Highlights from May 7, 2025
- President Donald Trump announced today that he plans to nominate Dr. Casey Means to be the next surgeon general. The announcement comes after his initial pick, Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, faced scrutiny from Trump ally Laura Loomer.
- Trump announced a White House event set for tomorrow concerning a trade deal with an unnamed country.
- Trump swore in former Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., as his ambassador to China as the administration prepares to meet with Chinese officials about trade and economic matters.
- Vice President JD Vance said at a security conference in Washington this morning that the Trump administration thinks Russia is asking for too much in talks to end the war in Ukraine.
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DNI Gabbard releases thousands more documents related to Robert F. Kennedy's assasination
National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard announced tonight the release of 60,000 more pages related to Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's assassination in 1968 after previously having released 10,000 documents about his death to comply with Trump's executive order.
Gabbard said the trove of documents released tonight includes "never-before-seen details about the FBI’s investigation into the assassination of RFK — including the discussion of potential leads by various FBI offices, internal FBI memos detailing the progress of the case, and more."
The files also include audio recordings of Los Angeles police interviews with Sirhan Sirhan, who was convicted in 1969 of killing Kennedy.
Gabbard said in a news release that federal agencies continue to search government facilities for additional files.
Trump now wants everyone to stop asking when the trade deals are coming
Just a few weeks ago, Trump and White House aides were boasting that his tariffs would force a legion of foreign nations to rush into new trade deals — and that Trump’s prowess would yield more favorable terms for the United States.
“I’m telling you, these countries are calling us up, kissing my a--,” Trump said last month before his reciprocal tariffs were due to go into effect. “They are dying to make a deal. ‘Please, please, sir, make a deal. I’ll do anything. I’ll do anything, sir!’”
Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro said on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” a few days later, after Trump paused some of his tariffs and declared a three-month negotiating window, “We’ve got 90 deals in 90 days possibly pending here.”
But Trump has changed his tone and his tune in recent days, as it has become clear that trade agreements don’t materialize as quickly as he would like and that there aren’t dozens in the queue. His shift also comes amid heavy criticism that his tariffs will hike prices for consumers and harm an American economy that had its first negative growth in years in the first quarter.
Trump administration re-creates infamous Signal chat to comply with court order
The Trump administration told a federal judge tonight it has re-created the controversial Signal group chat that former national security adviser Michael Waltz inadvertently added a journalist to and in which several U.S. officials discussed sensitive information.
Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine, who was added to the chat, later published the full chat messages, which in part featured Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's outlining of an imminent military strike.
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in March ordered the administration officials included in the chat, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, to "preserve all Signal communications between March 11 and March 15" and restore — to the extent possible — the contents of the group chat for record-keeping purposes.
An administration official said tonight that the agencies involved in the chat all got an email today from the White House counsel’s office, including what the official called a “consolidated version” of the Signal group chat.
David Bennett, director of the Office of Information Counsel in the Office of the General Counsel at the Defense Department, wrote in a sworn declaration, “The consolidated version was created from publicly available information and information saved from participants to the chat’s phones.”
The document includes content that has not been published by The Atlantic, according to Bennett, and it is now saved in each agency’s recordkeeping system.
As GOP concerns about Medicaid cuts grow, hard-liners pressure House Speaker Mike Johnson on lower deficits
Republicans on Capitol Hill are scrambling to resolve intense divisions over Medicaid as they hammer out a key piece of their massive bill for Trump’s agenda with hope of advancing it through a House committee next week.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., faces new conflicting pressure from within his narrow majority: Swing-district Republicans are growing increasingly wary of significant Medicaid cuts as they face political heat, while conservative hard-liners threaten to torpedo the bill unless it includes $2 trillion in cuts.
Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee met behind closed doors today to try to resolve their differences and will meet again tomorrow. The panel is tasked with finding $880 billion in savings, most of which will have to come from Medicaid, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, and it has already delayed releasing legislative text and holding a hearing.
While GOP lawmakers sounded upbeat as they left today’s meeting, disagreements at the highest levels about the path forward persisted.
Trump says major trade deal will be discussed at White House event tomorrow morning
Trump said on social media tonight that he will hold an event at the White House tomorrow morning related to a trade deal with an unnamed country, weeks after he suggested that foreign nations were eager to negotiate agreements with the United States in response to his tariffs.
"Big News Conference tomorrow morning at 10:00 A.M., The Oval Office, concerning a MAJOR TRADE DEAL WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF A BIG, AND HIGHLY RESPECTED, COUNTRY. THE FIRST OF MANY!!!," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Trump said yesterday that he wished critics of his tariff plans would “stop asking” about the number of deals he has brokered after he paused plans for some tariffs last month to allow for negotiations, adding that “one day we’ll come and we’ll give you 100 deals."
The Trump administration has faced ongoing criticism that tariffs could raise prices for consumers and hurt the economy.
Chief Justice John Roberts defends independent judiciary as Trump officials criticize courts
Chief Justice John Roberts stressed the importance of an independent judiciary today in remarks delivered at a time when Trump administration officials are frequently criticizing courts that have blocked their policies.
Roberts, speaking at a public event in Buffalo, New York, said an independent judiciary is a key feature of the U.S. constitutional system that had not existed in other countries when it was founded.
“In our Constitution ... the judiciary is a co-equal branch of government, separate from the others, with the authority to interpret the Constitution as law and strike down, obviously, acts of Congress or acts of the president,” he said.
“And that innovation doesn’t work if ... the judiciary is not independent,” he added. “Its job is to, obviously, decide cases but, in the course of that, check the excesses of Congress or the executive, and that does require a degree of independence.”
‘Nice to have options’: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene thinking about Senate or Georgia governor's race this weekend
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said today that she is considering running for the Senate or governor of Georgia.
Greene told reporters that with regard to the Senate race — in which the Republican nominee will face off against Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff — she will be “thinking it over and talking with my family this weekend,” adding that she also has “the opportunity to consider the governor’s race.”
“So, it’s really nice to have options, and I’ll make a decision based on where I think I can be most effective,” she said.
Republicans, who are wary of Greene, have been looking for a backup after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said he wouldn't make a bid for a Senate seat in the battleground state, which many Republicans see as crucial for expanding their three-seat majority next year.
Greene rebuffed those who doubt her chances of winning a general election.
“Yeah, they said the same thing about Donald Trump when he ran in 2016 and they said the same thing about him in 2024," Greene said in response to a reporter’s question about skeptics who have suggested her chances wouldn't endure beyond the primary.
Greene was first elected to the House in 2020.
DOJ says $4M ‘grant’ is funding El Salvador prison detentions as judge uses Trump’s words to undermine its argument
A federal judge questioned a Justice Department attorney this evening over whether Trump was telling the truth when he said he could secure the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, facility in El Salvador.
Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg of Washington, D.C., used Trump’s own words, as well as statements from White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, to chip away at the Trump administration’s contention that those incarcerated in CECOT were not in the constructive custody of the United States.
Trump said last week that he “could” have Garcia returned to the United States with a phone call, while Leavitt said the United States was paying El Salvador “approximately $6 million” to keep the men, and Noem said CECOT was “one of the tools in our tool kit” that the United States could use.
“Is the president not telling the truth, or could he secure the release of Mr. Abrego Garcia?” Boasberg asked Deputy Assistant Attorney General Abhishek Kambli, who was representing the Trump administration today.
“Was the president telling the truth” when he said he could pick up the phone and secure the release of Garcia or not? Boasberg asked.
Kambli responded, “That goes towards the president’s belief about influence he has.”
For the first time under oath, Boasberg was able to get information about the agreement — or lack thereof — between the United States and El Salvador regarding CECOT.
Boasberg asked the government about a $4.76 million grant, dated March 22, that was described as being for law enforcement needs related to the 238 alleged Tren de Aragua members recently deported to El Salvador.
Kambli confirmed that “grants were made” that “can be used for detention of these individuals.”
Boasberg said the plaintiffs had “a lot of facts in your favor” in arguing that the United States had what is called “constructive custody” of the men — which the Trump administration has argued in and out of court it does not have.
Boasberg has ordered the Trump administration to provide sworn declarations from administration officials by Friday about regarding who exactly has custody of the people at CECOT.
Boasberg has ordered attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union who, along with the nonprofit legal group Democracy Forward, are representing the plaintiffs, to review the information and to decide by Monday whether to request discovery — and if so, exactly what questions, depositions and documents they are requesting.
Boasberg will then decide what to order the Trump administration to produce, if necessary.
Judge blocks Asian migrants' deportation flight to Libya
A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order preventing migrants from being sent to Libya or any other third country after immigration attorneys filed an emergency motion today.
The United States reportedly plans to send a group of migrants to Libya as early as this week.
A U.S. military aircraft is expected to transport the migrants who are from the Philippines, Vietnam and Laos, among other countries, the motion said.
The plaintiffs are being set for removal “without any reasonable fear screening, let alone a fifteen-day window to file a motion to reopen with the immigration court to contest any negative reasonable fear determination,” according to the motion, which was filed in U.S District Court in Massachusetts.
DHS official says no arrests were made during visits to D.C.-area restaurants
A Department of Homeland Security official told NBC News that no arrests were made after agents visited a series of Washington, D.C.-area restaurants yesterday.
Multiple sources told NBC News yesterday that people identifying themselves as Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents visited restaurants across Washington. The agents had, in some cases, issued “Notice of Inspection” documents indicating that DHS agents would return in the coming days to obtain the I-9 documentation.
In response to NBC News' noting that no court-approved warrants were given to the restaurants to obtain employee-eligibility verification documents, the official suggested that the initial visits were “not enforcement operations” but visits to inquire about I-9 documentation.
Asked whether the restaurants were targeted for specific reasons, the DHS official responded: “These are not randomly conducted. It’s a case-by-case basis. To act like this was haphazard is uninformed.”
DHS has not provided information about why those specific eateries were targeted, and no allegations of illegal hirings have been levied against the.
The restaurants DHS targeted included eateries owned by José Andrés and the husband of CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell, as well as the bag shop founded by Jeff Zients, the former chief of staff to President Joe Biden.
The official indicated that the department will increase similar workplace operations.
“You should anticipate ramp-ups in workplace operations,” the official said. “We’re going to be enforcing the law. If you hire individuals who are in this country legally, all is good and things will be seamless. If you’re hiring people who are illegally and exploiting them, you’re going to have problems.”