Freed from US jail, Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil seizes his new public platformNew Foto - Freed from US jail, Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil seizes his new public platform

By Jonathan Allen NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump's fight with elite American universities was only a few days old when federal immigration agents arrested the Palestinian student activist Mahmoud Khalil at his Columbia University apartment building in New York in March. Over the more than three months he was held at a jail for immigrants in rural Louisiana, the Trump administration escalated its battle. It arrested other foreign pro-Palestinian students and revoked billions of dollars in research grants to Columbia, Harvard and other private schools whose campuses were roiled by the pro-Palestinian student protest movement, in which Khalil was a prominent figure. "I absolutely don't regret standing up against a genocide," Khalil, 30, said in an interview at his Manhattan apartment, less than two weeks after U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz ordered him released on bail while he challenges the effort to revoke his U.S. lawful permanent residency green card and deport him. "I don't regret standing up for what's right, which is opposing war, which is calling for the end of violence." He believes the government is trying to silence him, but has instead given him a bigger platform. Returning to New York after his release, Khalil was welcomed at the airport by U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a political foe of Trump; supporters waved Palestinian flags as he reunited with his wife and infant son, whose birth he missed in jail. Two days later, he was the star of a rally on the steps of a cathedral near Columbia's Manhattan campus, castigating the university's leaders. Last week, he appeared before cheering crowds alongside Zohran Mamdani, the pro-Palestinian state lawmaker who won June's Democratic primary ahead of New York City's 2025 mayoral election. "I did not choose to be in this position: ICE did," Khalil said, referring to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents who arrested him. "And this of course had a great impact on my life. I'm still, honestly, trying to contemplate my new reality." He missed his May graduation ceremony and emerged from jail unemployed. An international charity withdrew its offer of a job as a policy adviser, he said. The government could win its appeal and jail him again, so Khalil said his priority is spending as much time as possible with his son and wife, a dentist. Khalil was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Syria; his wife, Dr. Noor Abdalla, is a U.S. citizen and he became a U.S. lawful permanent resident last year. Moving to New York in 2022 as a graduate student, he became one of the main student negotiators between Columbia's administration and the protesters, who set up tent encampments on a campus lawn as they demanded that Columbia end investments of its $14 billion endowment in weapons makers and other companies supporting Israel's military. Khalil is not charged with any crime, but the U.S. government has invoked an obscure immigration statute to argue that Khalil and several other international pro-Palestinian students must be deported because their "otherwise lawful" speech could harm U.S. foreign policy interests. The federal judge overseeing the case has ruled that the Trump administration's main rationale for deporting Khalil is likely an unconstitutional violation of free-speech rights. The government is appealing. "This is not about 'free speech,'" Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, wrote in response to queries, "this is about individuals who don't have a right to be in the United States siding with Hamas terrorists and organizing group protests that made college campuses unsafe and harassed Jewish students." URGES UNIVERSITIES TO HEED THEIR STUDENTS Khalil, in the interview, condemned antisemitism and called Jewish students an "integral part" of the protest movement. He said the government was using antisemitism as a pretext to reshape American higher education, which Trump, a Republican, has said is captured by anti-American, Marxist and "radical left" ideologies. The Trump administration has told Columbia and other universities that federal grant money, mostly for biomedical research, will not be restored unless the government has greater oversight of who they admit and hire and what they teach, calling for greater "intellectual diversity." Unlike Harvard, Columbia has not challenged the legality of the government's sudden grant revocations, and agreed to at least some of the Trump administration's demands to tighten rules around protests as a precondition of negotiations over resuming funding. Khalil called Columbia's response heartbreaking. "Columbia basically gave the institution to the Trump administration, let the administration intervene in every single detail on how higher education institutions should be run," he said. Columbia's administration has said preserving the university's academic autonomy is a "red line" as negotiations continue. Virginia Lam Abrams, a Columbia spokesperson, said university leaders "strongly dispute" Khalil's characterization. "Columbia University recognizes the right for students, including Mr. Khalil, to speak out on issues that they deeply believe in," she said in a statement. "But it is also critical for the University to uphold its rules and policies to ensure that every member of our community can participate in a campus community free from discrimination and harassment." Khalil urged Columbia and other universities targeted by Trump to heed their students. "The students presented a clear plan on how this campus can follow human rights, can follow international law, can be inclusive to all students, where everyone feels equal regardless of where they stand on issues," he said. "They prefer to capitulate to political pressure rather than listening to the students." (Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Freed from US jail, Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil seizes his new public platform

Freed from US jail, Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil seizes his new public platform By Jonathan Allen NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. Pr...
US recalls top diplomat in Colombia as tensions with President Petro escalateNew Foto - US recalls top diplomat in Colombia as tensions with President Petro escalate

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — The Trump administration on Thursday recalled its top diplomat inColombiafor "urgent consultations" after recent comments from Colombia's president appearing to question the U.S. position on an alleged plan to remove him from office. The U.S. State Department said Thursday that the charge d'affaires at the U.S. embassy in Bogota, John McNamara, would be returning to Washington "following baseless and reprehensible statements from the highest levels of the government of Colombia." Colombian President Gustavo Petroresponded in kind, recalling Colombia's ambassador to Washington for consultation. He said he wants to talk to Amb. Daniel García Peña about progress on Colombia's priorities in the bilateral relationship. U.S. State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce said in a statement that the administration would also be "pursuing other measures to make clear our deep concern over the current state of our bilateral relationship." The statement did not elaborate on the reasons for the recall. Later on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed the move on X, writing that "Our nation is committed to the U.S.-Colombia bilateral relationship and the Colombian people. We will remain engaged on shared priorities, including security and stability." Petro has grappled this week with an apparent effort by current or former members of his administration to push him from office. Colombia's Attorney General's Office said Tuesday that it had opened an investigation into a plan allegedly led by Petro's own former Foreign Affairs Minister Álvaro Leyva. Spanish newspaper El País had published audio recordings over the weekend that appeared to contemplate such a plan. Leyva had allegedly approached some U.S. lawmakers to rally international pressure on Petro. On Wednesday, Petro said on X that there had been an attempted coup and he called on the U.S. justice system to investigate. "The other times that they have wanted to kill me the previous U.S. administration helped me," he wrote. "From here on, Bolivar's sword follows its libertarian path, and the energy of the light and vibrant people. And the U.S. government?" The leaked audio recordings indicated that Leyva had looked for support from Florida CongressmenMario Díaz-Balartand Carlos Giménez. Both have denied any involvement. Giménez responded Thursday on X, writing that "Petro cannot continue to threaten America and then think he can get away with it." Petro has previously denounced attempts to remove him from office, including by armed Colombian groups and a "soft" coup via institutional processes. In one case, he said the U.S. embassy alerted him so that it did come to pass. Colombia has long been the United States' key strategic partner in the region. But Petro's election as Colombia's first leftist president has tested that relationship. Petro has declared the drug war a failure and rewritten Colombia's antidrug policy, long supported and funded by the United States, for example lowering targets for eradication of coca plants. This week,Petro also halted the extraditionof a former leader of a dissident guerrilla faction that had already been approved by Colombia's Supreme Court to face U.S. drug trafficking charges. Petro said he was needed to participate in ongoing peace talks. In January, Petro aggravated U.S.President Donald Trumpby refusing to accept two deportation flights aboard U.S. military aircraft. EventuallyColombia sent its own planesto pick them up. ____ AP journalist Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report. ____ Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

US recalls top diplomat in Colombia as tensions with President Petro escalate

US recalls top diplomat in Colombia as tensions with President Petro escalate BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — The Trump administration on Thursday r...
Governor signs budget in early morning to secure Medicaid fundsNew Foto - Governor signs budget in early morning to secure Medicaid funds

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers signed a new two-year budget in the early morning hours Thursday in a race against Congress to ensure the state gets afederal Medicaid matchthat it would lose underPresident Trump'stax and spending cuts package. In an extraordinarily rapid succession of events, Evers and Republican lawmakers unveiled acompromise budget dealon Tuesday, the Senate passed it Wednesday night and hours later just before 1 a.m. on Thursday the Assembly passed it. Evers signed it in his conference room minutes later. Democrats who voted against the $111 billion spending bill said it didn't go far enough in meeting their priorities of increasing funding for schools, child care and expanding Medicaid. But Evers, who hasn't decided on whether he will seek a third term, hailed the compromise as the best deal that could be reached. "I believe most Wisconsinites would say that compromise is a good thing because that is how government is supposed to work," Evers said. Wisconsin's budget would affect nearly every person in the battleground state. Income taxes would be cut for working people and retirees by $1.4 billion, sales taxes would be eliminated on residential electric bills and it would cost more to get a driver's license, buy license plates and title a vehicle. Unprecedented speed There was urgency to pass the budget because of one part that increases an assessment on hospitals to help fund the state's Medicaid program and hospital provider payments. Medicaid cutsup for final approvalthis week in Congress cap how much states can get from the federal government through those fees. The budget would increase Wisconsin's assessment rate from 1.8% to the federal maximum of 6% to access federal matching funds. But if the federal bill is enacted first, Wisconsin could not raise the fee, putting $1.5 billion in funding for rural hospitals at risk. In the rush to get done, Republicans took the highly unusual move of bringing the budget up for votes on the same day. In at least the past 50 years, the budget has never passed both houses on the same day. "We need to get this thing done today so we have the opportunity to access federal funding," Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said at the start of debate just before 8 p.m. Wednesday. Governors typically take several days to review and sign the budget after it's passed but Evers took just minutes. Bipartisan compromise In a concession to the Democratic governor, Republicans also agreed to spend more money on special education services in K-12 schools, subsidize child care costs and give the Universities of Wisconsin its biggest increase in nearly two decades. The plan would also likely result in higher property taxes in many school districts due to no increase in general aid to pay for operations. The budget called forclosing a troubled aging prisonin Green Bay by 2029, but Evers used his partial veto to strike that provision. He left in $15 million in money to support the closure, but objected to setting a date without a clear plan for how to get it done. Republicans need Democratic votes The Senate passed the budget 19-14, with five Democrats joining with 14 Republicans to approve it. Four Republicans joined 10 Democrats in voting no. The Assembly passed it 59-39 with six Democrats in support. One Republican voted against it. Democratic senators were brought into budget negotiations in the final days to secure enough votes to pass it. "It's a bipartisan deal," Senate Minority Leader Dianne Hesselbein said before the vote. "I think everybody left the table wishing it was different, but this is something everyone has agreed on." Democrats said newly drawn legislative maps, which helped thempick up seatsin November and narrow the Republican majorities, led to greater compromise this year. "That gave us leverage, that gave us an opportunity to have a conversation," Democratic Sen. Mark Spreitzer said. Still, Spreitzer said the budget "fell far short of what was needed on our priorities." He and other Democrats said it didn't go enough to help fund child care, K-12 schools and higher education, in particular. Evers vetoes prison closure deadline The budget called forclosing a troubled aging prisonin Green Bay by 2029, but Evers used his partial veto to strike that provision. He left in $15 million in money to support planning for the closure, but objected to setting a date without a clear plan for how to get it done. The governor noted in his veto message that the state has "painful experience" with trying to close prisons without a fleshed-out plan, pointing out that the state's youth prison remains open even though lawmakers passed a bill to close the facility in 2017. "Green Bay Correctional Institution should close — on that much, the Legislature and I agree," Evers wrote. "It is simply not responsible or tenable to require doing so by a deadline absent a plan to actually accomplish that goal by the timeline set." Governor kills grant as payback for ending stewardship Evers used his partial veto powers to wipe out provisions in the budget that would have handed the town of Norway in southeastern Wisconsin's Racine County an annual $100,000 grant to control water runoff from State Highway 36. The governor said in his veto message he eliminated the grant because Republicans refused to extend the Warren Knowles-Gaylord Nelson Stewardship Program. That program provides funding for the state and outside groups to buy land for conservation and recreation. Republicans have complained for years that the program is too expensive and removes too much land from property tax rolls, hurting local municipalities. Funding is set to expire next year. Evers proposed allocating $1 billion to extend the program for another decade, but Republicans eliminated the provision. Evers accused legislators in his veto message of abandoning their responsibility to continue the program while using the runoff grant to help "the politically connected few." He did not elaborate. The town of Norway lies within state Rep. Chuck Wichgers and Sen. Julian Bradley's districts. Both are Republicans; Bradley sits on the Legislature's powerful budget-writing committee. Emails to both their offices seeking comment Friday morning weren't immediately returned. Rep. Tony Kurtz and Sen. Pat Testin, both Republicans, introduced a bill last month that would extend the stewardship program through mid-2030, but the measure has yet to get a hearing. ___ Associated Press writer Todd Richmond contributed to this report.

Governor signs budget in early morning to secure Medicaid funds

Governor signs budget in early morning to secure Medicaid funds MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers signed a new two-year budget ...
Trump had his military parade. Now he's launching America's yearlong 250th birthday party.New Foto - Trump had his military parade. Now he's launching America's yearlong 250th birthday party.

WASHINGTON – TheFourth of Julyisn't until Friday, but forPresident Donald Trump, the party begins one day earlier on July 3. And then the celebration will continuefor the next 365 days. To mark the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, the White House isplanning a full year of eventsacross the country that will culminate in one year on July 4, 2026, exactly 250 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Trump is set to kick off the yearlong countdown to America's 250th birthday with a speech Thursday night at the Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines that will include "patriotic entertainment" and fireworks. Trump ‒ who haslong embraced patriotic themes and imageryto complement his "America first" agenda ‒already had a controversial taxpayer-funded military paradeon the streets of Washington, D.C., last month. (The parade marked the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and also fell on the president's 79th birthday.) Now he has an opportunity to drape himself in the red, white and blue for the next 12 months. "We are planning parties. We are planning a national celebration to really unite the country," Monica Crowley, the White House's ambassador for major U.S.-hosted events, including the 250th anniversary celebration,said this week in an interview on Fox News, where she was previously a contributor. "Bring the country together out of shared patriotism, shared values and a renewed sense of civic pride." More:Army 250th anniversary parade: Trump presides over tanks, troops on DC streets; recap By losing the 2020 election but winning in 2024, Trump has noted that he now gets to be president for America's 250th birthday and when the United States hosts the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the world's most popular sporting event both in the same year. In the summer of 2028, while he's still in his second term, Los Angeles plays host to the Summer Olympics. "Can you imagine? I missed that four years and now look what I have. I have everything,"Trump said May 26 at National Arlington Cemeteryon Memorial Day. "Amazing the way things work out. God did that. I believe that, too," he added with a laugh. The festivities,dubbed America250, are organized under a nonprofit with the same name created in 2019 after Congress took action three years earlier to create the U.S. Semiquincentennial Commission to begin organizing the country's 250th anniversary celebration. The initiative is supposed to be a nonpartisan affair,but The Atlantic reportedthe group has effectively been operating "as an arm of Trump's White House operation." More:Trump has big plans for Fourth of July 2026. What we know about America's 250th. America250's newly named executive director isAriel Abergel, a former producer ofFox News' Fox and Friends who interned at the White House during Trump's first term. He's brought with him other former Fox News employees, according to The Atlantic, and enlisted the help of Trump campaign aides, including senior adviser Chris LaCivita. Corporate sponsors of America250include several led by executiveswho have sought to curry favor with Trump, including Ultimate Fighting Championship, Amazon, Coinbase and Oracle. Trump,in a post on Truth Social, said the America250 kickoff in Iowa "will be a very special event, honoring our Great Country, and our Brave Heroes who fought to keep us FREE." It could also give Trump his first chance to publiclytout passage of his so-called "big, beautiful bill"‒ but only if he's able to push House Republicans to sign off on the massive tax and spending bill before his self-imposed holiday deadline. Trump has a history of turning traditionally nonpartisan events into supercharged political spectacles. Ina June 10 speech to troops at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Trump slammed California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass as "incompetent" ‒ prompting some soldiers to boo their names ‒ and referred to Los Angeles as a "trash heap." He also singled out media covering the event as "fake news," making the speech sound more like a Trump campaign rally than an address to uniformed troops. More:President Donald Trump reinstates order to build 'National Park of American Heroes' Trump signed a Jan. 29 executive orderdirecting his administration to organize "a grand celebration worthy of the momentous occasion" of America's 250th birthday. That included creating a task force on celebrating the 250th anniversary, composed of Trump Cabinet secretaries and chaired by Trump and Vice President JD Vance. Each federal department and agency has assigned a point person to coordinate with the White House on America250 planning, a White House official told USA TODAY. The full slate of America250 activities and projects have not been announced, but some are in the works. More:Trump installs pair of 88-foot-tall new flag poles at the White House The most widely publicized plans are for a "National Garden of American Heroes" that will honor 250 American heroes across a wide range of fields. Trump reinstated plans for the garden, which he had pushed in his first term,as part of his America250 executive order. A location for the garden hasn't been decided. An updated timeline calls for it to be completed "as expeditiously as possible." Transportation Secretary Sean Duffyannounced a "Great American Road Trip"to mark America's 250th birthday that will highlight popular travel routes, historic landmarks and scenic destinations in all 50 states. The White House has started unveiling videos showing a narrated cartoon version of signers of the Declaration of Independence,such as President Thomas JeffersonandThomas Heyward Jr. of South Carolina. In the final year of his first White House term, Trump created a "1776 Commission" to promote what he called "patriotic education." There'salso a nationwide student writing and artwork contestin which children are asked to answer, "What does America mean to you?"A storytelling project looksto preserve firsthand accounts of Americans, both famous and lesser-known. Andan America Gives initiativeaims to increase volunteerism. An effort is underway for all 50 states to collect items for a "time capsule" that will be buried in Philadelphia on July 4, 2026. A traveling tech expo is set to display American innovations across the country. And celebrations will also mark the 250th anniversary of the Navy and Air Force ‒ though neither is expected to include a parade like the U.S. Army received for its 250th anniversary. And you can bet Trump will headline several more America250 events after Iowa. "It really is a gift to have him in office," Crowley said. "Can you imagine the other team being in office for America250?" Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump had his military parade. Now he's got America's 250th birthday.

Trump had his military parade. Now he's launching America's yearlong 250th birthday party.

Trump had his military parade. Now he's launching America's yearlong 250th birthday party. WASHINGTON – TheFourth of Julyisn't u...
Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to UkraineNew Foto - Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

WASHINGTON — PresidentDonald Trumpsaid he would hold a call with Russian PresidentVladimir Putina day after the U.S. said it would pause the delivery ofsome weaponsto Ukraine as the Pentagon conducts a review of its munition stockpiles. Trump announced the call with Putin in a Truth Social post. A White House official said a call was not scheduled to take place on July 3 with Ukraine's presidentVolodymyr Zelenskyy. Putin is 'misguided' Trump says:Trump says Putin is 'difficult' on Ukraine war, calls Russian leader 'misguided' The U.S. president met with Zelenskyy behind closed doors at the end of last month during a NATO Summit in The Hague. He acknowledged at a news conference after that Putin had been "more difficult"to negotiate with than he once thought. He noted that he'dalso had "some problems"with Zelenskyy. "I consider him a person that's, I think, has been misguided," Trump said of Putin. "I'm very surprised, actually, I thought we would have had that settled easy." He spent an hour on the phone with Putin on June 14. The conversation that fellon Trump's birthdaywas mainly about the conflict with Iran over it's nuclear program, the U.S. president said at the time. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine WASHINGTON — PresidentDonald Trumpsaid he would hold a call with...

 

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