The three-judge panel lifted an order blocking Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency from further cuts at the U.S. Agency for International Development.
The appeals court found the Trump administration is likely to show that DOGE’s involvement doesn’t violate the Constitution.
The decision blocks an earlier ruling from U.S. District Judge Theodore Chuang in Maryland, who found that DOGE’s actions violated the appointments clause.
After Cyclone Mocha hit Southeast Asia in 2023, Radio Free Asia’s Burmese Service sent out more than 70 stories in 10 days via shortwave radio, satellite TV and social media.
But following Friday’s earthquake that killed more than 150 people in Myanmar and neighboring Thailand, the U.S.-backed broadcaster has been noticeably absent, after Trump gutted its parent company.
RFA, which receives funding from the U.S. Agency for Global Media, has been forced to furlough most of its staff and sever contracts with stringers, hindering its efforts to gather news on the ground, according to RFA spokesperson Rohit Mahajan, a spokesperson.
As USAGM ends contracts for shortwave radio transmitters, RFA has lost three hours of transmission time to beam programs to audiences in Myanmar, Mahajan said.
“Given the deadly earthquake in Myanmar, when people are relying on RFA’s critical updates to learn more, this is very concerning,” he said.
U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy has temporarily prohibited U.S. authorities from sending people with final orders of removal to a different country than the one they came from — referred to as a third country — without a “meaningful opportunity” to argue that it would make them unsafe.
The Justice Department argues that allowing people to challenge deportation to a third country after they lose immigration cases would interfere with law enforcement.
Murphy, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, sided with advocacy groups including the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, which sued Sunday in Boston. His order remains in effect only temporarily, while the case advances in court.
Journalist Sara Carter is Trump’s choice to head up the Office of National Drug Control Policy, or become the nation’s “drug czar.”
She has been a contributor on Fox News Channel since 2017. Trump said Carter has tackled the fentanyl and opioid crises, and has exposed terrorists, drug lords and sex traffickers.
His pick for U.S. ambassador to Serbia is Mark Brnovich, a former Arizona attorney general. Brnovich is also an Army National Guard veteran whose parents came to the United States from the former Yugoslavia.
Trump said, “As the son of refugees who fled communism, Mark will be a strong advocate for Freedom, and always put AMERICA FIRST.“
The agency had been targeted for mass firings before the court’s intervention.
U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson agreed to issue a preliminary injunction that maintains the agency’s existence until she rules on the merits of a lawsuit seeking to preserve the agency. The judge said the court “can and must act” to save the agency from being shuttered.
Jackson previously heard testimony about the chaos that erupted inside the agency after government employees were ordered to stop working last month. The bureau’s chief operating officer, Adam Martinez, said the agency was in “wind-down mode” after Trump fired its previous director on Feb. 1.
Trump installed a temporary replacement who ordered the immediate suspension of all agency operations, canceled $100 million in contracts and fired 70 employees.
Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen arrives for an EU summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana)
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen’s statement also rejected Vance’s assertions that Denmark has ignored Greenland, saying the island is “a good and strong ally.”
She also said Denmark is increasing defense capabilities in the region. That includes new Arctic ships and long-range drones.
Vance had said while visiting Greenland that its residents have the right to self-determination. He also suggested Denmark hadn’t treated Greenland well, and said he believes its people will side with Trump’s takeover plans.
Trump has insisted the U.S. will eventually take over Greenland and hasn’t ruled out military force.
Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul asked the Dane County Circuit Court to issue an emergency injunction to stop the Elon Musk event, which he announced on his social media platform X. The weekend event was planned for just two days before the state’s hotly contested Supreme Court race was to be decided.
Musk initially said the money would go to voters in the Supreme Court race, then deleted that and said it would instead go to signers of his petition targeting “activist” judges.
Musk’s America PAC earlier this week gave $1 million to a Green Bay man who urged voters on Friday to cast their ballots for the Musk-backed and Trump-endorsed court candidate Brad Schimel.
Schimel, a Waukesha County judge, faces Democratic-backed Dane County Circuit Judge Susan Crawford in Tuesday’s election. Ironically, Kaul’s injunction request was randomly assigned to Crawford, but her spokesperson said she would recuse.
Will Stefanik remain supportive of Trump? Will she align with congressional Republicans? Will she resign completely?Russell A.
Hey, Russell. It’s a good question. Stefanik said that multiple issues factored into Trump’s decision to withdraw her nomination, including the possibility that an election to replace her may be delayed, the upcoming special elections in Florida, and the threadbare GOP majority in the House.
She appeared on Fox News last night and said this:
“I have been proud to be a team player. The president knows that. And he and I have had multiple conversations today, and we are committed to delivering results on behalf of the American people.”
Stefanik plans to remain in the House, and Speaker Johnson has said he wants her to return to a GOP leadership role, though it’s not yet clear what position she may hold.
Stefanik is the fourth Trump administration nominee who didn’t make it through the confirmation process.
AP’s Farnoush Amiri, who covers the UN, wrote about Stefanik’s withdrawal. Read her reporting.
Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette D. Clarke disputed the executive order signed by President Trump that questioned the truthfulness of Smithsonian museums in telling the nation’s history.
“We detest this administration’s dedication to whitewashing our nation’s history,” she said in a statement.
“Let’s be clear, Black history is American history,” the New York Democrat said. “We do not run from or erase our history simply because we don’t like it. We embrace the history of our country – the good, the bad, and the ugly.”
A divided appellate court panel of judges agreed to lift orders blocking the Trump administration from removing Merit Systems Protection Board member Cathy Harris and National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox.
On March 4, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras ruled that Trump illegally tried to fire Harris. Two days later, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled that Trump did not have the authority to remove Wilcox.
The Justice Department asked the appellate court to suspend those orders while they appeal the decisions.
President Joe Biden nominated Harris to the merit systems board in 2021 and nominated Wilcox to a second five-year term as an NLRB member in 2023.
Trump is pushing the House of Representatives to pass a measure that would prevent immediate financial disaster for the District of Columbia, even as he continues to level harsh criticism at the city and its leaders.
In a Friday morning post on Truth Social, he wrote, “The House should take up the D.C. funding ‘fix’ that the Senate has passed, and get it done IMMEDIATELY.”
It’s the first direct public indication from the Republican president that he supports efforts to restore a $1.1 billion hole in the district’s budget, and it’s a major boost for Democratic Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser’s campaign to reverse a legislative change that she says would devastate the capital city.
Billionaire Elon Musk on Friday clarified his reasons for visiting Wisconsin two days ahead of its hotly contested state Supreme Court election after deleting a social media post saying he planned to “personally hand over” $2 million to a pair of voters who have already cast their ballots in the race.
Musk later posted a clarification, saying the money will go to people who will be “spokesmen” for an online petition against “activist” judges. After first saying the event would only be open to people who had voted in the Supreme Court race, he said attendance would be limited to those who had signed the petition.
The change in direction came as Wisconsin’s Democratic attorney general said he planned to seek a court order on Friday to keep Musk from handing over the money.
Trump said the question was “easy to answer” when asked by a reporter for the definition of a woman during Women’s History Month.
Trump, speaking after Alina Habba’s swearing-in as interim U.S. attorney for New Jersey, said a woman is:
- “Somebody that can have a baby under certain circumstances.”
- “A person who is much smarter than a man, I’ve always found.”
- “A person that doesn’t give a man even a chance at success.”
- “A person that has, in many cases, been treated very badly,” referring to transgender athletes participating in women’s sports.
Scott Ainsworth, a Green Bay, Wisconsin, man, has been identified as the first person to receive $1 million from Elon Musk’s America PAC.
Ainsworth has posted dozens of Facebook posts since January supporting Brad Schimel, the Republican-backed candidate for Wisconsin Supreme Court, including photos from campaign events, social media posts from Donald Trump urging Wisconsinites to vote for Schimel and lists of donors to the Democratic-supported candidate, Susan Crawford.
“Remember to get out and VOTE Schimel for Supreme Court!” he declared in a March post.
Ainsworth donated $350 to Schimel’s campaign this year, campaign finance records show.
In the past few months, Ainsworth has also made posts calling the Department of Education a “failure” and urging it to be shut down, and criticizing former Vice President Kamala Harris and Sen. Tammy Baldwin.
Trump says Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP has agreed to provide at least $100 million in pro bono legal services in support of certain causes.
He says the firm will also pledge not to use diversity, equity and inclusion considerations in its hiring practices.
The firm is the second in two weeks to cut a deal with the Trump administration.
Last week, Paul Weiss, another powerhouse firm, reached a resolution after being targeted with an executive order that threatened the suspension of security clearances of attorneys at the firm.
Also Friday, two other firms — Jenner & Block and WilmerHale — sued the government to block enforcement of virtually identical orders that targeted also them.
Dozens of people gathered outside the Education Department’s Washington headquarters in a show of support for dismissed employees as they returned to pack up their desks.
The department’s workforce has been cut in half since Trump took office.
Bradley Custer was among 1,300 employees hit by a round of layoffs two weeks ago. He said he went to work for the department’s Office of Federal Student Aid to improve the student loan system.
“I’m really worried now that our progress is derailed and things will get worse again,” he said.
Vance has wrapped up his speech in Greenland after suggesting its people will side with Trump and agree to partner with the United States.
The vice president said Greenland’s residents have the right to self-determination.
But he rebuked Denmark, which he said was neglecting Greenland.
Vance said he believes Greenland’s people will ultimately side with the U.S. and its desire for control of the island because they are “rational and good.”
Trump has insisted the U.S. will eventually takeover Greenland and hasn’t ruled out military force. Denmark, as well as Greenland’s leaders, have soundly rejected that.
Mike Waltz, Trump’s national security adviser, is among the U.S. officials visiting Greenland with Vance.
Waltz has faced sharp criticism — including from some congressional Republicans — for mistakenly adding a journalist to a Signal group chat where top officials discussed details of a U.S. military attack in Yemen.
Waltz has taken “full responsibility” for building the chat group and called the security breach “embarrassing.” He’s vowed to move forward.
Chris Wright, Trump’s energy secretary, is also on Friday’s Greenland trip.
Vance is defending his break with Trump over a U.S. attack in Yemen.
The vice president was part of a group chat discussing airstrikes before they occurred.
On it, Vance appeared to break with Trump.
He questioned whether the president recognized that the U.S. attack meant to safeguard international shipping lanes clashed with Vance’s previous assertions that European countries weren’t doing enough to protect shipping interests.
“Sometimes we all agree. Sometimes we all disagree,” Vance said on Friday.
He insisted he supported the strikes, adding it’s “important we all have an honest conversation among ourselves” on national security.
Trump said he doesn’t know Trevor Milton but was told that the way Milton was treated by the justice system was “very unfair.”
“And they say the thing that he did wrong was he was one of the first people that supported a gentleman named Donald Trump for president,” Trump said.
Trump also said he acted after receiving some “fantastic recommendations” about Milton.
Milton, the founder of electric vehicle start-up Nikola, was sentenced last year to four years in prison for exaggerating the potential of his technology.
Milton announced late Thursday on the social platform X that Trump had called him with the news.
In remarks while visiting a U.S. military base, the vice president also said Denmark has “underinvested” in the island’s security and demanded changes to the situation.
His comments came as Trump continued to promote the idea of a U.S. takeover of Greenland.
“Our message to Denmark is very simple,” Vance said. “You have not done a good job by the people of Greenland.”
As many as 10,000 employees are expected to start receiving termination notices as soon as today, according to an emailed notice union representatives received from the department on Thursday.
The notice says between 8,000 and 10,000 people will be terminated.
Public health agencies are expected to be hit hardest, with HHS saying on Thursday it will eliminate 3,500 people from the Food and Drug Administration, which inspects prescriptions and foods; 2,400 jobs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and 1,200 jobs at the National Institutes of Health.
Habba was sworn into office by Attorney General Pam Bondi in a ceremony held in the Oval Office as Trump looked on.
The New Jersey native defended Trump in some of his civil lawsuits. He later brought her to the White House with the title of counselor to the president.
Alina Habba, President Donald Trump’s pick to be the interim U.S. Attorney for New Jersey, speaks with reporters outside the White House, Wednesday, March 26, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
“She counseled me very well,” Trump said. He said she’ll work “tirelessly to weed out crime and corruption and restore law and order to the Garden State.”
Habba thanked the president and said, “I would not be standing here today if it was not for the man to my right,” meaning Trump.
She promised to “make New Jersey great again.”
Freedom of press advocates are asking a federal court in California to rule that Elon Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service is subject to the federal Freedom of Information Act and to comply with FOIA requests made of it.
The nonprofit First Amendment Coalition and MSW Media, a female-led podcast network, filed on Friday in the U.S. District for Northern California.
A federal judge in Washington, D.C., ruled earlier in March that the U.S. DOGE Service was likely subject to FOIA and issued a preliminary injunction requiring the preservation of documents in a case brought by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics.
The plaintiffs in California have sought emails and other electronic text communications sent or received by Musk and by Department of Government Efficiency employees. The agency has not responded to the FOIA requests.
As Vance visits the island, Trump was asked if the trip could mean a larger U.S. military presence being deployed there eventually.
Trump didn’t answer the question. Instead, he told reporters in the Oval Office, “We get along very well with Greenland.”
“I think everybody wants to see that work out,” Trump said of the U.S. controlling the island, which is a Danish territory. He also said the U.S. gets along well with Denmark.
Trump added, “We need Greenland” for “international security.”
The president repeated his previous claims that many countries have military and other ships in waters around Greenland. He said greater U.S. influence in Greenland is “important for the peace of the world.”
Trump says Rep. Elise Stefanik did him “a big favor” by agreeing to stay in Congress instead of going to the UN.
Trump announced Thursday that he had pulled the New York Republican’s nomination as U.N. ambassador, saying he was concerned about Republicans’ razor-thin majority in the House.
He said Friday that he didn’t want to risk Democrats possibly winning Florida’s two special elections for the U.S. House next week. He noted all the money the party has spent to flip those seats.
“We don’t want to take any chances. It’s as simple as that. It’s basic politics,” he said.
Asked if Americans should buy their cars now to avoid higher prices from his 25% tariffs, the president suggested they had little reason for concern.
“No, I don’t think so,” Trump said about people pulling forward their auto purchases.
Trump is betting that his tariffs will cause the U.S. economy to boom. But his threats of multiple tariffs, with autos being just the latest example, have caused consumer sentiment to slump as people fear higher prices and fewer job opportunities.
Former United States Agency for International Development (USAID) workers show their support to USAID workers retrieving their personal belongings from USAID’s headquarters in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
A Musk associate sounded a death knell Friday for most remaining staffers and independent functions of the U.S. Agency for International Development, asserting that “substantially all” USAID positions not required by law would be eliminated.
Jeremy Lewin, a former member of Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency teams appointed to senior duties at the agency earlier this month, also asserted that the allows the Trump administration to eliminate the agency’s “independent operation.”
Lewin’s announcement appeared in a notice to USAID staff obtained by The Associated Press.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a separate notice that the administration had formally notified Congress Friday of its plans.
The S&P 500 fell 2% Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 722 points, and the Nasdaq composite fell 2.7%.
Lululemon Athletica had stronger profits last quarter but lost 14.8%, after the sportswear maker warned of slowing revenue growth with shoppers spending less because of concerns about inflation and the economy. It was just the latest in a line of retailers making similar warnings.
Markets could remain shaky worldwide as Trump’s April 2 deadline for more tariffs approaches. Treasury yields also fell despite a worse-than-expected report on inflation.
A report on Friday morning showed all types of U.S. consumers are getting more pessimistic about their future finances, including Republicans, independents and Democrats.
▶ Read more on reactions to Trump’s market-moving decisions
Vance and the second lady entered the mess hall at Pituffik Space Base and used some colorful language to describe the freezing temperatures outside.
“It’s cold as s–t here. Nobody told me,” Vance said, drawing laughs. Temperatures in Greenland were around -5 Fahrenheit.
The vice president said the flight from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland to Greenland was beautiful.
“The president is really interested in Arctic security, as you all know,” Vance said. “And it’s only going to get bigger over the coming decades.”
Sen. Patty Murray said the Trump administration and Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., are putting Americans’ lives in jeopardy.
During a call with the nation’s top former public health officials, the Democratic senator and others warned that nursing home safety, food and drug inspections, and clinical trials and scientific research are all being disrupted and dismantled by the DOGE cuts.
Murray said Americans need to know what’s at stake.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. criticized the department he oversees as an inefficient “sprawling bureaucracy” in a video announcing the restructuring, and faulted its 82,000 workers for a decline in Americans’ health.
“I want to promise you now that we’re going to do more with less,” Kennedy said.
▶ Read more on the impact of cuts at Health and Human Services
Elon Musk attends the finals for the NCAA wrestling championship, Saturday, March 22, 2025, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
Now the billionaire has deleted a social media post in which he had announced plans to hold a rally in Wisconsin to “personally hand over” $2 million to a pair of voters who have already cast their ballots in the state’s hotly contested Supreme Court race.
The post disappeared from Musk’s social media platform, X, about 12 hours after he initially posted it late Thursday night.
Musk had posted that he planned to give $1 million each to two voters at the event on Sunday, just two days before the election that will determine ideological control of the court.
Wisconsin law explicitly prohibits giving anything of value in exchange for a vote.
Their letter to Pam Bondi says the firing of 20 immigration judges in February could add to the strain on backlogged immigration courts.
Sen. Dick Durbin and Rep. Jamie Raskin, the top Democrats on committees overseeing the judicial system, along with over 60 other Democratic lawmakers, said the dismissal of the judges “is particularly baffling, given the immense pressure the immigration courts are under to adjudicate roughly 3.6 million immigration cases.”
Democrats have sought to provide more funding for immigration judges, but Trump is bypassing legal reviews as he tries to quickly remove migrants.
Soon after arriving, JD and Usha Vance sat down for lunch with American troops stationed at the Pituffik Space Base for lunch.
Vance told them he’s “really interested in Arctic security.”
“As you all know, it’s a big issue and it’s only going to get bigger over the coming decades,” Vance said.
Following the lunch, Vance was scheduled to receive briefings from military officials and deliver more formal remarks to troops.
The U.S. Agency for International Development contracts with American urban disaster-response teams.
Before the Trump cuts to foreign aid, USAID-backed search and rescue teams from Los Angeles County and Fairfax County, Virginia, could head off to distant quakes in as few as 24 hours, said Sarah Charles, who oversaw the teams in the Biden administration.
The Trump administration is believed to have cut the commercial-transport contracts that get disaster crews, their dog search teams, and heavy equipment to disasters to pull out survivors and bodies, Charles said.
Now, as Trump faces the first major natural disaster of his second term, “the well-built system that we had … those are in shambles,” Charles said.
▶ Read more about responses to Friday’s earthquake
Vice President JD Vance, right, and second lady Usha Vance arrive at Pituffik Space Base in Greenland, Friday, March 28, 2025. (Jim Watson/Pool via AP)
Friday’s one-day visit is limited to the U.S. Space Force outpost at Pituffik, on the northwest coast of Greenland about 750 miles north of the Arctic Circle.
The itinerary change removed the risk of potentially violating diplomatic custom by sending a delegation without an official invitation. It also reduces the likelihood that Vance and his wife will cross paths with residents angered by Trump’s announcements.
During his visit, Vance was expected to receive briefings and deliver remarks to U.S. service members, according to the vice president’s office. His delegation includes the national security adviser, Mike Waltz, and Energy Secretary Chris Wright, as well as second lady Usha Vance.
▶ Read more about the northernmost US base
Kennedy also pressured Gov. Patrick Morrisey to commit to monthly weight check-ins, and said he’ll be his personal trainer.
“The first time I saw him, I said: You look like you ate Gov. Morrisey,” Kennedy said. That comment drew nervous laughter from the crowd in West Virginia, which this week became the first state to sign a sweeping statewide ban on synthetic dyes in cereals, drinks and candies.
Kennedy and Morrisey also talked about adding more restrictions to the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program that millions of poor Americans use to buy food.
The U.S. president, in a social media post, called it an “extremely productive call.”
“We agree on many things, and will be meeting immediately after Canada’s upcoming Election to work on elements of Politics, Business, and all other factors, that will end up being great for both the United States of America and Canada,” Trump wrote.
Canadians vote on April 28.
The scholars taken into custody or deported by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in recent weeks include:
- Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish doctoral student at Tufts University
- Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian activist at Columbia University
- Yunseo Chung, a Columbia student who came from Korea as a child
- Badar Khan Suri, a Georgetown scholar from India
- Leqaa Kordia, Palestinian in New Jersey accused of protesting at Columbia
- Ranjani Srinivasan, an Indian doctoral student at Columbia
- Alireza Doroudi, a doctoral student from Iran at the University of Alabama
- Dr. Rasha Alawieh, a Lebanese kidney transplant specialist hired by Brown University
- Momodou Taal, a citizen of the UK and Gambia studying at Cornell University
▶ Read more about the detentions and deportations
Recovery efforts continue for four missing U.S. soldiers near the spot where their Hercules armored vehicle was found submerged at a training range in Pabrade, north of the capital Vilnius, Lithuania on Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis)
Their armored vehicle was discovered submerged in 15 feet of water after the soldiers went missing. Teams have been unable to get inside it or pull it out.
U.S. Army Europe and Africa said Friday that cranes, a large-capacity pump and more than 30 tons of gravel have been brought in to help drain the water, dig out the mud and pull out the M88 Hercules. A U.S. Navy dive crew is being brought in, and Polish Armed Forces have volunteered to send equipment and 150 personnel.
The site is “incredibly wet and marshy and doesn’t support the weight of the equipment needed for the recovery of the 70-ton vehicle without significant engineering improvements,” an Army statement said.
The soldiers’ identities have not been released. They’re part of the 1st Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division.
▶ Read more on the recovery effort in Lithuania
The U.S. sanctions name five people and three companies, accusing them of evading sanctions to support the militant group’s finance team through a Lebanon-based network.
Included are Rashid Qasim al-Bazzal, Mahasin Mahmud Murtada, Fatimah ‘Abdallah Ayyub, Hawra’ ‘Abdallah Ayyub, and Jamil Mohamad Khafaja.
Bradley T. Smith, the Treasury Department’s acting under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said Friday that this “underscores Treasury’s determination to expose and disrupt the schemes that fund” Hezbollah.
The chair of the Democratic National Committee will spend the weekend in Florida’s 6th congressional district, where the GOP candidate has raised concerns among Republicans ahead of a special election that was supposed to result in a landslide for conservatives.
Ken Martin will be visiting Daytona Beach and St. Augustine for get out the vote events in support of Democrat Josh Weil, who has raised $9 million for his campaign.
That’s nearly 10 times what Trump-endorsed Randy Fine has reported raising. Fine told The Associated Press he is spending $600,000 of his own money for his campaign.
In this photo provided by El Salvador’s presidential press office, a prison guard transfers deportees from the U.S., alleged to be Venezuelan gang members, to the Terrorism Confinement Center in Tecoluca, El Salvador, Sunday, March 16, 2025. (El Salvador presidential press office via AP)
The emergency appeal follows the 2-1 vote by a panel of judges that left in place an order by U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg temporarily prohibiting deportations of the migrants under the rarely used Alien Enemies Act.
The Justice Department argued that federal courts shouldn’t interfere with sensitive diplomatic negotiations, and that the migrants should make their case in a federal court in Texas, where they are being detained
Trump invoked the 18th century wartime law for the first time since World War II to justify the deportation of hundreds of people under a presidential proclamation calling the Tren de Aragua gang an invading force.
▶ Read more on Trump’s appeal to the Supreme Court over deportations