
Mamdani Says He Will ‘Discourage' the Term ‘Globalize the Intifada'
It became an issue in the heat of the Democratic primary race when Mr. Mamdani, a critic of Israel's war in Gaza, was asked in a podcast interview whether the phrase, which Palestinians and their supporters have called a rallying cry for liberation, made him uncomfortable and he refused to condemn it.
But at a closed-door meeting with the city's top business leaders on Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Mamdani said he would personally continue to not use the term and would 'discourage' its use by others, according to three people who were familiar with his comments.
It was the closest Mr. Mamdani had come to disavowing the term since the issue began rattling his campaign last month.
Mr. Mamdani told the roughly 150 business executives that while many people used the term to express solidarity with Palestinians, some New Yorkers viewed it as a reference to violence against Israel, according to one of the people who were familiar with his comments.
Just two weeks ago, shortly after his primary victory, Mr. Mamdani said in an interview on 'Meet the Press' that the term was 'not language that I use' but that 'I don't believe that the role of the mayor is to police speech.'
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Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump hits out at 'weakling' supporters after criticism over Jeffrey Epstein files
Donald Trump has called his own supporters "weaklings" as he tries to subdue criticism of his administration's handling of records about the Jeffrey Epstein case. The notorious financier was in New York in August 2019, shortly after he was arrested on sex trafficking charges. Rumours have long circulated over who he may have supplied underage girls to, and who visited his private island. Mr Trump once fanned the flames of the conspiracy theorists, blaming the deep state for the cover-up of unreleased details, while FBI boss Kash Patel and his deputy also suggested the previous administration concealed information. The FBI and Justice Department last week said there was "no incriminating client list" or evidence he blackmailed influential people. They also confirmed prior findings that he and wasn't murdered, as some claim. They said no more files would be disclosed - despite previous promises by attorney general Pam Bondi that "everything is going to come out to the public". The U-turn by authorities has caused outrage among some Trump supporters, who have turned their ire on Ms Bondi in particular. hit out at the critics on Wednesday and claimed they were being duped by the Democrats. The president knew Jeffrey Epstein socially in the 1990s and 2000s, with one well-known video showing the pair talking at a party. In a post on Truth Social, Mr Trump wrote: "Their new SCAM is what we will forever call the Hoax, and my PAST supporters have bought into this bull****, hook, line, and sinker. "They haven't learned their lesson, and probably never will, even after being conned by the Lunatic Left for 8 long years." "Let these weaklings continue forward and do the Democrats work," he added. "Don't even think about talking of our incredible and unprecedented success, because I don't want their support anymore!"He doubled down on his criticism later in the Oval Office, telling reporters it was a "big hoax" and that he had "lost a lot of faith in certain people". Mr Trump said Ms Bondi had already released all "credible information". "If she finds anymore credible information she'll give that, too," he added. "What more can she do than that?" Read more from Sky News: Far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones is among the influencers and podcasters who have criticised the president. Jones called the Epstein situation "the biggest train wreck I've ever seen". "It's not in character for you to be acting like this," he said in a video this week. "I support you, but we built the movement you rode in on. You're not the movement. You just surfed in on it." House Speaker Mike Johnson also told conservative podcaster Benny Johnson he wanted the Justice Department to "put everything out there and let the people decide".


CNN
21 minutes ago
- CNN
What ICE's Rapid Expansion Could Mean for Your Community - The Assignment with Audie Cornish - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
Audie Cornish 00:00:00 You may have seen one of these videos online of someone being picked up by what looks like U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Police footage 00:00:08 It's ICE. They're taking a mom and everybody's freaking out about it. Audie Cornish 00:00:12 You can't always be sure, given that ICE officers are prone to wearing masks these days. But sometimes, bystanders watch and film. In some cases, they try to intervene. Police footage 00:00:22 You're hurting her! Would you stop this? Would you STOP this? Audie Cornish 00:00:29 'Donald Trump has kept his promise to voters to launch a mass deportation, but ICE, as it is, is too small to do it. That's about to change. With the new mega bill he signed last week, President Trump got $75 billion more to spend on more ICE officers, equipment, and detention centers. Here's Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem making the pitch on what's to come. From the opening of Florida's self-described alligator alcatraz. Kristi Noem 00:01:00 We're looking at other locations as well. We've had several other states that are actually using alligator Alcatraz as a model for how they can partner with us as well Audie Cornish 00:01:08 ICE is on track to become the largest federal security force, bigger than the FBI, ATF, just about every other agency around in just the next five years. But history has shown us what can happen when we demand law enforcement agencies ramp up and take on new recruits fast in a heated political moment. Garrett Graff 00:01:28 It is, I think to be very frank about it, a recruitment pitch for all of America's worst bullies. Are you excited to dress up like you are going to go take Fallujah in tactical gear with long guns and masks and then go raid a Home Depot parking lot? Audie Cornish 00:01:50 I'm Adi Kornish and this is The Assignment. ICE is just over 20 years old, which in federal agency years is relatively young. It was among the alphabet soup of agencies formed under the newly established Department of Homeland Security. And here's an example that I found on their YouTube channel of the kind of recruitment pitch you might hear in the ICE Promo 00:02:16 'Working for ICE is a tremendous source of pride for me. Immigration Customs Enforcement was born out of the events of 9-11, and it stood up specifically to address the threats that face our homeland. Audie Cornish 00:02:31 'Fast forward to today, and the agency has a more rough-and-tumble image. And you get the sense they know that, because in the messaging, you hear this. Everybody has this misconception of, we're just out here to deport people and separate families. But this shift is more than perception. ICE operates very differently from other agencies. And I wanted to know why. Garrett Graff 00:02:54 I'm Garrett Graff, I'm a journalist and historian and I write a newsletter called Doomsday Scenario and host a history podcast called Long Shout Out. Audie Cornish 00:03:03 Okay. So in the name there, you're really just leaning in. You're not even pretending that this is going to be a cheerful story. Graff once covered immigration and border security when he was the editor of Politico Magazine. And over the years he's chronicled the rise of ICE. Garrett Graff 00:03:21 'ICE was a creation alongside as part of the Department of Homeland Security right after 9-11, and it brought together two different federal law enforcement agencies, the inspectors of the U.S. Customs Service, which were then part of The Department of Treasury, and that is now a division known as HSI, Homeland Security Investigations, that focuses drug smugglers, human traffickers, antique smuggling, custom smuggling nuclear nonproliferation. They do really cool, really complex national security cases. And then the other half of ICE is what used to be known as the Immigration and Naturalization Service, which was part of the Justice Department. And that is now something called ERO. Enforcement and removal operations. And when we think of ICE, that's really what we're thinking of. Audie Cornish 00:04:24 And with the infusion of cash and people, he says that culture is about to change. Garrett Graff 00:04:30 If you took the FBI, the ATF, the Secret Service, and the Marshals through in the DEA there, you still wouldn't get to the level of funding that we are now giving to ICE over the next couple of years with this new explosion of funding for immigration enforcement. Audie Cornish 00:04:54 I just want to pause, that's wild, like that, that is crazy. Garrett Graff 00:04:58 It is, and I think one of the things, so that money comes in a couple of different buckets. It goes to hiring about 10,000 new ICE agents. There's money in there also to hire about 3,000 new customs and border protection officers and agents. That's the border patrol, that's the sort of officers at US border customs that you're sort of used to in going through airports. And building new detention facilities, building new border infrastructure. Audie Cornish 00:05:30 'So that's all you're paying for all your Alligator Alcatraz's, right? There's money in there to kind of encourage states to try to make up their own pop-up temporary detention facilities. So you're talking about when you talk about it being bigger than all the other agencies, you're saying all the money it'll have to do everything it wants from the officers who pursue people to where they put them, like the entire system is going to grow. Garrett Graff 00:05:55 Yeah, and to put this in like very frank terms, we are giving ICE about as much money as we spend on the US Marines each year. Audie Cornish 00:06:08 How much is that? Garrett Graff 00:06:10 About $50 billion a year. Audie Cornish 00:06:13 Okay. Still a lot. I just like needed some sense of scale. I was thinking about ICE in the context of other agencies because it's relatively young. What makes ICE distinct in its culture? Garrett Graff 00:06:26 'Yeah, so one of the challenges of ICE on the ERO side, this immigration enforcement side, is this was already an agency that had some of the lowest hiring standards, lowest educational standards, and lowest training standards of any federal law enforcement agency, certainly any of the big ones. To give you sort of just a very specific example. Um, to join the FBI, you have to have a college degree. You have to also have professional experience or an advanced degree, a law degree or accounting degree. You, uh, you, have to be at least 23 years old. Uh, you to pass a top secret background check, a security clearance check, and then you undergo 20 weeks of training ice by comparison on ERO side, there is no educational requirement. You only have to pass a secret level, which is a lower level security clearance check. And then you only go through sort of 12 or 13 weeks of Academy training before you go into your work on the field. So these are- Audie Cornish 00:07:49 Sorry, you said 12 or 13 weeks Garrett Graff 00:07:52 And so this is an agency that already has some of the lowest standards for its officers in the U.S. Government. And what worries me about all of this money that we are throwing at the agency now is that in order to grow at the scale and scope and speed that the Trump administration hopes to grow it. Audie Cornish 00:08:17 Right, 10,000 new officers. Garrett Graff 00:08:18 10,000 new officers more than doubling the number on the immigration side, they're going to have to do what any agency does when it hires in a surge like that and lower its hiring standards, lower its training standards and lower it's supervision standards. Audie Cornish 00:08:37 Okay, let me stick up for ICE. What makes you think that that's where this is going? Meaning there might be, like right now, military recruiters are having a good time. People are signing up to be in the military. What is the reason why you think this is automatically going to be, uh, in a way you're implying a lower quality batch of people who may be coming in next? Garrett Graff 00:08:59 'It's a great question, Audie, and the answer is every single agency that has ever tried to do this in the entire history of American criminal justice and American policing. That it's sort of well-known in criminal justice in policing worlds that a healthy law enforcement agency cannot grow quickly. And to be clear, and we can spend more time talking about this, Audie is not a law enforcement agency. But when you look at the history, anyone in policing can rattle off the agencies that have tried to grow quickly. Miami in the 1980s, the infamous Metropolitan Police Department class of 1989 when Washington Mayor Marion Barry tried to grow the force by 50% in a single year. Both of those agencies saw enormous waves of criminality, misconduct and corruption. And then actually we even have. A more recent, very clear example that I spent years reporting on myself when I was at Politico within DHS, within ICE's sister agency, Customs and Border Protection, where we did a massive hiring surge in the late 2000s under Bush and Obama, doubled the number of Border Patrol agents from about 9,000 to 18,000. And the result was... sort of one of the most disruptive waves of corruption and criminality and misconduct we've ever seen in federal law enforcement. Audie Cornish 00:10:36 Yeah, I think this is where we get that for people who do have some stigma about Customs and Border Patrol, who maybe look at that agency a little different, it might kind of stem from this period. Because even as a reporter, I remember a time when there would be stories that would come out about officers. Garrett Graff 00:10:56 So to put sort of some specific numbers on this, from 2005 to 2012, more than 2170 CBP officers and agents were arrested for misconduct and corruption. And to make that clear, from 2005 to 2012. One CBP officer or agent was arrested every single day for misconduct, crimes, or corruption. And as late as 2017, when I was still reporting on this, that arrest pace had only slowed to one officer or an agent every 36 hours. Now remember, this is like a federal law enforcement agency. Like this, if anything, this should be sort of like. Less criminal than the average general population. Audie Cornish 00:11:52 'And this is not anec-data, right? Like, this is now you being like, I've heard there were problems of corruption. It's like, you could look up arrest on arrest. I don't know about all the convictions, but that's a lot of arrests. Garrett Graff 00:12:02 I went to I interviewed a CBP commissioner when I was writing about this for Politico, who told me on the record, we accidentally hired cartel members, like they were just not doing the background vetting that they were supposed to they weren't doing the Background Investigations that they were supposed too. They were not doing the training that they Were supposed to and then they were pushing these agents out into the field before they were ready. They actually hired a serial killer. There was a border patrol agent who was arrested for his serial murder, rape, kidnapping, and murder of women in Texas while he was a Border Patrol agent a few years ago. I mean, this is a wild level of criminality, and I think it's actually exactly what we're about to experience with ICE. Audie Cornish 00:12:57 More with Garrett Graff after the break. Audie Cornish 00:13:00 It's funny, I went to the ICE website to look at, you know, the videos and things like that they might be putting out to draw people. And the one that caught my eye was not the one that was like images of people being arrested and put on planes, which also was there. But there was one person who was explaining, you know it's important for me to show that this job isn't all just like arresting people and taking them from their families. And it reminded me that even they know that that's what people think they do. Garrett Graff 00:13:33 'And that to me actually is the thing that I most worry about with this hiring surge, which is we have never in American law enforcement, never in federal law enforcement seen a hiring surge take place within an agency as polarizing and partisan as ICE is today. So if you look at that post-9-11 hiring surge, we put a lot of new agents into the FBI, we doubled the border patrol, there were huge ramp ups in programs like the air marshals, but the recruitment pitch was this deeply patriotic post- 9-11, agree or disagree with it, whatever, but the pitch was, come be part of the first line of defense against terrorists. You know, America- All of us, all Americans, yeah. We are, America was attacked, you know, you are going to be part of the elite counter-terrorism forces that protect American way of life. That is not the hiring pitch that ICE is splashing across the front pages and the TV channels of America right now. They are, you now, you know, the photos, the stories, the videos, it is, I think, to be very frank about it, a recruitment pitch for all of America's worst bullies. Are you excited to dress up like you are going to go take Fallujah in tactical gear with long guns and masks and then go raid a Home Depot parking lot? Are you interested in doing hand-to-hand combat in courthouse hallways with Democratic members of Congress? Are you excited to go, you know, chase farm workers through fields, throwing tear gas canisters and flashbang grenades? You know, there's like, I think a level of sadism in the images that we are seeing out of ice right now. That are going to recruit exactly the wrong type of people to this job. Audie Cornish 00:15:53 You're talking about recruitment you're also describing news stories right like so you're saying just the way it is depicted in public is the advertisement itself is the thing that is going to help people decide is this something I would want to do or not and maybe help people who are more uh civil liberties minded uh maybe make them feel like well maybe that's not the for me. Garrett Graff 00:16:16 Yeah. And by the way, I think that this is an explicit part of MAGA's hiring pitch. Audie Cornish 00:16:23 So you think that ICE wants those images out there? Garrett Graff 00:16:26 I mean, look at what DHS, look at what CBP, look at what ICE is posting to social media. They are posting these incredibly aggressive, literally they posted a skeleton meme the other day about mass deportations. Look at the photo ops they're doing of DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis walking and laughing through alligator Alcatraz. As so many people have said about the Trump administration over the years, like the cruelty is the point. Audie Cornish 00:17:02 I think the defense from Tom Homan, who is the border czar and the person they put out frequently to talk about these things, is he has said Tom Homan 00:17:11 The rhetoric against the men and women of ICE is skyrocketing, especially by members of Congress. We have senators, we have Congress people that compare ICE to the Nazis, compare ICE to racists, and it just continues. So the public thinks, well, if a member of Congress can attack ICE, why can't we? So the rhetoric has to stop. Audie Cornish 00:17:29 And he's also talked about this contributing to their kind of amped up approach that they now have to be defensive or fearful while they're doing their job. Garrett Graff 00:17:42 'And I think my answer would be ICE didn't have to do this up until six months ago. Up until six months ago, they were they were actually deporting more people than they are now that this is the change has come because of who, who and where ICE is targeting. And this is, I think, an important part of the ICE story right now, which is, you know, Stephen Miller went to ICE headquarters this spring and demanded that they get to 3,000 arrests a day. That gives them sort of in round numbers about a million a year. And you know we were talking earlier about how for most of its 20-year existence ICE has focused on, again, oversimplifying this, the quote unquote actual criminals. Thanks for watching! That they've used prosecutorial discretion to go after the gang members, cartel members, et cetera. If you're trying to arrest 3,000 people a day, you have to go America's grandmas. You have to round up people in Home Depot parking lots. You have round up at farms because the work of going after the targeted sort of bad criminals just takes too long. Audie Cornish 00:19:05 Yeah, like it's easier to go after someone who has, you're saying, a civil infraction and not the resources to run. Right. Than a cartel member or someone who's made their life's work hiding from law enforcement. Exactly. You're saying it's just like, A, we should say in fairness, border apprehensions are down. Like those numbers are down and so you have to look elsewhere to make those apprehensions. Garrett Graff 00:19:33 Yes, and this is where, you know, the main shift in ICE has come is who they are going after. Audie Cornish 00:19:41 And how they're doing it. Like you were noting that even the FBI like they have their their jackets and like there's ways that we identify law enforcement even when they're not in a uniform and ICE is again shifting in its approach. Garrett Graff 00:19:58 'America has no tradition of masked law enforcement outside of a couple of small and specific areas in certain high-profile SWAT raids or undercover drug operations. But when the FBI shows up to raid your office or your house, they're not wearing masks and they go out of their way to make clear that they're the FBI wearing their big blue. FBI raid jackets. ICE has gone in a totally different direction in these last six months and we're seeing them wear masks and part of the reason that the Tom Homans of the world say, well, ICE needs to be masked now is because what they're doing is so controversial that they are being sort of personally targeted and attacked. Which I think should tell you something about the public support for the work that they're doing, that like no federal law enforcement agency in American history has ever done anything as unpopular with the public as what ICE is doing right now. Audie Cornish 00:21:14 Which is saying something when you think about U.S. History. Garrett Graff 00:21:18 I have covered the FBI for 20 years and I can tell you. Audie Cornish 00:21:22 So even during desegregation, like, I don't know. Garrett Graff 00:21:25 Yeah, I mean, like, again, like the US marshals and, you know, FBI agents protecting civil rights marchers like didn't feel that they needed to be masked. Audie Cornish 00:21:40 Despite you being the author of a newsletter called The Doomsday Scenario, I'm going to ask you to also reach into the history and tell me what happens when places do find a way to rise up out of those corrupt practices. So I don't talk about the Washington DC police department the way people did back or Miami, like, what happens? For an agency to write itself, so to speak, to become healthy law enforcement. Garrett Graff 00:22:16 'I'll give you an unfortunate example, which is one of the things that America realized after 9-11 was how broken and incompetent and culturally bereft Immigration and Naturalization services was, INS was. Audie Cornish 00:22:39 INS. Oh, you're taking it back. Garrett Graff 00:22:40 And what we did was we broke it apart and created ICE. And ICE is in some ways the bandaid for the last time our immigration enforcement efforts broke down. And I think in a very weird way, what ICE is doing to itself right now in terms of the level of aggression and I think sort of misconduct that we are seeing on display in America's streets on a daily basis right now means that abolishing ICE is going to become the moderate position of anyone hoping to dig us out of where the Trump administration and leaves us in the next couple of years. Audie Cornish 00:23:37 Journalist and historian Garrett Graff. His newsletter is called The Doomsday Scenario. Find it at We're going to have also CNN reporting on this topic as well. You can find both in our show notes. I want to thank you so much for listening. Please do follow, subscribe, leave a review and share. Every bit helps. And I'll see you next week.


Fox News
21 minutes ago
- Fox News
Execution scheduled for Texas death row inmate convicted in 'shaken baby' case as lawyers maintain innocence
A Texas man on death row is now scheduled to be put to death in October for his conviction in the death of his 2-year-old daughter in 2002, after his execution was delayed last year amid concerns about whether he is guilty. Robert Roberson's new execution date was set for Oct. 16 at 6 p.m., according to Judge Austin Reeve Jackson, who said it's the "reality of where we are." The new execution date is a year after his initial execution date was paused after a push from a bipartisan group of state lawmakers, among others. Attorneys for Roberson, 58, criticized the judge's ruling, arguing that substantial evidence shows he did not kill his daughter, Nikki Curtis, more than two decades ago in a case of the shaken baby hypothesis they say has been widely discredited. "Texans should be outraged that the court has scheduled an execution date for a demonstrably innocent man," his attorney, Gretchen Sween, said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "Everyone who has taken the time to look at the evidence of Robert Roberson's innocence—including the lead detective, one of the jurors, a range of highly qualified experts, and a bipartisan group of Texas lawmakers—has reached the same conclusion: Nikki's death was a terrible tragedy. Robert did not kill her. There was no crime," she continued. More than 80 state lawmakers, as well as the detective who helped the prosecution, medical experts, parental rights groups, human rights groups, bestselling novelist John Grisham and other advocates have called for the state to grant Roberson clemency over the belief that he is innocent. A group of state lawmakers also visited Roberson in prison last year to encourage him. Sween said she would seek a stay of Roberson's execution "so all of the evidence that proves he is innocent can be reviewed by the courts without the pressure of a looming execution date." If he is put to death, Roberson would be the first person in the U.S. to be executed in a case based on shaken baby syndrome. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton recently asked the court to schedule Roberson's execution despite the state Court of Criminal Appeals still considering new evidence about his potential innocence, Sween noted. Roberson was convicted after prosecutors argued he killed his daughter by shaking her to death. But his lawyers have said Nikki actually died from other health issues such as pneumonia and that new evidence proves his innocence. His lawyers also said doctors had failed to rule out these other medical explanations for the child's symptoms. "I believe he is innocent for two distinct reasons," Sween told Fox News Digital last year. "The theory that there was a crime that was used to convict him, which was then known as the shaken baby syndrome hypothesis, has been thoroughly discredited. There is no one now who would say the version of that hypothesis that was put before his jury as if it were scientific fact is legitimate." "Also, I know from the experts that had dug into his daughter's medical records and examined the evidence that this exceedingly ill child died from undiagnosed pneumonia that was [ravaging] her lungs, combined with very dangerous prescription medications she was given in the last few days of her life," she continued. "And it's not to suggest that doctors did this intentionally. It's just they didn't know about the pneumonia." Roberson was scheduled to be put to death on Oct. 17, 2024, before the state Supreme Court issued a stay to delay his execution shortly before it was set to take place. The state House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence issued a subpoena the day before Roberson's scheduled execution for him to testify at a hearing about his case. The state Supreme Court paused the execution that night to review the committee's request. The court said in November that the committee should be allowed to hear his testimony, as long as a subpoena does not block an inevitable execution. Roberson did not appear at subsequent House committee meetings after Paxton's office pushed to prevent him from testifying at the state Capitol.