Live updates: Trump meets with Cabinet officials as DHS funding fight drags on
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The House Ethics Committee will hold a rare public hearing this afternoon on theft and money laundering allegations against Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick.

What to know today ...
- TRUMP CABINET MEETING: At a Cabinet meeting today, President Donald Trump touted U.S. progress in the war with Iran, renewed attacks on the Somali community in Minnesota, and blamed Democrats for the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which is about to enter its sixth week.
- DHS SHUTDOWN: The glimmer of momentum earlier this week toward a deal on funding the Department of Homeland Security appears to have faded after the Senate failed to advance a full-year, House-passed spending bill last night in another mainly party-line vote. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said he will press forward with more votes ahead of an upcoming two-week recess.
- ETHICS HEARING: The House Ethics Committee will hold a rare public hearing on allegations against Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, the Democrat who was indicted on charges of stealing and laundering $5 million in federal relief funds for her re-election campaign.
Journalists ushered out of Cabinet meeting about 1.5 hours
The part of the Cabinet meeting that was open to journalists has concluded after about an hour and a half.
Trump says 'judges are really hurting this country'
While complaining about a judge that halted actions by the Trump administration, the president started to criticize judges more generally, including the Supreme Court justices.
"The judges are really hurting this country," he said. " Justice Roberts doesn't like what I say, but the judges are really hurting this country, and frankly, the justices, the Supreme Court, has really hurt our country, too."
The president has been criticizing the Supreme Court since it struck down his sweeping emergency tariffs in a 6-3 vote last month, a major blow to his economic agenda.
Trump says 'something should be done' about Minnesota attorney general
Trump said that "something should be done" about Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison. His comments came as he criticized immigrants from Somalia and railed against alleged fraud.
"The attorney general is a dirty cop," Trump said. "It’s my opinion. It’s only my opinion, and something should be done about him."
He did not specify what he thinks "should be done." NBC News has reached out to Ellison's office for comment.
Trump says boats were allowed to sail through the Strait of Hormuz

Trump said a "present" Iran gave the U.S. to prove their seriousness in the discussions to end the war continue was allowing eight oil tankers to sail through the Strait of Hormuz.
He said while watching Fox News, "They said something's unusual happening. There are eight boats that are going middle of the Hormuz strait — eight big tankers are going loaded up with oil right through, and I said, well, I guess they were right, and they were they were real, and I think they were Pakistani flagged. And I said, well, I guess we're dealing with the right people."
The president then said Iran allowed two more boats to go through, bringing the total to 10. Trump then told U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff during the meeting that he hoped he hadn't "screwed up" negotiations with Iran by revealing that information.
Trump says he used a mail-in ballot despite calling it 'cheating' because 'I'm president of the United States'

Asked why he used a mail-in ballot in a recent Florida special election, Trump said, "because I'm president of the United States." Trump has called mail-in voting "cheating."
"Because of the fact that I'm President of the United States, I did a mail in ballot for elections that took place in Florida, because I felt I should be here instead of being in the beautiful sunshine," he said.
Trump frequently spends his weekends in Florida.
Trump renews attacks on Somali community in Minnesota
Speaking about Minnesota and a long-running fraud case there, the president renewed his attacks on Somalian immigrants, telling reporters, "These people come from a crooked country, disgusting country, one of the worst countries in the world, acknowledged to be one of the worst countries."
Trump added, "They have no money. They have nothing. They come to our country, low IQs, and they rob us blind -- stupid people -- and they rob us blind."
The president has for months attacked Somalian immigrants, including Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., a Somali-American who came to the U.S. as a child.
Trump says suspending the gas tax is 'something we have in our pocket' if necessary
Asked by a reporter whether he would consider suspending the federal gas tax amid rising oil and gasoline prices, Trump said, "we've thought about it, I guess."
Trump pointed to the economy and stock market before the war started, adding that he said at the time that "we're going to take a little bit of a hit, a short term hit. It's going to end up going much higher than it was, in my opinion."
People "have talked" about suspending the gas tax, Trump said, adding, "It's something we have in our pocket if we think it's necessary."
The national gas price average is $3.98 per gallon, up from an average of $2.98 a month ago, according to AAA.
Trump complains that everyone has sued him but Jerome Powell hasn't faced legal trouble
Trump complained in his remarks at his Cabinet meeting that everyone sues him but that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell hasn't faced legal trouble.
"I get sued over a ballroom that’s going to be the most beautiful ballroom in the country, so desperately needed," he said, referring to his planned White House expansion.
"I get sued, Trump, but they don’t sue the guy whose interest rates are too high," the president said, repeating a continual criticism he makes of the Federal Reserve chair. "That’s why we call him 'too late.' His name is Jerome Powell. We call him Jerome 'too late' Powell. and he's done a terrible job," he said.
Trump, who called Powell a "moron," has ranted for months over a a renovation project at the central bank’s Washington, D.C., headquarters and how it's over budget. He pushed the Justice Department to investigate Powell over the cost overruns, which Powell called an “intimidation” tactic to press for cuts to interest rates. Powell recently said he wouldn't leave his job until the probe is closed.
"Nobody sues this guy," Trump continued. "And then when Jeanine Pirro, working with Pam [Bondi] and others, has the courage to sue to find out what happened to maybe $4 billion at a building that may never be occupied by Kevin Warsh, you may never get there," he said.
Federal reserve documents have estimated the total cost of renovations would be around $2.5 billion
Trump says having National Guard troops in cities is 'like training'
Trump said that deploying National Guard troops in cities is "like training."
"They love doing it," he said of the National Guard. "It's like training."
"This is actually training," he continued. "I never want to take them out of D.C. I mean, maybe somebody later on will do it."
The president sent National Guard troops to D.C. last summer as part of an effort to reduce crime, which he has repeated in other cities, such as Memphis. Earlier last year, he sent to Los Angeles and to assist Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel amid protests over immigration raids, which he then repeated in Portland and, briefly, the Chicago area.
Trump says Iran is 'begging to make a deal'

The president today told his Cabinet that Iranian leaders "are begging to make a deal."
"Not me," he added. "They're begging to make a deal, and anybody that saw what was happening over there would understand why they want to make a deal."
"I don’t know if we’ll be able to do that, I don’t know if we’re willing to do that," Trump added, repeating what he has told NBC News previously. "They should have done that four weeks ago. They should have done it two years ago, or they should have done it when we first came into office."
Trump's remarks come days after the U.S. delivered a 15-point peace plan to Iran via Pakistan, which Iranian leaders said they "responded negatively" to.
Trump Cabinet meeting kicks off
Trump's Cabinet meeting has kicked off.
This is the 10th Cabinet meeting of the president's second term in which part of the meeting has been open to journalists. The longest open portion of a Cabinet meeting stretched over three hours last year. His last Cabinet meeting was held in January.
Sen. Rand Paul throws cold water on GOP party-line bill for ICE, Iran war and elections overhaul
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., voiced deep skepticism about another party-line "reconciliation" bill as Republican leaders eye it to pass funding for ICE and the Iran war, as well as portions of the SAVE America Act.
“If they want to use reconciliation to spend more and borrow more, that would not be fiscally conservative and I wouldn’t support that,” Paul said.
He added that he opposes the Iran war and won't support funding it.
Paul also said he wants the package to be paid for, but lamented that Republicans don't seem to care about offsetting new spending anymore.
There are 53 Republican senators, meaning that if Paul opposes the bill they can only afford to lose two more before the bill collapses. Paul opposed Trump's "big, beautiful bill" last year.
The policy details behind DHS standoff — and a potential solution
The recent Democratic offer to Republicans on a deal to fund DHS “includes several key steps that the White House has already agreed to in principle, like officer identification, body-worn cameras, protecting sensitive locations from enforcement actions, and basic training standards,” a Democratic source familiar with the negotiations said.
Two Republican sources added that the offer also includes provisions the White House has rejected, such as requiring officers to remove masks and obtain judicial warrants to conduct immigration enforcement operations on private property.
“They’re asking for things that have already been turned down. So, it just seems like they’re going in circles,” Senate Majority Leader Thune, R-S.D., told reporters, rejecting the offer.
The underlying bill includes all of DHS funding except ICE’s enforcement and removal operations. Republicans argue that Democrats don’t get to demand policy reforms if they aren’t funding that portion of ICE. Democrats say the bill fully funds ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations, as well as Customs and Border Protection, which are conducting immigration enforcement, and thus they won’t support the legislation without some reforms.
“We didn’t invent this out of thin air. They murdered two Americans in cold blood,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn. “They are behaving illegally.”
Democrats are hoping that Republicans make a counteroffer.
Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., kept the door open to a compromise where the bill includes the policy reforms the White House has backed, while nixing those on masks and judicial warrants, which have hung up previous negotiations.
“That’d be very interesting,” Rounds told NBC News.
Airport wait times are now the longest in TSA history
As the partial government shutdown enters day 40, airports across the United States are facing hourslong lines with wait times that are now the longest in TSA history. The acting TSA administrator says many officers are struggling to support their families. “Some are sleeping in their cars, selling their blood and plasma and taking on second jobs to make ends meet,” she said. It comes as the transportation secretary warns things could get worse. NBC’s Priscilla Thompson and Aaron Gilchrist report for "TODAY."

China declines to confirm dates of Trump visit
China declined to confirm the dates of Trump’s upcoming visit to the country, which he said had been rescheduled for mid-May after being delayed so he could focus on the Iran war.
In a post on Truth Social, Trump said he would visit Beijing from May 14 to 15, about six weeks after the trip was originally planned. He added that he plans to host Chinese President Xi Jinping and Xi’s wife, Peng Liyuan, in Washington at a later date.
“China and the United States are maintaining communication regarding President Trump’s visit to China,” foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian told reporters in Beijing today.
China does not typically confirm the dates of such visits until shortly before they take place and had not confirmed the original dates of Trump’s trip, which the White House had said would last from March 31 to April 2.
Strike on alleged drug boat kills 4 in the Caribbean Sea, U.S. military says
The U.S. military said it carried out a strike yesterday on a boat accused of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean Sea, killing four people, as the Trump administration pushes forward with a monthslong campaign against alleged traffickers in Latin America while waging a war against Iran.
The latest attack brings the number of people who have been killed in boat strikes by the U.S. military to at least 163 since the Trump administration began targeting those it calls “narcoterrorists” in early September.
Trump's Cabinet meetings, by the numbers
Trump's Cabinet meeting today will be the 11th of his second term and the 10th that has been opened to the press.
The president posted about a closed Cabinet meeting last March.
All but one of the nine open potions of the Cabinet meetings this term have lasted over an hour, with three lasting over two hours. The longest, in August, lasted three hours and 17 minutes.
In his last public Cabinet meeting, in January, Trump notably did not answer questions from the press, a first for the open Cabinet meetings this term, and did not have all members of the Cabinet speak as he had in previous meetings.
Trump housing official seeks new DOJ prosecution of Letitia James
A Trump administration official made two criminal referrals yesterday against New York Attorney General Letitia James months after the Justice Department failed for a third time in its efforts to prosecute the longtime Trump target.
Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte alleged in the referrals that James committed insurance fraud, saying she may have falsified information on separate homeowner’s insurance applications regarding occupancy at two homes in Norfolk, Virginia, according to documents obtained by NBC News.
One referral was made to U.S. Attorney Jason Quiñones in the Southern District of Florida and the other to U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros in the Northern District of Illinois, as the insurance companies for the two respective applications, each for a different Norfolk property, are based in those jurisdictions.
Trump again calls on Republicans to end the filibuster
In a series of Truth Social posts this morning, Trump called on Republicans to terminate the filibuster in order to fund DHS and pass the SAVE America Act, an election overhaul bill that would require proof of citizenship to register to vote and require photo identification at the polls.
"When is 'enough, enough' for our Republican Senators," he said in one of the posts.
"There comes a time when you must do what should have been done a long time ago, and something which the Lunatic Democrats will do on day one, if they ever get the chance," he continued. "TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER, and get our airports, and everything else, moving again. Also, add the complete, all five items, SAVE AMERICA ACT items."
Republicans have so far resisted Trump's calls to end the filibuster, a delay tactic that effectively requires most bills in the Senate to have 60 votes, rather than a simple majority, to advance.
Despite optimism earlier this week that they would be able to reach a deal to fund DHS, the Senate failed again last night to advance a spending bill.
Trump to hold Cabinet meeting this morning
Trump will hold a Cabinet meeting this morning, his first since the Department of Homeland Security partially shut down nearly six weeks ago.
This will be the president's first Cabinet meeting with his newly confirmed homeland security secretary, Markwayne Mullin, who replaced Kristi Noem amid mounting criticism of her leadership.
Trump's Cabinet meetings often go on for hours.
Sen. Bernie Sanders backs Brian Poindexter in bid to flip Ohio district
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has endorsed Democrat Brian Poindexter in Ohio’s 7th Congressional District, lending national star power that could elevate the union ironworker in a May primary and in a general election that on paper favors Republicans.
“Brian Poindexter is an ironworker who has spent his life fighting for working people — as a union organizer, a city council member, and a coach in his community,” Sanders said in a statement first shared with NBC News. “He started working at 15 and knows firsthand what it’s like when the deck is stacked against you. At a time when billionaires are getting richer while working families can’t make ends meet, we don’t need more politicians who will sell out workers’ rights.”
Poindexter, who serves on the City Council in the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park, is competing for the nomination to face Rep. Max Miller, the Republican incumbent, in November. Miller won his second term by 15 points in 2024, and the northeast Ohio district was made slightly more Republican in recent redistricting. But the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has identified it as a district in play.
“Senator Sanders has spent his entire career fighting for the working class, and his endorsement means the world to me and to this campaign,” Poindexter said. “I grew up in a working family. I know what it’s like to live paycheck to paycheck, and I know that the people in Ohio’s 7th District are tired of being an afterthought in Washington. Senator Sanders understands that — and together, we’re going to fight for an economy that works for all Ohioans.”
While Poindexter already has secured support from several key labor groups, including the Ohio AFL-CIO, the Democratic primary ballot features seven other names, most notably Ed FitzGerald, the former Cuyahoga County executive and the unsuccessful Democratic nominee for governor in 2014. Others running in the primary include Keith Mundy, a past candidate for other congressional seats in Ohio, and Scott Schulz, a former school board member.
Ohio’s primary is May 5.
Trump administration to pay Michael Flynn in settlement over earlier prosecution
Michael Flynn and the Justice Department have agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser, over his claims of political targeting in a 2017 case in which he initially pleaded guilty.
The parties notified a federal judge yesterday in Florida that they had reached a settlement. The amount was not disclosed. Flynn had sued for $50 million in 2023, alleging malicious prosecution and abuse of process.
A judge previously tossed Flynn’s lawsuit in 2024. His attorneys filed an amended complaint last June, claiming the U.S. “improperly and politically targeted General Flynn because of his lawful association with the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald J. Trump.”
House ethics panel to hold rare public hearing on Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick allegations
The House Ethics Committee will hold a rare pubic hearing following its investigation into criminal allegations against Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., this afternoon.
Cherfilus-McCormick was indicted last November on charges that she stole and laundered $5 million in federal relief funds and used the money for her congressional campaign. Separately, the House Ethics Committee, which is made up of an equal number of Republicans and Democrats, conducted its own investigation of the congresswoman. She pleaded not guilty to the charges.
In December, a House ethics investigative subcommittee tasked with investigating Cherfilus-McCormick adopted a 27-count statement of alleged violations against the congresswoman. The statement said the panel had “reviewed over 33,000 documents totaling hundreds of thousands of pages of materials and conducted 28 witness interviews” before making the determination.
With today's hearing, a separate adjudicatory subcommittee now aims to determine whether any of the counts have been proven by the evidence.
The bipartisan Ethics Committee started looking into Cherfilus-McCormick in 2023 after a referral from the nonpartisan Office of Congressional Ethics, which is now known as the Office of Congressional Conduct.
Since 1991, there have only been four instances of the committee reaching the adjudicatory stage and only two such hearings. The last, in 2010, focused on financial and fundraising misconduct allegations against late Rep. Charlie Rangel, who was found guilty by the ethics panel and censured by the House.
Rangel acknowledged that he had made "serious mistakes," but blamed his own carelessness rather than any intentional corruption and said the probe was politically motivated.
Thune to press forward ahead of two-week recess after another failed DHS funding vote
The glimpse of momentum earlier this week toward a deal on funding the Department of Homeland Security appears to have faded after the Senate failed once again to advance the full-year, House-passed spending bill last night.
The 54-46 vote fell short of the 60 needed to advance the measure. Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania was the only Democrat to vote in favor of doing so.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., plans to continue holding votes to advance the GOP’s proposal, and he said he has not made a final decision about whether senators will leave for their two-week recess at the end of the week if no deal is reached.
Before last night's vote, Senate Democrats sent Republicans a counteroffer to fund DHS, which included policy changes to immigration enforcement operations. Republicans rejected the proposal, calling it “not even close to real.”
Thune said Democrats were “asking for things that have already been turned down, so it just seems like they’re going in circles.” He said there is “no point” in submitting another Republican counteroffer to them.