Tag: no-latest

  • Dear Abby | Couple’s marriage mired in the doldrums of middle age

    DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been together 30-plus years. When our love was new, it was all smiles, hand-holding and thrills when we saw each other after a long day at work or school. And, I guess, that’s normal.

    Now, three kids and three grandkids later, we’re edging past our mid-50s and there isn’t much left. There are no more smiles and no more hand-holding, only two sad adults. We still love each other. Neither of us wants to be apart from the other, but we don’t know how to bring back happiness.

    We hardly touch, and neither of us remembers the last time we smiled or even really laughed. We sit in the same room, living two completely different lives. I am partially disabled, so there are no more long walks or outside activities, which we used to do 20 years ago.

    We are now wondering: Is this the rest of our lives? Are we going to spend the next 20-plus years in a depressing marriage in which we love each other but no longer have anything in common? Our youngest daughter is 8, and our youngest grandson is 5. We watch the kids (15, 9, 8, 5) in the evening so our eldest can work. Is there any hope for us?

    — SAD SPOUSE IN NEW YORK

    DEAR SAD SPOUSE: You say that you and your husband love each other. There is hope for reviving your marriage if you agree to go to couples counseling together. Marriage involves more than smiles, hand-holding and thrills. It is a deep and caring partnership. Few couples can sustain the excitement of their honeymoon years. You and your husband have already done the hard work. Now you need to find your way back together.

    ** ** **

    DEAR ABBY: My husband and I were dining with friends in a high-end restaurant. The food was great, and so was the conversation. My husband leaned close to me and whispered, “She’s brushing her teeth!” I glanced to my left. I had thought the gal at the next table was just using a toothpick. No, she was vigorously brushing with a full-sized toothbrush!

    After about a minute, she placed the toothbrush into a cosmetic bag and pulled out a denture container. She then proceeded to insert and adjust her retainer. We were flabbergasted. Never in all my years have I seen such appalling table manners. Perhaps we shouldn’t have been staring, but it was one of those moments in which you are frozen to the spot.

    Abby, that restaurant has very nice bathrooms. What is happening to our society?

    — SHOCKED IN THE SOUTH

    DEAR SHOCKED: I understand why this woman’s performance stopped you cold. But, please, don’t blame “society” for her ignorance of the rules of etiquette, which dictate that to avoid grossing out those around us in public, we should excuse ourselves from the table and take care of our oral hygiene privately, IN THE RESTROOM if needed.

  • Horoscopes: Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026

    ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’re not trying to be unique or edgy — it just so happens that you resonate with topics that many people haven’t even heard of yet. It will be fun and fortifying to connect with those who share your interest.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re starting to question your fit in an organization or a particular role. You’re not exactly a fish out of water, but you may be a polar bear out of Alaska. The key here is to limit your time in the environment. Take lots of breaks. Is it possible to get a vacation?

    GEMINI (May 21-June 21). These are stubborn conditions, and stubborn people populate the landscape. They have something to give, but you won’t know what it is until you let go of what you want it to be. So instead of needing events to line up a certain way, you let go of expectation.

    CANCER (June 22-July 22). Socializing will be about answering the very human need to be seen and heard. Your story is an evolving one and you tell it differently depending on who is asking. Today, someone new will be curious about you.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The mood at 10 a.m. is very different from the mood at 4 p.m. — so different, in fact, you may feel like two different people. Does it help you to know it’s not an uncommon phenomenon? The world asks a lot of “a.m. you,” then “p.m. you” will ask a lot of the world.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll pull off complex plans with a simple approach: jump into and execute as you go. You’re also well aware that not everyone has access to experiences like this, and you’ll make the most of it.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’re touched by what’s around you and you’ll reconnect with possibility and a sense of aliveness. Just remember, no one comes into their own doing whatever everyone else does. Your artful approach will set you apart in the best way.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Your work will be better for the obstacles you face today. A lull will give you the chance to consider the part that you usually do automatically. This is just what you need to make things better than ever.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You want a feeling you felt before, but for some reason it’s not there. Don’t force it. This is the new you, not the old you, and you are sensitive in other ways you have yet to learn about.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). It’s nice to have assistance and support, but if you don’t get it today, you’ll get something even better. You’ll learn what you’re made of. You’ll dig deeper for your own true grit, which is the abiding resource that will never leave you.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The French culinary term “mise en place” will apply to your current project. Get all the elements ready for use. In cooking it means peeling, cutting and measuring your ingredients, but for your current project it’s readying other resources, including your team.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your imagination is active and responsive. You’ll gather a subtle impression from a situation, then let intuition guide your decisions without overanalyzing. The day will arrange itself in supportive ways.

    TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Jan. 22). It will be fun to know you inspire envy along with the other benefits your hard work reels in this Year of the Big Finish. You’ll be crossing the metaphorical finish line with several projects and goals, and the prize comes in money and position, hearts won and security attained. More highlights: cash through something simple, fun gatherings and beautifully supportive friendships. Aries and Capricorn adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 38, 42, 11, 4 and 18.

  • Washington Post seeks court order for government to return electronics seized from reporter’s home

    Washington Post seeks court order for government to return electronics seized from reporter’s home

    WASHINGTON — The Washington Post asked a federal court on Wednesday for an order requiring federal authorities to return electronic devices that they seized from a Post reporter’s Virginia home last week, accusing the government of trampling on the reporter’s free speech rights and legal safeguards for journalists.

    A magistrate judge in Alexandria, Va., temporarily barred the government from reviewing any material from the devices seized from Post reporter Hannah Natanson’s home. The judge also scheduled a Feb. 6 hearing on the newspaper’s request.

    Federal agents seized a phone, two laptops, a recorder, a portable hard drive, and a Garmin smart watch when they searched Natanson’s home last Wednesday, according to a court filing. The search was part of an investigation of a Pentagon contractor accused of illegally handling classified information.

    “The outrageous seizure of our reporter’s confidential newsgathering materials chills speech, cripples reporting, and inflicts irreparable harm every day the government keeps its hands on these materials,” the Post said in a statement.

    The seized material spanned years of Natanson’s reporting across hundreds of stories, including communications with confidential sources, the Post said. The newspaper asked the court in Virginia to order the immediate return of all seized materials and to bar the government from using any of it.

    “Anything less would license future newsroom raids and normalize censorship by search warrant,” the Post’s court filing says.

    The Pentagon contractor, Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones, was arrested earlier this month on a charge of unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents. A warrant said the search of Natanson’s home was related to the investigation of Perez-Lugones, the Post reported.

    Natanson has been covering Republican President Donald Trump’s transformation of the federal government, The Post recently published a piece in which she described gaining hundreds of new sources from the federal workforce, leading one colleague to call her “the federal government whisperer.”

    Attorney General Pam Bondi said that the search was done at the request of the Defense Department and that the journalist was “obtaining and reporting classified and illegally leaked information from a Pentagon contractor.”

    Perez-Lugones, a U.S. Navy veteran who resides in Laurel, Md., has not been charged with sharing classified information or accused in court papers of leaking.

    The Justice Department has internal guidelines governing its response to news media leaks. In April, Bondi issued new guidelines restoring prosecutors’ authority to use subpoenas, court orders and search warrants to hunt for government officials who make “unauthorized disclosures” to journalists.

    The new guidelines rescinded a policy from Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration that protected journalists from having their phone records secretly seized during leak investigations.

    Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press president Bruce Brown said the unprecedented search of the reporter’s home, “imperils public interest reporting and will have ramifications far beyond this specific case.”

    “It is critical that the court blocks the government from searching through this material until it can address the profound threat to the First Amendment posed by the raid,” Brown said in a statement Wednesday.

  • Supreme Court appears likely to allow Lisa Cook to remain on Fed board

    Supreme Court appears likely to allow Lisa Cook to remain on Fed board

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday appeared likely to block President Donald Trump from immediately firing Democratic-appointed Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve board, a move that would prevent Trump from exerting greater influence over the powerful central bank that guides the economy.

    Nearly all of the justices asked skeptical questions of Solicitor General D. John Sauer during roughly two hours of arguments, taking issue with most aspects of the government’s case that the president had met the legal bar to remove Cook while a lawsuit challenging her removal plays out. Such unanimity is rare on high-profile cases for a deeply polarized court.

    Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh said the Trump administration’s position that it could remove Fed governors without judicial review or due process “would weaken if not shatter the independence of the Federal Reserve.” He said presidents of both parties could gin up reasons to remove governors under such a system with dangerous implications for a central bank that Congress created to operate independently.

    “It incentivizes a president to come up with … trivial or inconsequential or old allegations that are very difficult to disprove,” Kavanaugh said. “It incentivizes sort of the search and destroy … no process, nothing, you’re done … what are we doing when we have a system that incentivizes that?”

    The president has complained for months that the Fed is not dropping interest rates quickly enough. He has tried to oust Cook over mortgage fraud allegations, and his Justice Department has launched a criminal probe of Fed Chair Jerome Powell over whether he lied to Congress.

    Both Cook and Powell have denied wrongdoing and accused Trump of manufacturing pretexts to undermine the independence of the central bank to achieve his policy goals. The campaign has alarmed many economists, who fear keeping interest rates artificially low could spark long-term inflation.

    The Supreme Court’s ruling, which is expected in the coming weeks or months, is one of the most significant tests to date of Trump’s push to expand presidential power and place parts of the government that for decades have operated independently under tighter control. It could also have major ramifications for the economy and is being closely watched by businesses and the markets.

    In a sign of the stakes, both Powell and Cook attended the arguments, as did former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke.

    The justices have repeatedly backed Trump’s bids to fire the heads of independent agencies in emergency rulings in his second term, but in a major shift Wednesday justices at both ends of the court’s political spectrum seemed ready to draw a red line around the Fed. Many signaled that they wanted additional legal proceedings, perhaps in the lower courts, before deciding a novel and weighty legal issue on the merits, while Chief Justice John Roberts signaled he might favor going ahead and ruling.

    Conservative Justice Samuel Alito asked Sauer why the Trump administration was asking the court to resolve such a momentous case in a “hurried manner.” Justice Amy Coney Barrett, also a conservative, pointed to a friend-of-the-court brief by former Fed governors warning that removing Cook could trigger a recession and counseled caution.

    Liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the public’s confidence in the court’s decision would benefit from hashing out significant factual and legal issues before issuing a decision.

    “We know that the independence of the agency is very important and that that independence is harmed if we decide these issues too quickly and without due consideration.” Sotomayor said.

    Congress set up the Fed to be insulated from control by the president so it could make difficult decisions, such as raising interest rates, that might not be politically popular but that are good for the overall health of the economy.

    No president in the 112-year history of the Fed had tried to fire a governor from the board before Trump targeted Cook in August. He alleged that she claimed two homes as primary residences at the same time to get a better mortgage rate. Cook denies the allegations.

    The issue before the justices was whether the effort to fire her complied with the Federal Reserve Act, which says Fed board members can be removed only “for cause.” A federal judge and a divided appeals court temporarily blocked Cook’s removal, prompting the administration to appeal to the high court.

    In October, the justices allowed Cook to temporarily remain in her job while they heard the emergency appeal from the Trump administration.

    Sauer told the justices that the alleged mortgage fraud by Cook met the legal bar to remove her and that the president had lost confidence in her ability to do the job. He also said courts did not have the authority to review the president’s decision, a contention a handful of the justices disputed.

    “The American people should not have their interest rates determined by someone who was, at best, grossly negligent in obtaining favorable interest rates for herself,” Sauer said.

    Paul Clement, Cook’s attorney, said judges did have the power to review Cook’s ouster. He also said the mortgage fraud allegations, even if true, would not meet the legal bar to fire Cook, because she applied for her mortgages before she was appointed to the Fed by President Joe Biden in 2022. He added that Cook was never given the opportunity to defend herself.

    “There is no reason to abandon more than 100 years of central bank independence on an emergency application,” Clement said.

    The justices quizzed attorneys for both sides about what the removal of a Fed governor should entail, often questioning whether the Trump administration had provided due process for Cook.

    Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, a liberal, sounded incredulous when Sauer said it was enough that the president had indicated on social media that he intended to fire Cook. Jackson asked how Cook was supposed to defend herself from the allegations without some kind of hearing.

    “Like, she was supposed to post about it [on social media] and that was the opportunity to be heard?” Jackson asked.

    David Wilcox, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and the director of U.S. economic research at Bloomberg Economics, said he expects the justices to send the case back to lower courts. He said the lower courts need to resolve a key procedural question: whether Cook was afforded adequate process, such as notice that she could be fired and an opportunity to be heard.

    “My guess is what the court will do is kick the can down the road,” he said, adding that it is risky to predict the outcome of the case based on oral arguments alone.

    Some legal experts said administration officials may have damaged their chances by launching the criminal probe of Powell earlier this month, creating the impression that Trump’s efforts are more about reshaping the Fed board and policy than any alleged malfeasance by its leaders.

    The Justice Department is probing whether Powell misled Congress about a $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s headquarters. Powell forcefully pushed back on those allegations, calling them “pretexts” in a video posted on the Fed’s website.

    “The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President,” Powell said.

    The arguments Wednesday were a notable shift from a case in December dealing with the legality of Trump’s firing of a Democrat from the Federal Trade Commission without cause. That case could also affect Cook’s job at the Fed.

    In that case, Sauer told the justices that Trump had the inherent authority under the Constitution to remove members of independent agency boards, even though Congress set up those agencies to operate at a remove from the executive.

    Some of the court’s conservative justices and many in the Trump administration have expressed support for an idea known as unitary executive theory, which holds that the Constitution gives the president broad authority to fire officials and that Congress cannot limit it.

    Agencies like the FTC, Securities and Exchange Commission, and Federal Election Commission operate as “a headless fourth branch” of government not fully accountable to the voters who elected the president, Sauer told the justices in the FTC case.

    The conservative majority on the court seemed to embrace that argument, possibly clearing the way for them to strike down a 90-year-old precedent, known as Humphrey’s Executor, that says that Congress could limit the president’s ability to dismiss the heads of independent agencies.

    “I think broad delegations to unaccountable independent agencies raise enormous constitutional and real-world problems for individual liberty,” said Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh.

    But Kavanaugh also suggested that the court sees the central bank as different and might carve out a rule protecting it. Whether it affects the Fed, a ruling striking down Humphrey’s Executor would be one of the largest shifts to the structure of government in decades. A decision in that case is also expected by the summer.

    Some Fed watchers said Wednesday the Cook case appeared unlikely to deal a fatal blow to the central bank’s independence. They also warned that the Fed is increasingly on the defensive – reacting to political pressure rather than setting the terms – and that without pushback from Congress and the markets, Trump could continue reshaping the institution in ways that erode its autonomy.

    “It sounds to me that this case will not be the Waterloo for Fed independence,” said Mark Spindel, an investment manager who co-wrote a history of the central bank’s independence. “But the institution is clearly playing defense.”

  • Immigration officers assert sweeping power to enter homes without a judge’s warrant, memo says

    Immigration officers assert sweeping power to enter homes without a judge’s warrant, memo says

    WASHINGTON — Federal immigration officers are asserting sweeping power to forcibly enter people’s homes without a judge’s warrant, according to an internal Immigration and Customs Enforcement memo obtained by The Associated Press, marking a sharp reversal of longstanding guidance meant to respect constitutional limits on government searches.

    The memo authorizes ICE officers to use force to enter a residence based solely on a more narrow administrative warrant to arrest someone with a final order of removal, a move that advocates say collides with Fourth Amendment protections and upends years of advice given to immigrant communities.

    The shift comes as the Trump administration dramatically expands immigration arrests nationwide, deploying thousands of officers under a mass deportation campaign that is already reshaping enforcement tactics in cities such as Minneapolis.

    For years, immigrant advocates, legal aid groups and local governments have urged people not to open their doors to immigration agents unless they are shown a warrant signed by a judge. That guidance is rooted in Supreme Court rulings that generally prohibit law enforcement from entering a home without judicial approval. The ICE directive directly undercuts that advice at a time when arrests are accelerating under the administration’s immigration crackdown.

    The memo itself has not been widely shared within the agency, according to a whistleblower complaint, but its contents have been used to train new ICE officers who are being deployed into cities and towns to implement the president’s immigration crackdown. New ICE hires and those still in training are being told to follow the memo’s guidance instead of written training materials that actually contradict the memo, according to the whistleblower disclosure.

    It is unclear how broadly the directive has been applied in immigration enforcement operations. The Associated Press witnessed ICE officers ramming through the front door of the home of a Liberian man in Minneapolis on Jan. 11 with only an administrative warrant, wearing heavy tactical gear and with their rifles drawn.

    The change is almost certain to meet legal challenges and stiff criticism from advocacy groups and immigrant-friendly state and local governments that have spent years successfully urging people not to open their doors unless ICE shows them a warrant signed by a judge.

    The Associated Press obtained the memo and whistleblower complaint from an official in Congress, who shared it on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive documents. The AP verified the authenticity of the accounts in the complaint.

    The memo, signed by the acting director of ICE, Todd Lyons, and dated May 12, 2025, says: “Although the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has not historically relied on administrative warrants alone to arrest aliens subject to final orders of removal in their place of residence, the DHS Office of the General Counsel has recently determined that the U.S. Constitution, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and the immigration regulations do not prohibit relying on administrative warrants for this purpose.”

    The memo does not detail how that determination was made nor what its legal repercussions might be.

    When asked about the memo, Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement to the AP that everyone the department serves with an administrative warrant has already had “full due process and a final order of removal.”

    She said the officers issuing those warrants have also found probable cause for the person’s arrest. She said the Supreme Court and Congress have “recognized the propriety of administrative warrants in cases of immigration enforcement,” without elaborating. McLaughlin did not respond to questions about whether ICE officers entered a person’s home since the memo was issued relying solely on an administrative warrant and if so, how often.

    Recent arrests shine a light on tactics

    Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal organization that assists workers exposing wrongdoings, said in the whistleblower complaint obtained by The Associated Press that it represents two anonymous U.S. government officials “disclosing a secretive — and seemingly unconstitutional – policy directive.”

    A wave of recent high-profile arrests, many unfolding at private homes and businesses and captured on video, has shined a spotlight on immigration arrest tactics, including officers’ use of proper warrants.

    Most immigration arrests are carried out under administrative warrants, internal documents issued by immigration authorities that authorize the arrest of a specific individual but do not permit officers to forcibly enter private homes or other non-public spaces without consent. Only warrants signed by judges carry that authority.

    All law enforcement operations — including those conducted by ICE and Customs and Border Protection — are governed by the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution, which protects all people in the country from unreasonable searches and seizures.

    People can legally refuse federal immigration agents entry into private property if the agents only have an administrative warrant, with some limited exceptions.

    Federal agents this month rammed the door of the Minneapolis home of a Liberian man with a deportation order from 2023, who was then arrested. Documents reviewed by The AP revealed that the agents only had an administrative warrant — meaning there was no judge who authorized the raid on private property.

    Memo shown to ‘select’ officials

    The memo says ICE officers can forcibly enter homes and arrest immigrants using just a signed administrative warrant known as an I-205 if they have a final order of removal issued by an immigration judge, the Board of Immigration Appeals or a district judge or magistrate judge.

    The memo says officers must first knock on the door and share who they are and why they’re at the residence. They’re limited in the hours they can go into the home — after 6 a.m. and before 10 p.m. The people inside must be given a “reasonable chance to act lawfully.” But if that doesn’t work, the memo says, they can use force to go in.

    “Should the alien refuse admittance, ICE officers and agents should use only a necessary and reasonable amount of force to enter the alien’s residence, following proper notification of the officer or agent’s authority and intent to enter,” the memo reads.

    The memo is addressed to all ICE personnel. But it has been shown only to “select DHS officials” who then shared it with some employees who were told to read it and return it, Whistleblower Aid wrote in the disclosure.

    One of the two whistleblowers was allowed to view the memo only in the presence of a supervisor and then had to give it back. That person was not allowed to take notes. A whistleblower was able to access the document and lawfully disclose to Congress, Whistleblower Aid said.

    Although the memo was issued in May, David Kligerman, senior vice president and special counsel at Whistleblower Aid, said it took time for its clients to find a “safe and legal path to disclose it to lawmakers and the American people.”

    ICE told to rely on administrative warrants, memo says

    ICE has been rapidly hiring thousands of new deportation officers to carry out the president’s mass deportation agenda. They’re trained at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Brunswick, Georgia.

    During a visit there by The Associated Press in August, ICE officials said repeatedly that new officers were being trained to follow the Fourth Amendment.

    But according to the whistleblowers’ account, newly hired ICE officers are being told they can rely solely on administrative warrants to enter homes to make arrests even though that conflicts with written Homeland Security training materials.

    ICE officers often wait for hours for the person they’re hoping to arrest to come outside so they can make the arrest on the sidewalk or at the person’s work — public places where they are allowed to operate without the risk of infringing on the person’s Fourth Amendment rights.

    Whistleblower Aid called the new policy a “complete break from the law” and said it undercuts the “Fourth Amendment and the rights it protects.”

  • Trump to meet with Zelensky as Ukraine endures a bitter winter after Russian attacks

    Trump to meet with Zelensky as Ukraine endures a bitter winter after Russian attacks

    KYIV, Ukraine — About 4,000 buildings in Kyiv remained without heating Wednesday, and nearly 60% of the Ukrainian capital was without power, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said, after days of Russian bombardment of Ukraine’s power grid and as President Donald Trump prepared to hold talks with the Ukrainian leader.

    With temperatures falling as low as minus-4 F in Kyiv, Ukraine is seeing one of the coldest winters in years, deepening the hardship of Ukrainians almost four years after Russia launched a full-scale invasion.

    A yearlong push by the Trump administration to stop the fighting hasn’t yielded any breakthrough, despite the American president issuing a series of deadlines, though efforts were set to continue.

    Trump said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland that he would meet Thursday with Zelensky.

    “I want to stop it,” Trump said of the fighting Wednesday. “It’s a horrible war.”

    U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he plans to discuss peace proposals with Putin as well as hold talks with a Ukrainian delegation.

    “We need a peace,” Witkoff said at Davos.

    Putin confirmed late on Wednesday that Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner are expected in Moscow on Thursday for talks. The Russian leader said that Moscow and Washington, among other things, are discussing the possibility of using Russian assets frozen in the U.S. for rebuilding “territories damaged by the hostilities” after a peace agreement is reached.

    But with a dispute over Greenland’s future largely eclipsing other transatlantic issues at Davos, discussions about Ukraine’s defense looked likely to be sidelined.

    Zelensky said last week his envoys would try to finalize with U.S. officials documents for a proposed peace settlement that relate to postwar security guarantees and economic recovery.

    He added that the U.S. and Ukraine could sign the documents in Davos this week, but on Tuesday he said he wouldn’t be traveling to Switzerland and would focus on restoring power in Ukraine.

    Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers is allocating 2.56 billion hryvnias (almost $60 million) from a reserve fund to purchase generators, Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko said Wednesday.

    NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Wednesday urged the 32-nation alliance’s military chiefs to press their national governments to supply desperately needed air defense systems to Ukraine, helping it fend off Russia’s aerial attacks.

    “Please use your influence to help your political masters to do even more,” Rutte said in a video message to top brass as they met at NATO’s Brussels headquarters.

    “Look deep into your stockpiles to see what more you can give to Ukraine, particularly air defense interceptors. The time really is now,” he said.

    Russia launched 97 drones and a ballistic missile at Ukraine overnight, the Ukrainian air force said.

    In the central Dnipropetrovsk region, attacks killed a 77-year-old man and a 72-year-old woman, according to Oleksandr Hanzha, head of the regional military administration.

    Russia’s Defense Ministry said that air defenses downed 75 Ukrainian drones over several regions.

    The international airports of Krasnodar, Sochi, Gelendzhik and Saratov briefly suspended flights overnight because of the drones.

    In Adygea, more than 120 miles from the Ukrainian border, a Ukrainian drone caused a fire at an apartment building that injured 11 people, including two children, according to Gov. Murat Kumpilov.

  • Immigration enforcement arrives in Maine as a court freezes restrictions on tactics in Minnesota

    Immigration enforcement arrives in Maine as a court freezes restrictions on tactics in Minnesota

    MINNEAPOLIS — Maine became the latest target of the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement crackdown, while a federal appeals court on Wednesday suspended a decision that prohibited federal officers from using tear gas or pepper spray against peaceful protesters in Minnesota.

    The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was persuaded to freeze a judge’s ruling that bars retaliation against the public in Minnesota, including detaining people who follow agents in cars, while the government pursues an appeal. Operation Metro Surge, an immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota’s Twin Cities, has been underway for weeks.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi praised the appeals court on X, saying the Justice Department “will protect federal law enforcement agents from criminals in the streets AND activist judges in the courtroom.”

    Minnesota is a major focus of immigration sweeps by agencies under the Department of Homeland Security. State and local officials who oppose the effort were served with federal grand jury subpoenas Tuesday for records that might suggest they were trying to stifle enforcement.

    A political action committee founded by former Vice President Kamala Harris is urging donors to contribute to a defense fund in aid of Gov. Tim Walz, her 2024 running mate.

    “The Justice Department is going after Trump’s enemies,” Harris’ email said, referring to President Donald Trump.

    Feds turn to Maine as next target

    In Maine, the Department of Homeland Security named the enforcement operation Catch of the Day in an apparent play on the state’s seafood industry. Maine has relatively few residents who are in the United States illegally but has a notable presence of refugees in its largest cities, particularly from Africa.

    Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, said she won’t grant a request for confidential license plates sought by Customs and Border Protection, a decision that reflects her disgust over “abuses of power” by immigration enforcers. Renee Good was fatally shot by an ICE officer in Minneapolis on Jan. 7.

    “We have not revoked existing plates but have paused issuance of new plates. We want to be assured that Maine plates will not be used for lawless purposes,” Bellows said.

    A message seeking comment from CBP was not immediately returned.

    Portland City Council member Pious Ali, a native of Ghana, said there’s much anxiety about ICE’s presence in Maine’s largest city.

    “There are immigrants who live here who work in our hospitals, they work in our schools, they work in our hotels, they are part of the economic engine of our community,” Ali said.

    Conflicts emerge in shooting incident

    Greg Bovino of U.S. Border Patrol, who has commanded the Trump administration’s big-city immigration crackdown, said more than 10,000 people in the U.S. illegally have been arrested in Minnesota in the past year, including 3,000 “of some of the most dangerous offenders” in the last six weeks during Operation Metro Surge.

    Bovino defended his “troops” and said their actions are “legal, ethical and moral.”

    Julia Decker, policy director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, said advocates have no way of knowing whether the government’s arrest numbers and descriptions of the people in custody are accurate.

    Separately, a federal judge said he’s prepared to grant bond and release two men after hearing conflicting testimony about an alleged assault on an immigration officer. Prosecutors are appealing. One of the men was shot in the thigh by the officer during the encounter last week.

    The officer said he was repeatedly struck with a broom and with snow shovels while trying to subdue and arrest Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna following a car crash and foot chase.

    Aljorna and Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis denied assaulting the officer. Neither video evidence nor three eyewitnesses supported the officer’s account about the broom and shovels or that there had been a third person involved.

    Aljorna and Sosa-Celis do not have violent criminal records, their attorneys said, and both had been working as DoorDash drivers at night to avoid encounters with federal agents.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Douglas Micko said they still could be detained by ICE even if released from custody in the assault case.

  • Trump’s Board of Peace is dividing countries in Europe and the Middle East

    Trump’s Board of Peace is dividing countries in Europe and the Middle East

    JERUSALEM — Divisions emerged Wednesday over President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace as its ambitions have grown beyond Gaza, with some Western European countries declining to join, others remaining noncommittal and a group of Muslim countries agreeing to sign on.

    The developments underscored European concerns over the expanded and divisive scope of the project — which some say may seek to rival the U.N. Security Council’s role in mediating global conflicts. Trump is looking to form the board officially this week on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

    Norway and Sweden said they won’t accept their invitations, after France also said no, while a bloc of Muslim-majority nations — Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — said in a joint statement that their leaders would join.

    It was not immediately clear how many countries would accept. A White House official said about 30 countries were expected to join, and about 50 had been invited. Two other U.S. officials, who similiarly spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal plans not yet made public, said roughly 60 countries had been invited but only 18 had so far confirmed their participation.

    Trump was sunny about the prospects ahead of an event Thursday tied to the board, saying of the countries that were invited that “some need parliamentary approval but for the most part, everybody wants to be on.”

    Chaired by Trump, the board was originally conceived as a small group of world leaders overseeing the Gaza ceasefire plan. But the Trump administration’s ambitions have since expanded into a more sprawling concept, with Trump hinting at the board’s role as mediator for other global conflicts.

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’s agreed to join the board — a departure from an earlier stance when his office criticized the makeup of another committee tasked with overseeing Gaza.

    Norway and Sweden say no, following in France’s footsteps

    Norway’s state secretary, Kristoffer Thoner, said the Scandinavian country would not join the board because it “raises a number of questions that requires further dialogue with the United States.”

    Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on the sidelines of Davos that his country wouldn’t sign up for the board as the text currently stands, Swedish news agency TT reported, though the country hasn’t formally responded.

    Slovenian Prime Minister Robert Golob said “the time has not yet come to accept the invitation,” according to the STA news agency. The main concern is the board’s mandate is too broad and could seriously undermine international order based on the U.N. Charter, Golob said.

    France declined the invitation earlier in the week. French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said, “Yes to implementing the peace plan presented by the president of the United States, which we wholeheartedly support, but no to creating an organization as it has been presented, which would replace the United Nations.”

    The United Kingdom, the European Union’s executive arm, Canada, Russia, Ukraine and China also have not yet indicated their response to Trump’s invitations.

    Several in the Middle East and beyond say they will join

    Parties key to the Gaza ceasefire — Egypt and Israel — have said they would join the board, as have Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Morocco, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.

    Netanyahu’s decision was significant because his office had previously said the composition of a Gaza executive committee — which includes Turkey, Israel’s key regional rival, and will work with those governing the territory day to day — was not coordinated with the Israeli government and ran “contrary to its policy,” without clarifying its objections.

    The move could now put Netanyahu in conflict with some of the far-right allies in his coalition, such as Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has criticized the board and called for Israel to take unilateral responsibility for Gaza’s future.

    Many questions remain about the board. When asked by a reporter on Tuesday if the board would replace the U.N., Trump said: “It might.”

    White House names some officials to oversight boards

    The White House said an executive board will work to carry out the vision of the Board of Peace.

    The executive board’s members include U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Trump envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Apollo Global Management CEO Marc Rowan, World Bank President Ajay Banga, and Trump’s deputy national security adviser Robert Gabriel.

    Rowan is a co-founder Apollo Global Management, a U.S. asset-management firm. The billionaire businessman is also a philanthropist who has supported projects in Israel, the U.S. Jewish community, and the University of Pennsylvania, where he and Trump both studied.

    Nickolay Mladenov, a former Bulgarian politician and U.N. Mideast envoy, is to serve as the executive board’s representative overseeing day-to-day matters.

  • Iranian state TV issues first official death toll from recent protests, saying 3,117 were killed

    Iranian state TV issues first official death toll from recent protests, saying 3,117 were killed

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iranian state TV on Wednesday issued the first official death toll from recent protests, saying 3,117 people were killed, while the foreign minister issued the most direct threat yet against the United States after Tehran’s bloody crackdown, warning the Islamic Republic will be “firing back with everything we have if we come under renewed attack.”

    State television carried statements by the Interior Ministry and the Martyrs Foundation, an official body providing services to families of those killed in wars, stating the toll and saying 2,427 of the dead in the demonstrations that began Dec. 28 were civilians and security forces. It did not elaborate on the rest.

    The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said the death toll was at least 4,560. The agency has been accurate throughout the years on demonstrations and unrest in Iran, relying on a network of activists inside the country that confirms all reported fatalities. The Associated Press has been unable to independently assess the death toll.

    The comments by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who saw his invitation to the World Economic Forum in Davos rescinded over the killings, came as a U.S. aircraft carrier group moved west toward the Middle East from Asia. U.S. fighter jets and other equipment appeared to be moving in the Mideast after a major U.S. military deployment in the Caribbean saw troops seize Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro.

    Araghchi makes threat in column

    Araghchi made the threat in an opinion article published by The Wall Street Journal. The foreign minister contended “the violent phase of the unrest lasted less than 72 hours” and sought again to blame armed demonstrators for the violence. Videos that made it out of Iran despite an internet shutdown appear to show security forces repeatedly using live fire to target apparently unarmed protesters, something unaddressed by Araghchi.

    “Unlike the restraint Iran showed in June 2025, our powerful armed forces have no qualms about firing back with everything we have if we come under renewed attack,” Araghchi wrote, referring to the 12-day war launched by Israel on Iran in June. “This isn’t a threat, but a reality I feel I need to convey explicitly, because as a diplomat and a veteran, I abhor war.”

    He added: “An all-out confrontation will certainly be ferocious and drag on far, far longer than the fantasy timelines that Israel and its proxies are trying to peddle to the White House. It will certainly engulf the wider region and have an impact on ordinary people around the globe.”

    Araghchi’s comments likely refer to Iran’s short- and medium-range missiles. The Islamic Republic relied on ballistic missiles to target Israel in the war and left its stockpile of the shorter-range missiles unused, something that could be fired to target U.S. bases and interests in the Persian Gulf. Already, there have been some restrictions on U.S. diplomats traveling to bases in Kuwait and Qatar.

    Mideast nations, particularly diplomats from Gulf Arab countries, had lobbied U.S. President Donald Trump not to attack Iran after he threatened to act in response to the killing of demonstrators. Last week, Iran shut its airspace, likely in anticipation of a strike.

    The USS Abraham Lincoln, which had been in the South China Sea in recent days, had passed through the Strait of Malacca, a key waterway connecting the sea and Indian Ocean, by Tuesday, ship-tracking data showed.

    A U.S. Navy official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the aircraft carrier and three accompanying destroyers were heading west.

    While naval and other defense officials stopped short of saying the carrier strike group was headed to the Middle East, its current heading and location in the Indian Ocean means it is only days away from moving into the region. Meanwhile, U.S. military images released in recent days showed F-15E Strike Eagles arriving in the Mideast and forces in the region moving a HIMARS missile system, the type used with great success by Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion in the country in 2022.

    Protest death toll rises

    The death toll exceeds that of any other round of protest or unrest in Iran in decades, and recalls the chaos surrounding the 1979 revolution that brought the Islamic Republic into being. Although there have been no protests for days, there are fears the toll could increase significantly as information gradually emerges from a country still under a government-imposed shutdown of the internet since Jan. 8.

    The first indication from authorities of the extent of casualties came Saturday from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who said the protests had left “several thousand” people dead and blamed the United States. The protests began over economic pressures but quickly broadened to take on the theocracy.

    The Interior Ministry statement Wednesday asserted that “terrorists used live ammunition that led to the deaths of 2,427 people and security forces.”

    The Martyrs Foundation said Iran would pursue what it called “terrorists” who it claimed were tied to Israel and “supported, equipped and armed” by the U.S.

    Nearly 26,500 people have been arrested, according to the Human Rights Activists News Agency. Comments from officials have led to fears of some of those detained being put to death in Iran, one of the world’s top executioners.

    That and the killing of peaceful protesters have been two red lines laid down by Trump in the tensions.

    Kurdish exiles claim Iranian attack in Iraq

    The National Army of Kurdistan, the armed wing of the Kurdistan Freedom Party, or PAK, claimed Iran launched an attack against one of its bases near Irbil, some 200 miles north of Baghdad. It said one fighter had been killed, and released mobile phone footage of a fire in the predawn darkness.

    Iran did not immediately acknowledge the attack, which would be the first foreign operation Tehran has launched since the protests started.

    A handful of Iranian Kurdish dissident or separatist groups — some with armed wings — have long found a safe haven in northern Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdish region, where their presence has been a point of friction between the central government in Baghdad and Tehran. The PAK has claimed it launched attacks in Iran as a crackdown on the demonstrations took place, something reported by semiofficial Iranian news agencies as well.

  • Democrats seek to block Homeland Security funding over ICE concerns

    Democrats seek to block Homeland Security funding over ICE concerns

    House Democrats plan to vote against a negotiated funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday to protest Immigrations and Customs Enforcement’s aggressive actions against U.S. citizens in Minneapolis and other cities.

    Thousands of ICE agents have been sent to Minnesota since December as part of a crackdown that DHS has described as the largest immigration enforcement effort in the agency’s history. An ICE agent shot and killed 37-year-old Renee Good this month, prompting mass demonstrations in the Twin Cities. A week later, another ICE officer shot an undocumented Venezuelan man in the leg during an arrest. ICE also began an operation in Maine on Wednesday.

    ICE agents have increased their presence across the country over the past year, which President Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have said is necessary to deport undocumented immigrants with criminal records. But agents have been taped on camera aggressively detaining individuals, including many U.S. citizens or undocumented immigrants without violent criminal records.

    House Democrats were initially poised to support the DHS funding bill because congressional appropriators worked in a bipartisan manner to cobble together the dozen individual pieces of spending legislation necessary to pass before the Jan. 30 deadline to fund the government and prevent another shutdown. But Good’s death incensed many Democrats and became a red line for the caucus, forcing Republican leaders to delay the measure’s consideration and put the bill on the floor for a stand-alone vote.

    Officials from the White House and Homeland Security did not immediately return a request for comment on the Democrats’ decision.

    Bipartisan members of the House and Senate appropriations committees negotiated the bill as part of a broader package of spending legislation before Democratic opposition became apparent. The bill would allocate $64.4 billion to Homeland Security, including $10 billion for ICE — on par with existing funding levels — and fund the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Transportation Security Administration, the Coast Guard, and Customs and Border Protection.

    It would reduce funding for ICE’s enforcement and removal operations by $115 million, reduce the number of detention beds by 5,500, fund body cameras for agents, and reduce funding for Border Patrol. It does not include other changes Democrats pushed for, including prohibitions on ICE agents shooting at moving vehicles or detaining U.S. citizens.

    During a Democratic caucus meeting Wednesday morning, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D., N.Y.) and his lieutenants announced they would vote against the bill because, they said, ICE is running rampant across the country and the proposal does not include any significant steps to rein in agents.

    “These reforms aren’t enough. [ICE’s] lawlessness has to stop. And they’re only doing this because they can. They’re only doing this because the president of the United States wants to use them to terrorize communities,” Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar (Calif.) told reporters Wednesday.

    Democrats will introduce several amendments to the bill during a GOP-led House Rules Committee meeting Wednesday, their final hope to change the measure enough to back it. The amendments would block ICE agents from detaining and deporting U.S. citizens and bar agents from covering their faces during enforcement operations. It isn’t clear whether Republicans will vote against those proposals in the committee.

    “This is a time when so many people across the country, in every district, are saying, ‘What the hell is going on here?’” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D., Wash.), who introduced an amendment in the Rules Committee to bar ICE from using federal money to detain and deport U.S. citizens. “We’re just at this place where it is so serious. Where the First Amendment rights, Fourth Amendment rights, and Fifth Amendment rights are being so clearly violated every day — and that’s for U.S. citizens. Imagine what’s happening to people who are not U.S. citizens.”

    Republicans are aware they cannot rely on Democratic support to pass the legislation, and leaders have implored that all GOP lawmakers be present for Thursday’s vote to ensure its passage. If every member of the House is present and voting, Republicans can only afford to lose two votes to send the last of 12 appropriation bills to the Senate if all Democrats oppose it.

    The House is expected to hold separate votes on the DHS funding bill and a three-bill package of the other remaining appropriations bills on Thursday. Government funding expires on Jan. 30, and without an appropriations bill or a funding extension known as a continuing resolution, any agency that hasn’t had a spending bill enacted into law would shut down.

    Besides the outrage from Good’s death, Democrats are also feeling pressure from their electoral base to fight back against the Trump administration more broadly on immigration. Some lawmakers have begun to resurrect a demand leaders in the party have tried to tamp down for years: “Abolish ICE.” The slogan became a rallying cry during Trump’s first term, and many strategists say it ultimately cost the Democratic Party in subsequent elections as voters considered Republicans tougher on crime and border security.

    “Hey Democrats, if you have a problem with ICE — which many of them do, irrationally — you should not take down the appropriations bill because there are all these other areas of Homeland Security that are essential,” said Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.), who noted that not funding DHS would impact preparations for America’s 250th celebration and the World Cup. “This is not a game.”

    Notably, House Democratic leaders are not whipping lawmakers to vote against the legislation, though most are expected to join them in opposing it. Several moderate Democrats who represent swing districts are weighing whether to support to bill rather than be targeted for voting against the border security agency.

    Others, including Rep. Henry Cuellar (D., Texas), who crafted the bill, argue that Republicans already locked in the bulk of DHS funding for ICE through their massive tax and immigration law, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” That measure sent $75 billion for immigration enforcement to ICE, money which would continue uninterrupted even if the annual spending bill doesn’t pass.

    The top Democrats on the House and Senate appropriations committees, Rep. Rosa DeLauro (Conn.) and Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.) have also argued that denying funding for the agency would impact other key government services, such as TSA and FEMA, and that a short-term funding law would give the Trump administration wider latitude to make spending decisions at DHS.

    Aguilar said that the caucus is aware of those risks, but they will be voting against the package without “substantive” changes.

    “It’s unfortunate that the behavior of ICE is jeopardizing the Homeland Security bill,” he said.