In a change of course, US Justice Dept drops challenge to Georgia voting law
By Andrew Goudsward
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump's Justice Department said on Monday it was pulling out of a lawsuit that challenges a Republican-backed Georgia election law as discriminatory, abandoning a position it took under Democratic President Joe Biden.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said recent increases in Black voter turnout in the battleground state refuted the lawsuit's claim that the 2021 law, which mandated new voting requirements, amounted to voter suppression.
"Georgians deserve secure elections, not fabricated claims of false voter suppression meant to divide us," Bondi said in a statement.
The move was the latest in a series of actions by the Justice Department to end Biden-era civil rights actions and shift the focus of the Civil Rights Division to pursue conservative causes.
The law is also being challenged by several civil rights groups including the Georgia chapter of the NAACP, which said it would continue its effort.
"When the government drops the ball and turns a blind eye to injustice, we will step in," Gerald Griggs, the president of the Georgia NAACP chapter, told Reuters.
In a 2021 lawsuit, the Justice Department alleged that the law disproportionately harmed Black voters by limiting absentee ballots and banning the distribution of water or food to people waiting in line at polling places.
Georgia has denied the claims, arguing the law is aimed at securing elections. Brad Raffensperger, a Republican who serves as the state's top elections official, said the Justice Department's move shows the law 'stands on solid legal ground.'
Preliminary data from the 2024 election shows that while the total number of ballots cast by Black voters increased, the turnout gap between white and Black voters grew by about 3% from 2020 to 2024, according to the left-leaning Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law.
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Politico
21 minutes ago
- Politico
Playbook PM: Trump tallies wins as he leaves NATO summit
Presented by THE CATCH-UP THE VICTORY LAP CONTINUES: President Donald Trump took center stage at the NATO summit in the Netherlands today, touting his brokered ceasefire between Iran and Israel that seems to be holding, as well as the defense spending commitment that he secured from NATO allies — a 'monumental win for the United States' as Trump called it. What Trump said: The president spent a large portion of a nearly hourlong news conference blasting the intel assessment reported yesterday that found Iran's nuclear capabilities had only been set back by months. 'We think we hit 'em so hard and so fast, they didn't get to move,' Trump said, while slamming the NYT and CNN for their reporting. 'We destroyed the nuclear. It's blown up … to kingdom come.' He even compared the attack to the nuclear bombs detonated in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, Reuters' Jeff Mason and Gram Slattery report. 'This ended a war in a different way,' he said. Especially upset: Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who's ordered a Pentagon investigation into the initial assessment leak per POLITICO's Paul McLeary. Hegseth said at the news conference there was 'low confidence' in the initial report on the damage, adding: 'If you want to make an assessment at what happened at Fordo, get a big shovel and go deep, because Iran's nuclear program is obliterated.' The damage: Iran's Foreign Ministry said today that their nuclear installations were 'badly damaged' but didn't provide many more details, Bloomberg's Dana Khraiche reports. Trump said in a Truth Social post that Israel backed up his 'OBLITERATED' claim. What comes next: Trump said he'll be talking with Iran next week, and he will 'probably' ask for a written statement that Iran won't pursue a nuclear weapon again. 'But they're not going to be doing it anyway,' adding that it's a possibility Iran signs an agreement. Asked whether the two sides could resume fighting, Trump said 'I think they're very much finished.' WORD PLAY: NATO allies cemented their agreement today to boost defense spending to 5 percent — but not all the allies, thanks to the language in the group's comminqué, NYT's Lara Jakes writes. 'The difference lies in a bit of mushy diplomatic language that lets the NATO secretary general, Mark Rutte, claim that he delivered on President Trump's spending demand. The brief and unanimously approved communiqué that NATO issued after leaders wrapped up their annual summit says that 'allies' — not 'all allies' — had agreed to the 5 percent figure.' Striking back: Trump lashed out at Spain, which didn't agree to the 5 percent bump, and signaled he's ready to retaliate for what he views as an ally not stepping up to the plate — threatening Madrid will pay 'twice as much' in tariffs in a renegotiated trade deal, POLITICO's Eli Stokols and Felicia Schwartz report. And yet, Trump 'declared outright that NATO allies' 'passion' for their collective defense had erased much of his long-held skepticism about the alliance,' Eli and Felicia write. ME AND Z: Trump also met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the summit, who 'couldn't have been nicer,' Trump said. Zelenskyy called the meeting 'long and substantive,' and it prompted Trump to consider sending more Patriot air-defense batteries to the war-torn country, per Bloomberg's Daryna Krasnolutska and Andrea Dudik. After talking with Zelenskyy, Trump told reporters that Russian President 'Vladimir Putin really has to end that war.' Mixed signals: Secretary of State Marco Rubio signaled that the U.S. likely wouldn't slap more sanctions on Russia, Eli reports with more of our POLITICO colleagues. But that softer stance from Rubio 'came as a surprise to the NATO foreign ministers Rubio met the night before,' who he told that the Senate would likely take up sanctions legislation soon. MOOD MUSIC: Rutte appears to have 'cracked the code for a successful leaders' summit involving President Donald Trump: Call him 'daddy,'' POLITICO's Felicia Schwartz and colleagues write from The Hague. 'Add to that a significantly slimmed-down schedule that was long on praise for the president — Rutte's 'daddy' was intended as a compliment for intervening in the fighting between Israel and Iran — and short on existential questions like how alliance members will fund their most significant spending increase since the end of the Cold War.' IN THE AIR: Trump is on his way back to the U.S., per the pool. He's leaving what was surely nicer weather and will return to swampy humidity once he's back (stay inside, folks). Good Wednesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Spot something? Send it my way at abianco@ 7 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW 1. IN THE HOT SEAT: Emil Bove, a top Justice Department official, and federal appeals court nominee testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee this morning for a confirmation hearing for his appointment to a federal appeals court. Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the panel, said Bove was in a 'category all of his own' in terms of controversial Trump judicial nominees, POLITICO's Hailey Fuchs and Erica Orden report. On the controversies: Bove said he 'never advised a Department of Justice attorney to violate a court order,' as a whistleblower complaint alleged. He also defended DOJ's controversial decision to squash the corruption prosecution of NYC Mayor Eric Adams and denied that there was any quid pro quo to get Adams' cooperation on immigration enforcement — though he did say 'policy reasons made it appropriate to dismiss the charges.' More from Hailey and Erica 2. 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I survived the bunker busters. Let's call it even.' More on Massie: The Kentucky Republican has been a consistent thorn in Trump's side, and Trump-aligned GOP groups have already drawn up plans to oust him in 2026, POLITICO's Brakkton Booker and colleagues write. Things could get expensive, fast: 'Some Republican strategists estimate combined spending could reach as high as $45 million, an unheard of total for a primary contest in the 4th Congressional District.' Says Chris LaCivita in a text message to POLITICO: 'He has established himself as a contrarian for contrarian sake … He should be a man and switch parties instead of posing as a Republican.' 6. IMMIGRATION FILES: The Trump administration has promised to target the 'worst of the worst immigrants,' but so far only 6% of known immigrant offenders have been arrested, NBC's Julia Ainsley and Laura Strickler scooped. Almost half those in ICE custody have no charges or criminal convictions at all. 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Fox News
24 minutes ago
- Fox News
UN's atomic agency's Iran policy gets mixed reviews from experts after US-Israel 'obliterate' nuclear sites
JERUSALEM - After 12 days of fighting, President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared victory against Iran's nuclear program. Trump declared three nuclear sites had been obliterated, as Netanyahu announced that Israel had "removed an immediate dual existential threat: both in the nuclear domain and in the area of ballistic missiles" – achievements the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) failed to reach throughout some 20 years of monitoring Iran's nuclear activities. Dr. Or Rabinowitz, a nuclear proliferation scholar from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a visiting associate professor at Stanford University, told Fox News Digital that the IAEA "cannot, by itself, stop a country that wants to divert nuclear material and technology from its civilian program to its military program." "It can warn, and that's what it has been doing," she said. "Sometimes these warnings led to United Nations Security Council resolutions, and sometimes they didn't, but the IAEA by itself, can't do more than that – it is only as strong as the board members and the countries that participate in it." Days before Israel launched its military assault on Iran with the aim of removing the nuclear – and conventional – weapons threat, the global nuclear watchdog reported that Iran had an estimated 408.6 kilograms (nearly 901 pounds) of uranium enriched to 60%, enough to make some nine nuclear bombs. The report, which also criticized Iran's lack of cooperation with the IAEA, prompted the agency's board of governors, for the first time in 20 years, to declare that the Islamic Republic was in breach of its non-proliferation obligations. "We shouldn't be surprised by this failure, and we should add to this failure, the failure of the United Nations," said Dr. Yoel Guzansky, a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University. Guzansky highlighted the fact that just a week ago, in the midst of launching hundreds of ballistic missiles into Israeli towns and cities, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi addressed the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva. "Iran was welcomed there, and Israel was bashed," he noted. "It just shows that the U.N. system has long failed, and is long in need of remodeling, remaking, rebuilding," Guzansky continued, adding that compared to other U.N. bodies, "the IAEA is fairly okay." "It's not black and white, it has had some achievements, but it depends on what your expectations are," he continued. "I don't think anyone expected that the IAEA would entirely prevent Iran." Guzansky said that two decades of inspections and such reports had actually allowed Israel, and the U.S., to "gather intelligence and an understanding of Iran's nuclear program" – a fact that was tested over the past week and a half. Iran has consistently maintained that all its nuclear activities were entirely peaceful and that it would never seek to develop or acquire nuclear weapons. "The real problem here isn't necessarily the IAEA, it's that Iran has been cheating for 20 years and has not been playing a straight bat," said Alan Mendoza, Executive Director of the Henry Jackson Society. "Iran has been confusing and tricking and secretly developing programs, which the IAEA has not been able to access," he said, adding, "so, in many ways, it's not the IAEA fault, per se, it doesn't have any enforcement capabilities -- its job is just to monitor." Mendoza also said that Iran's ability to advance its nuclear ambitions and enrich uranium to weapons grade level was "really the fault of the international community, rather than an agency." "This could have been cracked down upon years ago, as we have now seen, whether by military or other means, to actually force Iran into compliance," he said. "What this ultimately shows you is that when you have an international malefactor who continues to want to game the system, the only way to deal with them is to blow up the system and say, 'Okay, you want to play it that way,' well, here's our response." Despite the U.S. and Israel's successful use of force, the IAEA has held back from commending their actions. At an emergency session of the agency's board members on Monday, Rafael Grossi, the IAEA's Director General, was still urging diplomacy and warning that fighting risked "collapsing the global nuclear Non Proliferation regime." "There is still a path for diplomacy, we must take it, otherwise violence and destruction could reach unimaginable levels, and the global Non-Proliferation regime that has underpinned international security for more than half a century could crumble and fall," he said, without a word about Iran's lack of transparency and its clear violation of international agreements over more than two decades. But on Tuesday, two days after the U.S. military carried out massive precision strikes on three key nuclear sites in Iran, Grossi told Fox News' Martha MacCallum that his agency did not know where nearly 900 pounds of potentially enriched uranium is now located, after Iranian officials said it had been removed for protective measures ahead of the US strikes on nuclear facilities in Iran. "Like all the international bodies who have been condemning US and Israeli action, these organizations exist for the purpose solely of diplomacy," Mendoza said, adding, "The agency doesn't have any military function. It has no recourse to it. It can't call for it, so, if you think about it, all they're doing is merely protecting their position within the international system." Requests for a response from the IAEA were not immediately answered on Wednesday.


CNN
26 minutes ago
- CNN
GOP Rep on leaked DIA report: ‘I'll take Israeli intelligence over that document any time'
Republican Rep. Carlos Gimenez tells CNN's Wolf Blitzer and Pamela Brown why he thinks Israeli Intelligence about the damage to Iran's nuclear facilities is more reliable than an assessment from the US Defense Intelligence Agency.