Early in President Trump’s first term, McSweeney’s editors began to catalog the head-spinning number of misdeeds coming from his administration. We called this list a collection of Trump’s cruelties, collusions, corruptions, and crimes, and it felt urgent to track them, to ensure these horrors—happening almost daily—would not be forgotten. Now that Trump has returned to office, amid civil rights, humanitarian, economic, and constitutional crises, we felt it critical to make an inventory of this new round of horrors. This list will be updated monthly between now and the end of Donald Trump’s second term.
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ATROCITY KEY
– Constitutional Illegalities, Collusion, and/or Obstruction of Justice
– Environment
– Harassment, Bullying, Retribution, and/or Sexual Misconduct
– Lies and Misinformation
– Musk Madness
– Policy
– Public Statements and Social Media Posts
– Trump Family Business Dealings
– Trump Staff and Administration
– White Supremacy, Racism, Misogyny, Homophobia, Transphobia, and/or Xenophobia
Last Updated: May 5, 2025
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JANUARY 2025
– January 20, 2025 – During his inaugural address at the Capitol Rotunda, Donald Trump proclaimed, “The golden age of America begins right now… From this day forward, our country will flourish and be respected again all over the world.” During the speech, he condemned the Biden administration while President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris sat directly behind him. Trump stated he would reverse “horrible betrayals” and railed against a “radical and corrupt establishment” that he said “extracted power and wealth from our citizens.” On the dais near him sat a few of the wealthiest citizens in the world, including Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg.
– January 20, 2025 – Trump offered unconditional pardons to approximately 1,500 people charged in connection with the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. “These are people who actually love our country,” Trump announced, “so we thought a pardon would be appropriate.” Several January 6 defendants refused to accept their pardons. Mary Hemphill, often referred to as “MAGA Granny,” said, “It’s an insult to the Capitol police officers, to the rule of law, and to the nation. It contributes to their false propaganda—that they continue to gaslight the nation and everyone that it was a peaceful protest.”
– January 20, 2025 – In violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, Trump signed an executive order to end birthright citizenship. Attorneys general from twenty-two states sued in federal court. US District Judge John Coughenour blocked the order, describing it as “blatantly unconstitutional.” “We’re the only country in the world that does [birthright citizenship],” Trump said. Dozens of countries, including Canada, Mexico, and many South American nations, offer birthright citizenship.
– January 20, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order withdrawing the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement. He described it as “a rip-off.” During his inaugural address, Trump said, “We will be a rich nation again, and it is that liquid gold under our feet that will help to do it.” Fossil fuel interests gave Trump’s presidential campaign an estimated $75 million. Newly appointed Energy Secretary Chris Wright founded the fracking firm Liberty Energy. In 2023, Wright claimed, “There is no climate crisis, and we’re not in the midst of an energy transition, either.”
– January 20, 2025 – Trump signed Executive Order 14169, which mandated a ninety-day pause on all US foreign development assistance programs. The order, entitled “Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid,” stated, “The United States foreign aid industry and bureaucracy are not aligned with American interests and in many cases antithetical to American values.” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, “There will be changes, but the changes are not meant to be destructive, they’re not meant to be punitive.” Abby Maxam, head of Oxfam America, stated that suspending funding “could have life or death consequences” for children and families around the world.
– January 20, 2025 – During a speech at an inauguration celebration, Elon Musk, Trump’s pick to lead his Department of Governmental Efficiency, gave not one but two fascists gestures. “I just want to say thank you for making [Trump’s election victory] happen,” the billionaire told supporters. He then pounded his chest and extended his arm diagonally in the air, very similar to the Nazi Party’s infamous salute. After the crowd cheered, he did it a second time. In recent months, Musk had been increasingly engaging with far-right groups, like Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland. Trump, too, has been criticized for his fascist views, even by his vice president, JD Vance, who once called him “America’s Hitler.”
– January 21, 2025 – Trump introduced Executive Order 14151, aimed at ending diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) policies throughout the federal government. The order stated, “Federal employment practices, and employee performance reviews, shall reward individual initiative, skills, performance, and hard work and shall not under any circumstances consider DEI or DEIA factors, goals, policies, mandates, or requirements.” Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, said the government already hires and promotes exclusively based on merit: “The results are clear: a diverse federal workforce that looks like the nation it serves. We should all be proud of that.”
– January 23, 2025 – Trump fired more than a dozen inspectors general in a late-night purge of independent government watchdog officials assigned to investigate crime and abuse. The fired inspectors general received White House emails that stated, “Due to changing priorities, your position as Inspector General… is terminated, effective immediately.” In response to the firings, Trump said, “Some people thought that some were unfair or some were not doing the job.” He claimed that the mass removal of inspectors general was “a very standard thing to do.” The terminations directly violated a federal law that required a thirty-day notice to Congress that included a rationale for the firings.
– January 24, 2025 – Just hours before he visited areas devastated by the Southern California wildfires, Trump blamed California’s Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom and other state officials for the fires. “Look, Gavin’s got one thing he can do,” Trump told Fox News. “He can release the water that comes from the north. There is massive amounts of water, rainwater, and mountain water that comes, too, with the snow, comes down as it melts, there’s so much water.” Water resource and environmental engineering experts said there was no connection between California’s water supply and the deadly wildfires.
– January 24, 2025 – Trump’s pick for secretary of defense, Fox News host Pete Hegseth, was narrowly confirmed after allegations of his past sexual violence, alcoholism, workplace misconduct, and affinity for far-right and neo-Nazi groups came to light. An affidavit by Hegseth’s former sister-in-law alleged that Hegseth, who has a white-extremist symbol tattooed on his chest, regularly made racist comments to his ex-wife while drunk. Upon his confirmation, Trump said, “We have a great secretary of defense, and we’re very happy,” adding, “the important thing is winning.”
– January 25, 2025 – In Chicago, Secret Service agents showed up at Hamline Elementary School and attempted to question an eleven-year-old who had posted an anti-Trump video online. The agents first visited a residence in the neighborhood to investigate a “threat to one of our protectees in reference to the recent TikTok ban.” They then visited the school and showed identification to school administrators, who refused to let them in. Initially, school officials falsely stated that the agents were from ICE, reflecting the community’s growing fears amid heightened tensions over immigration policy. More than 90 percent of Hamline’s students are Latinx and about two-thirds are English-language learners.
– January 25, 2025 – During a phone call with King Abdullah II of Jordan, Trump said he wanted Jordan to welcome more Palestinians from Gaza. “I’d love for you to take on more because I’m looking at the whole Gaza Strip right now, and it’s a mess. You’re talking about a million and a half people, and we just clean out that whole thing.” Jordanian Foreign Affairs Minister Ayman Safadi promptly replied, “Our refusal of displacement is a steadfast position that will not change.” In response to Trump’s suggestion, Senator Lindsey Graham said, “I don’t know what he’s talking about.”
– January 25, 2025 – At a Las Vegas rally, Trump speculated about running for additional presidential terms. “It will be the greatest honor of my life to serve not once but twice—or three or four times.” Just two days later, in a speech to House Republicans at Mar-a-Lago, Trump added, “I’ve raised a lot of money for the next race that I assume I can’t use for myself, but I’m not 100 percent sure,” eliciting laughter from House Speaker Mike Johnson, a former constitutional lawyer. The Twenty-Second Amendment to the US Constitution explicitly bans a president from being elected to more than two terms.
– January 27, 2025 – President Trump signed executive orders banning transgender individuals from serving in the military, eliminating the military’s diversity programs, and reinstating with back pay service members who were previously discharged for refusing COVID-19 vaccinations. The order banning trans service members stated that “adoption of a gender identity inconsistent with an individual’s sex conflicts with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle” and “is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member.” In 2018, the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps chiefs all told Congress that transgender troops did not negatively impact unit cohesion, discipline issues, or morale.
– January 27, 2025 – In an internal memo sent to federal agencies, the White House ordered a temporary pause on federal grant and loan disbursements to ensure compliance with Trump’s recent executive orders. “The use of federal resources to advance Marxist equity, transgenderism, and Green New Deal social engineering policies is a waste of taxpayer dollars,” wrote Matthew J. Vaeth, then acting director of the Office of Management and Budget. A spreadsheet identified 2,600 federal programs under review, showing impacts to foreign aid, homeless shelters, food stamps, college financial aid, disaster reconstruction, Social Security, and senior health care.
– January 27, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order aimed at restricting gender-affirming health care—such as puberty blockers, hormone therapy, and surgery—for those under the age of nineteen. “Across the country today, medical professionals are maiming and sterilizing a growing number of impressionable children under the radical and false claim that adults can change a child’s sex through a series of irreversible medical interventions,” the order stated. “This dangerous trend will be a stain on our Nation’s history, and it must end.” In temporarily blocking the executive order, US District Judge Brendan A. Hurson said, “This is a population with an extremely higher rate for suicide, poverty, unemployment, drug addiction. [Abruptly stopping health care would be] horribly dangerous for anyone, for any care, but especially for this extremely vulnerable population.” Research shows that gender-diverse minors face increased risks for mental health issues, substance use, and suicide, and that gender-affirming health care improves overall well-being and quality of life.
– January 28, 2025 – In her first White House briefing, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that the Elon Musk–led Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had prevented a planned $50 million from going “out the door to fund condoms in Gaza,” a “preposterous waste of taxpayer money.” Musk later reposted a video of Leavitt’s remarks with the comment “tip of the iceberg.” Leavitt’s claim was subsequently repeated and expanded upon by the president: “We identified and stopped $50 million being sent to Gaza to buy condoms for Hamas. They used them as a method of making bombs. How about that?” No evidence was offered to support Leavitt’s, Musk’s, or Trump’s claims. A federal report published in 2024 and now inaccessible on the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) website showed that the agency’s total worldwide spending on condoms in 2023 was only $7.1 million and that no condoms were provided or funded for the Middle East between 2021 and 2023.
– January 28, 2025 – The day after a passenger plane and Army helicopter collided mid-air above the Potomac River in Washington, DC, Trump blamed the deadly crash on DEI. At the time of Trump’s statement, an investigation into the cause of the crash was still ongoing. Trump stated, without evidence, that a “diversity push” by the Federal Aviation Administration had resulted in “hiring people with severe intellectual and psychiatric disabilities.” “We have to have the smartest people,” said Trump, referring to air traffic controllers. “It doesn’t matter what they look like, how they speak, who they are.” When a reporter asked Trump directly whether he believed “this crash was somehow caused as the result of diversity hiring,” Trump responded, “It just could have been.” Sixty-seven people were killed in the collision, the first major US commercial passenger crash since 2009.
– January 30, 2025 – During his Senate confirmation hearing, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s nominee for secretary of health and human services, doubled down on past statements that Black people have stronger immune systems than white people and should receive vaccines on a different schedule. In response to questions from Senator Angela Alsobrooks, who is Black, Kennedy said that a “series of studies” by the Mayo Clinic have shown that “to particular antigens Blacks have a much stronger reaction.” Dr. Richard Kennedy (no relation), a vaccine researcher at Mayo Clinic whom Robert F. Kennedy cited during the hearing, said the health secretary nominee was “twisting the data far beyond what they actually demonstrate.” Studies show that false beliefs about biological differences between Black and white people are associated with racial disparities in medical assessment and treatment.
– January 30, 2025 – The mass deportation operation spearheaded by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE ) rattled immigrant communities across the country. A recent announcement by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stated that DHS officials would enter schools and churches to conduct raids. The deportation operation was meant to remove dangerous criminals. Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, admitted to “collateral arrests.” The Trump administration said it had arrested 7,400 people in nine days, and White House and ICE officials highlighted several dozen arrested immigrants on social media. No information in the thousands of other cases was made available.
– January 31, 2025 – The Justice Department fired dozens of prosecutors and demanded a list of FBI employees who had worked on investigations related to the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. Emil Bove, the acting deputy attorney general, characterized the initial hiring of these prosecutors during the Biden presidency as “subversive” and concurred with Trump’s description of the Capitol attack investigations as “a grave national injustice.” At the time of the Capitol attacks, Bove worked for the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and directed prosecutors to support the FBI’s investigations. “At no point did I ever hear him or anybody else express concern about these investigations and these arrests that we were making,” said Christopher O’Leary, an FBI counterterrorism official who worked with Bove on the investigations.
– January 31, 2025 – In compliance with Trump’s executive orders eliminating federal DEI programs and requiring the government to recognize only two sexes, numerous Department of Health and Human Services webpages and datasets were taken down, including CDC and NIH pages related to HIV, LGBTQ+ health, STI treatment, and food safety during pregnancy. In response, the Infectious Disease Society of America released a statement, noting that the removal of these online resources was “deeply concerning” and created “a dangerous gap in scientific information and data to monitor and respond to disease outbreaks.”
- – -FEBRUARY 2025
– February 1, 2025 – President Trump signed executive orders imposing tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico. The tariffs aimed to curb the flow of migrants and fentanyl into the country. He claimed the three countries were allowing “mass numbers of people to come in and fentanyl to come in.” The executive orders sidestepped congressional approval, and Trump acknowledged there could be “some pain” in the form of higher inflation, job losses, and stagnating growth due to the tariffs. The Wall Street Journal called Trump’s plan “the dumbest trade war in history.”
– February 3, 2025 – Trump ordered the Army Corps of Engineers to release 2.2 billion gallons of water from two reservoirs in central California. Local officials scrambled to prepare as communities were threatened of being inundated. On Truth Social, Trump crowed, “The water is flowing in California… and heading to farmers throughout the State, and to Los Angeles. Too bad they refused to do this during my First Term—There would have been no fires!” Neither reservoir was connected to aqueducts serving the southern part of the state. “Those releases had absolutely zero to do with anything in Los Angeles,” said Gregory Pierce, director of UCLA’s Water Resource Group. “This was a stunt purely so Trump could say that he did something.”
– February 3, 2025 – Trump announced the United States would cut aid to South Africa over their recent land expropriation law. On Truth Social, Trump posted, “South Africa is confiscating land, and treating certain classes of people VERY BADLY.” Trump’s talking points mirrored those of South Africa–born billionaire Elon Musk. In 2023, Musk said, “They are openly pushing for genocide of white people in South Africa.” White South Africans, who make up about 7 percent of the population, continue to dominate land ownership and occupy almost 50 percent of South Africa’s surface area.
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– February 4, 2025 – During a White House press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Donald Trump said that Palestinians should leave war-ravaged Gaza and settle elsewhere. He also announced that the United States would take over the territory and redevelop it into “the Riviera of the Middle East.” Trump didn’t rule out deploying US troops and offered no other details on how the 1.8 million residents of the Gaza Strip would be resettled or how the US would take ownership of the land. Over 46,000 Palestinians have been killed, many of them children, during the Israel-Hamas conflict.
– February 5, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order banning transgender women and girls from participating in women’s sports. “Who could forget last year’s Paris Olympics, where a male boxer stole the woman’s gold medal after brutalizing his female opponent?” Trump said, repeating a false claim about a female boxer from Algeria, where it is illegal for people to change their gender. “From now on,” he said, “women’s sports will be only for women.” During a congressional hearing in December 2024, NCAA President Charlie Baker said there were fewer than ten transgender athletes among the 510,000 competing at US schools.
– February 6, 2025 – Trump posted on Truth Social that “billions of dollars” from USAID had improperly gone to the media company Politico, which he considers “fake news.” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt repeated his claim during a press conference. “I was made aware of the funding from USAID to media outlets, including Politico,” she said. Government agencies used funding to subscribe to Politico Pro, a service that tracks legislation and other policy information. According to USA Spending.gov, USAID paid $24,000 to Politico Pro in 2024 for a subscription to E&E, an energy and environmental news service owned by the company.
– February 7, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order to eliminate “anti-Christian bias” in the federal government. “If we don’t have religious liberty,” he said during a speech at the National Prayer Breakfast, “then we don’t have a free country. We probably don’t even have a country.” He appointed Attorney General Pam Bondi to lead a task force that would “fully prosecute anti-Christian violence.” In response, the Interfaith Alliance stated, “We fear that this task force will aid organizations looking to circumvent anti-discrimination laws under the guise of religious freedom… There is no evidence of widespread anti-Christian bias in the United States.”
– February 7, 2025 – Trump’s January 20 executive order stated “illegal aliens” are “presenting significant threats to national security and public safety.” Recent interviews conducted by California nonprofit Cal Matters suggested that some people arrested in Trump’s immigration crackdown were not hardened criminals. Loreal Duran of Echo Park recounted her husband’s arrest. “It was just a regular morning,” she said, as her husband, Giovanni Duran, was getting ready to drive their children to school. Giovanni came to California from El Salvador without federal authorization when he was two years old. He worked as a busser in a sushi restaurant in Los Angeles before he was taken into custody. Loreal’s seven-year-old son asked, “Did Daddy get arrested because he’s brown?” A recent report said
that less than half of the approximately 8,200 people arrested from January 20 through February 2 had criminal convictions.
– February 8, 2025 – Employees of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) were told to cease “all supervision and examination activity” and “all stakeholder engagement” via an email from newly appointed Director of the Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought. A White House statement claimed the CFPB “has long functioned as another woke, weaponized arm of the bureaucracy that leverages its power against certain industries and individuals disfavored by so-called elites.” The CFPB is an independent agency created after the collapse of the US banking system in 2008, which left Americans with massive financial losses and raised questions about the operations of the country’s major financial institutions.
– February 9, 2025 – After two weeks on the lam, a man recently pardoned by President Trump for his role in the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack was arrested again, this time on old charges of soliciting a minor. Thirty-six-year-old Andrew Taake allegedly sent sexually explicit messages to an undercover officer posing as a teenage girl in 2016. In 2023, he pled guilty to assaulting officers with bear spray and a metal whip during the Capitol attack and was sentenced to six years in prison. According to Trump, his mass pardon of individuals such as Taake convicted of crimes related to the Capitol attack ended “a grave national injustice that has been perpetrated upon the American people.”
– February 9, 2025 – “I think Canada would be much better off being the 51st state because we lose $200 billion a year with Canada. And I’m not going to let that happen,” Trump said during an interview with Fox News on Super Bowl Sunday. He claimed Canada was not viable as a country and would be much better off as a fifty-first state. “Mr. Trump has it in mind that the easiest way to do it is absorbing our country, and it is a real thing,” said Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. “They’re very aware of our resources, of what we have, and they very much want to be able to benefit from those.”
– February 9, 2025 – As Air Force One flew over the Gulf of Mexico en route to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans, Trump signed a proclamation designating February 9 as “Gulf of America Day,” following up on his earlier executive order directing the secretary of the interior to rename the Gulf of Mexico. During remarks at Mar-a-Lago on January 7, Trump announced his intentions to change the name and explained his motivations for doing so. “[Mexico is] essentially run by cartels. Mexico’s really in trouble, a lot of trouble, very dangerous place. We’re going to change [that] because we do most of the work there,” he continued, “and it’s ours. It’s appropriate, and Mexico has to stop allowing millions of people to pour into our country. They can stop them.” Comedian Stephen Colbert first used the term “Gulf of America” satirically, following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, joking that “we broke it, we bought it.” In 2012, Democratic State Representative Stephen Holland introduced a satiric bill proposing the name change to draw attention to Republican anti-immigration efforts.
– February 9, 2025 – During the same flight to the Super Bowl, Trump—whose real estate failures have resulted in multiple bankruptcy filings—described Gaza as a “big real estate site” for the US to “own” and “redevelop”: “I think that it’s a big mistake to allow people—the Palestinians, or the people living in Gaza—to go back yet another time, and we don’t want Hamas going back. And think of it as a big real estate site, and the United States is going to own it… and develop it. We’re going to bring stability to the Middle East.” With only a few exceptions for security and military reasons, forced displacement of civilians is a violation of the Geneva Conventions.
– February 10, 2025 – Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove directed federal prosecutors to dismiss charges against New York City mayor Eric Adams without prejudice. In his memo to the Southern District of New York, Bove argued that continued prosecution of Adams would interfere with the mayor’s ability to enforce the Trump administration’s immigration agenda and noted that the order to dismiss was made “without assessing the strength of the evidence or the legal theories on which the case is based.” Adams, who spent months currying favor with Trump, was indicted in September 2024 on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud, soliciting illegal campaign contributions from foreign nationals, and bribery.
– February 10, 2025 – President Trump pardoned former Democratic Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich after first commuting his sentence during his first term. In 2010, Blagojevich was convicted on seventeen corruption and pay-to-play charges—including an attempt to sell the Senate seat vacated by Barack Obama—and sentenced to fourteen years in prison, of which he served only eight. During Blagojevich’s trial, prosecutors presented a recording of Blagojevich in which the former governor, referring to the Senate seat, said, “I mean, I’ve got this thing, and it’s fucking golden. And I’m just not giving it up for fucking nothing.” After Blagojevich’s indictment, he appeared on Donald Trump’s Celebrity Apprentice, where the future president praised his “tremendous courage and guts.”
– February 10, 2025 – President Trump signed an executive order to end “the procurement and forced use of paper straws.” “These things don’t work,” Trump told reporters. “I’ve had them many times, and on occasion, they break, they explode. If something’s hot, they don’t last very long, like a matter of minutes, sometimes a matter of seconds. It’s a ridiculous situation.” Single-use plastics negatively impact both the environment and human health. Brushing off environmental concerns, Trump, who is reportedly obsessed with and terrified of sharks, added, “I don’t think that plastic is going to affect a shark as they’re eating, as they’re munching their way through the ocean.”
– February 10, 2025 – Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered that US Army base Fort Liberty be renamed Fort Bragg, its original name. “That’s right, Bragg is back,” said Hegseth. Originally named after slave-owning Confederate General Braxton Bragg, the North Carolina base was renamed Fort Liberty in 2023 following racial justice protests and legislation forbidding the naming of bases after Confederates. Sidestepping that legislation, Hegseth’s memo claimed the base was named after World War II veteran Roland L. Bragg. However, during media appearances between 2021 and 2024, Hegseth repeatedly criticized efforts to remove the names of Confederates from army bases as “a sham,” “garbage,” and “crap.”
– February 10, 2025 – Following his purge of eighteen Biden-appointed board members, Trump became chairman of the traditionally bipartisan John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and immediately fired its longtime president. A frequent target of Kennedy Center honorees, Trump has criticized the Kennedy Center for its “woke” and queer-friendly programming. “Just last year,” he said, “the Kennedy Center featured Drag Shows specifically targeting our youth—THIS WILL STOP.” Although pundits have frequently described Trump as a performance artist, the president has yet to attend a Kennedy Center performance and is the only president to have skipped the Kennedy Center Honors twice. “I got reports they were so bad,” Trump said, referring to the Kennedy Center shows, “I didn’t want to go. There was nothing I wanted to see.”
– February 11, 2025 – Wearing a “Dark MAGA” hat and black T-shirt, Elon Musk made several false claims about DOGE in the Oval Office. “I don’t know of a case where an organization has been more transparent than the DOGE organization,” said Musk, who also asserted, without evidence, that USAID officials had taken “tens of millions of dollars” worth of “kickbacks.” In actuality, Musk has taken great pains to prevent DOGE staffers from being identified, refused to release his financial disclosure filing, and has not been open about when his staffers will show up at federal agencies or how his team plans to use access to payment systems. “Who is this unelected billionaire, that he can attempt to dismantle federal agencies, fire people, transfer them, offer them early retirement, and have sweeping reform or changes to agencies without any congressional review, oversight, or concurrence?” said US Representative Gerald Connolly. When questioned about some of his previous false statements, Musk responded, “Some of the things that I say will be incorrect and should be corrected. Nobody’s going to bat 1,000.
– February 12, 2025 – Tulsi Gabbard was confirmed as the director of national intelligence with a 52–48 Senate vote. A veteran and former Democratic representative from Hawaii, Gabbard met with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in 2017 and has made comments sympathetic to Russia. Soon after Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Gabbard wrote on social media, “This war and suffering could have easily been avoided if Biden Admin/NATO had simply acknowledged Russia’s legitimate security concerns.” As of March 2025, Russia still occupies about 20 percent of Ukraine. The war has killed an estimated 40,000 civilians, and nearly eleven million people have either fled Ukraine or are internally displaced.
– February 12, 2025 – Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. was confirmed as the Secretary of Health and Human Services with a 52–48 Senate vote. In the past, Kennedy has suggested that chemicals in the water supply can turn children gay or transgender, questioned whether HIV causes AIDS, and compared COVID-19 mandates to laws in Nazi Germany. A longtime anti-vaccine activist, Kennedy has made false statements that vaccines cause autism, reduce IQ, and increase susceptibility to flu and polio. “Nobody can tell you what the risk profile for any vaccine is,” Kennedy claimed in 2019. “So anybody who says they’re safe and effective is not telling the truth because they can’t tell you that based on science.” According to the World Health Organization, vaccines have saved at least 154 million lives over the past fifty years.
– February 13, 2025 – Acting US Attorney Danielle Sassoon resigned over the Justice Department’s order to dismiss charges against NYC Mayor Eric Adams without prejudice. In a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Sassoon wrote that dismissing the case against Adams was “inconsistent with my ability and duty to prosecute federal crimes without fear or favor and to advance good-faith arguments before the courts” and accused the mayor’s lawyers of advocating for “what amounted to a quid pro quo, indicating that Adams would be in a position to assist with the Department’s enforcement priorities only if the indictment were dismissed.” Sassoon’s resignation prompted a wave of other resignations, including the departures of John Keller and Kevin Driscoll, who led the DOJ’s public integrity unit in Washington, and Hagan Scotten, the lead prosecutor in the Adams case. “Our laws and traditions do not allow using the prosecutorial power to influence other citizens, much less elected officials,” wrote Scotten in his resignation letter. “If no lawyer within earshot of the president is willing to give him that advice, then I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion. But it was never going to be me.”
– February 13, 2025 – As part DOGE’s efforts to cut spending and reduce the federal workforce, over three hundred workers at the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), which oversees the US stockpile of nuclear weapons, were abruptly fired. “The DOGE people are coming in with absolutely no knowledge of what these departments are responsible for,” said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association. “Elon Musk and DOGE are playing a dangerous game,” added Senator Ed Markey. “Cutting 200 NNSA staff overnight weakens oversight and could leave our nuclear stockpile vulnerable. This isn’t smart savings—it’s dangerously irresponsible.” Following significant chaos and criticism, NNSA Acting Director Teresa Robbins was forced to rescind the terminations the following day.
– February 13, 2025 – During President Trump’s meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Agence France-Presse photographer Jim Watson snapped a photo showing a gold-framed New York Post cover featuring Trump’s mugshot hanging just outside the Oval Office. The mug shot, which Trump shared on social media with the caption “NEVER SURRENDER” and which subsequently appeared on Trump campaign merchandise, was taken in August 2023 after Trump was indicted in Fulton County on charges stemming from his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
– February 13, 2025 – The National Park Service removed references to transgender people from its Stonewall National Monument website. What used to be listed as LGBTQ+ was changed to LGB. The Stonewall Uprising in 1969 was a pivotal moment in the LGBQT+ activist movement. The Stonewall Inn released a statement in response, saying, “This blatant act of erasure not only distorts the truth of our history, but it also dishonors the immense contributions of transgender individuals—especially transgender women of color—who were at the forefront of the Stonewall Riots and the broader fight for LGBTQ+ rights.”
– February 14, 2025 – The New York Times reported that Trump plans to pave over the grass in the Rose Garden so that it resembles his patio at Mar-a-Lago. “The White House has not been given any tender, loving care in many decades, so President Trump is taking necessary steps in order to preserve and restore the greatness and glory of ‘the People’s House,’” said Steven Cheung, Trump’s communications director. One of the most iconic White House settings, the Rose Garden has been used for press conferences, bill-signing ceremonies, formal dinners, and weddings.
– February 15, 2025 – Echoing a quote often attributed to Napoleon Bonaparte, who crowned himself French emperor in 1804, President Trump posted on social media that “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.” A day later, responding to a news article about the Trump administration’s violation of a court order, Trump posted the same quote, this time overlaying an image of Napoleon. The posts followed earlier remarks in which Trump joked about becoming a dictator and argued that presidents should have immunity from criminal prosecution.
– February 17, 2025 – On President’s Day, thousands of protesters took to streets across the United States, many calling Trump a “king.” Protesters also rallied against Elon Musk’s team at the Department of Government Efficiency and their pending cuts to social services. Anita Gilmore of Maryland expressed concerns about her son’s health care coverage: “My son is on Medicaid because he has a life-threatening disease, and if I wasn’t there to take care of him, he would be one of these [DC] homeless guys on the street.”
– February 18, 2025 – Panama detained three hundred asylum-seekers who had been deported under President Trump’s orders. The detainees were held in a hotel while they waited for authorities to organize returns to their home countries. Many of the migrants didn’t want to return, due to safety concerns. One migrant attempted suicide and another broke his arm trying to escape. The White House posted a video on social media entitled “ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight.” The caption referred to autonomous sensory meridian response videos, which are popular online for delivering pleasant sounds that create positive and therapeutic sensations.
– February 18, 2025 – Trump called Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “a dictator without elections.” Ukraine is under martial law, which under its constitution forbids the holding of elections. Trump also accused the democratically elected president of Ukraine of starting the war with Russia. “You should have never started it,” Trump said. “You could have made a deal.” Zelenskyy responded by saying, “With all due respect to President Donald Trump as a leader… he is living in a disinformation space.” Russia’s army crossed Ukraine’s border in 2022, an invasion that Putin sought to justify by claiming it was necessary to protect civilians in eastern Ukraine.
– February 20, 2025 – As part of Trump’s slashing of federal government agencies, the IRS announced it would layoff nearly seven thousand workers for “poor performance.” Many of the terminated workers were hired by the Biden administration to focus on enforcement efforts on wealthy taxpayers. “This will ensure that the IRS is not going after the wealthy and is only an agency that’s really focused on the low income,” said University of Pittsburgh tax law professor Philip Hackney, a former IRS lawyer. “It’s a travesty.”
– February 20, 2025 – Kash Patel, an ally of President Trump and conspiracy theorist who appeared on a prominent white nationalist’s podcast eight times, was confirmed by a vote of 51 to 49 to lead the FBI. During the confirmation hearings, senators grilled Patel about his lack of law enforcement experience and expressed doubts about his ability to maintain the independence of the FBI. Patel evaded questions about whether he would investigate officials on a so-called enemies list in his book, Government Gangsters. US Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL), ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, released a statement saying, “Kash Patel is an extreme MAGA loyalist… He is blindly loyal to Donald Trump and Donald Trump only.”
– February 21, 2025 – Elon Musk appeared on stage at the right-wing Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) wielding a chainsaw, bragging about the cuts his Department of Government Efficiency has made, and suggesting Democrats should be charged treason for their immigration policies. “This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy,” he shouted before accusing the Biden administration of allowing immigrants into the United States so as to accrue more supporters at the polls, a conspiracy theory known as the “great replacement.” There is no evidence the former president eased immigration restrictions to allow migrant workers to vote.
– February 21, 2025 – During a meeting with a bipartisan group of governors, Trump questioned Maine’s Democratic Governor Janet Mills about complying with the executive order banning transgender athletes in women’s sports. “We are the federal law. You better comply or you’re not getting any federal funding.” Gov. Mills responded, “See you in court.” The US Department of Education promptly informed Maine they were under a “directed investigation.” In a statement, Gov. Mills said, “Do not be misled: This is not just about who can compete on the athletic field, this is about whether a president can force compliance with his will, without regard for the rule of law.”
– February 22, 2025 – Trump addressed members of CPAC and boasted about firing thousands of federal workers, and dismantling USAID, the government’s main international development agency. “We have escorted the radical-left bureaucrats out of the building and have locked the doors behind them.” He also praised the January 6 insurrectionists in attendance, calling them “political prisoners and J6 hostages.” Among those pardoned was Enrique Tarrio, leader of the Proud Boys, who had been convicted of seditious conspiracy. The day before Trump’s address at CPAC, Tarrio was arrested on assault charges.
– February 24, 2025 – The United States voted against a United Nations General Assembly resolution condemning Russian aggression in Ukraine and calling for Russia to withdraw from Ukrainian territory. The United States also abstained from voting on its own competing resolution calling for an end to the war after other countries added three amendments replacing “the Russia-Ukraine conflict” with “the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by the Russian Federation,” acknowledging Ukraine’s territorial rights, and calling for a “lasting” peace. President Trump has falsely blamed Ukraine for starting the war and called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a dictator.
– February 24, 2025 – Tom Homan, Trump’s border czar, attacked so-called sanctuary cities during a speech at CPAC. He singled out Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox, in particular, and falsely accused him of refusing to work with ICE to deport illegal immigrants. “You’re not a police commissioner,” Homan shouted from the podium. “Take that badge off your desk, put it in your desk drawer—because you became a politician. You forgot what it’s like to be a cop.” In an interview earlier in the week, Cox said Boston police officers would help ICE detain illegal criminals who have committed crimes but would not work with the federal government to arrest immigrants solely for immigration reasons. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu defended Cox. “It’s insulting. We have the best police commissioner in the country. Boston’s crime levels are at the lowest ever reported in our history,” she said. “I’m coming to Boston, I’m bringing Hell with me,” Homan threatened to massive cheers from the CPAC crowd. As of March 17, 2025, Homan had yet to come to Boston.
– February 24, 2025 – The US State Department ordered officials to deny visas to transgender athletes traveling to the US for sports events and to issue permanent visa bans against individuals who have “misrepresented” their sex on visa applications. The State Department order follows Trump’s earlier executive order banning transgender athletes from women’s sports. While signing that executive order, Trump stated that he had told Secretary of State Marco Rubio to make clear to the International Olympic Committee that “America categorically rejects transgender lunacy.” “It’s normal to say that people accused of fraud or misrepresentation are often considered ineligible,” said Sarah Mehta, an ACLU policy lawyer, “but it is quite bizarre and novel in a terrible way to be saying it’s based on their misrepresenting their sex or gender in order to come and participate in an event in the United States.”
– February 25, 2025 – Breaking with decades of precedent, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that the Trump administration would select which journalists participate in the White House press pool. “We’re going to be calling those shots,” added Trump. The announcement followed the administration’s retaliatory barring of Associated Press journalists after the AP refused to comply with Trump’s order that the Gulf of Mexico, which mostly lies outside maritime regions controlled by the United States, be called the Gulf of America. “This move tears at the independence of a free press in the United States. It suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president. In a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps,” said Eugene Daniels, a Politico reporter and president of the White House Correspondents’ Association.
– February 25, 2025 – Trump posted an AI-generated video showing Gaza transformed into a luxury resort featuring golden Trump statues and balloons. In the video, war-ravaged children emerge from rubble onto glittering beaches with belly dancers and palm trees, a smiling Elon Musk eats hummus, and Trump lounges on the beach with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while a voice sings, “No more tunnels, no more fear. Trump Gaza is finally here.” The video follows Trump’s earlier statements about taking over Gaza, expelling its Palestinian residents, and developing the Palestinian territory into the “Riviera of the Middle East.” “The video advocating for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza published on President Trump’s social media is not only arrogant and disrespectful,” said Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian activist and politician, “but also violates international law and human rights.”
– February 25, 2025 – An unvaccinated child with no underlying health conditions died from measles in rural West Texas. It was the first such US death since 2015 and the first such US death of a child since 2003. As of March 4, 2025, the Texas measles outbreak had risen to over 150 cases. Vaccination rates in Gaines County, where the outbreak began, are especially low. During a Cabinet meeting, Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic, downplayed the Texas measles outbreak, saying, “It’s not unusual. We have measles outbreaks every year.” Several days later, in an opinion piece for Fox News, Kennedy stopped short of explicitly recommending the MMR vaccine, calling the decision to vaccinate a “personal” choice and advocating for vitamin A treatment, which experts have recommended against using in most measles cases.
– February 25, 2025 – Trump said that the United States would soon offer a new visa program to help attract foreign investors to the country. “We are going to be selling a gold card,” he said. “We are going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million. It’s going to give you green card privileges plus its going to be a route to [American] citizenship.” When asked if Russian oligarchs would be eligible, Trump said, “Yeah, possibly. Hey. I know some Russian oligarchs that are very nice people.”
– February 26, 2025 – Despite not being a Cabinet secretary, Elon Musk attended Donald Trump’s first Cabinet meeting and defended his cost-cutting efforts at DOGE. Wearing a black “tech support” T-shirt and knocking on his “wooden head,” Musk said he hoped to trim $1 trillion from the federal budget while also acknowledging, with a chuckle, that he had accidentally cancelled Ebola prevention. When questioned about his order that government workers send an email summarizing their accomplishments for the week, a directive that caused significant confusion and was widely criticized, Musk repeated a baseless claim that some workers collecting federal paychecks are either fictional or dead.
– February 26, 2025 – The Trump administration terminated funding for thousands of global health projects, including programs for polio, HIV, malaria, and maternal health. The State Department announced the terminations over email, writing, “This award is being terminated for convenience and the interest of the U.S. government.” USAID experts warned that the cuts will lead to an estimated 166,000 malaria deaths, 200,000 polio paralyses in children, 28,000 new cases of infectious diseases like Ebola and Marburg, and one million children not treated for severe malnutrition, which is often fatal, annually. “People will die,” said Dr. Catherine Kyobutungi, executive director of the African Population and Health Research Center, “but we will never know because even the programs to count the dead are cut.”
– February 27, 2025 – In a Truth Social post, Trump encouraged Iowa lawmakers to approve a bill ending state civil rights protections for transgender Iowans. “Iowa, a beautiful State that I have won BIG every time, has a Bill to remove Radical Gender Ideology from their Laws,” he wrote. “Iowa should follow the lead of my Executive Order, saying there are only two genders, and pass this Bill – AS FAST AS POSSIBLE.” The bill, which was approved and then signed by Governor Kim Reynolds, removes gender identity as a protected class, allowing employers, businesses, and landlords to discriminate against transgender people. In a 2023 survey, more than 60 percent of transgender adults said they have faced discrimination because of their gender identity.
– February 28, 2025 – During a televised Oval Office meeting, President Trump and Vice President Vance lashed out at Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy and threatened to abandon Ukraine. After Zelenskyy expressed doubts about an American-brokered peace deal with Russia, the vice president called the Ukrainian leader “disrespectful,” adding, “You should be thanking the president for trying to bring an end to this conflict.” As the meeting continued, Trump and Vance raised their voices, interrupted Zelenskyy, and pointed fingers at him. “You’re gambling with the lives of millions of people. You’re gambling with World War III, and what you’re doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country that’s backed you far more than a lot of people say they should have,” said Trump. “You’re either going to make a deal or we’re out. And if we’re out, you’ll fight it out and I don’t think it’s going to be pretty.”
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– March 1, 2025 – Despite his history of documented grammar and spelling issues, President Trump signed an executive order making English the official language of the United States. The order revoked a Clinton-era mandate requiring federal agencies to provide services and translated documents to people who speak limited English. Although the order’s practical impact may be limited, pro-immigration groups warned that the order may stigmatize immigrants and make it more difficult for non-English speakers to access government services. At CPAC in February, Trump explicitly linked his contempt for other languages to his anti-immigration agenda: “We have languages coming into our country. We don’t have one instructor in our entire nation that can speak that language. These are languages—it’s the craziest thing—they have languages that nobody in this country has ever heard of. It’s a very horrible thing.”
– March 2, 2025 – Trump directed federal agencies to increase timber production across 280 million acres of national forests. His executive order stated, “The United States has an abundance of timber resources, but heavy-handed Federal policies have prevented full utilization of these resources.” Trump’s order pressed federal agencies to bypass endangered species protections and other environmental regulations. “They’re not hiding the ball,” said Blaine Miller-McFeeley, a senior legislative representative at Earthjustice, a public interest environmental law organization. “It’s just about trying to cut as much of our forests as possible to line the pockets of timber industry executives.” Trump nominated Tom Schulz, a former lumber industry executive, to lead the Forest Service.
– March 3, 2025 – Elon Musk’s DOGE removed hundreds more claims from its mistake-filled “wall of receipts.” The deleted claims erased $4 billion in savings that the group said it had made for US taxpayers. The items removed included five of the seven largest savings that it had claimed credit for the previous week. The New York Times reported the mistakes included “canceled contracts” that had been completed during previous presidential administrations. In 2005, the US Coast Guard contracted with a Virginia firm for administrative assistance. The contract was completed in June 2005, and the firm was paid $144,000. DOGE’s team reported they had canceled the contract and had saved US taxpayers $53.7 million.
– March 4, 2025 – At a joint session of Congress, Trump gave the longest address before the House and Senate in modern presidential history. Republicans chanted “USA! USA!” as they listened to Trump’s misleading and false statements about government fraud, Social Security, immigration, the economy, and transgender mice. Democrats held up signs in protest that read, UNTRUE and MUSK STEALS. Representative Al Green, a Democrat from Texas, shouted at Trump that he did not have a mandate, and was removed from the chamber by security. Green later said, “It’s worth it to let people know that there are some people who are going to stand up” to Trump.
– March 4, 2025 – In a closed-door meeting, Representative Richard Hudson (R-NC), the chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee, told GOP lawmakers to stop holding in-person town halls in their districts. Several Republicans had received angry blowback from their constituents, largely over DOGE’s massive cuts. Yet according to the party line, that wasn’t the reason for the pause on town halls. “There are people who do this as a profession,” Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters. “They’re professional protesters.” While some liberal advocacy groups encouraged people to attend the town halls, there was no evidence that any of the attendees had been paid.
– March 5, 2025 – The Department of Veterans Affairs announced it would reduce its workforce by more than 80,000. “We take good care of our veterans,” Trump said. “But we are having great success in slimming down our government.” More than 25 percent of the VA’s workforce is composed of veterans. Gregg Bafundo, a Marine who served during the first Gulf War said, “They’re going to put guys like me and my fellow Marines that rely on the VA in the ground.”
– March 6, 2025 – Trump announced a reprieve on imposing a 25 percent tariff on products from Mexico and Canada. When asked if the decision was based on the stock market, Trump said it had nothing to do with it. “I’m not even looking at the market, because long term the United States will be very strong with what is happening.” Trump’s comments came as the Dow Jones went down 400 points and the Nasdaq Composite closed more than 10 percent below its recent high, as investors continued to worry about the Trump administration’s chaotic economic plan. “The president wants American growth and American prosperity, okay?” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said, “You’re going to see the stock market explode.”
– March 7, 2025 – References to the Enola Gay, the aircraft that dropped an atomic bomb on Japan during World War II, were marked for deletion as part of the Department of Defense’s efforts to purge diversity, equity, and inclusion content in accordance with President Trump’s executive order. Other images and posts containing the word “gay,” including references to people with the common last name “Gay,” were also flagged for deletion. The aircraft was named after Enola Gay Tibbets, mother of military pilot Paul Tibbits, and it was not, in fact, gay.
– March 7, 2025 – The Trump administration canceled $400 million in federal grants and contracts to Columbia University for the school’s “continued inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.” The Trump administration has targeted universities over their DEI policies and handling of pro-Palestinian protests, which began at Columbia in the spring of 2024. “There’s no question that some complaints of antisemitism at Columbia and other universities are valid,” wrote Rabbi Jill Jacobs, CEO of T’ruah. “But Trump’s withholding funds from Columbia… [is] about advancing the administration’s assault on universities, free speech, academic freedom and liberal democracy, not combating antisemitism.”
– March 8, 2025 – ICE arrested and detained graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, a legal permanent resident who played a key role in the pro-Palestinian movement at Columbia University. Revoking a green card is a rare and usually lengthy process that, in the vast majority of cases, occurs only after the green card holder has been accused and convicted of a crime. “Following my previously signed Executive Orders, ICE proudly apprehended and detained Mahmoud Khalil, a Radical Foreign Pro-Hamas Student on the campus of Columbia University,” Trump posted on Truth Social. “This is the first arrest of many to come. We know there are more students at Columbia and other Universities across the Country who have engaged in pro-terrorist, anti-Semitic, anti-American activity, and the Trump administration will not tolerate it.” Despite refusing to say what specific crime Khalil had committed, House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the arrest, saying, “I’m going to say this clearly: If you’re on a student visa, and you’re in America and you’re an aspiring young terrorist who wants to prey upon your Jewish classmates, you’re going home,” he said. “We’re going to arrest your tail. We’re going to send you home where you belong.” In contrast, Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of UC Berkeley Law School who has criticized the pro-Palestine student movement in the past, said, “Arresting and seeking to deport a Columbia University student for his speech activities clearly violates the First Amendment—and does nothing to combat antisemitism on campus.”
– March 9, 2025 – In a Fox News interview, President Trump did not rule out the possibility of a recession resulting from his tariff policies. When asked directly whether he expected a recession this year, Trump replied, “I hate to predict things like that. There is a period of transition because what we’re doing is very big. We’re bringing wealth back to America. That’s a big thing, and there are always periods of, it takes a little time. It takes a little time, but I think it should be great for us.” Citing Trump’s policies, including his sweeping tariffs, both Goldman Sachs and Yardeni Research raised their odds of a recession occurring in the next twelve months.
– March 10, 2025 – Following Trump’s statements the previous day about a possible recession, the stock market experienced its worst decline of the year. The Dow lost almost 900 points, the S&P 500 dropped 2.7 percent, and the Nasdaq dropped 4 percent. In response, White House officials attempted to downplay the sell-offs. “There are a lot of reasons to be extremely bullish about the economy going forward,” said Kevin Hassett, White House National Economic Council Director. “But for sure, this quarter, there are some blips in the data.” Another White House official added, “We’re seeing a strong divergence between animal spirits of the stock market and what we’re actually seeing unfold from businesses and business leaders.” “Blips” or “animal spirits” aside, many remained unconvinced. “We anticipate lasting damage to global economic activity,” said BNP Paribas strategists.
– March 10, 2025 – Amazon announced that it would begin streaming The Apprentice, the reality television show starring Donald Trump, on Prime Video. Following a series of bankruptcies and bad business deals by Trump, The Apprentice relaunched Donald Trump as a global icon of American success, paving his eventual run for the presidency. As an executive producer on the show, Trump will likely financially profit from Amazon’s acquisition. The announcement is only the latest example of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s attempts to curry favor with the Trump administration. Earlier this year, Prime Video announced the acquisition of a Melania Trump documentary on which the first lady served as executive producer. The Washington Post, which Bezos owns, also refused to endorse a presidential candidate in the last presidential election and announced new editorial policies favoring conservative viewpoints.
– March 11, 2025 – The Department of Education fired more than 1,300 employees, reducing its total staff to roughly half the number at the beginning of the year. In an interview on Fox News, Education Secretary Linda McMahon described the mass layoffs as the first step toward shutting down the Education Department, which requires congressional approval. “[Trump’s] directive to me, clearly, is to shut down the Department of Education, which we know we’ll have to work with Congress, you know, to get that accomplished. But what we did today was to take the first step of eliminating what I think is bureaucratic bloat,” said McMahon. According to Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association, the layoffs “will send class sizes soaring, cut job training programs, make higher education more expensive and out of reach for middle-class families, take away special education services for students with disabilities, and gut student civil rights protections.”
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– March 11, 2025 – Erica Y. Carr, the acting executive secretary of USAID, ordered Washington employees to burn or shred classified documents and personnel files. “Shred as many documents first, and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break,” Carr wrote in an email. Her order came amid legal challenges related to the Trump administration’s attempts to dismantle USAID. The Federal Records Act of 1950 forbids the destruction of government documents without prior approval from the National Archives and Records Administration. “This is slash-and-burn mode and not leaving any evidence behind that could disprove their narrative,” said Kel McClanahan, executive director of National Security Counselors.
– March 11, 2025 – Following nationwide protests at Tesla facilities and declines in Tesla’s stock in response to CEO Elon Musk’s role in the Trump administration, President Trump turned the White House lawn into a makeshift Tesla showroom. With Musk at his side, the influencer-in-chief strolled among five different Tesla models, eventually deciding to purchase a red Model S for use by his staff despite his repeated criticisms of electric vehicles in the past and his signing of an executive order revoking Biden-era electric vehicle targets. Trump’s said reason for the purchase was to help out Musk, who recently indicated he would donate $100 million to Trump political operation groups. “I think he’s been treated very unfairly by a very small group of people,” said Trump. “And I just want people to know that he can’t be penalized for being a patriot.” In response to a reporter’s question, Trump said he would consider labeling those committing violence against Tesla owners and dealerships as “domestic terrorists.”
– March 12, 2025 – While speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, President Trump used the term “Palestinian” as a slur to describe Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer and falsely stated that Schumer, who became the highest-ranking elected Jewish politician in American history as Senate majority leader, “was not Jewish.” “Schumer is a Palestinian as far as I’m concerned,” Trump said. "He’s become a Palestinian. He used to be Jewish. He’s not Jewish anymore. He’s a Palestinian.” Jewish and Muslim groups quickly condemned Trump’s remarks. Trump previously used the term “Palestinian” as a slur to refer to Schumer during rallies and in a social media post in February. He also used the term as a slur in his presidential debate with Joe Biden, calling Biden “a very bad Palestinian.”
– March 12, 2025 – The Environmental Protection Agency canceled $20 billion in climate and green energy grants, and said it would repeal dozens of environmental protections against air and water pollution. In a video posted on social media, EPA administrator Lee Zeldin praised the changes without once mentioning the environment or public health. “From the campaign trail to Day One and beyond, President Trump has delivered on his promise to unleash energy dominance and lower the cost of living,” Zeldin said, celebrating March 12, 2025, as “the greatest day of deregulation in American history” even as former EPA administrator Gina McCarthy called it “the most disastrous day in EPA history.”
– March 12, 2025 – Following the Trump administration’s cuts to federal research funding, the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School rescinded all offers of admission to its graduate biomedical program for 2025–2026. The funding cuts have also impacted programs at Duke University, Vanderbilt University, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, among others. “This is a severe blow to science and the training of the next generation of scientists,” said Siyuan Wang, a geneticist and cell biologist at Yale School of Medicine. “With fewer scientists, there will be less science and innovation that drive societal progress and the improvement of public health.”
– March 13, 2025 – Leqaa Kordia, a Palestinian who took part in pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University, was arrested in Newark for overstaying her student visa. “It is a privilege to be granted a visa to live and study in the United States of America,” said Kristi Noem, the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Kordia’s arrest came hours after DHS officials searched two Columbia University dorm rooms as part of what Todd Blanche, US deputy attorney general, described as an investigation into Columbia’s “harboring and concealing illegal aliens on its campus.” Sebastian Javadpoor, a Columbia University student, said, “We have students who are so scared about the possibility of retaliation, about the possibility of having ICE reported on them, that they’re too afraid to call public safety if something happens to them.”
– March 13, 2025 – Dr. Rasha Alawieh, a kidney transplant specialist and professor at Brown University’s medical school, was detained at Boston Logan International Airport after returning from visiting family in Lebanon. Despite having a valid visa and a court order temporarily blocking her expulsion, Dr. Alawieh was subsequently deported. “They did not do anything to stop the plane,” said Dr. Basma Merhi, Dr. Alawieh’s colleague and lawyer. “So, clearly, they wanted to deport her regardless of if there was a judge’s order or not. She didn’t do anything wrong.”
– March 13, 2025 – Fabian Schmidt, a green card holder who lives in New Hampshire, was detained at Boston Logan International Airport after returning from Luxembourg. Schmidt’s mother, Astrid Senior, said her son was “violently interrogated.” “He had to go and be stripped naked and was showered by two officers with ice cold water, and was interrogated again,” she said. “He hardly got anything to drink. And then he wasn’t feeling very well, and he collapsed.” Fabian Schmidt came to the country legally in 20007. He lives with his partner and child, who are both American citizens.
– March 14, 2025 – Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted surveillance footage of Columbia University student Ranjani Srinivasan walking through LaGuardia Airport on social media. In her post, Noem wrote that she was “glad to see one of the Columbia University terrorist sympathizers use the CBP Home app to self-deport.” Srinivasan, a Columbia University doctoral student and Fulbright recipient, fled to Canada after her student visa was abruptly revoked without explanation. The Department of Homeland Security later issued a statement accusing Srinivasan, without evidence, of being “involved in activities supporting Hamas, a terrorist organization.”
– March 14, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order dismantling seven federal agencies, including the US Agency for Global Media, which oversees Voice of America (VOA). “President Trump is delivering on his promise to make our government more efficient. American taxpayers should not be funding anti-American propaganda in the name of journalism,” said White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt. Established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1941, Voice of America provides news in fifty languages to more than 354 million people worldwide. Trump’s order dismantling VOA was celebrated by Russian and Chinese state media. In a social media post, fired VOA reporter Liam Scott described the gutting of VOA and other agencies as “part of the administration’s broader assault on press freedom and the media”: “I’ve covered press freedom for a long time, and I’ve never seen something like what’s happened in the US over the past couple months.”
– March 14, 2025 – In a speech at the Department of Justice, President Trump attacked and vowed retribution against those who had worked on cases against him, including Manhattan district attorney Alvin L. Bragg, former special counsel Jack Smith, and former FBI director James Comey. “These are people that are bad people, really bad people,” Trump said. “They tried to turn America into a corrupt communist and third-world country, but in the end, the thugs failed and the truth won.” Trump also lavished praise on Judge Aileen M. Cannon, who dismissed the classified documents case against him, and Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, who both represented him in criminal cases and were subsequently appointed to DOJ roles. Trump also proclaimed himself “chief law enforcement officer,” a title typically reserved for the attorney general.
– March 14, 2025 – Elon Musk shared and then deleted a social media post that stated, “Stalin, Mao, and Hitler didn’t murder millions of people. Their public sector employees did.” The post came amid Musk’s cost-cutting initiatives at DOGE, which have resulted in thousands of public sector employees losing their jobs. Between six and nine million Soviets died from executions, starvation, and imprisonment under Joseph Stalin; 30–40 million people died from starvation and disease under Mao Zedong; and 11 million people died during the Holocaust under Adolf Hitler.
– March 15, 2025 – President Trump signed a proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport Venezuelan immigrants allegedly belonging to the gang Tren de Aragua to El Salvador without due process. In response, US District Judge James Boasberg ordered that all planes carrying immigrants covered by the proclamation return immediately to the US. However, at least one plane continued to El Salvador. “Oopsie… Too late,” Nayib Bukele, El Salvador’s president, posted on social media above a headline about Boasberg’s order. In total, 261 immigrants were deported to El Salvador, more than half via the proclamation. Several relatives of the men deported said their family members had no ties to the gang Tren de Aragua, and neither the US nor Salvadoran government has offered any evidence of the deportees’ gang affiliations. The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 has only been invoked three times in history and only against citizens of hostile enemy governments during declared wars.
– March 17, 2025 – District Judge James E. Boasberg questioned whether the Trump administration ignored his court order regarding planes carrying alleged gang members to El Salvador. In a verbal ruling, Boasberg directed the planes to return to the United States after he issued a restraining order blocking deportations that stemmed from Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act. The deportees were suspected members of the Tren de Arugua Venezuelan gang. Deputy Associate Attorney General Abhishek Kambli contended that only Boasberg’s short written order, issued after he made the verbal demand, counted. In response, Boasberg said, “I will memorialize this in a written order since apparently my oral orders don’t seem to carry much weight.”
– March 17, 2025 – In its effort to target agencies tied to foreign assistance work, the Trump administration fired the majority of the board of the US Institute of Peace (USIP). Members of Elon Musk’s DOGE entered the building with FBI agents after standoffs with USIP. Fired USIP president and CEO George Moose said, “What has happened here today is an illegal takeover by elements of the executive branch of a private nonprofit.” White House spokesperson Anna Kelly declared, “Rogue bureaucrats will not be allowed to hold agencies hostage.” Part of USIP’s stated mission is to “keep America safe, reducing the risk that the United States will be drawn into costly foreign wars that drive terrorism, criminal gangs, and migration.”
– March 18, 2025 – An article about Baseball Hall of Famer and Civil Rights hero Jackie Robinson’s military career was removed from the Department of Defense’s website as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on DEI-related material. Robinson’s wasn’t the only page to be removed. One celebrating Ira Hayes, a Native American marine who was one of the soldiers holding the American flag in the famous WWII picture at Iwo Jima, and another page about Native American code talkers were also deleted. Defense Department spokesperson Sean Parnell defended the removals: “I think the president and the secretary have been very clear on this—that anybody that says in the Department of Defense that diversity is our strength is, is frankly, incorrect.” ESPN baseball writer Jeff Passan slammed the removal of Robinson’s page: “The ghouls who did this should be ashamed. Jackie Robinson was the embodiment of an American hero. Fix this now.” Hours later, the Jackie Robinson page on the DoD’s website was restored.
– March 18, 2025 – The New York Times reported that the Trump administration wanted to “cripple the left” through executive orders, investigations, and public misinformation. It’s a plan to follow through on Trump’s campaign vow to seek “retribution” against his political enemies. Cole Leiter, executive director of Americans Against Government Censorship, said the Trump administration was seeking “to cut the legs out from their opposition.”
– March 18, 2025 – DOGE’s freeze on government spending severely affected the Food and Drug Administration’s studies and food testing programs. The lack of funding prevented the FDA from buying food to perform routine tests for pathogens. It also halted a study on bacteria in baby formula. Darin Detwiler, a food safety consultant and associate professor at Northeastern University, said, “It’s as if someone, without enough information, has said, ‘What’s a good way to save money on our automobiles? Let’s just take out the seat belts and airbags, because do we really need them?’”
– March 18, 2025 – ProPublica reported that before the Trump administration laid off nearly seven thousand IRS workers for “poor performance” on February 20, an IRS lawyer warned that the language used in the termination letter was fraudulent. Joseph Rillotta sent emails to Trump’s staff saying that no performance reviews had been considered when terminating the thousands of employees. “[I’m] pleading with you to remove the clause,” Rillota wrote. “It is not an immaterial false statement, because it is designed to improve the government’s posture in litigation (to the detriment of the employees that we are terminating today).” His email and a follow-up email were ignored by Trump’s staff.
– March 18, 2025 – Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts rebuked Donald Trump’s call to impeach a federal judge. Roberts’ reproach came after Trump demanded the removal of District Judge James E. Boasberg, who ruled against his recent deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members. On Truth Social, Trump ranted, “HE DIDN’T WIN ANYTHING! I WON FOR MANY REASONS, IN AN OVERWHELMING MANDATE, BUT FIGHTING ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION MAY HAVE BEEN THE NUMBER ONE REASON. This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges’ I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!” In response, Chief Justice Roberts stated, “For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.”
– March 18, 2025 – In an interview with Fox News, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. suggested an unorthodox and potentially dangerous method for dealing with the bird flu. Since 2022, over 166 million chickens have been affected by the highly contagious disease. Kennedy said farmers “should consider maybe the possibility of letting it run through the flock so that we can identify the birds, and preserve the birds that are immune to it.” Veterinary scientists weren’t too keen on RFK Jr.’s strategy. “That’s a really terrible idea, for any one of a number of reasons,” said Dr. Gail Hansen, a former state veterinarian for Kansas. If the bird flu were allowed to spread, the virus would mutate thousands of times over, killing even more birds and put other animals and potentially humans in danger. “It’s a recipe for disaster,” Hansen added.
– March 19, 2025 – In a phone call with Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “agreed to Russia’s offer of a mutual pause in attacks on energy targets” for thirty days. During the call, Trump suggested the US could take control of Ukrainian power plants. White House officials said, “American ownership of those plants could be the best protection for that infrastructure.” Trump described the conversation with Zelenskyy as “very good” and peace talks were “very much on track.” The call with Zelenskyy followed an overnight Russian attack that included strikes on energy facilities.
– March 20, 2025 – Trump signed an executive order to dismantle the US Department of Education. Trump sat in the East Room of the White House surrounded by children at school desks. He approached several children and asked them, “Should I do it?” After Trump signed the order, he remarked, “Sounds strange doesn’t it? Department of Education. We’re going to eliminate it.” Since its founding in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter, the department’s regulatory role has advocated for students with disabilities and low-income students. The department also enforced student civil rights laws. Only an act of Congress can abolish a cabinet agency.
– March 20, 2025 – Appearing on the billionaire-hosted All-In Podcast, billionaire Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said that only someone committing fraud would complain about not receiving their monthly Social Security check. “Let’s say Social Security didn’t send out their checks this month—my mother-in-law, who’s 94, she wouldn’t call and complain,” Lutnick said. “Anybody who’s been in the payment system and the processes, who knows the easiest way to find the fraudster is to stop payments and listen because whoever screams is the one stealing.” The secretary’s words stoked more concern that Trump and Musk’s DOGE plan to make drastic changes to the Social Security Administration (SSA). Earlier in the week, the SSA announced it was changing their identity verification process, which could make it harder for older Americans to access their benefits. The government also plans to shutter many SSA buildings and lay off thousands of employees. Representative James Clyburn (D-SC) responded on X to Lutnick’s bizarre statement: “The billionaires in the Trump administration have no idea what it’s like to rely on Social Security earned through a lifetime of hard, honest work.”
– March 21, 2025 – The Trump administration said it would suspend $175 million in federal funding to the University of Pennsylvania over its policy on transgender athletes. The White House’s response on the Elon Musk–owned social media platform X said the decision was made over Penn’s policy of “forcing women to compete with men in sports.” The suspension reflected Trump’s recent executive order. Penn had made news over the case of Lia Thomas, who competed for the men’s swim team before transitioning. In 2022, she became the first transgender woman to win a major collegiate swimming title. Lia said, “People will say, ‘Oh, she just transitioned so she would have an advantage, so she could win.’ I transitioned to be happy, to be true to myself.”
– March 21, 2025 – As more information emerged about the roughly two hundred Venezuelans who were deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador for allegedly being members of the Tren de Aragua gang, it was revealed that many of the them had no history of gang affiliation or, in some cases, no criminal record at all. Lawyers and relatives of the deportees said they were accused largely based on their tattoos. One man, Jerce Reyes Barrios, who had entered the United States legally in 2024, had a tattoo of the logo of Real Madrid, his favorite soccer team. The Department of Homeland Security claimed the tattoo was evidence of his affiliation with the Tren de Aragua gang. But according to Ronna Risquez, an expert on Venezuelan gang activity who wrote a book about the Tren de Aragua gang, “Venezuelan gangs are not identified by tattoos.”
– March 21, 2025 – Paul Weiss, a prominent law firm known for its civil rights work, conceded to pressure from the White House after Trump signed an executive order, which sought to hinder the firm’s security clearance and ban their lawyers from stepping foot in federal buildings. Trump’s order was seen as another attempt to seek retribution against his political opponents, as Paul Weiss has served many Democratic clients. As part of the agreement, the firm promised to end its DEI policies and give $40 million in free legal services to the Trump administration. Many associates at other high-power law firms signed a letter urging their employers to take a stand against the government. Rachel Cohen, an associate at the law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher, and Flom, resigned over her employer’s inaction. “This is not what I saw for my career… but Paul Weiss’ decision to cave to the Trump administration on DEI, representation, and staffing has forced my hand,” she wrote. “We do not have time. It is either now or never, and if it’s never, I will not continue to work here.” Dana Nessel, Michigan’s attorney general, lamented on X, “Paul Weiss is merely rearranging the proverbial deck chairs on the Titanic. With this administration, there will be no legitimate legal system and no need for actual lawyers.”
– March 21, 2025 – Columbia University announced it would agree to all of the Trump administration’s demands regarding student protests and monitoring antisemitism on campus. On March 13, the White House sent a letter to the university threatening to pull $400 million in federal grants until it complied. The university said it would change its policies around student protests, including banning masks during protests, and hiring an administrator to oversee courses that teach about Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African studies to make sure “the educational offerings are comprehensive and balanced.” A day earlier, several faculty members of the university’s history department sent a signed letter warning the school against agreeing to the government’s terms, comparing the Trump administration’s actions to “authoritarian regimes” that have sought control over academic institutions. As of March 24, 2025, it was not known whether Columbia’s capitulation would free up their federal grant money. However, Leo Terrell, a senior Justice Department lawyer, said the university still had much more to do to get it. “Columbia has not, in my opinion—and the opinion of the Department of Justice—cleaned up their act,” he said. “They’re not even close, not even close to having those funds unfrozen.”
– March 21, 2025 – Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that airplane manufacturer Boeing won the contract to build the “next generation” of fighter jets for the US military. The new planes would be called F-47’s. Trump said generals picked the title, and it’s a beautiful number." He also added that U.S. allies were interested in buying the aircraft and that the US would likely sell them “toned down” versions “because someday, maybe they’re not our allies.” In 2024, DOGE head Elon Musk told senior leaders. in the United States military that “manned fighter jets are obsolete in the age of drones.” He called those who built the F-35 and F-47 idiots.
March 22, 2025 – Trump attacked Maine Governor Janet Mills again over her state’s transgender athlete policies. In a Truth Social post, the president of the United States demanded an apology from Mills and implied that the government would pull funding for the state until she apologized for their confrontation in February. “While the State of Maine has apologized for their Governor’s strong, but totally incorrect, statement about men playing in women’s sports while at the White House House Governor’s Conference, we have not heard from the Governor herself, and she is the one that matters in such cases,” Trump wrote in an early Saturday morning post. “Therefore, we need a full-throated apology from the Governor herself and a statement that she will never make such an unlawful challenge to the Federal Government again before this case can be settled.” It is unclear what “case” the president referred to. In response to their clash at the Governors’ Conference, Mills said, “In my conversation with the President last week, unfortunately, he made a statement that I have never heard any president say before, that he is the law… It’s like Louis the XIV.”
– March 21, 2025 – The Department of Homeland Security revoked temporary legal protections for over 500,000 Cubans, Venezuelans, Haitians, and Nicaraguans who came to the US for urgent humanitarian reasons. The protections were part of a Biden administration program that created renewable “legal pathways” for individuals to come to the US, provided they passed security checks and had financial sponsors. US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said these temporary residents would lose their legal status on April 2. In the Federal Register, she wrote that the administration ended the program because it had no “significant benefit.” Recently, Trump considered whether to cancel the temporary legal status of 240,000 Ukrainians who fled to the US during the conflict with Russia.
– March 24, 2025 – Jeffrey Goldberg, editor in chief of The Atlantic, revealed that he was accidentally included in a group chat where top Trump administration officials posted about “operational details of forthcoming strikes in Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying, and attack sequencing.” The emoji-filled chat took place on Signal, a commercial messaging app, and included Vice President JD Vance, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, National Security Advisor Michael Waltz, and other top officials. National security lawyers stated that the chat may have violated provisions of the Espionage Act; the messages were also set to disappear, possibly violating federal records laws. “This is one of the most stunning breaches of military intelligence I have read about in a very, very long time,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. Hillary Clinton, who was heavily criticized for using a private email server as secretary of state, added: “You have got to be kidding me.”
– March 24, 2025 – Yunseo Chung, a legal permanent resident who has lived in the US since childhood, sued the Trump administration after ICE attempted to arrest and deport her. The Department of Homeland Security stated that Chung had “engaged in concerning conduct, including when she was arrested by NYPD during a pro-Hamas protest at Barnard College” and that she was “being sought for removal proceedings under the immigration laws.” A Columbia University student, Chung attended a pro-Palestinian student sit-in on March 5 and was arrested by police on misdemeanor charges of obstructing a government building. Several days after Chung’s release, ICE showed up at Chung’s parents’ home and began texting her. Federal prosecutors subsequently informed Chung that her legal permanent residency was being “revoked,” and her university housing was also searched. “It can’t be the case that a straight-A student who has lived here most of her life can be whisked away and potentially deported,” said Naz Ahmad, codirector of CLEAR legal clinic and one of Chung’s lawyers. “All because she dares to speak up.”
– March 25, 2025 – Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish graduate student at Tufts University, was detained by Department of Homeland Security agents despite having a valid student visa and no criminal charges filed against her. Surveillance video showed six plainclothes officers approach Ozturk on the street, restrain her, and then hide their faces. At the time of her arrest, Ozturk, who is Muslim and wears a head covering, was headed to a Ramadan break fast with friends. Without access to her medication, she suffered an asthma attack en route to a detention center in Louisiana. A senior DHS spokesperson said that Ozturk had “engaged in activities in support of Hamas” without providing any details or evidence. Ozturk’s friends and colleagues pushed back against DHS’s characterization: “She doesn’t drive, but if she was to drive she wouldn’t even have a parking ticket. That’s the kind of person we’re talking about,” said Reyyan Bilge, a psychology professor at Northeastern. In March 2024, Ozturk cowrote an opinion essay in The Tufts Daily criticizing Tufts’ response to student demands to “acknowledge the Palestinian genocide” and divest from companies connected to Israel.
– March 25, 2025 – Following a social media meltdown, a portrait of President Trump was removed from the Colorado Capitol, where it had hung for the past six years. Over the weekend, Trump had railed against the oil painting portrait on Truth Social, calling it “purposefully distorted” and “truly the worst.” In the same post, Trump accused the artist of “[losing] her talent as she got older” and blamed the portrait on Colorado’s Democratic governor, Jared Polis, despite the fact the portrait was funded, commissioned, and unveiled by Republicans. A spokeswoman for the governor stated that Polis was “surprised to learn the President of the United States is an aficionado of our Colorado State Capitol and its artwork.”
– March 25, 2025 – President Trump signed an executive order requiring proof of US citizenship to vote and that all ballots be received by Election Day. In the past, Trump has repeatedly made false statements about noncitizens voting and mail-in voter fraud. After losing the 2020 election, he falsely blamed voter fraud, describing the election as “rigged,” “stolen,” and “a hoax.” “We have a rigged election. We have bad borders, we have very bad elections. We have a bad voting system. We have mail-in ballots,” Trump said in a 2024 interview. In fact, voter fraud is exceedingly rare, and stricter voting requirements may disenfranchise citizens without easy access to the necessary documents or who cannot vote in person on Election Day. “This measure will no doubt disproportionately impact historically-excluded communities,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project, “including voters of color, naturalized citizens, people with disabilities, and the elderly, by pushing unnecessary barriers to the fundamental right.”
– March 25, 2025 – President Trump granted a full and unconditional pardon to Devon Archer, who testified to Congress about Hunter Biden’s business dealings. One of Biden’s former business partners, Archer testified that Hunter Biden had used “soft power” and his association with President Joe Biden to influence his business dealings, earning Archer a following among conservatives. Before signing the pardon, Trump said Archer was “a victim of a crime” and “was treated very unfairly.” In 2022, Archer was convicted of fraud and sentenced to a year-and-a-day prison term, which had yet to commence. With the pardon, Archer will not be required to pay the forfeitures or restitution, and he will not serve a single day in prison.
– March 25, 2025 – Tom Homan, Trump’s “border czar,” acknowledged that “collaterals” were swept up in a recent ICE operation that took place in Boston over six days and resulted in 370 arrests. “Most were criminals, but many were collaterals. A majority criminals. How come the collaterals? I’ve said this a thousand times. Sanctuary cities are going to get exactly what they don’t want: more agents in the community and more collateral arrests.” Pressed for more details by reporters, Homan added, “I don’t have the numbers.” In a statement, ICE noted that only 205 of the 370 people arrested had a criminal history. Gladys Vega, president of La Colaborativa, a social services organization for Latinx immigrants, noted the devastating impact of the raids on her community: “It’s creating panic, it’s creating a situation where the fear is taking over, and people are not showing up to doctor’s appointments, they’re not showing up to school, they’re not going in huge numbers to the church.”
– March 25, 2025 – In a video posted to social media, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posed in front of an overcrowded prison cell at El Salvador’s notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, also known as CECOT. Earlier in the month, the Trump administration deported hundreds of migrants to CECOT without due process and without evidence that the men were tied to gangs or had committed crimes. In the video, the inmates’ heads were shaved, and many did not have shirts; the men were stacked on three levels of bunks, with multiple men crammed to a bunk and standing room only on the ground. “I also want everybody to know, if you come to our country illegally, this is one of the consequences you could face,” said Noem, who wore a gold $50,000 Rolex and what appeared to be strip lashes and hair extensions in the video.
– March 25, 2025 – In his opening remarks at a White House Women’s History Month event, Trump said, “We’re ending the Marxist war on women. You had a war on women. And we’re protecting women’s rights, defending women’s dignity and standing up for the American moms and daughters.” Hours after taking office in January, the Trump administration took the website www.reproductiverights.gov offline. Trump also eliminated the Gender Policy Council, expressed opposition to the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, and supported proposed cuts to Medicaid. One in ten women in the US relies on Medicaid for health coverage, including pregnancy-related care, family planning, screening for breast and cervical cancer, and long-term care services and support.
– March 27, 2025 – The Trump administration announced a new 25 percent tariff on auto imports to boost domestic manufacturing. “This will continue to spur growth,” Trump told reporters. “Anybody who has plants in the United States, it’s going to be good for.” On news of the new tariff, General Motors stock fell nearly 7 percent. Noted economist Arthur Laffer, who Trump awarded with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019, said in a twenty-one-page analysis that the tariffs could add well over four thousand dollars to the cost of a car for American consumers. Economist Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute of International Economics, said, “We’re going to see reduced choice. These kinds of taxes fall more heavily on the middle and working class.’’ Several days after the tariff announcement, Trump admitted he “couldn’t care less” if auto makers raised their prices
– March 27, 2025 – Ten thousand federal employees of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) were laid off by the Trump administration. HHS manages the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said, “This Department will do more—a lot more—at a lower cost to the taxpayer.” Responding to the layoffs, Dr. Chris Pernell, director of the NAACP’s Center for Health Equity said, “Any reduction in our public health infrastructure—whether it’s workers or funding—only serves to make Americans sicker. And we know that when America gets a cold, Black people get the flu.”
– March 27, 2025 – Trump issued an executive order called “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.” The order aimed to force changes at the Smithsonian Institution and its National Museum of African American History and Culture. Vice President JD Vance was charged with eliminating programs that advanced “divisive narratives” and “improper ideology.” The order stated that the Smithsonian promoted “a divisive, race-centered ideology” and “narratives that portray American and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive.” In 2017, Trump visited the museum and declared, “I’m deeply proud that we now have a museum that honors the millions of African American men and women who built our national heritage, especially when it comes to faith, culture, and the unbreakable American spirit.”
– March 28, 2025 – During a contentious trip to Greenland, Vice President JD Vance said, “Denmark has not kept pace and devoted the resources necessary to keep the people of Greenland safe from a lot of very aggressive incursions from Russia, from China and other nations.” He offered no details of the alleged incursions. The United States has had a military base on Greenland since 1951 and is required to defend the country as a member of NATO. Vance’s speech in Nuuk coincided with the Trump administration’s desire to acquire the Danish territory. Trump stated that he “won’t take anything off the table” to procure the island. Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said in a Facebook post, “President Trump says that the United States ‘will get Greenland.’ Let me be clear: The United States will not get it. We do not belong to anyone else.”
– March 29, 2025 – More than two hundred “Tesla Takedown” rallies took place in cities around the world. Protest organizers discouraged people from buying Teslas or selling off their Tesla stock. The rallies also voiced opposition to Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. In the days leading up to the protests, Musk’s department had already slashed US federal budgets and laid off thousands of workers. Manissa Maharawal, an assistant professor at American University who studied anti-tech protests, pointed out that “the hypocrisy is so deep. Tesla has received billions in government funding.” In San Francisco, one protester featured a sign with a photograph of Musk and a caption that read, THIS IS THE IMMIGRANT WHO TOOK YOUR JOB.
– March 30, 2025 – In a court filing, the Trump administration admitted that it had mistakenly deported a Maryland man with protected legal status, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, to El Salvador on March 15. “Although ICE was aware of his protection from removal to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia was removed to El Salvador because of an administrative error,” the filing acknowledged. Trump administration lawyers went on to state that the US courts have no jurisdiction to order Abrego Garcia’s return; they asked that the court dismiss Abrego Garcia’s request that the Trump administration call for his return and withhold payment to the Salvadoran government on the grounds that Trump’s “primacy in foreign affairs” took priority over the interests of Abrego Garcia and his family. Married to a US citizen and the father of a five-year-old disabled child, Abrego Garcia has no criminal record in the US and was granted a protected legal status in 2019 due to his likelihood of facing harm if deported back to his home country.
– March 30, 2025 – During an interview with NBC News, President Trump did not rule out the possibility of seeking a third presidential term “There are methods which you could do it,” he said, acknowledging that one possible route would involve Vice President JD Vance running for president and then passing the role to Trump. In the past, Trump has frequently joked or speculated about running for a third term; in February, he likened himself to a king. The Twenty-Second Amendment to the US Constitution explicitly bans a president from being elected to more than two terms.
– March 30, 2025 – The Trump administration deported seventeen more men to a maximum security prison in El Salvador. Although officials claimed the men were deported under regular immigration law rather than under the controversial Alien Enemies Act of 1798, both Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Pentagon Chief of Staff Joe Kasper still described the deportations as “counterterrorism” operations. In a statement released the following day, Rubio described the deportees as “violent criminals from the Tren de Aragua and MS-13 organizations, including murderers and rapists.” The administration did not provide detailed information about the identities of the deportees, their alleged crimes, or the legal authority under which they were removed. The Trump administration has faced significant criticism and multiple lawsuits over its handling of earlier deportations to El Salvador and the possibility that it defied a judge’s order. Family members of those deported earlier in the month said their relatives were not gang members and were denied due process. The Trump administration also acknowledged that at least one man was mistakenly deported due to “administrative error.”
– March 30, 2025 – At a rally in Green Bay, Elon Musk gave two Wisconsin voters $1 million checks and promised additional smaller payments to those who help elect conservative Brad Schimel to the State Supreme Court. In a video posted by Elon Musk’s America PAC, one of the recipients, Ekaterina Deistler, explicitly linked her payment to following Musk’s instructions to vote. “I did exactly what Elon Musk told everyone to do: sign the petition, refer friends and family, vote, and now I have a million dollars,” said Deistler. The cash giveaways came after Musk previously offered voters one hundred dollars to sign a petition denouncing “activist judges.” Earlier in the day, the Wisconsin Supreme Court had declined to accept a lawsuit from the attorney general arguing that Musk’s actions violated anti-bribery laws. Musk and affiliated groups have spent over $20 million on the race, which they have argued will impact congressional redistricting. “Whichever party controls the House to a significant degree controls the country, which then steers the course of Western civilization,” said Musk. According to The New York Times, Musk began directing money to the Wisconsin judicial race shortly after Tesla sued Wisconsin over laws prohibiting auto manufacturers from selling directly to consumers.
– March 31, 2025 – President Trump commuted the sentence of Jason Galanis, whose congressional testimony last year aided Republican efforts to impeach former president Joe Biden. When asked to explain the commutation, a senior White House official mentioned Galanis’s contribution to the impeachment investigation. A former business associate of Hunter Biden, Galanis pled guilty to two securities fraud schemes and was sentenced to over fifteen years in prison and $162 million in forfeiture and restitution. The commutation eliminated Galanis’s unpaid financial penalties. “He and his codefendants engaged in market manipulation and the defrauding of shareholders, and they stole a large portion of the proceeds of tribal bonds that were intended to fund economic development projects,” said Audrey Strauss, the former US attorney for the Southern District of New York, after Galanis’s sentencing.
– March 31, 2025 – Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. "announced they were joining with Bitcoin mining company Hut 8 to create a new firm called American Bitcoin. Twenty percent of American Bitcoin will be controlled by American Data Centers, whose investors include both Trump sons, and Eric Trump was listed as cofounder and chief strategy officer of the new firm. According to government ethics experts, the Trump family’s crypto dealings are a major conflict of interest. During his campaign, Donald Trump and his sons launched World Liberty Financial, which offers two types of digital currencies, and on the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration, Donald Trump and Melania Trump launched a memecoin. As president, Trump has eased up on prosecuting crypto crime and created a national stockpile of digital currencies, an action widely viewed as a boon to crypto investors.
- – -APRIL 2025
– April 1, 2025 – Princeton University said that the US government had frozen several dozen of its research grants without explanation. According to a Department of Energy spokesperson, the grants were paused “pending the completion of the Department of Education’s investigation into Princeton regarding antisemitic harassment.” The funding freeze came just weeks after Princeton’s president, Christopher L. Eisgruber, published an opinion essay in The Atlantic criticizing the Trump administration’s threatened funding cuts and demands to Columbia University. Wrote Eisgruber, “The attack on Columbia is a radical threat to scholarly excellence and to America’s leadership in research. Universities and their leaders should speak up and litigate forcefully to protect their rights.” According to Inside Higher Education, approximately $210 million in grants, about half of Princeton’s total grants for the year, were frozen.
– April 1, 2025 – In an interview with Reuters, former Costa Rican president and Nobel laureate Óscar Arias said the US had revoked his visa. The visa revocation came several weeks after Arias posted multiple social media posts critical of the Trump administration. On February 3, Arias compared Trump to a “Roman emperor.” On February 28, he criticized Trump and JD Vance of using “arrogant and humiliating language,” “intimidating words,” and “a series of inappropriate and [sic] threats” in their televised Oval Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. “If someone wants to use a reprisal to silence me, well, obviously they’re not going to silence me,” said Arias, who was awarded the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating an end to conflicts in Central America.
– April 2, 2025 – US District Judge Dale E. Ho dismissed corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams—who spent months currying favor with Trump—but stopped short of dismissing the charges without prejudice, which would have enabled the Justice Department to reinstate the charges at a later date. In his memo to the Southern District of New York, acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove had argued that continued prosecution of Adams would interfere with the mayor’s ability to enforce the Trump administration’s immigration agenda. Bove also noted that the order was made “without assessing the strength of the evidence or the legal theories on which the case is based.” In his ruling, Judge Ho wrote, “Everything here smacks of a bargain: Dismissal of indictment in exchange for immigration policy concessions.” He said he had little recourse but to dismiss after the DOJ abandoned the case, but he criticized the Justice Department’s reasoning as “unprecedented and breathtaking in its sweep” and rebutted DOJ claims that the prosecution had been political: “There is no evidence—zero—that [Manhattan federal prosecutors] had any improper motives.”
– April 2, 2025 – In a Rose Garden ceremony, President Trump announced sweeping new “Liberation Day” tariffs, including a 10 percent baseline tariff and significantly higher rates against Japan, China, and the European Union. The following day, the stock market experienced its biggest decline since 2020. The S&P 500 fell 4.84 percent, the Dow Jones Industrial Average 3.98 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite 5.97 percent. Acknowledging the dramatic stock market declines, Trump compared the tariffs to “an operation, like when a patient gets operated on” and predicted a recovery without evidence: “The markets are going to boom. The stock is going to boom. The country is going to boom. And the rest of the world wants to see if there’s any way they can make a deal.” The financial services company JPMorgan said that the tariffs would lead to a recession.
– April 2, 2025 – Following liberal candidate Susan Crawford’s victory in the Wisconsin State Supreme Court election, which was viewed widely as a referendum on Elon Musk, the world’s richest man walked back the results. “I expected to lose, but there is value to losing a piece for a positional gain,” Musk wrote on his social media company X. He had campaigned vigorously for the conservative candidate Brad Schimel, spending $25 million, including direct payments to voters, and describing the election in existential terms as “one of those things that may not seem that it’s going to affect the entire destiny of humanity, but I think it will.” At a Green Bay rally earlier in the week, Musk had handed out two $1 million checks to two individuals who had voted for Schimel. Nevertheless, Crawford won handily by ten percentage points. “Today, Wisconsonites fended off an unprecedented attack on our democracy, our fair elections and our Supreme Court,” Crawford said during her victory speech. “Wisconsin stood up and said loudly that justice does not have a price. Our courts are not for sale.”
– April 2, 2025 – Millions of dollars in grants to the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) were canceled by the Trump administration. NEH provides crucial funding to state humanities councils, museums, historical sites, archives, libraries, educators, media, and schools. Over email, grant recipients were informed that the NEH would be “repurposing its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the president’s agenda.” Cathy Gorn, executive director of National History Day, one of the programs whose funds were terminated, told The New York Times, “We are in danger of not being able to help this next generation of American citizens understand the nation’s past.”
– April 3, 2025 – The Trump administration laid out a series of demands that Harvard University must meet to avoid losing almost $9 billion in federal grants and contracts. In a letter to Harvard’s president, three federal agencies said Harvard has “fundamentally failed to protect American students and faculty from antisemitic violence and harassment” and demanded that Harvard ban face masks, clarify its speech policies, make changes to departments that “fuel antisemitic harassment,” ban DEI, adopt “merit-based” admissions and hiring policies, and disclose foreign gifts and contracts. In response to an earlier announcement about the threatened funding cuts, Harvard’s president, Alan Garber, wrote in an email that the loss of funds would “halt life-saving research and imperil important scientific research and innovation.”
– April 3, 2025 – One day after meeting with far-right activist and conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer, Trump fired six national security officials, including the director of the National Security Agency, General Timothy Haugh; Haugh’s civilian deputy, Wendy Noble; and National Security Council Director for Intelligence Brian Walsh. “Always we’re letting go of people,” Trump said on Air Force One. “People that we don’t like or people that we don’t think can do the job or people that may have loyalties to someone else.” During an Oval Office meeting, Loomer presented Trump with printed files of research she had compiled on various officials and urged the president to fire staffers she viewed as insufficiently loyal or who were appointed by former President Joe Biden. Via social media, Loomer accused several of the fired officials of being “disloyal to President Trump” and appeared to confirm her involvement in their removal: “Thank you, President Trump, for being receptive to the vetting materials provided to you and thank you for firing these Biden holdovers.”
– April 3, 2025 – Dr. Mehmet Oz was confirmed as the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in a 53-45 Senate vote. A celebrity doctor and one-time Republican Senate candidate, Oz has been accused of endorsing products and making recommendations that are not supported by scientific evidence. On The Dr. Oz Show, he suggested apple juice contained dangerous levels of arsenic, promoted green coffee bean extract as a “miracle pill” for weight loss. A 2014 British Medical Journal study found that more than half of Oz’s recommendations on his show either contradicted or were unsupported by scientific research. In 2003, he was banned from presenting research at a conference due to false claims he had made in his research paper abstract. During the pandemic, Oz promoted hydroxychloroquine, a drug to which he had financial ties, as a COVID-19 treatment despite no evidence of its efficacy.
– April 4, 2025 – After a federal judge ordered the federal government to bring back a man mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller disparaged the judge on social media. “Marxist judge now thinks she’s president of El Salvador,” wrote Miller. Despite having protected legal status and no criminal record in the US, Kilmar Abrego Garcia of Maryland was deported to El Salvador on March 15 in what the Trump administration later admitted was an administrative error. “This was an illegal act,” said Judge Paula Xinis, who ordered that Abrego Garcia be returned no later than April 7, 2025. “Congress said you can’t do it, and you did it anyway.”
– April 4, 2025 – Dozens of international student visas were revoked across the University of California system and at Stanford University. UC-San Diego Chancellor Pradeep Khosla said that five UCSD student visas had been rescinded and that a sixth student was “detained at the border, denied entry, and deported to their home country.” “The federal government has not explained the reasons behind these terminations,” said Khosla, who added that the university had received the notifications “without warning.” During a visit to Guyana the previous week, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US had revoked approximately three hundred visas, most belonging to students. “We do it every day. Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visa,” said Rubio, referring to pro-Palestinian student protesters. “I hope at some point we run out because we have gotten rid of all of them, but we’re looking every day for these lunatics that are tearing things up.”
– April 4, 2025 – As President Trump golfed in Florida, over 1,400 anti-Trump “Hands Off Rallies” involving an estimated one million people took place across all fifty states. The organizers called for “an end to the billionaire takeover and rampant corruption of the Trump administration”; “an end to slashing federal funds for Medicaid, Social Security, and other programs working people rely on”; and “an end to the attacks on immigrants, trans people, and other communities.” In response, the White House released a statement defending the president and attacking Democrats: “President Trump’s position is clear: he will always protect Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid for eligible beneficiaries. Meanwhile, the Democrats’ stance is giving Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare benefits to illegal aliens, which will bankrupt these programs and crush American seniors.” In a segment that aired two days later on Fox News, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt also referred to the protesters as “far-left lunatics” and called Democrats the “party of crazy.”
– April 4, 2025 – An unvaccinated eight-year-old Texas girl with no underlying health conditions died from measles. Following the death of another unvaccinated Texas child with no underlying health conditions on February 25, it was the second such US death since 2015 and the second such US death of a child since 2003. Another unvaccinated person died on March 6 after testing positive for measles, though officials have not yet confirmed the cause of death. As of April 6, 480 measles cases were reported in West Texas, 54 in New Mexico, and 10 in Oklahoma. In an opinion essay for Fox News that was published in early March, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic, stopped short of explicitly recommending universal MMR vaccination, calling the decision to vaccinate a “personal” choice. He also advocated for vitamin A treatment, which experts have recommended against using in most measles cases. More recently, Kennedy emphasized untested measles treatments like cod liver oil and hired a discredited vaccine skeptic to research long-debunked links between vaccines and autism.
– April 4, 2025 – Erez Reuveni, a Justice Department lawyer who expressed frustration with the government’s deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, was placed on indefinite leave. Garcia, a Maryland man with protected legal status, was deported in March due to what the government has described as an “administrative error.” In court, Reuveni said that Abrego Garcia “should not have been removed” and added that he did not know why Abrego Garcia was arrested. “I am also frustrated that I have no answers for you on a lot of these questions,” said Reuveni. When asked why the government couldn’t bring Abrego Garcia back, Reuveni responded, “I will say for the court’s awareness that when this case landed on my desk, the first thing I did was ask my client the same question. I have not yet received a satisfactory answer.”
– April 6, 2025 – Trump hosted events that attracted hundreds of donors to his Palm Beach club and resort. Guests gathered at Mar-a Lago for The American Patriots Gala, which featured Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Trump’s Doral Club also hosted a golf tournament sponsored by the Saudi-backed league LIV Golf. All 643 rooms at the club were full, including the $13,000-per-night Presidential Suite. Trump boasted on social media, “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO GET RICH, RICHER THAN EVER BEFORE.” The day before the events, Trump used his trademark Sharpie pen to announce new global tariffs that erased $5 trillion in market value from S&P 500 companies. Versions of the pen were available at Mar-a-Lago for three dollars.
– April 6, 2025 – Secretary of State Marco Rubio revoked all visas held by South Sudanese passport holders. He accused the South Sudanese government of “taking advantage of the United States,” adding, “every country must accept the return of its citizens in a timely manner when another country seeks to remove them.” Rubio also said the US would “prevent further issuance to prevent entry into the United States by South Sudanese passport holders.” South Sudan nationals were granted “temporary protected status” (TPS) by the Obama and Biden administrations. TPS is granted to foreign citizens who cannot safely return home because of war, natural disasters, or other “extraordinary” conditions. United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres urged international leaders to prevent South Sudan from falling “over the abyss” into another civil war.
– April 7, 2025 – Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced plans for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to stop recommending fluoridation in drinking water nationwide. Kennedy said he would assemble a task force to study the issue and make new recommendations. In March 2025, Utah became the first state to ban fluoride in drinking water—against the advice of the American Dental Association. Kennedy praised Utah for becoming “the leader in making America healthy again.” Kennedy’s announcement coincided with the elimination of the twenty-person Division of Oral Health. The CDC has stated that community water fluoridation is one of ten great public health achievements of the twentieth century.
– April 7, 2025 – US Navy Vice Admiral Shoshana Chatfield, the only woman on NATO’S military committee, was fired by the Trump administration. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth removed Chatfield, “due to a lack of confidence in her ability to lead.” Chatfield was on a list of senior military officers targeted as “woke” by the conservative American Accountability Foundation. Of the ten firings of military officers that have taken place during Trump’s second term, five of them were women. In the US military, women make up seventeen percent of the total force.
– April 8, 2025 – Federal District Court Judge Trevor N. McFadden ordered the White House to restore the Associated Press’s (AP) full access to President Trump. The judge said that banning the news outlet violated the First Amendment. His opinion stated, “The Constitution requires no less.” Trump barred AP reporters from presidential press events because of their refusal to acknowledge Trump’s renaming of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. In March 2024, AP reporter Josh Boak grilled White House Secretary Karoline Leavitt on the difference between taxes and tariffs. “I think it’s insulting that you’re trying to test my knowledge of economics,” Leavitt said. “I now regret giving a question to the Associated Press.”
– April 9, 2025 – Trump unexpectedly reversed course on steep global tariffs on nearly sixty countries just hours before he put them in place. Trump said he authorized a ninety-day pause in which countries would face “a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff” of 10 percent. Trump did not extend the pause to China. He raised China’s tariffs to a hefty 125 percent. China retaliated by raising levies on American goods to 84 percent. Before the announcement, Trump’s tariffs had wreaked havoc on markets and sparked fears of a recession. “Over the last few days, it looked pretty glum,” Trump said, “I thought that people were jumping a little bit out of line. They were getting yippy.” According to the Center for American Progress, the typical American household can now expect to pay an average of $4,600 annually because of Trump’s tariffs.
– April 9, 2025 – Trump faced accusations of market manipulation hours before he paused US global tariffs. At 9:37 a.m., Trump posted on Truth Social, “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!! DJT,” Several hours later, he announced the ninety-day tariff pause, which created a surge in market shares. When questioned about the timing of his decision, Trump said, “I would say this morning. Over the last few days, I’ve been thinking about it. Fairly early this morning.” Kathleen Clark, a government ethics law expert at Washington University School of Law said, “He’s sending the message that he can effectively and with impunity manipulate the market. As in: Watch this space for future stock tips.”
– April 9, 2025 – The Supreme Court instructed the Trump administration to take steps to bring back Salvadoran migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was wrongly deported to a prison in El Salvador. The court rejected the administration’s emergency appeal and partially endorsed US District Court Judge Paula Xinis’s order that required the government to “facilitate and effectuate the return” of Mr. Abrego Garcia. The administration conceded that it made a mistake in sending Abrego Garcia to El Salvador, calling it an administrative error. Murray Osario, an attorney representing Abrego Garcia, called the ruling an “overdue first step” that “does nothing to address the government’s obligation to return him safely and immediately to the United States.”
– April 11, 2025 – Trump administration officials recommended deep cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The proposal included ending "all funding for climate, weather, and ocean Laboratories and Cooperative Institutes.” Officials also recommended eliminating the Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Office (OAR). The OAR had provided a variety of scientific services, including early warning systems for natural disasters, science education for K-12 students, and the study of the rapidly warming Arctic. The NOAA recommendation came on the heels of the removal of mentions of climate change from federal websites. House Science Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren said she will “do everything [she] can to stand in the way of this idiotic plan.”
– April 11, 2025 – A Louisiana immigration judge ruled that Columbia University graduate and activist Mahmoud Khalil, a legal permanent resident, could be deported. Judge Jamee E. Comans said at the hearing that the government had “established by clear and convincing evidence that he is removable.” Khalil recalled Judge Comans saying at a hearing earlier in the week that “there’s nothing more important to this court than due process rights and fundamental fairness.” In response to the ruling, Khalil said, “Clearly, what we witnessed today, neither of these principles were present today or in this whole process. This is exactly why the Trump administration has sent me to the court, 1,000 miles away from my family.”
– April 12, 2025 – Trump continued to escalate the trade war with China, rattling investors, businesses, and consumers. Beijing raised tariffs on US imports to 125 percent after the White House clarified that Chinese imports now face tariffs of 145 percent. US businesses that relied on products from China were faced with halted shipments. In response to the backlash, Trump announced he would exclude electronics like smartphones and laptops from reciprocal tariffs. Trump proclaimed on Truth Social, “We are doing really well on our TARIFF POLICY.” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt also tried to allay fears. “Trust in President Trump. He knows what he’s doing,” she said. “This is a proven economic formula.” Larry Fink, CEO of mega-investment firm BlackRock, was not convinced. “I think we’re very close, if not in, a recession now.”
– April 13, 2025 – In a memo shared with the Washington Post, State Department officials revealed that Secretary of State Marco Rubio lacked the evidence for revoking the visa of Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk. Yet on March 25, ICE agents detained her anyway. The memo questioned the accusations made by the Trump administration that Ozturk “engaged in activities in support of Hamas.” Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor U.S. attorneys provided evidence to support their claim, a search of U.S. government databases on Ozturk did not reveal any terrorist-related and antisemitc activity. During a hearing in Vermont, Jesse Rossman, Ozturk’s attorney, said, “There is not discretion, even in immigration law, for the government to violate the Constitution.”
– April 13, 2025 – Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that ten more immigrants had been deported to El Salvador. “Last night, another ten criminals from the MS-13 and Tren de Aragua Foreign Terrorist Organizations arrived in El Salvador,” Rubio posted on social media, without providing any evidence of the deported men’s gang affiliations or that they had been charged with a crime. The Trump administration began deporting immigrants to the notorious Salvadoran prison CECOT in March without due process and based on little more than their tattoos and clothing.
– April 13, 2025 – When asked on Air Force One about claims of human rights abuses at CECOT, the notorious Salvadoran prison where the Trump administration has sent deportees, President Trump responded, “I don’t see it.” CECOT does not allow visitation, recreation, or education, and 65-70 inmates are crammed into each cell. Last year, the human rights organization Cristosal reported that at least 261 people had died in El Salvador’s prisons during a gang crackdown and cited additional cases of abuse, torture, and lack of medical attention. “They only have about half an hour outside of their windowless cells to be outside in a hallway of the prison,” said Margaret Cargioli, a lawyer for Immigrant Defenders Law Center. “They are overcrowded within each of the cells, and they’re sleeping on metal.” The advocacy group Human Rights Watch said they were not aware of any detainees who had ever been released from CECOT.
– April 14, 2025 – During an Oval Office meeting with Trump, El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele told reporters that he would not aid in the return of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man with protect status who was “accidentally” deported in March by ICE and sent to an El Salvadoran terrorist confinement center. The U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that the Trump administration must “facilitate” the return of Garcia, but Attorney General Pam Bondi said the ruling meant that they could only assist in his return if the El Salvadoran government agreed to it. “How can I return [Garcia] to the United States? Like, if I smuggle him into the United States?” President Bukele said, with Trump at his side. “Of course I’m not going to do it. The question is preposterous.” Stephen Vladeck, a Georgetown University law professor, told the New York Times that Garcia’s deportation amounted to a “rule-of-law crisis.” “If the government can do it to Abrego Garcia,” he said, “they can do it to anybody.”
– April 14, 2025 – The Trump administration froze over $2 billion in grants to Harvard University after the school announced it would not comply with the federal government’s demands. In March, Trump’s antisemitism task force placed $9 billion, most of it dedicated to health research and hospital funding, on hold while they investigated the nation’s oldest university’s efforts to stop antisemitism on campus and reviewed its policies around student and faculty protests. On April 11, members of the task force sent a letter to Harvard saying it must change its admissions and hiring policies, as well as end all its DEI programs. In an open letter, Harvard’s president, Alan Garber explained why the school would not agree to the Trump administatrion’s orders, “No government—regardless of which party is in power—should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue.” Republican congresswoman Elise Stefanik released a statement, condemning her alma mater’s decision. “Harvard University has rightfully earned its place as the epitome of the moral and academic rot in higher education,” she wrote. “It is time to totally cut off U.S. taxpayer funding to this institution that has failed to live up to its founding motto, Veritas.” The money pulled back by the government was to be used for research on HIV, tuberculosis, and traumatic brain injuries.
– April 14, 2025 – During an Oval Office meeting with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, President Trump expressed enthusiasm yet again for deporting US citizens convicted of violent crimes to El Salvador. “Homegrown criminals are next. I said homegrowns are next, the homegrowns. You’ve gotta build about five more places,” Trump told Bukele, in an exchange that was livestreamed. Speaking to reporters, Trump said, “We always have to obey the laws, but we also have homegrown criminals that push people into subways, that hit elderly ladies on the back of the head with a baseball bat when they’re not looking, that are absolute monsters. I’d like to include them in the group of people to get them out of the country.” Although Trump said that Attorney General Pam Bondi was studying the matter, legal experts said there was nothing to look into: “It is pretty obviously illegal and unconstitutional,” said Ilya Somin, a professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School.
– April 14, 2025 – Stephen Miller, US Homeland Security advisor and White House deputy chief of staff, contradicted Department of Justice documents acknowledging that the Trump administration had made “an administrative error” in deporting Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who had protected legal status, to El Salvador. “Nobody was mistakenly deported anywhere,” Miller told reporters outside the White House. “That’s a big mistake that all of you, most of you, have gotten wrong. No one was mistakenly sent anywhere. The only mistake that was made is a lawyer put an incorrect line in a legal filing that’s since been relieved… [Abrego Garcia] is El Salvadorian. He is an illegal alien. He was deported to El Salvador.” On Fox News, Miller doubled down, arguing that Abrego Garcia was not mistakenly deported and stating without evidence that he was a member of MS-13. Mr. Abrego Garcia has denied being a member of any gang, and he has not been convicted of any crime.
– April 14, 2025 – State Department official Pete Marocco, who oversaw the dismantling of USAID, stepped down after less than three months on the job. Marocco, who fired thousands of USAID staffers and supported plans to cancel 83 percent of USAID programs, had previously described USAID as “a money laundering scheme” and accused the agency of advancing LGBTQ causes in developing countries and antiauthoritarian movements in former Soviet states. Senior USAID officials previously warned Trump administration officials that the closure of USAID would result in hundreds of thousands of deaths.
– April 14, 2025 – Mohsen Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident, was arrested by immigration officials after arriving for an appointment to take his citizenship test, the final step in the process of becoming a citizen. A Palestinian student at Columbia University who has lived in the US for ten years, Mahdawi participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations at Columbia, though he stepped back from organizing in March 2024. In a memo, Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused Mahdawi—without evidence—of undermining the Middle East peace process by reinforcing antisemitic sentiment, stating that Mahdawi had “engaged in threatening rhetoric and intimidation of pro-Israeli bystanders.” However, statements from Mahdawi’s friends and Mahdawi’s own previous statements contradict Rubio’s assertions. “[Mahdawi’s] willingness to actually hear and actively learn and understand the Israeli experience—I mean, I’ve never met anyone who so quickly was willing to take feedback,” said Mikey Baratz, an Israeli who recently graduated from Columbia. In a December 2023 interview about his childhood experience seeing his friend killed by an Israeli soldier, Mahdawi said he wanted a peaceful end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: “My motivation comes out of love now, not out of anger, not out of hate.”
– April 15, 2025 – In an interview on Fox News, border czar Tom Homan said he would deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia again if he were returned to the US, openly defying court orders. “Now, if somehow he comes back and that happens, he’s going to be detained and removed again. He’s an MS-13 gang member based on our intelligence and El Salvador’s intelligence,” said Homan without providing details or evidence to support his claims. Abrego Garcia, who has protected legal status, was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March in what the Trump administration has admitted was “an administrative error.” The Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration to “facilitate” Abrego’s return, but so far, little has been done.
– April 15, 2025 – One day after the Trump administration froze $2 billion in grants to Harvard University for rejecting its policy demands, President Trump threatened the school’s tax-exempt status on Truth Social: “Perhaps Harvard should lose its Tax Exempt Status and be Taxed as a Political Entity if it keeps pushing political, ideological, and terrorist inspired/supporting ‘Sickness?’ Remember, Tax Exempt Status is totally contingent on acting in the PUBLIC INTEREST!” Almost all colleges and universities have tax-exempt status, and federal law prohibits the executive branch from “directly or indirectly” ordering the IRS to conduct specific tax investigations. “Selective prosecution of your political adversaries through the tax system is the stuff of dictatorship. This is unconscionable and wrong but a continuation of trends we have seen in President Trump’s approach both to universities and to tax enforcement,” said Lawrence Summers, former Treasury secretary and former president of Harvard.
– April 16, 2025 – Following Trump’s executive order “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” in February and months of escalating threats, the Trump administration sued Maine for refusing to ban transgender athletes from women’s sports. The lawsuit accused Maine of violating Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination, and called for a compensation program for “female athletes who have been denied equal athletic opportunities.” “This is about sports,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said. “This is also about these women’s personal safety.” Maine Governor Janet Mills countered: “This matter has never been about school sports or the protection of women and girls, as has been claimed. It is about states’ rights and defending the rule of law against a federal government bent on imposing its will, instead of upholding the law.” Transgender people make up less than .002 percent of US college athletes, and trans women have been competing in women’s sports for decades.
– April 16, 2025 – Disregarding established scientific research, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed that autism was preventable and that an increase in autism cases was caused solely by environmental factors. “Genes don’t cause epidemics. You need an environmental toxin,” Kennedy said. Researchers maintain that the increase in autism cases was instead due to better screening, awareness, and access, as well as broader definitions of autism and more parents having children later in life. Though environmental factors may possibly contribute to whether a child develops autism, there is no evidence to suggest that autism is preventable, and scientists have known since the 1970s that genes play a role. “Autism is not an infectious disease. So there aren’t preventative measures that we can take,” said Dr. Joshua Anbar, a professor at Arizona State University who collected data for the CDC report on autism showing increased rates. Added Dr. Catherine Lord, a psychologist and autism researcher, “We know there is a clear genetic contribution. That is not in question.” Kennedy has also repeatedly promoted false theories that vaccines cause autism.
– April 16, 2025 – The Trump administration moved to redefine what it means to “harm” a protected species under the Endangered Species Act. According to the Endangered Species Act, the definition of “harm” includes “significant habitat modification or degradation,” a definition upheld by a 1995 Supreme Court ruling. The Trump administration proposal seeks to narrow the definition of “harm” so that only taking direct action to kill or injure a species would qualify, a move that would make it significantly easier to log, build, or drill for oil. “What they’re proposing will just fundamentally upend how we’ve been protecting endangered species in this country,” said Noah Greenwald, codirector of endangered species at the Center for Biological Diversity. Habitat loss is the primary cause of species extinction in the US.
– April 16, 2025 – Two days after the Trump administration froze $2 billion in grants to Harvard University and one day after President Trump threatened the school’s tax-exempt status on social media, the Department of Homeland Security canceled another $2.7 million in grants to Harvard and threatened to revoke its ability to enroll foreign students. In a letter sent to Harvard, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem demanded that Harvard provide detailed records on foreign student visa holders’ “known illegal” and “known dangerous or violent” activities by April 30, 2025, or the school would lose its Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) certification. “Harvard bending the knee to antisemitism—driven by its spineless leadership—fuels a cesspool of extremist riots and threatens our national security,” Noem said in a press statement. A Harvard spokeswoman said the school was aware of Noem’s letter, which she said “followed on the heels of our statement that Harvard will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights.”
– April 17, 2025 – Following a deadly shooting at Florida State University that left two dead and six injured, President Trump said he would not support stricter gun control measures. “These things are terrible. But the gun doesn’t do the shooting, the people do,” Trump told reporters. “I have an obligation to protect the Second Amendment. I ran on the Second Amendment, among many other things, and I will always protect the Second Amendment.” One FSU student who survived the shooting, Robbie Alhadeff, previously lost his sister Alyssa in the 2018 Parkland High School massacre. “A lot of the people I’m friends with are from Parkland, and a lot of them go to FSU. This is the second time it’s happened—and no one I know wants to go back to school,” said Alhadeff. In February, Trump signed an executive order directing the attorney general to withdraw several Biden administration gun regulations.
– April 17, 2025 – During an Oval Office meeting with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, President Trump told reporters that he had the power to remove Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who had recently warned that Trump’s tariffs would likely lead to significant economic damage. “Oh, he’ll leave. If I ask him to, he’ll be out of there,” Trump said. “I don’t think he’s doing the job. He’s too late, always too late. Little slow, and I’m not happy with him. I let him know it, and if I want him out, he’ll be out of there real fast.” Earlier in the day, Trump had criticized Powell and called for his removal in a social media post riddled with inaccurate and misleading information: “The ECB is expected to cut interest rates for the 7th time, and yet, ‘Too Late’ Jerome Powell of the Fed, who is always TOO LATE AND WRONG, yesterday issued a report which was another, and typical, complete ‘mess!’ Oil prices are down, groceries (even eggs!) are down, and the USA is getting RICH ON TARIFFS. Too Late should have lowered Interest Rates, like the ECB, long ago, but he should certainly lower them now. Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!” No Federal Reserve chair has ever been fired by a president, and the Federal Reserve Act states that board members may only be removed “for cause,” which has historically been interpreted as misconduct or incapacity.
– April 17, 2025 – At the direction of DOGE, three-quarters of AmeriCorps staff members were placed on administrative leave. Established in 1993 under a different name, AmeriCorps was designed as a domestic version of the Peace Corps. Its young volunteers work on community service projects related to disaster services, environmental stewardship, education, and veterans’ affairs, among others. The layoffs included employees who work for a national disaster response program and may affect work in areas impacted by Hurricane Helene. The following day, California Governor Gavin Newsom decried the layoffs and announced that California would sue to stop the dismantling of AmeriCorps: “We’ve gone from the New Deal, the New Frontier, and the Great Society to a federal government that gives a middle finger to volunteers serving their fellow Americans.”
– April 17, 2025 – The Trump administration sent termination notices to 90 percent of employees at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a watchdog agency that supervises financial institutions and enforces federal consumer protection laws. Created in response to the 2008 financial crisis, the CFPB has returned $21 billion to defrauded consumers since its founding in 2011. The layoffs are part of the administration’s larger attempts to dismantle the CFPB, which has been criticized by prominent Trump donors, including Elon Musk, as a barrier to their business interests. In February, Elon Musk’s X announced a deal with Visa to offer mobile payment services, which would be regulated by the CFPB. “The fact that Musk is now engaged in payment businesses that would be regulated by the CFPB at the same time he’s trying to tear down the CFPB puts in sharp relief the conflicts of interest here and how much this disserves the general public,” said Richard Cordray, a former director of the CFPB. “The whole situation is rife with conflicts of interest.”
– April 17, 2025 – President Trump signed two executive orders aimed at the commercial fishing industry. The first, “Unleashing American Commercial Fishing in the Pacific,” opened the Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument, one of the world’s largest ocean reserves, to commercial fishing; the second, “Restoring American Seafood Competitiveness,” ordered the Commerce Department to loosen regulations on the commercial fishing industry. While some fishermen celebrated the move, environmentalists argued that opening the Pacific Islands National Monument to commercial fishing would harm the area’s ecosystem and endanger marine life. In response, Angelo Villagomez, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said that opening up marine monuments to industrial fishing “sets a dangerous precedent that our public lands and waters are for sale to the highest bidder.”
– April 18, 2025 – Escalating its crackdown on Harvard University, the Trump administration accused Harvard of failing to report large foreign donations. In a letter to the university’s president, the Department of Education demanded that Harvard provide a list of all foreign donors, turn over all records of foreign donor communication dating back to 2020, and provide details on foreigners who had spent time at Harvard, dating back to 2010. “Today’s records request is the Trump administration’s first step to ensure Harvard is not being manipulated by, or doing the bidding of, foreign entities,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said, without providing any evidence to support her department’s accusations against Harvard. Pushing back against the accusations, Harvard responded that it had filed such reports for decades “as part of its ongoing compliance with the law”:https://www.wsj.com/us-news/education/trump-demands-harvards-foreign-funding-records-acc11947 “As is required, Harvard’s reports include information on gifts and contracts from foreign sources exceeding $250K annually. This includes contracts to provide executive education, other training, and academic publications.”
– April 19, 2025 – Vice President JD Vance attempted to airbrush his meeting with Vatican officials after Pope Francis did not attend, instead sending his deputy, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, to reportedly lecture Vance about compassion. “There was an exchange of opinions on the international situation, especially regarding countries affected by war, political tensions, and difficult humanitarian situations, with particular attention to migrants, refugees, and prisoners,” the Vatican said in a statement. In response, Vance’s office released photos of the vice president smiling and laughing with Vatican officials and walking through the Vatican with his children. “The Vice President and Cardinal Parolin discussed their shared religious faith, Catholicism in the United States, the plight of persecuted Christian communities around the world, and President Trump’s commitment to restoring world peace,” Vance’s office said. In February, Pope Francis criticized the Trump administration’s deportation policies and urged Catholics to reject anti-immigrant narratives. Without mentioning Vance by name, the pope rebuked the vice president’s invocation of ordo amoris, which Vance had characterized as a hierarchy of duties prioritizing one’s family and community over the rest of the world, to defend the administration’s deportations: “Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups.” In his final public statement on Easter Sunday, Pope Francis reiterated the importance of rejecting xenophobia: “How much contempt is stirred up at times towards the vulnerable, the marginalized, and migrants! On this day, I would like all of us to hope anew and to revive our trust in others, including those different from ourselves, or who come from distant lands, bringing unfamiliar customs, ways of life, and ideas! For all of us are children of God!” Hours later, Pope Francis died of a stroke and cardiovascular arrest.
– April 19, 2025 – Two weeks after hundreds of thousands marched against the Trump administration in 1,400 “Hands Off!” rallies across the country, a new wave of “50501” anti-Trump protests were held nationwide to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the start of the American Revolution. According to the protest’s organizers, over three million people attended the 50501 protests. While some protesters gathered outside the White House, Trump was at his golf course.
– April 20, 2025 – In an Easter post on Truth Social, Trump lashed out at his enemies and repeated his debunked claims about the 2020 election. His post included “Radical Left Lunatics,” “WEAK and INCOMPETENT judges,” and “Sleepy Joe Biden.” Trump declared, “He was, by far, our WORST and most Incompetent President—But to him, and to the person that ran and manipulated the Auto Pen (perhaps our REAL President!), and to all of the people who CHEATED in the 2020 Presidential Election in order to get this highly destructive Moron Elected, I wish you, with great love, sincerity, and affection, a very Happy Easter!!!” Republicans Against Trump, a group of GOP supporters who don’t back Trump, wrote in an X post, “Ah yes, the true spirit of Easter: rage-posting about your political enemies.”
– April 21, 2025 – Trump announced that undocumented immigrants should not be entitled to trials and insisted that his administration should be allowed to deport them without appearing before a judge. “I hope we get cooperation from the courts. We have thousands of people that are ready to go out and you can’t have a trial for all these people.” Trump added, “A judge can’t say, ‘No, you have to have a trial.’ The trial is going to take two years. We’re going to have a very dangerous country if we’re not allowed to do what we’re entitled to do.” In response to Trump’s statements, Representative Jonathan L. Jackson, Democrat of Illinois, wrote on social media, “‘We can’t give everyone a trial’—excuse me, what?! That’s straight-up #dictator talk… If you want to shred the Constitution, just say so.”
– April 21, 2025 – The president continued his attacks against Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Trump called Powell “a major loser” and demanded that the Central Bank lower its key interest rate to boost the economy. Trump stated that energy and grocery prices are “substantially lower” and “there is virtually no inflation.” Food prices jumped in January and March, and overall inflation remained above the Fed’s 2 percent target. After Trump’s attack on Powell, the Dow dropped by more than 1,000 points, and the broad S&P 500 stock index tumbled nearly 3 percent. The dollar fell to its lowest level in three years.
– April 21, 2025 – The White House expressed support for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth after The New York Times reported that he shared sensitive military information in another Signal chat. The chat included Hegseth’s wife and brother. Trump said, “It’s just fake news. They just bring up stories. I guess it sounds like disgruntled employees.” Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt added, “This is what happens when the entire Pentagon is working against you and working against the monumental change that you are trying to implement.” In an interview with Politico, Republican Representative and former Air Force General Don Bacon said, “Russia and China are all over his phone, and for him to be putting secret stuff on his phone is not right… He’s acting like he’s above the law—and that shows an amateur person.”
– April 22, 2025 – A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from dismantling Voice of America (VOA), the government-funded broadcaster. Trump and his Republican allies had accused VOA of having a “leftist bias” and “failing to project pro-American values.” In defending VOA’s mission, plaintiff attorneys wrote, “That simple mission is a powerful one for those living across the globe without access to a free press and without the ability to otherwise discern what is truly happening.” Judge Royce C. Lamberth stated the administration’s move to decimate the agency was “arbitrary” and “capricious.” He went on to say, “Not only is there an absence of ‘reasoned analysis’ from the defendants; there is an absence of any analysis whatsoever.”
– April 22, 2025 – Trump announced that Elon Musk would step back from his role as director of DOGE. The move corresponded with a steep decline in Tesla’s profits. Trump supported Musk’s move and said, “He saved us a lot of money.” Without providing details, Musk said he had saved taxpayers $150 billion. The figure was 15 percent of the $1 trillion he pledged to save. Musk’s and DOGE’s miscalculations stemmed from the financial costs of their chainsaw for bureaucracy policy. The Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit that studies the federal workforce, used budget figures to produce a rough estimate that firings, rehirings, lost productivity, and paid leave of thousands of workers would cost upward of $135 billion.
– April 23, 2025 – Trump demanded that Ukraine agree to a proposal that would grant Russia all the Crimean territory it has gained in the war. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded, “There is nothing to talk about. It is our land, the land of the Ukrainian people.” On social media, Trump said that Zelenskyy was being “inflammatory” and “would only prolong the killing field.” He told reporters at the White House that the deal was on the verge of acceptance by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump added, “I thought it might be easier to deal with Zelenskyy. So far, it’s harder.” Russia overtook the Crimean Peninsula by force in 2014. The peninsula is roughly the size of the US state of Maryland.
– April 24, 2025 – A federal judge paused a key section of Trump’s executive order that proposed sweeping changes to voting and elections. Trump’s March 24 order stated that election fraud was rampant. “This will end it, hopefully,” he said when signing it. Past audits have proven election fraud to be very rare. The order instructed the independent Election Assistance Commission to require that applicants prove US citizenship before they can be registered to vote. US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly sided with voting rights groups and Democrats, saying that the Constitution gives the power to regulate federal elections to states and Congress—not the president. During the 2024 election, Trump pushed a baseless narrative that large numbers of noncitizens were poised to vote and swing the election for Democrats.
– April 25, 2025 – The FBI arrested Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan and charged her in federal court for allegedly helping an undocumented immigrant avoid arrest. The arrest escalated the Trump administration’s focus on judges’ conduct related to immigration enforcement. FBI Director Kash Patel wrote on X: “We believe Judge Dugan intentionally misdirected federal agents away from Eduardo Flores Ruiz, allowing the subject—an illegal alien—to evade arrest.” He said that agents arrested Ruiz after he was “chased down.” Patel added that “the judge’s obstruction created increased danger to the public.” On Truth Social, Trump shared an image of the judge found on her Facebook page by the right-wing blogger Libs of TikTok. The image showed Dugan on the bench wearing a KN95 face mask and displaying the Ukrainian national symbol of a trident.
– April 25, 2025 – In a possible violation of Justice Department policy, FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo on social media of Judge Hannah Dugan’s perp walk with the caption, “No one is above the law.” According to the DOJ’s Confidentiality and Media Contacts Policy, DOJ personnel are not permitted to “voluntarily disclose a photograph of a defendant unless it serves a law enforcement function or unless the photograph is already part of the public record.” Former Attorney General Eric Holder, who implemented the policy during the Obama administration, said Patel’s post violated the policy. “Whatever the issues with what the judge did, they’re trying to maximize intimidation.”
– April 25, 2025 – A two-year-old US citizen was deported to Honduras with her pregnant mother and eleven-year-old sister despite an emergency petition filed by the child’s father. US District Court Judge Terry A. Doughty called the deportation “illegal and unconstitutional” and stated that he had a “strong suspicion that the government just deported a US citizen with no meaningful process.” The two-year-old child, referred to in court papers as V. M. L., had accompanied her mother and sister to an immigration appointment in New Orleans, where the three were subsequently detained by ICE. After the child’s mother, Jenny Carolina Lopez Villela, was scheduled for an expedited removal, Justice Department lawyers claimed in a filing that Lopez Villela told ICE that she wanted to retain custody of V. M. L. and to take the child with her to Honduras. The child’s father disputed this narrative, and Lopez Villela’s consent has not been independently verified. According to the ACLU, Lopez Villela was not allowed to speak with lawyers and was only permitted to speak with her husband for less than a minute before she was deported. ICE did not coordinate any continuity of prenatal care or medical oversight for Lopez Villela.
– April 25, 2025 – A four-year-old US citizen and seven-year-old US citizen were deported with their mother to Honduras. The family did not have the opportunity to speak with lawyers before they were deported, according to the National Immigration Project. Lawyers for the family said the mother was not given an option to leave the children in the United States and that the four-year-old boy, who has a rare form of late-stage cancer, did not have access to his medications or doctors while in custody. “Deporting U.S. citizen children is illegal, unconstitutional, and immoral,” said Erin Herbert, a lawyer with Ware Immigration. “The speed, brutality, and clandestine manner in which these children were deported is beyond unconscionable, and every official responsible for it should be held accountable.”
– April 26, 2025 – Trump traveled to Rome to attend the funeral of Pope Francis. Before leaving, he met briefly with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The topic of their conversation was Russia’s killing of civilians earlier in the week. Following the meeting, Trump posted on Truth Social that there was “no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns, over the last few days. It makes me think that maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along.” At the funeral, the president broke the Vatican’s dress code by wearing a blue suit. He was also seen checking his phone and chewing gum. Trump spent only fourteen hours in Rome. He told aides that he wanted to return to his golf resort in New Jersey by the end of the day.
– April 27, 2025 – A CNN poll showed that Trump’s approval ratings had plummeted as he approached the hundred-day mark of his presidency. Only 41 percent of respondents approved of his job performance—the lowest any president has polled at the one hundred-day mark in seven decades. Forty-five percent said they strongly disapproved of Trump’s handling of the presidency, and just 40 percent said they have a favorable view of the president. Trump lost support from women, Hispanic Americans, and political independents. Since March 2025, when Trump’s tariff plan led to declines in the stock market, the president’s approval ratings on economic issues fell significantly, including a 9 percent drop on inflation and a 4 percent drop on tariffs. Trump dismissed the bad polling and suggested that new organizations that published them should be investigated for “election fraud.”
– April 28, 2025 – President Trump signed two executive orders targeting sanctuary cities, immigrants, and officials accused of “obstructing criminal or immigration law enforcement.” The first order, “Protecting American Communities from Criminal Aliens,” directed the attorney general and secretary of homeland security to publish a list of so-called sanctuary cities and to pursue “all necessary legal remedies and enforcement measures”; the order also told federal agencies to stop enforcing state and local laws that allow undocumented immigrants to receive in-state tuition benefits in higher education. The second order, “Strengthening and Unleashing America’s Law Enforcement to Pursue Criminals and Protect Innocent Citizens,” directed the Trump administration to provide additional resources to law enforcement, including legal resources to cops accused of wrongdoing, modifications to existing restraints such as federal consent decrees, and military equipment to local law enforcement; the order also instructs law enforcement to pursue legal action against state or local officials accused of “obstructing criminal or immigration law enforcement.” “These orders have no legal basis and are another example of President Trump’s relentless campaign to attack the integrity of our legal system and separation of powers by targeting judges, lawyers, and other officials who refuse to comply with his extreme agenda,” said Naureen Shah, director of government affairs for the ACLU’s Equality Division.
– April 28, 2025 – As part of the Trump administration’s efforts to promote its immigration crackdown, one hundred mug-shot-style posters of arrested immigrants were erected on the White House lawn. The posters included the words ARRESTED and ILLEGAL ALIEN as well as text specifying the alleged crimes of those depicted. Although the posters did not include the immigrants’ names, they were identified in a White House press release. A White House social media account posted a video panning across the posters as Michael Bublé’s “Feeling Good” played in the background. “Illegal immigration is not a victimless crime,” said border czar Tom Homan. “Every sick person we take off the street, especially child rapists, makes this country safer.” According to ICE’s own latest data, 46 percent of detainees in mid-April had no criminal record.
– April 28, 2025 – In an interview with The Atlantic, President Trump bragged about how much fun he’s having during his second presidency. When asked whether his second term felt different than his first, Trump said, “The first time, I had two things to do—run the country and survive; I had all these crooked guys. And the second time, I run the country and the world.” Later, he acknowledged, “I’m having a lot of fun, considering what I do. You know, what I do is such serious stuff.” Added Brian Ballard, a lobbyist and Trump ally: “The first time, the first weeks, it was just ‘Let’s blow this place up.’ This time, he’s blowing it up with a twinkle in his eye.”
– April 29, 2025 – During an interview with ABC News’ Terry Moran, President Trump incorrectly stated that Kilmar Abrego Garcia—the Maryland man with protected legal status who the Trump administration admitted was mistakenly deported due to an “administrative error”—had “MS-13” tattooed on his knuckles. The president appeared to be referring to an altered photo of Abrego Garcia’s hand that he had posted to social media the previous week. The photo showed four of Garcia’s fingers with tattoos of a leaf, a face, a cross, and a skull. Above the tattoos, the term “MS13” was digitally superimposed as a caption. When Moran told Trump that the letters were photoshopped, Trump snapped, “Why don’t you just say, ‘Yes, he does,’ and, you know, go on to something else.”
– April 29, 2025 – Trump marked one hundred days in office by railing against immigrants and attacking his opponents during a Michigan rally. “We’re here tonight in the heartland of our nation to celebrate the most successful first hundred days of any administration in the history of our country,” Trump said, surrounded by screens reading “100 Days of Greatness.” During his ninety-minute speech, Trump repeated lies about the 2020 election being stolen, mocked how Joe Biden looked in a bathing suit, and bragged about his immigration crackdown. “Removing the invaders is not just a campaign pledge, it’s my solemn duty as commander-in-chief,” Trump said. The crowd cheered as Trump played a video of deportees arriving at the notorious El Salvador prison, CECOT, and having their heads shaved. The Daily Beast declared Trump’s first one hundred days the “worst” in history.
– April 29, 2025 – Wired reported that Christopher Sweet, a college junior, was tasked with using AI to propose rewrites to Department of Housing and Urban Development regulations for DOGE. In an email sent to HUD employees, Sweet was introduced as a student at the University of Chicago, studying economics and data science. His role has involved reviewing HUD regulations, comparing them to existing laws, and identifying areas where the rules could be relaxed or eliminated. As the lead on the AI deregulation project, Sweet was given access to HUD’s data repository on public housing and its enterprise income verification systems. He had no previous government experience.
– April 29, 2025 – In a social media post, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth boasted about cutting the Women, Peace, and Security program, which encourages more women to play active roles in national security issues: “This morning, I proudly ENDED the ‘Women, Peace & Security’ (WPS) program inside the @DeprtofDefense. WPS is yet another woke divisive/social justice/Biden initiative that overburdens our commanders and troops—distracting from our core task: WAR-FIGHTING….GOOD RIDDANCE WPS!” Two Trump cabinet members—Secretary of State Marco Rubio and DHS Secretary Kristi L. Noem—previously cosponsored the bill establishing the program, which Trump himself signed into law in 2017. Women remain underrepresented in national security roles.
– April 30, 2025 – The Commerce Department reported that the US economy had its worst quarter since 2022. GDP fell to an annualized rate of -0.3 percent, a sharp drop from the fourth quarter’s 2.4 percent rate, and the stock market declined after the announcement. Peter Navarro, special counselor to the president, attempted to spin the GDP report as “very positive news for America,” and President Trump, in a social media post, blamed the weak economic numbers on former president Biden: “This is Biden’s Stock Market, not Trump’s. I didn’t take over until January 20th. Tariffs will soon start kicking in, and companies are starting to move into the USA in record numbers.” Economists have instead blamed the weak numbers on the chaos and uncertainty created in anticipation of Trump’s tariffs.
– April 30, 2025 – The Trump administration announced that it had signed a mineral deal with Ukraine that will give the US a share in future revenues from Ukraine’s mineral reserves; the deal did not include explicit security guarantees for Ukraine. “This agreement signals clearly to Russia that the Trump administration is committed to a peace process centered on a free, sovereign, and prosperous Ukraine over the long term,” said Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. “President Trump envisioned this partnership between the American people and the Ukrainian people to show both sides’ commitment to lasting peace and prosperity in Ukraine.” At a CPAC conference several months ago, Trump said he wanted Ukraine to pay the US back for military aid. “I want them to give us something for all the money we put up. So we’re asking for rare earth and oil—anything we can get!” said Trump. “We’re going to get our money back because it’s not fair.” Two days after announcing the minerals deal, the State Department said it was stepping back from mediating the Ukraine-Russia conflict.
– April 30, 2025 – On Trump’s 101st day in office, The New York Times published an article in which historians claimed many of Trump’s actions were unprecedented. The thirty-five historians categorized six of Trump’s actions as having “no clear historical precedent”: invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport Venezuelan migrants; dismantling USAID; renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America”; withholding federal funding from universities; declaring a “national energy emergency”; and issuing more than one hundred executive orders in his first one hundred days. The historians also categorized five of Trump’s actions as having “no precedent in the modern era”: ignoring a federal judge’s order; asserting broad power over independent federal agencies; ordering or calling for an end to birthright citizenship; repeatedly stating a desire to acquire another nation’s sovereign land; and imposing universal tariffs.
– April 30, 2025 – Just one day before Mike Waltz was ousted as National Security Advisor, a Reuters photographer captured a photo of him using a modified version of Signal during a cabinet meeting. The photo showed that Waltz was communicating via Signal with Vice President JD Vance, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Although the version of Signal that Waltz was using retains copies of messages to comply with government record preservation regulations, it is not approved for sensitive government communications. In March, Waltz came under fire after he accidentally included a journalist on a Signal group chat in which war plans were discussed.
– April 30, 2025 – During a televised Cabinet meeting, Attorney General Pam Bondi claimed that Donald Trump had saved the lives of 258 million Americans, or three-quarters of the population. “Since you have been in office, President Trump, your DOJ agencies have seized more than 22 million fentanyl pills—3,400 kilos of fentanyl… which saved—are you ready for this, media?—258 million lives,” said Bondi. Just two days earlier, on Fentanyl Awareness Day, Bondi had posted on social media that Trump had saved 119 million lives. According to experts, fentanyl seizures show only how much fentanyl didn’t make it into the US, and the relationship between fentanyl entering the US and overdose deaths is less clear. “Bondi’s statements demonstrate profound ignorance about fentanyl and interdiction,” said Dr. Ryan Marino, a toxicologist and emergency room physician who studies addiction. He added, “119 million Americans do not even use fentanyl, and to risk an overdose requires intentional ingestion of fentanyl or another illicit drug contaminated with fentanyl. Fentanyl overdose is not a risk for people who do not use drugs.” In 2024, opioid overdose deaths declined in the US for the first time in six years, which many have attributed to the wider availability of Narcan; a draft budget proposal showed that the Trump administration planned to eliminate a $56 million Narcan program.
– April 30, 2025 – Two weeks before President Trump’s planned visit to the Middle East, the Trump Organization agreed to a new Middle East golf course and real estate deal involving Qatari Diar, a government-owned firm. The Qatari golf course is only the latest example of Trump family members partnering with a foreign government. In Oman, the Trump Organization is building hotels and golf projects on government-owned land; other Trump Organization real estate deals involve Serbia, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, and the Emirates. “It’s extremely troubling,” said Zephyr Teachout, a law professor who previously sued Trump for taking improper financial payments from foreign governments. “The Qatari government, military, and trade decisions are now unavoidably a part of the broader private negotiation over a real estate deal.”
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– May 1, 2025 – On May Day, thousands of Americans rallied against the Trump Administration in over one thousand protests nationwide. While celebrating labor victories, the demonstrators also criticized the Trump administration’s cuts to education funding, the rollback of workers’ rights, and mass deportations. As part of the National Law Day of Action, legal professionals in approximately fifty cities also protested the Trump administration’s attacks on the legal system. Dressed in court attire and carrying pocket Constitutions, the lawyers chanted, “The rule of law protects us all. Without it, we will surely fall.” Said Traci Feit Love, executive director of Lawyers for Good Government, “If lawyers are taking to the streets, it means something very serious and very bad is happening.”
– May 1, 2025 – The New York Times reported that the Trump administration had deported Bhutanese refugees who were in the country legally and that the deported refugees were now stateless. Fleeing ethnic cleansing in their home country, the refugees began arriving in the US legally around 2007 through a humanitarian program initiated under former President George W. Bush. “The [Bhutanese refugee] community was not prepared for this,” said Robin Gurung, co–executive director of Asian Refugees United. “We came through the formal refugee resettlement program, which means the US government, they agreed to bring us to this country. The understanding was the government, they’re not going to come after us.” According to the article, an estimated sixty Bhutanese refugees were detained, and at least twenty-four were deported. The deported refugees were turned away from Bhutan, which does not recognize them as citizens, and their families stated that many of the deported refugees are now in hiding or in unknown locations. “We have not heard from my brother. For all we know, he could be dead,” said Devi Gurung, whose brother Ashok Gurung was among the deported refugees.
– May 1, 2025 – President Trump signed an executive order prohibiting federal funding for NPR and PBS. Calling NPR and PBS’s coverage “biased and partisan,” the order instructed the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to cut off direct funds and to cut grants to local public radio and television stations that indirectly fund PBS and NPR programs. “The President’s blatantly unlawful Executive Order, issued in the middle of the night, threatens our ability to serve the American public with educational programming, as we have done for the past fifty-plus years,” said Paula Kerger, president and chief executive of PBS. Added Patricia Harrison, president and CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, “CPB is not a federal executive agency subject to the President’s authority. Congress expressly forbade ‘any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over educational television or radio broadcasting, or over [CPB] or any of its grantees or contractors.”
– May 2, 2025 – Just days after joking that he would “like to be pope,” President Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself dressed in papal attire. A White House account subsequently reposted the image, which was swiftly condemned around the world. “There is nothing clever or funny about this image, Mr. President,” said the New York State Catholic Conference. “We just buried our beloved Pope Francis, and the cardinals are about to enter a solemn conclave to elect a new successor of St. Peter. Do not mock us.” In response, Senator Lindsey Graham posted, “I was excited to hear that President Trump is open to the idea of being the next Pope. This would truly be a dark horse candidate, but I would ask the papal conclave and Catholic faithful to keep an open mind about this possibility!” Vice President JD Vance, a Catholic, defended Trump, writing, “I’m fine with people telling jokes.”
– May 2, 2025 – The White House released a new budget blueprint for fiscal year 2026 that proposed funding cuts for education, foreign aid, the environment, health, and public assistance while increasing spending on defense and homeland security. According to a letter from the Office of Management and Budget, the proposed budget would provide a “historic” $175 billion to “fully secure the border” while slashing funds for the National Park Service, UN peacekeepers, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, the National Institutes for Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Internal Revenue Service, among other programs. Climate science research, foreign economic and disaster assistance, and schools would also face cuts. “This budget proposal would set our country back decades by decimating investments to help families afford the basics, to keep communities safe, and to ensure America remains a world leader in innovation and lifesaving research,” said Senator Patty Murray.
– May 2, 2025 – Hours after President Trump proposed eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts in a new budget proposal, the agency began rescinding grant offers. Arts administrators were informed of the changes via emails stating that the NEA "is updating its grantmaking policy priorities to focus funding on projects that reflect the nation’s rich artistic heritage and creativity as prioritized by the president… [and] terminating awards that fall outside of these new priorities.” The emails said the NEA would focus on projects that “elevate” historically Black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving colleges. However, many of those impacted noted that the withdrawn grants had been supporting work by artists of color. For example, Portland Playhouse’s withdrawn grant would have helped finance their production of August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, and Yale Repertory Theatre’s withdrawn grant would have helped with the development and production of a stage adaptation of Zora Neale Hurston’s short story “Spunk.” Trump’s new budget blueprint also proposed eliminating the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
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– May 2, 2025 – In a rare rebuke, five former National Weather Service directors signed an open letter criticizing the Trump administration’s staffing cuts to their organization and issuing a stern warning: “NWS staff will have an impossible task to continue its current level of services. Our worst nightmare is that weather forecast offices will be so understaffed that there will be needless loss of life.” As the directors noted in their letter, inaccurate weather forecasting has wide-ranging implications: “Airplanes can’t fly without weather observations and forecasts; ships crossing the oceans rely on storm forecasts to avoid the high seas; farmers rely on seasonal forecasts to plant and harvest their crops which feed us. Perhaps most importantly, NWS issues all of the tornado warnings, hurricane warnings, flood warnings, extreme wildfire conditions and other information during extreme weather events.” The Weather Service has lost about 10 percent of its staff since Trump took office, and Trump’s latest budget proposal recommended a $1.5 billion cut to the Weather Service’s parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which has likewise already endured significant staffing cuts.
– May 4, 2025 – Enrique Tarrio, former leader of the white-supremacist group The Proud Boys, visited Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago and thanked the president for pardoning him for his participation in the January 6 takeover of the Capitol building. One of Trump’s first acts as president in his second term was pardoning all those you were convicted for their roles in the January 6 insurrection. “He knew the hardships me and my family faced for three long years,” Mr. Tarrio wrote on social media. Since being pardoned, Tarrio has started a podcast and a crypto coin venture with other former members of the Proud Boys, who were also convicted and pardoned. Of the meeting with the president, Tarrio said, “He is working on making things right. I thanked him for giving me life back. He replied with… I Love You guys.”
– May 4, 2025 – In a Truth Social post, Trump announced he is authorizing the reopening of the notorious prison Alcatraz. “For too long, America has been plagued by vicious, violent, and repeat Criminal Offenders, the dregs of society, who will never contribute anything other than Misery and Suffering,” the president of the United States wrote. “When we were a more serious Nation, in times past, we did not hesitate to lock up the most dangerous criminals, and keep them far away from anyone they could harm. That’s the way it’s supposed to be.” Trump’s directive comes as he has been fighting with federal courts over deporting legal citizens to prisons in El Salvador and Guantanamo Bay. Alcatraz was closed in 1963 and has since become a historic landmark and a major tourist destination in San Francisco. On its website, the Bureau of Prisons states that Alcatraz was originally closed due to high costs. A major campaign promise of Trump’s was to cut federal spending.
– May 4, 025 – During a wide-ranging and testy interview on Meet the Press, Trump waffled when asked about upholding the Constitution. He said, “I don’t know. I’m not, I’m not a lawyer. I don’t know.” In a related response, Trump doubled down on his agenda to deport millions of undocumented immigrants. “Some of the worst people on Earth,” Trump said, "I was elected to get them the hell out of here, and the courts are holding me from doing it.” Recent polls show that over half of Americans disapprove of his handling of immigration. In another part of the interview, Trump repeated his desire to make Canada the fifty-first state, but said it was “highly unlikely” doing so would require military action. That said, he didn’t rule out military action when it came to taking over Greenland from Denmark. “Something could happen with Greenland,” Trump said. “I’ll be honest, we need that for national and international security.”
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