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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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Reporter Ken Klippenstein's latest investigation into the inner workings of the Trump regime finds that immigration enforcement agencies ICE and Border Patrol have relaxed recruitment and deployment guidelines in an effort to fill the administration's sweeping deportation goals. "There's splits within the agency about the shooting [of Renee Good] and the general mission," says Klippenstein, whose reporting is based on leaked documents and interviews with officials from the Department of Homeland Security. Because "they're worried about sending more experienced agents there who might not agree with the mission," he explains, DHS is heavily recruiting volunteers with little vetting or training to carry out its deportation mandate. "They have more money than they know what to do with, and they need to fill those roles, and they're doing everything they can to create them so that the actual personnel head count can match the resources that they now have."
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(Third column, 4th story, link)
Related stories: SHOCK VIDEO: ICE TERRORIZES ANOTHER WOMAN... Pentagon to dispatch military lawyers to Minneapolis... ROGAN BLASTS 'GESTAPO'... NATIVE AMERICANS ARRESTED... REPORT: AGENT OFFERS CASH FOR NAMES... NOEM IMPEACHMENT PUSH RACKS UP SUPPORT...
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(Top headline, 1st story, link)
Related stories: Emergency Alerts in Washington, NYC...
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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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(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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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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Republican election officials welcome the review, which relies on a federal verification tool, but they say they have not discovered a major problem when it comes to noncitizen voters.
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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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