Key Events (10)
President Trump concluded his three-day visit to China, where he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The two leaders discussed Taiwan, trade, and Iran, but announced no major breakthroughs on these contentious issues.
Israel and Lebanon agreed to extend their ceasefire, according to a U.S. State Department announcement. The truce was originally announced by President Trump last month, though Israel and Hezbollah continued exchanging fire after the initial announcement.
The Trump administration moved toward indicting former Cuban leader Raúl Castro, escalating U.S. pressure on Cuba amid an ongoing fuel crisis. The action echoes the prior indictment of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
The Senate parliamentarian ruled against some immigration enforcement funding provisions in the Republicans' $70 billion immigration budget reconciliation package, limiting the scope of the immigration measure.
A veterans group filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration claiming that the Veterans Affairs department violates law by restricting abortion services for veterans and their dependents.
A major Texas children's hospital announced plans to create the first detransition clinic and will cease offering gender-affirming care to youth, following a $10 million settlement with Texas. The move represents a significant shift in healthcare policy.
The Pentagon was found to have quietly shut down a legally required program designed to prevent civilian deaths caused by military operations, according to a watchdog. The action came following a U.S. strike on a girls' school in Iran.
A Georgia town with a population of 5,000 filed a lawsuit over an Immigration and Customs Enforcement plan to convert a warehouse into a 10,000-capacity immigration detention center in the area.
The Trump administration was considering a $1.7 billion fund to compensate political allies investigated under the Biden administration, a proposal critics described as an unusual political slush fund financed by taxpayers.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement violently arrested a U.S. citizen and documented the arrest on video 'like a documentary,' according to exclusive reporting. The agency made social media posts about the gunpoint arrest of the protester, Christian Cerna.