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(Second column, 3rd story, link)
Related stories: Treasury yields jump on prospect of USA refunding tariff money... Gold price hits record high... MOODY'S Economist Warns 'On the Brink' of Recession...
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(Third column, 7th story, link)
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Lawmakers are continuing their inquiry into Mr. Epstein, the disgraced financier, despite the Trump administration's efforts to quell public demand for information.
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(Second column, 12th story, link)
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The Home Office is proactively contacting foreign students to warn them of the consequences of overstaying a visa for the first time.
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(Second column, 16th story, link)
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President Trump's announcement came days after Rudolph W. Giuliani, his former lawyer and a onetime New York City mayor, was hurt in a car accident.
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Lawmakers haven't settled on a plan to pass spending legislation. The GOP will need to find Democratic votes in the Senate.
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Trump announced he will bestow the nation's highest civilian honor on the former New York mayor, his longtime ally, days after Giuliani was injured in a car crash.
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(First column, 9th story, link)
Related stories: Tiny African country detaining 5 deported migrants asks USA for $500 million...
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(Second column, 13th story, link)
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The president and his advisers have suggested they will fight a federal appeals court's ruling that found many of the administration's tariffs to be illegal.
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Leicestershire Police confirmed it received a report about an ice cream van outside a polling station.
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What happened in Geneva this month bodes ill for future global environmental agreements.
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Nadler, who has represented New York for more than three decades, will not seek reelection at next year's midterms, according to a person familiar with the matter.
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If President Trump's actions were intended to drive a law-and-order wedge between Democratic big-city leaders and their constituents, it has also exposed a division in his own coalition.
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World Liberty Financial's cryptocurrency token fell short of investors' hopes. But a previous deal paved the way for a payment to the Trump family of potentially hundreds of millions of dollars.
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(Second column, 14th story, link)
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(First column, 5th story, link)
Related stories: Trump's attempt to dismiss health concerns backfires as new theories grow... Camera-shy on golf trip amid rumors and Vance brutal bid for power... Russian State TV Weighs In: 'Queen Also Had Bruise and Then Died'...
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The president, who has targeted collective bargaining contracts for nearly one million government employees, has said their functions touch on national security.
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We speak with Rachel Griffin Accurso, the educator known to millions around the world as Ms. Rachel, who has become a leading advocate for children in Gaza. Her YouTube channel for young children became wildly popular during the COVID-19 pandemic and today has more than 16 million subscribers. Since the start of Israel's war on Gaza, Accurso has used her social media reach to speak out for Palestinian children facing hunger, disease, injury and death. She has been hailed as the heir to Mister Rogers, the legendary PBS children's entertainer who also used his position in families' living rooms to speak out on social issues.
"I see all children as precious and equal. My deep care for children doesn't stop at any border," Accurso tells Democracy Now! in a wide-ranging interview.
We also speak with Tareq Hailat, director of the Treatment Abroad Program for the Palestine Children's Relief Fund, who helped connect Accurso with a 3-year-old girl from Gaza named Rahaf, who lost both her legs in an Israeli airstrike. Accurso and Rahaf filmed a video in which they sing and dance together.
Hailat describes Accurso as "one of the most significant, if not the most significant, voices for Palestinian human rights" in the world. "Her advocacy has touched the hearts of people that never would have ever heard about Gaza or the Palestinian children, and that's why her voice is so vital," he says.
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The Supreme Court ruled in 1989 that burning an American flag is speech protected by the First Amendment. President Trump says it should be punished.
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(Top headline, 2nd story, link)
Related stories: Trump ends free-market capitalism that enriched America...
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In 1980, historian Howard Zinn published his classic work, A People's History of the United States. The book would go on to sell over a million copies and change the way many look at history in America. We begin today's special with highlights from a production of Howard Zinn's Voices of a People's History of the United States, where Zinn introduced dramatic readings from history. Alfre Woodard reads the words of labor activist Mother Jones; Howard's son Jeff Zinn reads the words of IWW poet and organizer Arturo Giovannitti; Marisa Tomei reads the words of the women's suffrage leader Harriet Hanson; and James Earl Jones reads from Zinn's A People's History of the United States.
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(First column, 15th story, link)
Related stories: Crime Festers in Republican States While Their Troops Patrol Washington...
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(First column, 6th story, link)
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Critics warned the president was making a dangerous power grab with fascist echoes.
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The president's firing of Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook and other cases could serve as major tests of how far the high court is willing to go to bless his assertion of executive authority.
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Two men and a woman are arrested as people protest against migrants being housed in a hotel in Epping.
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An appellate court ruling could stymie the import taxes that Trump has used to raise revenue, negotiate with foreign leaders and even head off global conflicts.
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It was unclear which of Epstein's victims is expected to attend the meeting after a federal probe into the convicted sex trafficker ended in August 2019 with the financier's death.
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A G.O.P. request for information and interviews comes amid Trump administration claims that crime in the capital is worse than it appears.
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We speak with UNICEF spokesperson Tess Ingram in Gaza City, where the world's top authority on hunger has formally declared a famine. The United Nations-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, says the "catastrophic" situation in Gaza's largest urban center puts about half a million Palestinians at risk of starving to death. Many aid agencies have lifesaving supplies sitting in warehouses outside Gaza that they are unable to distribute due to Israeli restrictions. This comes as Israel has escalated its destruction of Gaza City with the intent of forcibly displacing residents further south.
"Hopefully world leaders will take it and use it as a catalyst to finally do something to try and get more aid to these children," Ingram says of the famine declaration. "What we are asking for is for us to be allowed to do our jobs. We are being hampered every step of the way at the moment."
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The government would establish a new and independent body, with the aim of hearing cases more quickly.
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Family and community members are mourning 52-year-old Roberto Carlos Montoya Valdez, a father and grandfather from Guatemala who died while attempting to escape an anti-immigrant raid at a Home Depot in California last week. Montoya, a day laborer who had lived and worked in the United States for about three years, was struck and killed by a car while fleeing across a nearby freeway. Democracy Now! speaks with Montoya's wife and daughter, Ana María Vásquez and Ana Victoria Montoya, at their home in Guatemala. "We want people to remember my dad in the same way we will remember him: as a loving, respectful, brave man," says Ana Victoria. "He died because of these injustices, this persecution."
At least two men have now died while attempting to flee the Trump administration's massive expansion of federal immigration enforcement. Authorities have yet to confirm which agencies or groups were behind the raid. "If it was indeed a fact that Roberto Carlos was being chased by an individual into the highway, the community, the family, needs to know the truth. We need to, most of all, bring justice," says Pablo Alvarado, the co-executive director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network. NDLON is calling on Home Depot to release any video footage it has, and demanding an immediate and full investigation of the events that led to Montoya's death.
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President Trump says he is working on a "deal" to end the Russia-Ukraine war by hosting a series of meetings between the U.S., European Union, Russia's Vladimir Putin and Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky. Putin is insisting Russia keep areas of Ukraine that it has seized, including the long-contested Donbas region, while Zelensky is asking the U.S. for security guarantees to prevent future invasion by its powerful neighbor. We host a conversation with two political scientists, University of Chicago professor John Mearsheimer and Ukrainian democratic socialist Denys Pilash, about the likely outcome of the talks and the roots of the conflict. Mearsheimer says "the sides remain so far apart" when it comes to the possibility of a ceasefire during peace negotiations that "the best outcome would be to settle this war now." Pilash, on the other hand, says there are still measures that can be taken to pressure Russia to agree to a ceasefire and to secure more favorable postwar terms for Ukraine.
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Jess Michaels lives with the PTSD from her 1991 assault by the serial sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. She is part of a national chorus of voices calling on the Trump administration to release files related to the federal case against Epstein, who reportedly died by suicide while awaiting trial in 2019. Trump's personal relationship with Epstein has been under heavy scrutiny since he broke a campaign promise to publicize details about the Epstein case and instead moved to cut a new deal with convicted Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell. The decision has fractured his right-wing base, but as demands for transparency grow within the MAGA movement, Michaels says survivors are still struggling to be heard. "You never hear the words 'Epstein victim' or 'Epstein survivor' out of this White House," she says, slamming the politicization of survivors' pain and trauma. "The victims of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell have been speaking up for almost two decades," Michaels says. "It is appalling that there is so little justice for this issue."
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Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Reuters/GettyWelcome to October Surprise, the Daily Beast's daily countdown to the biggest election of our lifetime. It's only 20 days until Election Day and here's what's happening in the race to the White House between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
THE DOWNLOADMore than 100 Republican officials who support Kamala Harris for president planned to join the vice president in Pennsylvania on Wednesday for a stunning public rebuke of Donald Trump, their own party's presidential candidate.
Read more at The Daily Beast.
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WASHINGTON - Today marks the first anniversary of the creation of the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) Center for Countering Human Trafficking (CCHT). The CCHT, led by ICE Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), is a DHS-wide effort dedicated to bringing human traffickers to justice, protecting victims of sex trafficking and forced labor, and preventing these terrible crimes from occurring.
In recognition of the CCHT and to continue to advance its critical work, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas directed DHS components to incorporate a victim-centered approach into all policies, programs, and activities governing DHS interactions with victims of crime.
"The victim-centered approach is critical to the work of the DHS Center for Countering Human Trafficking and to the Department's fight against all crimes involving severe abuse and exploitation," said "Safeguarding, supporting, and respecting victims of human trafficking is not just the right thing to do. It also enables law enforcement to better detect, investigate, and prosecute perpetrators of human trafficking."
DHS also announced a number of new initiatives across components to combat sex trafficking and forced labor:
ICE HSI issued a directive underscoring HSI personnel's responsibility to identify and assist victims of crime. The CCHT launched a new public website at DHS.Gov/CCHT to bring together all DHS anti-human trafficking resources in one easily accessible place. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) released the first ever standalone T-Visa Resource Guide for law enforcement and certifying agencies. The T-Visa Resource Guide provides information to certifying agencies, including law enforcement, on how to support victims of human trafficking while law enforceme
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