logo
Trump team emphasizes immigration in Boulder response

Trump team emphasizes immigration in Boulder response

The Hill2 days ago

President Trump and his administration are leaning into immigration more than antisemitism in the wake of an attack in Boulder, Colo., that targeted a pro-Israel gathering.
The administration has made it its mission to usher in tough immigration policies, and it has also gone after universities for antisemitism over campus protests related to the Gaza war.
The attack on the group demonstrating in Boulder for the release of hostages held by Hamas fits into several arguments the administration is making about what needs to change in the country, particularly since the suspect behind the attack was living in the U.S. on an expired visa.
So far, the response from the administration has been much more focused on highlighting that immigration status.
Trump's response to the attack a day later began by ripping his predecessor President Biden for what he deems a 'ridiculous open border policy.'
The Department of Homeland Security, meanwhile, was 'revamping' the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) tip line to 'report suspicious criminal activity by illegal aliens including terrorist activity, gang related crimes, and suspected sex trafficking' in its response to the event in Boulder.
'For four years, the Biden Administration allowed millions of unvetted illegal aliens—including terrorists, gang members, and other violent criminals—to pour into our country. Yesterday's terrorist attack by a suspect illegally in our country, underscores the importance of getting these illegal aliens out of our country,' assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.
DHS' response to the attack on Sunday involved immediately highlighting that the suspect had been in the U.S. illegally.
Similarly, Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned about deporting criminals in response to the attack.
'In light of yesterday's horrific attack, all terrorists, their family members, and terrorist sympathizers here on a visa should know that under the Trump Administration we will find you, revoke your visa, and deport you,' he said on X.
The suspect, Mohamed Soliman, has been charged with a federal hate crime after he allegedly yelled 'Free Palestine' as he was attacking the group, injuring multiple people with Molotov cocktails.
Soliman had entered the U.S. on a tourist visa in August 2022. That visa expired in early 2023 but Soliman stayed in the country since and he had applied for asylum during that time. DHS said he had also applied for a work permit once the tourist visa was up, but that had also expired.
Soliman used a 'makeshift flamethrower' and incendiary devices Sunday to attack people demonstrating for the release of hostages held in Gaza by Hamas. The victims of the attack range in age from 52 to 88, The Associated Press reported.
Deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, one of the administration's chief immigration hawks, quickly called out Soliman's immigration status late Sunday just after the attack, calling him 'an illegal alien.'
'He was granted a tourist visa by the Biden Administration and then he illegally overstayed that visa. In response, the Biden Administration gave him a work permit. Suicidal migration must be fully reversed,' Miller said.
Press secretary Karoline Leavitt, meanwhile, did highlight that Jewish Americans should 'rest assure' that 'this president has your back.'
She also directed her response towards the work of the administration to crack down on border crossings and also blamed the Biden.
'I'd also like to point out that this administration has done more than any administration to curb this violence and to curb illegal immigration,' she said. 'We know that this individual, this terrorist, was allowed into this country by the previous administration… was given a tourism visa and then was illegallyl allowed to stay.'
The incident in Boulder comes just a week after another antisemitic attack in Washington, D.C.
A man who shouted 'free, free Palestine' while being detained fatally shot two Israeli Embassy staffers, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, at a reception at the Capital Jewish Museum.
Following that attack in Washington, attorney general Pam Bondi said the threat level has been increased for all Americans, telling people that 'whether you are Jewish or not, be vigilant.'
Some Democrats on Monday said the administration wasn't doing enough to call out antisemitism.
'It was an obviously antisemitic attack and the latest in a series of antisemitic attacks. We had that attack on that couple exiting the Jewish community center in Washington a couple of weeks ago… and the Jewish community is very on edge. And we want the federal government to do more,' Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) said on CNN.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), meanwhile, called out the dangers of unchecked antisemitism but opted not to address the administration's response.
'Because of their Jewish identity, they were targeted by hate. When antisemitism is allowed to fester in more corners of society, it historically leads to more terrorism and violence,' Schumer said on the Senate floor.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tariff-Resistant Economy Soothes Traders Ahead of Jobs Day
Tariff-Resistant Economy Soothes Traders Ahead of Jobs Day

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tariff-Resistant Economy Soothes Traders Ahead of Jobs Day

(Bloomberg) -- Options traders are betting the S&P 500 Index will post its smallest swing in months following Friday's US employment report, highlighting how a spate of better-than-expected data has calmed investor worries over the economic impact of President Donald Trump's tariffs. The Global Struggle to Build Safer Cars At London's New Design Museum, Visitors Get Hands-On Access LA City Council Passes Budget That Trims Police, Fire Spending ICE Moves to DNA-Test Families Targeted for Deportation with New Contract NYC Residents Want Safer Streets, Cheaper Housing, Survey Says The benchmark is projected to move 0.9% in either direction on Friday, according to data compiled by Piper Sandler & Co. That figure, based on the prices of S&P 500 options straddles as of Tuesday's close, is the smallest implied swing ahead of a jobs print since February and below an average realized move of 1.3% over the past year. Concern over the global trade war's impact on US growth flared in early April, after Trump unveiled a list of tariffs aimed at the country's trading partners around the globe. Stocks tumbled, with the S&P 500 falling to the edge of a bear market. But Trump has mitigated or stalled many of those levies in the weeks since, while data on measures such as inflation and job openings suggest the economy is taking the trade chaos in stride. The S&P 500 is just 2.8% off its all-time high reached earlier this year, following a weekslong surge. 'Tariffs initially spooked markets, but stocks have recovered because there aren't meaningful cracks in the economy yet,' said Vishal Vivek, equity trading strategist at Citigroup Inc. 'The risk is if unemployment unexpectedly spikes. Then stocks would need to reprice for slower growth.' Economists polled by Bloomberg expect the US economy to have created roughly 130,000 in May, down from 177,000 a month prior. The jobless rate is expected to hold steady at 4.2%. ADP Research data on Wednesday showed hiring decelerated to the slowest pace in two years last month, raising concern that Friday's non-farm payrolls figures could also show labor conditions weakening. A separate report showed activity at US service providers slipped into contraction territory last month for the first time in nearly a year. The S&P 500 Index traded 0.1% higher at 10:04 a.m. in New York. Sanguine Outlook Trader positioning reflects a sanguine outlook going into the report. After the S&P 500 soared 6.2% last month — its best May since 1990 — hedge funds and other large speculators have turned net short on futures tied to the Cboe Volatility Index for the first time in five weeks, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show. Solid economic numbers helped boost their confidence. The Citigroup US Economic Surprise Index, a rolling measure of whether economic indicators are clocking in above or below expectations, turned positive in late May for the first time since mid-February, when the S&P 500 traded at records. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model sees real gross domestic product growing at a 4.6% annualized rate in the second quarter, up from a contraction of 0.2% in the first three months of the year. Of course, a negative jobs day surprise could sour the mood. JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s trading desk, led by Andrew Tyler, said in a Monday note the S&P 500 may drop as much as 3% if the economy created fewer than 100,000 jobs in May. The chance of such an outcome, however, is only around 5%, according to his estimates. In the most likely scenario, jobs growth last month will come in between 115,000 to 135,000, with the index gaining 0.25% to 1%, Tyler says. The jobs data will also help investors gauge whether the Federal Reserve will keep rates on hold for the foreseeable future, as it attempts to balance trade war uncertainties with threats of slowing growth and accelerating inflation that could result from the tariffs. The central bank enters a blackout period this weekend ahead of its June 18 rate decision. 'Even if jobs growth somewhat slows, traders will give this report a pass because employment data lags,' said Larry Benedict, chief executive of The Opportunistic Trader, a financial market-research firm. 'It will take a few months before the tariff impacts will really begin to appear in those figures.' (Updates with ADP, services data, S&P 500 trading in sixth paragraph.) YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It's Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Is Elon Musk's Political Capital Spent? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To Mark Zuckerberg Loves MAGA Now. Will MAGA Ever Love Him Back? ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Video games and podcasts: Can Democrats win back the bros?
Video games and podcasts: Can Democrats win back the bros?

Boston Globe

time18 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Video games and podcasts: Can Democrats win back the bros?

Advertisement Throughout the campaign, I Meanwhile Trump was Advertisement Democrats are just coming around to that reality. Pete Buttigieg gets soft kudos for recently Even though Buttigieg recently Or when they got onto the topic of public services, Buttigieg argued that the Scandinavians' high taxes turn into top-notch public resources. To which Schulz declared: Public spending is 'easy to do when, like, every girl's hot.' Granted, Buttigieg is gay, but even when Schulz conceded that Scandinavian dudes are cute, too, Buttigieg laughed, shrugged a little, and eventually asked: 'Where were we?' Pete Buttigieg at a Town Hall in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on May 13. THALASSA RAASCH/NYT To be fair, those are questions that would make both woke progressives and straight-laced conservatives squirm. But Trump isn't a polished politician — he's a guy's guy. You can imagine him in that situation, completely at ease. He would have chuckled at the joke about not hiring women, smirking and wagging a finger at Schulz: 'You're a funny guy, you know that, but boy, you're gonna get me in trouble.' And on the question of spending money on attractive women, well, we know where Trump falls there. He would have made them laugh, just like he did when he Advertisement Trump clearly never had any qualms about going on edgy shows. But Democrats did. Akaash Singh, one of Schulz's cohosts, told Buttigieg: 'We've begged so many Democrats to come on this platform. You're the first one.' Trump didn't need to be begged. He simply took advice from his In their rush to find a tough-talking guy who can mobilize voters against Trump, Democrats could find themselves embracing influencers who alienate some of their own voters. Like streamer Hasan Piker, a former Rutgers frat boy who loves lifting, who's been The biggest problem Democrats will have is convincing bros of their authenticity. It took an electoral walloping for Buttigieg to embrace the manosphere. And while Democrats try to talk the talk, they still hold onto the same progressive ideas that alienated them from many voters. On a podcast in March with the conservative bro-in-chief Charlie Kirk, who cofounded the right-wing political machine Turning Point USA, Gavin Newsom said that the question of whether to allow transgender athletes in women's sports is 'an issue of fairness.' But as California continued to be under fire for its liberal policies on transgender athletes, Newsom Advertisement Is just showing up in bro-ey spaces enough to win back some young voters for Dems? I conducted my own little study, free of charge, to find out. Gabe, a finance worker in his early 20s who voted for Trump and declined to give his last name, told me that Democrats might win over a few curious voters with a new male outreach strategy, but ultimately, cosmetic changes alone won't make a lasting difference. 'I think you have to realign the ideology,' he told me, listing frustrations about equity-based initiatives, costly energy policies, lockdowns during COVID, and more. 'You might be wearing a flannel, have a beard, drink protein shakes,' he said. But Democrats are 'still spewing the same garbage.' This column first appeared in , Globe Opinion's free weekly newsletter about local and national politics. If you'd like to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up . Carine Hajjar is a Globe Opinion writer. She can be reached at

Trump budget bill would increase deficit by $2.4 trillion and 10.9 million would lose health insurance, CBO says
Trump budget bill would increase deficit by $2.4 trillion and 10.9 million would lose health insurance, CBO says

CBS News

time19 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Trump budget bill would increase deficit by $2.4 trillion and 10.9 million would lose health insurance, CBO says

Washington — Republicans' sweeping policy bill aimed at advancing President Trump's second-term agenda would increase the deficit by $2.4 trillion over the next decade, according to a new estimate prepared by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The CBO also estimates that 10.9 million more people would be without health insurance in 2034 as the result of the House-passed legislation, given changes to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act under the bill. House Republicans are aiming to cut at least $1.5 trillion in spending to offset trillions in tax cuts, while also raising the debt ceiling by $4 trillion. The package, which Mr. Trump refers to as the "big, beautiful bill," is now in the hands of the Senate after making it out of the House before Memorial Day. The bill is expected to undergo changes in the Senate before heading back to the lower chamber. This is a developing story and will be updated.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store