Skip to content

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Home - BBC US politics - US court allows Trump to keep control of National Guard in LA

Posted in
  • BBC US politics

US court allows Trump to keep control of National Guard in LA

by The editor•20 June 2025•Posted inBBC US politics

Trump deployed the troops in response to protests in the city, despite objections from city officials and California’s governor.

The editor
More by The editor

You might also like

Trump orders reopening of notorious Alcatraz prison

Camp Mystic: Why were so many people killed there during Texas floods?

Texas approves new electoral map favouring Republicans

Post navigation

Previous Article Previous article:
Inside the Situation Room, where Trump and his national security team are weighing next steps on Iran
Next Article Next article:
Chris Brown denies London nightclub assault

The Atlantic

  • Mike Pence: Donald Trump Has Not ‘Changed the Republican Party’

    The former vice president spoke at The Atlantic Festival about the president he once served.

  • The MAGA Campaign to Suppress Dissent—Even on the Right

    Charlie Kirk’s assassination was a tragedy. It is also an opportunity for conservatives who hope to silence their political rivals.

  • The Running Mate Kamala Harris Didn’t Dare Choose

    “I love Pete,” she writes in her new book. But picking a gay man would have been too risky.

  • Russia’s New Politics of Abduction

    How Trump embraced the game of trading prisoners with Vladimir Putin

  • What Charlie Kirk Told Me About His Legacy

    He didn’t just want to win elections. He wanted to win a generation.

Talking Points Memo

  • Trump Poised to Fire US Attorney for Not Indicting Letitia James

    A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the...

  • Republicans Kill Attempt to Subpoena FCC Chair After Jimmy Kimmel Suspension

    The House Oversight Committee voted Thursday to table a motion to subpoena Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr to testify...

  • ‘Not Life or Death for Us’: DC Officials Push for Budget Fix in CR or Out of It

    Despite their reluctance to fix a $1.1 billion hole they blew in Washington D.C.’s budget last March, House Republicans are...

  • Listen To This: Kirk Aftermath

    Kate and Josh discuss the Charlie Kirk killing and its fallout, the Republicans’ stopgap bill and leadership’s refusal to endorse...

  • A Few Thoughts on KimmelGeddon

    Let me start by noting the obvious: What we saw yesterday with Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension by ABC News was a...

Fox News

  • 58 House Dems vote against resolution honoring 'life and legacy' of Charlie Kirk

    Lawmakers voted to honor conservative activist Charlie Kirk, condemning political violence while sparring over responses to his death.

  • House passes Trump-backed plan to avert government shutdown

    The House of Representatives passed a bill to punt the government funding deadline until Nov. 21 on Friday.

  • Russian jets carrying ballistic missiles violate Estonian airspace, foreign minister says

    Russian jets carrying Kinzhal ballistic missiles breached Estonian airspace, prompting NATO interception and potential Article 4 consultation requests.

  • Trump calls antifa ‘terrorist group,’ fueling fight over free speech and limits of law enforcement

    President Trump declares antifa a major terrorist organization, sparking debate among experts about constitutional implications and enforcement challenges.

  • Soros drops massive donation into Newsom's redistricting effort to counter Trump: report

    George Soros' $10 million donation helped build Gavin Newsom's $70 million war chest for California's Proposition 50 redistricting ballot initiative, according to a new report.

The Hill

  • Texas cotton farmers prepare for 'curveball' as pest invasion threatens future

    The cotton jassid, an invasive species of leafhopper, has been found in Texas and could threaten cotton farmers in the future if it is not contained.

  • House Republicans pass stopgap spending bill, set up shutdown fight with Senate

    House Republicans on Friday approved a short-term government spending package to avert a shutdown at month’s end, sending the bill to the Senate and setting up a clash with upper chamber Democrats vowing to sink the measure.  The legislation was crafted by Republicans, without Democratic input, and that dynamic was reflected in the lopsided 217-212...

  • I lost my job, and unfettered AI made it much harder to find work again

    Related Video: DC Bureau: Fed Interest Rate Decision I came to the U.S. from France over 15 years ago with a dream familiar to many immigrants: to build a better life, contribute meaningfully, and honor the values of freedom, opportunity, and resilience that make America unique. For years, that dream felt within reach. I worked...

  • Several elected officials arrested at New York anti-ICE demonstration

    Several elected officials were among the dozens of people arrested Thursday at a New York City federal building after asking for access to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) holding facility.  Nearly a dozen elected lawmakers, including New York City Comptroller Brad Lander (D), were detained by federal law enforcement after going to 26 Federal Plaza...

  • CDC vaccine advisers delay controversial vote on hepatitis B vaccine

    Key vaccine advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted 11-1 Friday morning to delay a recommendation on changes to the hepatitis B vaccine administered to newborns, a surprise development greeted with relief by infectious disease experts.  The vote came after a lengthy and tense discussion Thursday about the necessity of giving newborn...

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Architecture
  • Astronomy
  • BBC US politics
  • Beauty
  • CNN
  • Democracy matters – defending democracy
  • Fashion
  • Featured articles
  • FiveThirtyEight
  • Food
  • Fox news
  • Just security
  • Movie Stuff
  • NPR
  • Painters Matter
  • Politico
  • Politics Matters
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Atlantic
  • The Guardian
  • The Hill
  • Travel

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Find Us

This is a good place to read all your sources at just one stop.

Address
123 Main Street
New York, NY 10001

Hours
Monday–Friday: 5:00AM–5:00PM
Saturday & Sunday: Only urgent matters

The abouve looks good so I left it there, like I would be running a regular physical operation as well ,-)

You can reach me at editor@thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

The Guardian

  • House passes short-term funding bill to avert US government shutdown; legislation moves to Senate – live updates

    Republican bill would fund government until 21 November; bill now moves to Senate chamber, where passage is less certainToday, lawmakers in the House will vote on legislation, known as a “continuing resolution” (CR), to prevent a looming government shutdown at the end of September.The bill, introduced by Republicans, would fund the government until 21 November. According to Politico, House GOP whip Tom Emmer was confident, as of Thursday, that his party had enough votes. “We’re going to pass this,” he said in an interview. Continue reading...

  • Resolution to honor Charlie Kirk as ‘courageous patriot’ divides US House

    Some Democrats fear messaging trap and political polarization from measure sponsored only by RepublicansThe killing of the conservative activist Charlie Kirk last week has triggered a wave of political disquiet in Washington, with some House Democrats fearing a messaging trap over a Republican resolution to honor him while other lawmakers worry about the broader political temperature following government pressure on broadcasters.The five-page resolution, introduced by the House speaker, Mike Johnson, and co-sponsored by 165 House Republicans but no Democrats, praises Kirk as a “courageous American patriot” who sought to “elevate truth, foster understanding, and strengthen the Republic”. Continue reading...

  • Josh Shapiro and Pete Buttigieg respond to revelations from Kamala Harris’s book

    Harris’ memoir, 107 Days, includes her thoughts about the Pennsylvania governor and former transport secretary as potential running matesJosh Shapiro has said Kamala Harris will “have to answer” for why she did not publicly alert people to Joe Biden’s declining ability to serve during his term in the White House.The Democratic Pennsylvania governor was a candidate to become Harris’s running mate when she replaced Biden as the Democratic party nominee for president late in the 2024 campaign after the president dropped his re-election bid, but narrowly lost out to Minnesota governor Tim Walz – whom Harris dishes on in her new book. Continue reading...

  • When even Ben & Jerry’s can’t speak out, it’s clear: the era of corporate responsibility is over | Austin Sarat

    Jerry himself has left the ice-cream company, alleging it had been silenced. He’s yet another casualty of corporate kowtowingWhen the history of this era is written, there will be much to say about the behavior of large corporations. And none of it will be good.As the Trump administration has ramped up its assault on American democracy, many corporations have chosen to look the other way or to curry favor with the president. They have fired employees who were too outspoken in their criticism of Donald Trump – ABC’s suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talkshow, after Kimmel’s remarks about Maga’s reaction to the killing of Charlie Kirk, is the latest example.Austin Sarat, William Nelson Cromwell professor of jurisprudence and political science at Amherst College, is the author or editor of more than 100 books, including Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty Continue reading...

  • How Trump has turned the legal system ‘on its head’ to meet deportation goals

    Cuban asylum seeker EC and others saw hard-won victories vanish as new rules upended immigration courtsThe Cuban asylum seeker referred to in court papers as EC could not believe his luck, and neither could his lawyers.They had come to immigration court in Miami in late spring expecting only incremental progress in a case that had been grinding away for more than three years. Yet here was the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) lawyer telling the judge the government was dropping its deportation demands. It seemed EC had won, eligible at last for a green card and permanent residency in the United States. Continue reading...

Politico

  • Weighted vest women are the 2026 swing voters

    Meet the new midterm swing voters: They broke for Donald Trump in 2024, they're a toss-up for 2026 — and they're wearing weighted vests all over your neighborhood.

  • Late-night TV hosts blast 'autocrat' Trump after Kimmel yanked off air

    “If ABC thinks that this is going to satisfy the regime, they are woefully naive,” Stephen Colbert warned after the ABC star was taken off the air.

  • The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

    Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

  • Florida plans to stop school vaccine mandates. These states could follow.

    One anti-vax attorney called mandates “the tool of bullies, criminals and dictators.”

  • Post-Kimmel, Dems could change the cancel culture narrative

    It’s not clear how Democrats will translate this relatively united front into an electoral strategy.

NPR

  • Their teenage sons died by suicide. Now, they are sounding an alarm about AI chatbots

    Grieving parents and online safety advocates at a congressional hearing called for new laws to regulate AI companion apps to protect the mental health of minors.

  • House to vote on stopgap funding bill, but health care fight threatens a shutdown

    House Republicans are pushing a bill funding government agencies through November 21, but Democrats say without a plan to renew expiring health care subsidies they will oppose it.

  • Legal experts say pulling Jimmy Kimmel from air may amount to illegal 'jawboning'

    Free speech scholars say ABC's decision to suspend Jimmy Kimmel's late-night show indefinitely represents "jawboning," when government officials pressure private companies to suppress speech.

  • Senior Labour MP says Trump's state visit was a "high-wire act" that made progress

    NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Labour MP Emily Thornberry, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, about President Trump's summit with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer today.

  • Kimmel's suspension for Kirk comments sparks furor over free speech and censorship

    After Jimmy Kimmel's show was suspended "indefinitely" for comments he made following Charlie Kirk's death, questions about free speech and just what is government censorship reach heightened levels.

Five Thirty Eight

  • What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry

    Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly-ish polling roundup. It’s officially impeachment season again. On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced that he’s directing three House committees to start investigating whether President Biden benefited from his son Hunter’s business dealings overseas. McCarthy accused the Biden family of “a culture of corruption,” saying that the Biden administration

  • The Second GOP Debate Could Be Smaller, With Or Without Trump

    The second Republican presidential primary debate is less than two weeks away, so time is running out for GOP contenders to meet the Republican National Committee’s qualification criteria. To make the Sept. 27 debate, each candidate must have at least 3 percent support in two qualifying national polls, or at least 3 percent in one

  • The Senate Is Losing One Of Its Few Remaining Moderate Republicans

    On Wednesday, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced he would not run for reelection in 2024. On the surface, the electoral impact of Romney’s decision is minimal — his seat should stay safely in Republican hands. But it’s still notable because it represents the departure of one of the few remaining Republican senators who had a

  • Why ‘Bidenomics’ Isn’t Working For Biden

    Welcome to FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited. nrakich (Nathaniel Rakich, senior elections analyst): For a long time, the economy has been seen as a big liability for President Biden in his reelection bid. Inflation soared in 2021 and 2022, culminating at a rate of 9.1 percent last June. The same

  • Why Biden Is Losing Support Among Voters Of Color

    Among the most politically tuned-in, last week saw the kind of hand-wringing and accusations of bias surrounding the polls that you’d usually expect from the final two months of a campaign, not the final year and two months of a campaign. The focus was largely on general election polls: Whether a Wall Street Journal poll

Painte

Paul Klee

Paul Klee

24 April 202330 December 2024
Michael Parkes

Michael Parkes

24 April 202312 July 2025
Wassily Kandinsky, 1903, The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter)

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky

20 December 202012 July 2025
Copyright © 2025 thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org.
Powered by WordPress and HybridMag.
  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

bladibla

Scroll Up