“But undocumented immigrants are breaking the law.”
I don’t care. Not even a little.
Trump broke the law. His insurrectionists broke the law. And when they did, you insisted that breaking the law is patriotic and that our freedom fighters were all law breakers.
By the standards that you actively uphold, undocumented immigrants are patriots. So I will treat them like patriots.
Trump is beyond lying, he is fundamentally delusional.
French President Emmanuel Macron fact checks Donald Trump on his lies about funding Ukraine
Michael McFaul, Former U.S. Ambassador to Russia and Simon Shuster, Reporter for Time Magazine join Nicolle Wallace on Deadline White House with reaction to the meeting between French President Emmanuel Macron and Donald Trump at the White House, with the French President correcting the American President for his lies over how the war in Ukraine is funded, and the work the French President is doing to try to keep America on the right side of history and not back a dictator in Vladimir Putin.
The Trump administration canceled $900 million in contracts overseen by the Institute of Education Sciences, which partners with scientists and education companies to compile and make public data about schools each year.
The Trump administration has terminated more than $900 million in Education Department contracts, taking away a key source of data on the quality and performance of the nation’s schools.
The cuts were made at the behest of Elon Musk’s cost-cutting crew, the Department of Government Efficiency, and were disclosed on X, the social media platform Musk owns, shortly after ProPublica posed questions to U.S. Department of Education staff about the decision to decimate the agency’s research and statistics arm, the Institute of Education Sciences.
A spokesperson for the department, Madi Biedermann, said that the standardized test known as the nation’s report card, the National Assessment of Educational Progress, would not be affected. Neither would the College Scorecard, which allows people to search for and compare information about colleges, she said.
IES is one of the country’s largest funders of education research, and the slashing of contracts could mean a significant loss of public knowledge about schools. The institute maintains a massive database of education statistics and contracts with scientists and education companies to compile and make data public about schools each year, such as information about school crime and safety and high school science course completion.