***BRAIN DEAD MAGA GOP...UNTIL LIBRARY OF CONGRESS!*****
— GOP leaders draw the line at Trump’s Library of Congress takeover: GOP congressional leaders have stood aside the past four months as President Donald Trump has attacked legislative branch prerogatives — shuttering agencies, canceling federal grants and imposing sweeping tariffs. Now he’s meddling in their actual back yard. A White House push to seize control of the Library of Congress over the past week has run temporarily aground due to quiet but firm resistance from Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, according to three people granted anonymity to describe the sensitive situation. ***MAGA, TRUMP & THE BRAIN DEAD HATE THE FIRST AMENDMENT! DIFFERENCES OF OPINION ARE WHAT MADE THIS NATION GREAT! **** — Judge orders release of Georgetown scholar Trump admin is seeking to deport: A federal judge has ordered the release of a Georgetown researcher the Trump administration put into immigration detention in March as part of a crackdown on pro-Palestinian academics. U.S. District Judge Patricia Giles said today the government offered no evidence that Indian-born Badar Khan Suri posed a danger to the community. She also said his arrest likely violated his free speech rights as well as his rights to freedom of association with his Palestinian-American wife. excerpts: “The First Amendment extends to noncitizens and doesn’t distinguish between citizens and non-citizens,” Giles said during a hearing in her Alexandria courtroom. The judge said her ruling releasing Khan Suri was “totally separate” from ongoing deportation proceedings he faces in immigration court. In March, masked ICE agents surrounded and detained Khan Suri in Arlington, Virginia, amid a broader crackdown on foreign academics viewed by the Trump administration as espousing anti-Israel or pro-Palestine views. He is a postdoctoral fellow at Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service and was teaching a class on “Majoritarianism and Minority Rights in South Asia.” Though Khan Suri’s attorney quickly sued to keep him in Virginia and to seek his release from custody, federal agents transferred him within hours to Louisiana and then Texas. Giles’ ruling is the third federal court decision in recent days to order the release of scholars targeted in the Trump administration’s unprecedented deportation effort. Federal judges in Vermont also ordered the release of Tufts student Rumeysa Ozturk and Columbia student Mohsen Mahdawi. All three had their student visas revoked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who determined that their presence in the country was contrary to U.S. foreign policy interests. Khan Suri’s release comes amid rising alarm and skepticism from the courts about the Trump administration’s tactics. A newly unsealed search warrant in the case of Columbia University student Yunseo Chung — similarly targeted for deportation before a New York-based federal judge blocked her detention — revealed authorities’ effort to target the university itself for alleged “harboring” of immigrants whose visas Rubio had revoked. The judges overseeing Mahdawi’s and Ozturk’s cases said the two appeared targeted purely for First Amendment-protected views, with one warning of an environment akin to the Red Scare and McCarthyism. — Trump EPA moves to weaken drinking water limits on toxic ‘forever chemicals’: The Trump administration said today it intends to roll back first-ever limits set by the Biden administration on four toxic “forever chemicals” contaminating water supplies across the country . Even low levels of the chemicals known as PFAS are linked with cancer, immune system problems, developmental effects and other health ailments. EPA-mandated testing has found them in nearly half of Americans’ drinking water. excerpt: EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the agency will leave in place and continue to defend limits for the two most notorious types of PFAS — PFOA and PFOS — which have been phased out of use. But EPA will ask a federal court to let the agency “rescind the regulations and reconsider” the decision to regulate four of their close cousins that were designed to replace them. Zeldin also said he will craft a regulation to give water utilities two more years to comply with the remaining limits and will provide technical support to water systems, especially those in small and rural communities, as well as opportunities to request exemptions from the regulation. “We are on a path to uphold the agency’s nationwide standards to protect Americans from PFOA and PFOS in their water. At the same time, we will work to provide common-sense flexibility in the form of additional time for compliance,” he said in a statement. Zeldin, who pushed for aggressive regulation of PFAS chemicals when he was a representative from Long Island, New York, has said addressing the country’s PFAS problem is one of his top priorities as administrator. He recently announced plans to boost research and address industrial releases of the chemicals. But the drinking water regulation presents a politically treacherous decision for the administration, with some of the country’s most powerful business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and the American Chemistry Council, fiercely opposing it. Many of those groups’ members have used or produced the chemicals for decades in everything from stain-resistant carpeting to nonstick cookware to firefighting foam, and could face significant liability for cleanups and personal injury lawsuits. They are also continuing to profit from that production and use, including in politically important sectors such as semiconductors and defense technology. North Carolina is one of the 39 states that do not have their own enforceable limits for some PFAS.
Three of the four PFAS whose limits EPA wants to pull back are structurally different from the two whose limits the Trump administration wants to leave in place. That raises the prospect that drinking water utilities that upgrade their systems to treat for PFOA and PFOS could select technologies that don’t effectively treat for other PFAS. If the Trump administration decides to issue regulations for those chemicals in the future, water utilities may need to reengineer their systems. Meanwhile, the Trump administration is also facing another hot-button decision around PFAS: whether to continue defending a Biden-era regulation listing PFOA and PFOS as hazardous under the nation’s Superfund law. That rule is seen as key to forcing chemical companies and others responsible for the pollution to pay for cleanup — something Zeldin has said he supports. But it also stands to create massive financial liabilities for major companies and the Defense Department. — Boeing signs deal in Doha against backdrop of Air Force One delays, Qatar’s luxury jet gift : Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg joined President Donald Trump in Qatar Wednesday for a signing ceremony for 160 new planes — but not the one the president really wants. The much-discussed potential gift of a luxury Boeing 747 from Qatar did not come up during brief remarks celebrating the separate deal for Boeing to sell Qatar Airways 160 new jets. Under a proposal endorsed by Trump this week, Qatar’s royal family would gift him their own Boeing 747-8 jet to replace the current planes used as Air Force One. The plan has roiled not only some GOP lawmakers but even some vocal MAGA influencers, who have called out the move. The Qatari proposal came as Trump has separately been feuding with Boeing over delays in delivering him a new Air Force One.
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