US judge to enter ‘limited’ temporary order to block Trump from moving to dismantle USAid
A US judge on Friday said he will enter a “very limited” temporary order blocking Donald Trump’s administration from taking certain steps to dismantle the US Agency for International Development (USaid), according to Reuters.
US district judge Carl Nichols in Washington said he would issue the order following a lawsuit by the largest US government workers’ union and an association of foreign service workers, who sued on Thursday to stop the administration’s efforts to dismantle the agency.
In a notice sent to the foreign aid agency’s workers on Thursday, the administration said it will keep 611 essential workers onboard at USaid out of a worldwide workforce that totals more than 10,000. This move has largely been directed by Elon Musk, who’s spearheading the president’s effort to shrink the federal bureaucracy.
A justice department official, Brett Shumate, told Nichols that about 2,200 USAid employees would be put on paid leave under the administration’s plans, saying: “The president has decided there is corruption and fraud at USAid.”
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Updated at 16.59 EST
Key events
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Alaskan lawmakers are aiming to halt the renaming of Denali to Mount McKinley.
The state senate unanimously voted on Friday to pass a resolution that urges Donald Trump to stop his plans to change the name of the highest peak in North America. The senate followed a similar vote of 31-8 in the state house last week.
Trump signed an executive order to rename Denali during his first week of office, saying it was to honor the former president. “President McKinley is honored for giving his life for our great nation,” the order reads.
Barack Obama changed the name of the mountain from Mount McKinley to Denali in 2015. That name change was to “recognize the sacred status of Denali to many Alaska Natives”.
Reverting the name to Mount McKinley has been unpopular even with Republicans. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican senator from Alaska, said that she “strongly disagreed” with Trump’s decision.
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Updated at 18.25 EST
Judge who ordered temporary order to halt dismantling of USAid is Donald Trump appointee.
In 2019, Trump appointed Judge Carl Nichols to the US district court for the District of Columbia. Nichols blocked Marco Rubio from putting 2,200 USAid employees on leave starting midnight tonight, so that the legal proceedings could play out.
“They should not put those 2,200 people on administrative leave,” Nichols said during an emergency hearing on Friday. Nichols could also order Rubio to reinstate 500 employees who’ve already been put on leave, he said he was still weighing that decision. The judge said he would formalize his decision later tonight.
Two unions representing federal and foreign service workers brought the lawsuit against the government. They said dismantling the aid agency is “unconstitutional and illegal” and had “generated a global humanitarian crisis”. They argue that only Congress has the power to lawfully disassemble USAid.
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Updated at 17.35 EST
A US Treasury threat intelligence analysis has reportedly designated staff from Elon Musk’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge) as an “insider threat”.
Wired obtained an internal email on Friday that said Doge’s access to government payment systems is “the single biggest insider threat risk the Bureau of the Fiscal Service has ever faced”.
Musk has brought a group on young men onto his team to reportedly work to gain access to the government’s computer systems, causing outcry among democrats. Senator Chuck Schumer has called the group “an unelected shadow government … conducting a hostile takeover of the federal government”.
The young men, who are all under the age of 26, have little government experience and have been working at the behest of Musk to tap into internal systems at various federal agencies, including the Department of Education, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Treasury Department.
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Updated at 17.28 EST
US judge to enter ‘limited’ temporary order to block Trump from moving to dismantle USAid
A US judge on Friday said he will enter a “very limited” temporary order blocking Donald Trump’s administration from taking certain steps to dismantle the US Agency for International Development (USaid), according to Reuters.
US district judge Carl Nichols in Washington said he would issue the order following a lawsuit by the largest US government workers’ union and an association of foreign service workers, who sued on Thursday to stop the administration’s efforts to dismantle the agency.
In a notice sent to the foreign aid agency’s workers on Thursday, the administration said it will keep 611 essential workers onboard at USaid out of a worldwide workforce that totals more than 10,000. This move has largely been directed by Elon Musk, who’s spearheading the president’s effort to shrink the federal bureaucracy.
A justice department official, Brett Shumate, told Nichols that about 2,200 USAid employees would be put on paid leave under the administration’s plans, saying: “The president has decided there is corruption and fraud at USAid.”
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Updated at 16.59 EST
Pentagon is amassing more soldiers on the southern border
A US official said the agency will deploy about 1,500 more active-duty troops, bringing the total number to about 3,600, according to the Associated Press.
Moving troops south is part of Donald Trump’s plans to crack down on immigration and beef up security at the border. Trump signed several executive orders during his first week in office addressing immigration, including one declaring a national emergency at the southern border.
Roughly 1,600 active-duty troops have already been deployed, according to the Associated Press, and about 500 more are anticipated to head south within the next few days.
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Updated at 16.49 EST
Trump signs executive order targeting South Africa
Donald Trump has signed an executive order to address “serious human rights violations occurring in South Africa”, Reuters reports, in the latest sign of worsening relations between the United States and Africa’s largest economy.
It was not yet clear how the order would affect South Africa, but it comes after secretary of state Marco Rubio accused the country of “anti-Americanism”, while Trump announced he would cut funding to the country over its efforts to reform land ownership.
Here’s more on the spat:
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The shuttering of USAid continues apace, with its name taped over on a building directory outside its Washington DC headquarters:
Only a few hundred staffers are set to remain at the organization that facilitates the US foreign aid strategy:
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The day so far
Donald Trump has made clear he will fire “some” of the FBI agents who investigated the January 6 US Capitol attack, after the bureau turned over their names to a justice department official who was previously one of the president’s attorneys. Speaking at a joint press conference with Japan’s prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, the president also again backed dismantling the Department of Education and said he was “very proud” of the work of the “department of government efficiency”, despite objections from Democrats and advocacy groups. Earlier in the day, he renewed his offensive against USAid, and said he’d announce a new barrage of tariffs on unspecified countries next week.
Here’s what else has happened today:
Trump said he is in “no rush” to make his plan to put the United States in charge of the Gaza Strip a reality.
USAid’s dismantling may be a boon for China’s global influence, analysts say.
The health and human services department and agencies under its umbrella – such as the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control – may be the next targets of Trump’s mass layoffs, the Wall Street Journal reports.
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Updated at 15.30 EST
Just before he wrapped up his press conference with the Japanese prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, Donald Trump was asked if he had given Elon Musk and his “department of government efficiency” any particular orders of where to find areas to cut spending.
“We haven’t discussed that much. I’ll tell him to go here, go there. He does it. He’s got a very capable group of people, very, very, very, very capable. They know what they’re doing. They’ll ask questions, and they’ll see immediately, as somebody gets tongue-tied, that they’re either crooked or don’t know what they’re doing,” Trump said.
“I’ve instructed him go into education, go into military, go into other things as we go along, and they’re finding massive amounts of fraud, abuse, waste, all of these things,” the president added, without offering details.
The reporter speaking to Trump noted that social security and Medicare make up the bulk of federal spending. “Social security will not be touched, it’ll only be strengthened,” Trump replied, again without providing details of how he would do that and then pivoting to accusations that undocumented immigrants are accessing those benefits.
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Updated at 15.09 EST
Trump says he will fire ‘some’ FBI agents who worked on January 6 cases
Donald Trump said he will fire an unspecified number of the FBI agents who worked on January 6 cases, after the justice department sought the names of bureau employees involved in investigations related to the Capitol attack.
“I’ll fire some of them because some of them were corrupt,” Trump replied, when asked at his press conference if he would fire all the agents who investigated January 6.
“I have no doubt about that. I got to know a lot about that business, that world. I got to know a lot about that world, and we had some corrupt agents, and those people are gone, or they will be gone, and it’ll be done quickly and very surgically.”
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Trump again backs dismantling education department
Donald Trump then signaled he remained serious about closing the Department of Education, saying regulations around schooling would be better left to the states.
“We’re ranked dead last,” Trump said. “I want to see it go back to the states where great states that do so well have no debt, they’re operated brilliantly. They’ll be as good as Norway or Denmark or Sweden or any of the other highly ranked countries … 35 to 38 states will be right at the top, and the rest will come along. They’ll have to come along competitively. And by the way, we’ll be spending a lot less money, and we’ll have great education.”
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Updated at 15.03 EST
Trump says ‘very proud’ of Doge’s work, says they’re acting ‘at my insistence’
Donald Trump has defended Elon Musk’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge), saying their work is necessary to root out unspecified “corruption”.
“I’m very proud of the job that this group of young people, generally young people, but very smart people, they’re doing,” Trump said, referring to the reportedly young engineers Musk has staffed Doge with. “They’re doing it at my insistence. It would be a lot easier not to do it, but we have to take some of these things apart to find the corruption.”
Democrats have condemned the effort, saying Musk and his employees are unqualified and have put America’s privacy at risk by accessing sensitive government systems, among other concerns.
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The last time Donald Trump was in office, Shinzo Abe was Japan’s prime minister, and the rapport the two leaders developed looms over Shigeru Ishiba’s visit to Washington DC, the Guardian’s Justin McCurry reports:
Donald Trump had yet to get his feet under the Oval Office desk when he held his first meeting with a foreign leader in late 2016. Shinzo Abe, then Japan’s prime minister, arrived at Trump Tower in November that year bearing a gift of a gold-plated golf club and harbouring a determination to get the Japan-US relationship under Trump off to the best possible start.
The success, or otherwise, of Abe’s charm offensive had potentially serious repercussions. During the election campaign, Trump had suggested he would withdraw US troops from Japan, contingent on Tokyo’s willingness to make a bigger financial contribution to their countries’ postwar alliance.
The gambit worked. During Trump’s five-nation visit to Asia in late 2017, he and Abe, who was assassinated in 2022, bonded over a round of golf – a sport for which the Japanese leader had apparently developed a sudden passion – and gourmet hamburgers.
For the remainder of Trump’s term, Abe supported the US administration with a fervour that eluded many of his contemporaries. US troops remained in Japan, and the bilateral security treaty – the cornerstone of Japan’s postwar foreign policy – survived unscathed.
As he prepares to fly to Washington on a three-day visit, all eyes are on whether Japan’s current leader, Shigeru Ishiba, will be able to re-create Abe’s personal rapport with Trump, although golf diplomacy is unlikely to play a part for the cigarette-smoking plastic-modelling enthusiast.
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Joanna Walters
The press conference is now underway and Donald Trump is currently giving compliments to his counterpart.
Just before the two leaders came out, US vice-president JD Vance turned up in the room.
Trump said the US worked well together with Japanese prime minister Shigeru Ishiba’s predecessor, Shinzo Abe.
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Updated at 14.35 EST
Joanna Walters
The scene is set at the White House for the forthcoming press conference between Donald Trump and Shigeru Ishiba.
The press has gathered in the East Room and podium sound checks are complete as the US president and the Japanese prime minister prepare to make remarks and take questions from media representatives.
The countries’ respective flags alternate behind the area where the leaders will station themselves and senior aides are chatting nearby.
The press conference was due to get under way an hour ago. The two are having a working lunch. Ishiba is the second foreign leader to visit Trump here since he became the 47th president. Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu was the first, earlier this week, and the visit made huge waves with Trump’s comments that the US should take over Gaza.
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Updated at 14.35 EST
Democratic lawmakers turned away from Department of Education
Around a dozen Democratic members of Congress attempted to enter the Department of Education today in response to reports that Donald Trump would soon order it dismantled, but were denied access.
“Today we went to the Department of Education and demanded answers in defense of our students, in defense of our teachers, in defense of families and communities that are built around public education. We’re not going to let them destroy our public school system and destroy the futures of millions of kids across this country,” said congressman Maxwell Frost, who was part of the group.
The group tried for about 10 minutes to get in, but were informed they would not be allowed access. Police were called, and were positioned inside the building’s lobby.
You can see video of the attempt here.
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Updated at 14.02 EST
Only a few hundred employees will remain at USAid once Donald Trump’s dismantling of the aid agency is complete, the Guardian’s Anna Betts reports:
Donald Trump’s administration is reportedly planning to keep just more than 600 essential workers at USAid, according to a notice sent to employees of the US foreign aid agency on Thursday night.
The notice, shared with Reuters by an administration official on Friday, reportedly stated that 611 essential workers would be retained at USAid, which had more than 10,000 employees globally.
Earlier, it was reported that the administration intended to retain fewer than 300 staff members at USAid.
The USAid staff reductions are set to take effect at midnight on Friday, as indicated on the agency’s website. But a lawsuit filed on Thursday by the American Foreign Service Association (AFSA) and the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) seeks to prevent the administration from dismantling USAid, which was established as an independent agency by a law passed by Congress in 1998.
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Updated at 13.53 EST
Trump says he will announce reciprocal tariffs next week
Donald Trump said he plans to announce reciprocal tariffs on many countries next week.
Trump was asked about his plans for further restrictions on trading partners during a bilateral meeting with the Japanese prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba. Trump replied:
I’ll be announcing that next week, reciprocal trade, so that we’re treated evenly with other countries, we don’t want any more, any less.
Trump warned repeatedly during his campaign that he would impose a universal tariff on imports into the US.
Trump also threatened tariffs on Japanese goods if the US trade deficit with Japan is not equalized.
“Should be pretty easy to do,” he said, according to Reuters. “I don’t think we’ll have any problem whatsoever. They want fairness too.”
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Updated at 13.20 EST
The Trump administration has agreed not to publicly release the names of FBI agents and employees who investigated the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.
The justice department agreed to a temporary deal not to immediately make public the names of agents who worked on investigations related to the 6 January 2021 insurrection until at least late March.
The deal was struck after acting head of the FBI, Brian Driscoll, turned over to the justice department a list of FBI employees involved in the January 6 investigations.
The data, submitted to at least partially comply with an order from the acting deputy attorney general, Emil Bove, last month demanding information, included employee numbers, job titles and job roles.
The demand prompted days of internal resistance from Driscoll and the bureau and prompted two lawsuits from groups of anonymous FBI agents who said the move endangered their safety.
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