avoid paying some U.S. taxes. The announcement comes as new rules published this week would require visitors from 42 countries in the visa waiver program to submit up to five years of social media history, along with phone numbers, email addresses and biometric data.
Shev Dalal-Dheini, director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, says the changes show that "if you're wealthy, if you can pay to play, then you're welcome to come to the United States. But if you're not — if you're coming as a tourist, or you're coming to seek humanitarian protection — then we're going to make it much tougher for you to come here and really put a lot of hurdles along the way in the guise of security and vetting."
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