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Live updates: R<strong>f</strong>K Jr. sworn in as health secretary; Trump moves to <strong>f</strong>ire probationary employees
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LIVE COVERAGE
Updated 21 minutes ago

Live updates: Robert f. Kennedy Jr. is sworn in as health secretary; Trump administration moves to fire probationary employees

On Capitol Hill, President Donald Trump’s nominee for education secretary, Linda McMahon, faced a grilling from senators at her confirmation hearing.
Linda McMahon sits in a chair and smiles
Linda McMahon, President Donald Trump's nominee for education secretary, in the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington on Dec. 9.Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images

What's going on today

Trump administration tells federal agencies to fire probationary employees

Ted ObergTed Oberg is an investigative reporter at NBC4 Washington.

Megan Lebowitz

Ted Oberg and Megan Lebowitz

Reporting from Washington

The Trump administration began a mass firing of federal workers today.

Office of Personnel Management officials met with agency leaders today and advised them to dismiss probationary employees, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Hundreds of thousands of people could be affected, according to data from the Office of Personnel Management, although the exact number who will be terminated was not immediately clear.

Read the full story here.

Trump won't say what Russia should give up when asked about negotiations with Ukraine

At this evening's news conference with Modi, Trump offered a meandering response to a reporter's question about what Russia should give up after his administration recently said Ukraine may have to cede territory to end the war between the two countries.

"Russia has gotten themselves into something that I think they wish they didn't," Trump said.

Without providing specifics, he said it "is too early to say what’s going to happen. Maybe Russia will give up a lot, maybe they won’t, and it’s all dependent on what is going to happen."

Trump also said negotiation "really hasn’t started" but defended his administration's comments that it was unlikely that Ukraine would become a NATO member.

"I’ve heard that Russia would never accept that, and I think Ukraine knew that," he said.

“So that’s the way it is, and I think that’s the way it’s going to have to be," he added.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said yesterday that it was "unrealistic" that Ukraine's borders would be returned to what they were before 2014.

Modi says he aims to 'Make India Great Again'

At a joint news conference this evening, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi referred to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan, saying, “Borrowing an expression from America, our vision for a developed India is to 'Make India Great Again,' or 'MIGA.'”

Modi suggested that the two countries’ adopting nation-specific offshoots of the motto gives rise to a "mega partnership for prosperity."

14 states file a lawsuit arguing Elon Musk’s authority at DOGE is unconstitutional

Reporting from Washington

A group of 14 states sued Musk and Trump today, arguing that the authority the White House granted to Musk and DOGE is unconstitutional.

The suit, filed by Democratic attorneys general from states like Arizona, Michigan and Rhode Island, takes aim at the magnitude and scale of Musk’s power, noting that DOGE has led the Trump administration’s efforts to dramatically reduce the size of the federal workforce, dismantle entire agencies and access sensitive data.

“The founders of this country would be outraged that, 250 years after our nation overthrew a king, the people of this country—many of whom have fought and died to protect our freedoms—are now subject to the whims of a single unelected billionaire,” Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said in a statement.

Read the full story here.

forest Service plans to dismiss at least 3,400 workers, union says

The U.S. forest Service plans to terminate at least 3,400 positions, a union official said today.

Dennis Lapcewich, communications chair for the National federation of federal Employees' forest Service Council, said the agency sent a list of affected employees to the union today.

"We're hearing conflicting reports that notices are going out today. We're hearing reports that some notices have already gone out," he said this afternoon after a meeting of the union's leadership.

The forest Service, which is part of the Agriculture Department, employs more than 30,000 people, according to its website.

Lapcewich, who is also a vice president of the forest Service Council’s Washington locals, said the union expects the agency to notify the affected employees over the next two days.

The forest Service did not respond to a request for comment.

Bloomberg first reported on the agency's dismissal plans.

Trump says there will be meeting next week in Saudi Arabia about ending the war in Ukraine

Megan Lebowitz

Alexandra Bacallao

Megan Lebowitz and Alexandra Bacallao

Trump referred to a meeting next week about the war in Ukraine.

“Next week there’s a meeting in Saudi Arabia, not with myself, or President Putin, but with top officials, and Ukraine will be a part of it, too, and we’re going to see if we can end that war," Trump said in remarks alongside Modi.

He did not say which top officials would be at the meeting.

‘YOLO McConnell’: former Senate leader emerges as lone GOP voice against key Trump nominees

Scott Wong, Sahil Kapur and frank Thorp V

Reporting from Washington, D.C.

As the longest-serving Senate leader in history, Republican Mitch McConnell had a reputation for keeping his rank-and-file members in line and frustrating Democrats by relentlessly using procedural tactics to block their agenda.

Now out of leadership and wrapping up what is likely to be his last term in office, McConnell, 82, of Kentucky, is free from the constraints of leadership and the prospect of facing voters again. He has now voted against three of Trump’s high-profile nominees and publicly criticized the tariffs at the center of his economic agenda.

Read the full story here.

After Kennedy’s confirmation, Trump establishes ‘Make America Healthy Again’ commission

Kennedy, the recently confirmed health and human services secretary, will chair a new commission focused on addressing chronic disease.

Trump established the commission today with an executive order he issued just hours after the Senate confirmed Kennedy. The Make America Healthy Again Commission, as it’s called, will consist of several high-ranking federal officials, including the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the commissioner of the food and Drug Administration and the directors of the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Read the full story here.


Education Department fired at least 60 employees this week

The Education Department began terminating dozens of probationary employees across several divisions yesterday. 

At least 60 probationary employees — those who have worked for less than a year — were fired this week, according to the American federation of Government Employees, a union representing Education Department staff members. 

A department spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment today. 

Staff members were terminated in the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, the Office of Communications and Outreach, the Office for Civil Rights and the federal Student Aid office, according to current and former staff members and copies of termination letters obtained by NBC News. The staff members asked not to be named for fear of retaliation.

Three terminated employees said they were informed through email. They had not yet received additional paperwork that would be necessary to file for unemployment, nor had they been presented anything to sign for severance terms or information about how long benefits like health insurance will continue.

Trump told reporters yesterday he wanted to close the Education Department, and a federal judge lifted a pause on the so-called fork in the Road buyout offer presented to much of the government workforce. Three department employees said they received notices last night that the offer — which leadership said required them to waive legal rights to take it — was no longer available.

Linda McMahon appeared before a Senate committee today to be considered for education secretary and said that the Trump administration would present a plan to Congress on changing the department but that there were some aspects that could be eliminated without lawmakers’ approval.

The terminations were devastating for employees. 

“I’m someone who really believes in education,” a terminated employee said. “I attended Title I schools. I received a Pell Grant. I received public student loan forgiveness after years of working as a teacher — the department has given me so much.”

Another person fired yesterday said they depleted their savings to move across the country with their spouse for the job at the department. They considered it their “dream job” and worried that the terminations will hobble the agency.

Meanwhile, some staff members still at the department said they have been instructed not to communicate with outside organizations that they normally correspond with, such as education trade groups, schools or people seeking updates on civil rights complaints they filed, effectively bringing the work of some employees to a halt.

“We’re all just sitting here twiddling our thumbs, waiting for the department to disappear,” a current employee said.

Vance, Rubio and bipartisan delegation of lawmakers to attend Munich Security Conference this weekend

Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and a bipartisan group of lawmakers will take part in the Munich Security Conference this weekend.

Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., will lead a congressional delegation of 16 other lawmakers at the conference, which is a forum for international security policy.

The other lawmakers are: Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas; Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.; Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska; Joni Ernst, R-Iowa; Adam Schiff, D-Calif.; Andy Kim, D-N.J.; Roger Wicker, R-Miss.; Mark Warner, D-Va.; Michael Bennet, D-Colo.; Chris Coons, D-Del.; Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii; Thom Tillis, R-N.C.; Chris Van Hollen, D-Md.; Eric Schmitt, R-Mo.; and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich.; as well as Rep. William Timmons, R-S.C.

Lisa Murkowski introduces legislation to officially designate North America's highest mountain as 'Denali'

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, introduced legislation today to officially designate the country's highest peak as Denali.

Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office to revert the name of the mountain in Alaska back to Mount McKinley in honor of President William McKinley.

"This isn’t a political issue — Alaskans from every walk of life have long been advocating for this mountain to be recognized by its true name," Murkowski said in a news release. "That’s why today I once again introduced legislation that would officially keep this mountain’s quintessential name, 'Denali.'"

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, also co-sponsored the bill.

Musk spotted in Oval Office during Trump and Modi's comments to reporters

Megan Lebowitz

Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner

Megan Lebowitz and Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner

Musk was in the Oval Office during Trump and Modi's comments to reporters before their private meeting, his second such appearance in the Oval Office in as many days.

During the media availability, the two leaders addressed the countries' relationship and took a few questions from reporters.

Musk and Modi met earlier today, Modi said on X.

Trump said the leaders would discuss trade, a conversation that comes as Trump is implementing recent tariffs on countries around the world.

"We have, I think, some very big things to talk about," Trump said in the Oval Office. "Number one is, they’re going to be purchasing a lot of our oil and gas."

Sen. John Thune to file motion to advance Kash Patel's nomination to be fBI director Tuesday

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., will move Tuesday to start the process to consider Kash Patel’s nomination to be fBI director. Thune will file cloture around 6 p.m. Tuesday on Patel’s nomination, which was reported out of the Judiciary Committee along party lines, 12-10, earlier today.

Democrats are expected to force dilatory procedural votes Monday afternoon before Thune can make his move, but they will not affect the outcome.

The move means the procedural cloture motion vote related to Patel’s nomination will be next Thursday and his final confirmation vote will be just two hours after that, so he is expected to be confirmed next Thursday.

Musk shares meme deriding those who benefit from federal programs as 'parasite class'

Reporting from New York

Musk posted a meme yesterday evening describing Americans who benefit from federal programs as "the parasite class."

"Watching Trump slash federal programs knowing it doesn't affect you because you're not a member of the Parasite Class," the meme read.

Musk commented: "Why 90% of America loves @DOGE," pointing to the Department of Government Efficiency that Trump has tasked him to run.

Musk, the world's richest man, is the beneficiary of billions from lucrative contracts his companies, such as SpaceX and Tesla, have with the federal government. In less than a month since Trump took office, Musk has run roughshod through federal agencies as part of Trump's effort to rapidly reshape the government in his image.

"Who are you to call someone else a member of the parasite class," posted Everett Kelley, president of the American federation of Government Employees, linking to a story about the State Department's plans to purchase $400 million of armored Tesla Cybertrucks.

Congressional Democrats, advocates rally against DOGE outside VA headquarters

Reporting from Washington, D.C.

Democrats from the House and the Senate, along with representatives from affected labor unions, including the American federation of Government Employees and the Service Employees International Union, joined forces outside the Department of Veterans Affairs to call out Trump and Elon Musk’s DOGE efforts to reduce their workforce. 

“Nine million veterans are watching you give them the middle finger, and we’re not going to stand for it,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said. “We are going to fight Elon Musk’s plan to slash and trash the VA in the biggest power grab and heist of valuable information and money in our nation’s history.”

Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., called out what he said is Republican hypocrisy.

“These are the same politicians and billionaires who never miss a photo-op with veterans. These same ones who wave the flags and talk about supporting our troops,” Takano said. “But now, they are trying to destroy the very system our veterans rely on. They’re treating our nation’s veterans and VA employees like disposable parts, instead of the essential caregivers that they are.”

HHS announces RfK welcome ceremony: 'Selfies are welcome!'

Reporting from New York

fresh off Kennedy's confirmation as secretary of health and human services, the department announced a private welcome ceremony for him Tuesday at agency headquarters in Washington.

The announcement, which came in an email to HHS employees obtained by NBC News, noted that the agency "encourage[s] all staff to attend in person," adding that Kennedy will speak at the event.

"Immediately following his remarks, Secretary Kennedy will personally meet and greet" those on hand, the email continued. "Selfies are welcome!"

RfK Jr. defends vaccine record, praises dismantling of USAID

Kennedy defended his record on vaccines this afternoon in remarks after he was sworn-in as health secretary, seeking to assuage a key concern many Democrats expressed during the confirmation process.

Responding to a reporter's question about concerns from Americans over vaccines, Kennedy said his approach is "common sense."

"Vaccines should be tested. They should be safe. Everybody should have informed consent. People are reacting because they hear things about me that aren't true. They hear characterizations of things that I've said that are simply not true, and when they hear what I have to say actually about vaccines, everybody supports it," he said.

Kennedy was questioned during his Senate confirmation process about his past activism opposing vaccines, his work as chairman at an anti-vaccine nonprofit group and his promotion of false theories that vaccines are tied to autism. He was also criticized over his role in a measles outbreak in Samoa.

Kennedy also said he called Trump during the dismantling of USAID, arguing that the foreign assistance agency has drifted from its original mission.

"My uncle started USAID in 1961 for humanitarian purposes, to put our country on this side of the poor. It has been captured by the military-industrial complex. It has become a sinister propagator of totalitarianism and war across the globe," Kennedy said. "Very few people understand how sinister this agency really is."

Kennedy said Trump saw what was going on in USAID and stood up to it.

"We want to do the same thing with the institutions that are stealing the health our children," Kennedy said.

Kennedy said he wants government agencies to stress "unimpeded science, rather than the kind of product that is coming out of those agencies today."

Putin goes from pariah to negotiating partner as Trump announces plans to meet

for a decade, Russian President Vladimir Putin has been the West’s pariah after he first annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and then launched a full-scale invasion of the country. Now, Trump has given Putin a big boost — and possibly re-entry onto the global stage — by offering him much of what he has been asking for in Ukraine.

While Trump has made it no secret that he planned a radical departure from Joe Biden’s goal of an ostensible outright Ukrainian victory, his comments yesterday — including that Russia “fought for that land and they lost a lot of soldiers” — startled observers and apparently, governments across Europe.

Read the full story.

Judge blocks parts of Trump's executive orders targeting transgender people

fiona Glisson

Nnamdi Egwuonwu

fiona Glisson and Nnamdi Egwuonwu

U.S. District Judge Brendan Hurson said he will grant a request by a group of transgender people and their parents for a temporary restraining order on parts of Trump's executive orders that define sex as biological and stop federal funding of transgender medical care for people under age 19, saying they had “met the standard for a temporary restraining order.”

Hurson said Trump's orders could harm the lives of transgender youths and entire communities if hospitals lose significant funding. He added that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed in their legal challenge.

“Stopping care in the middle of receiving it — any care, really — casts doubt on whether the goals are to protect the recipients of the care,” Hurson said at the hearing.

During the hearing, Joshua Brock, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, noted that Trump's orders came only after several bills that would limit transgender health care for minors failed to pass in Congress.

“It seems like pretty strong evidence that the executive order is doing what Congress is trying to do and has not succeeded,” Brock said. 

Read the full story here.

RfK Jr. sworn in as HHS secretary

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch sworn in Kennedy this afternoon. In remarks leading up to the swearing-in, Trump praised Kennedy, saying he would restore Americans' trust.

"He’s absolutely committed to getting dangerous chemicals out of our environment and out of our food supply and getting the American people the facts and the answers that we deserve after years in which our public health system has squandered the trust of our citizens," Trump said.

"It was a very tough, it was a very nasty group of people that were after him, but he was tougher and he was smarter than they are, and that's why he's here today," Trump added.

Senate advances Kelly Loeffler's nomination for Small Business Assoication administrator

The Senate voted along party lines, 51-43, to advance Kelly Loeffler’s nomination to be Small Business Association administrator.

Her final confirmation vote will be no sooner than Tuesday. 

Trump: I'd 'love' to have Russia back in the G7

Trump lamented the fact that Russia was thrown out of the G8 international group as he answered questions from reporters in the Oval Office.

"I'd love to have them back," he said. "I think it was a mistake to throw them out."

Russia was indefinitely suspended from the group, which is made up of the world's largest economies, in 2014, after it annexed Crimea.

"Look, it's not a question of liking Russia or not liking Russia," Trump added. "It was the G8, and you know, I said: 'What are you doing? You guys, all you talk about is Russia, and they should be sitting at the table.'"

He also said that Russian President Vladimir Putin "would love to be back," and that if President Barack Obama hadn't united with other G8 nations to remove Russia, it might never have invaded Ukraine.

"Obama and a couple of other people made a mistake, and they got Russia out," Trump said. "It's very possible that if that was the G8, you wouldn't have had the problem with Ukraine. And if I was president, you definitely wouldn't have had the problem with Ukraine."

Trump questions whether Mitch McConnell had polio

During a briefing with reporters in the Oval Office, Trump expressed doubt that Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., ever had polio.

"I have no idea if he had polio," Trump told reporters after he was asked about McConnell's vote not to confirm Robert f. Kennedy Jr. for Health and Human Services secretary.

Kennedy is a high-profile vaccine skeptic who has previously questioned the effectiveness of polio vaccines.

"I’m a survivor of childhood polio," McConnell said in a statement explaining his vote today. "In my lifetime, I’ve watched vaccines save millions of lives from devastating diseases across America and around the world. I will not condone the re-litigation of proven cures, and neither will millions of Americans who credit their survival and quality of life to scientific miracles."

Trump went on to say that McConnell "shouldn't have been [Senate] leader."

"He’s not equipped mentally," Trump said. "He wasn’t equipped. 10 years ago, mentally, in my opinion, he’d let the Republican Party go to hell. If I didn’t come along, the Republican Party wouldn’t even exist right now. Mitch McConnell never really had it. He had an ability to raise money because of his position as leader, which anybody could do, you could, and that’s saying a lot."

Trump falsely claims the 2020 election was rigged

Trump falsely claimed to reporters today that the 2020 election was rigged, but said the 2024 election was "too big to rig."

Trump made the remark while detailing his efforts to work with Putin during his first term, efforts that he said were sidelined by Covid and "a rigged election."

Trump has long sowed doubts about the 2020 election. In contrast, Trump has largely stood by the results of the 2024 election.

"Now we have an election that was too big to rig," Trump said. "My whole theme was too big to rig, and they tried, but they didn't pull it off."

Trump says he believes Putin 'wants peace'

Trump said again that he believes that Putin "wants peace," telling reporters the Russian leader would tell him if that was not the case.

"I think he wants peace. I think he would tell me if he didn’t," Trump said.

Trump first shared that sentiment yesterday after speaking to both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy by phone, the former conversation lasting "over an hour."

"I think we’re on the way to getting peace. I think President Putin wants peace and President Zelenskyy wants peace, and I want peace," Trump said.

Trump says the IRS will be investigated by DOGE 'like everybody else'

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

Asked by a reporter in the Oval Office if the Department of Government Efficiency is planning to close the IRS, Trump said he doesn’t expect it but that the agency will be “looked at like everybody else.” 

“Just about everybody’s going to be looked at,” Trump said. "They’re doing a hell of a job. It’s an amazing job they’re doing.” 

Trump then called DOGE a “force of super-geniuses,” and said the agency is “building.” 

Trump claims Russia invaded Ukraine because of Biden's comments on Ukraine and NATO

Trump said in the Oval Office today that Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 because of comments that Biden had made about Ukraine potentially joining NATO.

Trump said he believes the war started "because Biden went out and said that they could join NATO, and he shouldn't have said that."

"As soon as he said that, I said, you know what? You're going to have a war now. And I was right about that. This is a war that would have never happened if I were president," he said.

Biden said in 2021, before the war began, that Ukraine ultimately joining NATO was in Ukraine's hands. Biden later said in 2023 that Ukraine wasn't ready to join the alliance and said certain conditions had to be met first.

Trump maintains Canada is a 'serious contender to be our 51st state'

Trump, while assailing Canada's reliance on the U.S. for military and economic support, repeated that the country would benefit from being a part of the U.S.

"I spoke to Governor Trudeau on numerous occasions, and we'll see what happens," Trump said, referring to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Trump claimed that Canada has very little leverage in negotiations with the United States, maintaining that the U.S. has little need for Canadian products and claiming the country "survives" off of American support.

"Why would we pay $200 billion a year in subsidies to Canada when they’re not a state, you do that for a state, but you don’t do that for somebody else’s country. So I think Canada is going to be a very serious contender to be our 51st state ongoing."

Trudeau has panned the proposal.

Judge extends by one week an order preventing USAID employees from being placed on leave

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has extended a court order blocking the Trump administration from placing thousands of USAID workers on administrative leave as part of an alleged effort to dismantle the agency.

U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols entered a temporary restraining order last week reinstating hundreds of USAID employees who had already been placed on paid administrative leave and prohibiting the government from making further cuts to the agencies active workforce. Nichols extended his order to run through midnight on friday, feb. 21, after a three-hour hearing today.

Nichols will issue a written order on federal employee labor unions’ request for a full preliminary injunction that would permanently halt the USAID cuts while litigation proceeds before the temporary restraining order expires, he said. 

Nichols asked the government to provide additional information on what steps it will take to ensure safety of overseas USAID employees placed on leave and what benefits overseas employees will retain should they choose to remain at their posts while on leave.

Trump admits that his tariffs may lead to short-term price increases

Trump admitted in the Oval Office this afternoon that his decision to impose tariffs on all major U.S. trading partners may lead to prices going up in the short term.

"I think what's going to go up is jobs are going to go up, and prices could go up somewhat short-term, but prices will also go down," he said when asked by a reporter who voters should hold responsible for price increases.

"And I think the farmers are going to be helped by this very much, because product is being dumped into our country, and our farmers are getting hurt very badly by the last administration," he said.

Commerce Secretary nominee Howard Lutnick, who was next to Trump in the Oval Office, said that they're aiming for the tariffs to take effect around April 1.

U.S. attorney who oversaw Eric Adams prosecution resigns

Tom Winter and Jonathan Dienst

Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Danielle Sassoon has resigned, a senior official tells NBC News. 

Sassoon was leading the prosecution of New York City Mayor Eric Adams. On Monday, Justice Department leaders appointed by Trump ordered Sassoon and her team to dismiss the corruption charges against Adams.

Sassoon's decision came in a two-sentence resignation letter. It does not refer to the directive from the Department of Justice about Adams, a senior official says.

The case against Adams, according to the docket, has not yet been dropped.

Read the full story here.

Senate advances Howard Lutnick's nomination for secretary of commerce

The Senate voted along party lines, 52-45, to advance Howard Lutnick’s nomination to be secretary of commerce. His final confirmation vote is set for next week.

The Senate is now voting on a procedural motion to advance Kelly Loeffler’s nomination to be SBA administrator.

Jim Tressel says he isn’t thinking about running for Ohio governor — but he isn’t ruling it out

CLEVELAND — Jim Tressel, a former college football coach and Ohio’s soon-to-be lieutenant governor, said today that he never envisioned accepting such a position — and that, despite heightened speculation, he has not thought about running for governor in 2026.

But Tressel, speaking by telephone with NBC News, acknowledged that he also never thought he would be the head coach of a Big Ten football program or president of a state university. And he notably did not rule out seeking another job once seen as beyond his reach and limits.

Read the full story.

Defense contractor stresses that it’s not its sister news organization

After Elon Musk condemned U.S. spending at Thompson Reuters Special Services on Thursday, the government contractor stressed their independence from the news organization that is their sister company.

“Thomson Reuters Special Services (TRSS), LLC is a separate U.S. legal entity governed by an independent Board of Directors, that operates independently from Reuters News. Recent public discourse has conflated these entities and has inaccurately represented the nature of the business between TRSS and the Department of Defense,” Steve Rubley, CEO of Thomson Reuters Special Services, said in a statement.

Both TRSS and Reuters News share the parent company Thompson Reuters, which also sells Westlaw, a service with legal and regulatory information, and other products to law firms, accounting firms, and corporations.

“TRSS has provided software and information services to U.S. government agencies across successive administrations for decades, to assist in identifying and preventing fraud, supporting public safety, and advancing justice,” Rubley said in his statement.

After an X user called the spending “large scale social deception," Musk commented “just wow” in response.

Contracted during Trump’s first term, the organization's work focused on research into preventing cyberattacks and phishing engineered through social connections. 

TRSS has earned more than $13 million in government contracts over the last 15 years at a number of agencies. The news agency has taken in far less, earning more than $3 million in government spending — mostly for selling its news to the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which distributes news programming around the world.

Trump announces plan to impose ‘fair and reciprocal’ tariffs against American trading partners, including allies

Trump signed a memorandum calling for “fair and reciprocal” trade tariffs on all major U.S. trading partners, including longtime allies.

The memo calls on Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Jamieson Greer, Trump’s official global trade representative, to assess within 180 days on a country-by-country report whether “remedies” that ensure reciprocal trade relations are necessary.

Read the full story here.

Senators are voting on a motion to advance Howard Lutnick's nomination for secretary of commerce

The Senate is voting now on a procedural motion to advance Howard Lutnick’s nomination to serve as secretary of commerce. The vote needs a simple majority to pass. 

After the Senate votes on Lutnick, they will vote on another procedural motion to advance Kelly Loeffler’s nomination to be SBA administrator.

These will be the last votes of the week, and Lutnick’s and Loeffler’s final confirmation votes are slated for next week.

Markey says Loeffler would dismantle Small Business Administration

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., said former Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., will carry out Trump and Musk’s “illegal bidding” and cut off funding for the Small Business Administration at the expense of "working-class people" if confirmed as the agency's next administrator.

"I'm concerned for the more than 722,000 small businesses who call Massachusetts home and who last year relied on $708 million in loans from the Small Business Administration," Markey said.

Markey said Loeffler would prioritize the agenda of Trump and Musk over the needs of "the more than 34 million small businesses" nationwide that rely on the agency for support. He noted that Musk's DOGE commission has already begun terminating employees at the agency.

"Unfortunately, we by now are able to look back and see the totality across the EPA, across NIH, across the president's call for the dismantlement of the Department of Education — what the real storyline is here," Markey said. "My goal is to try to protect that SBA that we've all known on a bipartisan basis for generations."

In further explaining his “no” vote, Markey also criticized Loeffler for her “unapologetic defense” of Trump’s executive orders, which he said “supersede the law of the land,” and her support of Trump's Jan. 6 pardons.

Issa Rae cancels sold-out Kennedy Center show following Trump takeover

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

Actor and producer Issa Rae announced the cancellation of her sold-out Kennedy Center show in an Instagram post this afternoon. 

Thanking fans for their support, Rae said she could not proceed with the event “due to what I believe is an infringement on the values of an institution that has faithfully celebrated artists of all backgrounds through all mediums.”

The Fashion Awards 2024 Presented by Pandora - Arrivals
Issa Rae attends at the Royal Albert Hall on Dec. 2, 2024 in London.Gareth Cattermole / Getty Images for BfC file

The post comes after Trump fired longtime center President Deborah f. Rutter and appointed Richard Grenell, who served as the ambassador to Germany in Trump’s first administration, to take her place. 

Trump announced yesterday on Truth Social he had been appointed as chair of the Kennedy Center, saying, “It is a Great Honor to be Chairman of The Kennedy Center, especially with this amazing Board of Trustees.” The vote came after Trump appointed several new nominees to the board and removed nominees appointed by former President Joe Biden. 

Jason Robert Brown, a theater composer responsible for scoring popular musicals like “The Last five Years” and “Parade,” took to Instagram to say “Parade” will play at the Kennedy Center in August in spite of the changes. 

The musical is about the trial of Leo frank, a Jewish man who was lynched after wrongfully being convicted of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl in 1913. The musical focuses on themes of antisemitic rhetoric in America. 

“It’s all ridiculous and comical but I’ll point out that PARADE is playing at the Kennedy Center in August and we’re not changing One Word,” Brown wrote.

India has ‘good vibes’ with Trump, and Modi is trying to keep it that way

from tariff concessions to accepting deportees, India is pulling out all the stops to win favor with Trump as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits the White House today.

India, the world’s largest democracy, enters a second Trump term in a relatively strong position. Trump and Modi, India’s Hindu nationalist leader of more than a decade, have similar worldviews and a personal rapport that goes back years, and India has become a strategic U.S. partner in countering its neighbor China.

Read the full story here.

Tim Walz not ruling out Senate run

A source close to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz confirms to NBC News that he has not ruled out a run for Senate following Sen. Tina Smith’s announcement that she's not seeking re-election. The source said he’s thinking about it and also thinking about a third term as governor.

Also notable is that Lt. Gov. Peggy flanagan announced in a post on X this morning that she plans to run for the Senate seat.

"I love Minnesota and my intention is to run for U.S. Senate and continue to serve the people of this state," she said. "I’ll make a formal announcement later this month. In the meantime, I’m talking with community and family and friends. I will have more to say soon."

White House terminates top federal prosecutors amid DOJ, fBI purge

Ryan J. Reilly, Lisa Rubin and Rebecca Shabad

The White House terminated multiple U.S. attorneys yesterday evening amid a period of upheaval at the Justice Department initiated by Trump, who was himself a criminal defendant in two separate federal cases until they were dropped after his election in November.

The full extent of the terminations was not clear as of this morning. The White House did not respond to a request for comment, and a Justice Department spokesman could not immediately provide a figure for how many of the nation’s 93 U.S. attorneys in federal court districts across the country were impacted.

The departure of the remaining U.S. attorneys who were nominated by former President Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate was expected at some point, but their immediate terminations by the White House were a departure from history. In the past, politically appointed U.S. attorneys had been asked to resign by the Justice Department.

Read the full story here.

Baldwin raises concern about McMahon over WWE sex abuse suit

After pressing McMahon on rules schools must follow to investigate sexual misconduct under Title IX, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisc., brought up an ongoing lawsuit that named the education secretary nominee as a defendant.

The suit alleges that when McMahon was president of WWE, she turned a blind eye to child sex abuse committed by an employee of the wrestling promotion. An attorney for McMahon this week called the lawsuit "baseless."

“This civil lawsuit based upon thirty-plus year-old allegations is filled with scurrilous lies, exaggerations, and misrepresentations regarding Linda McMahon,” attorney Laura Brevetti said in a statement to NBC News. “Ms. McMahon will vigorously defend against this baseless lawsuit and without doubt ultimately succeed.”

Baldwin noted that as part of running the Department of Education, McMahon would oversee its enforcement of civil rights laws and how schools address crime on campus.

“I am so concerned about whether sexual assault survivors on campus can trust you to support them,” Baldwin said. 

“They certainly can trust me to support them,” McMahon responded. “I have a granddaughter that is now in college. I have two grandsons who are in college, and I have deep commitment and understanding of how I would feel if any of them were involved in sexual harassment or accused of sexual harassment. You have my absolute commitment that I will uphold and protect those investigations to make sure that those students are treated fairly on both sides.”

McMahon did not directly address the lawsuit in her response.

Sen. Alsobrooks defends protesters after criticism from Republican senator

Sen. Angela Alsobrooks, D-Md., defended the nearly half dozen protesters who have so far interrupted McMahon's confirmation hearing as "passionate educators" advocating "on behalf of our children."

Several of the protesters said they had a background in public education, with one describing themselves as a teacher and another as a public school graduate.

Alsobrooks' defense was in direct response to Sen. Jim Banks, who moments earlier slammed the protesters for interrupting the "important work" of the hearing and acting like "children."

"Can you imagine them teaching?" Banks said. "These people teaching our kids in classrooms across America, and they come here and act like children."

Alsobrooks called that remark by Banks "disparaging."

"I want to address how shameful it was to say 'who would want to be taught by them.' They are exactly the kind of people who we want teaching our children," Alsobrooks said.

McMahon's confirmation hearing has ended

Linda McMahon's confirmation hearing ended after about two and a half hours of questions, which featured some tense exchanges between the nominee and Democrats about Trump's planned cuts to the Education Department and other policy areas.

Sen. Banks criticizes teachers protesting McMahon's Cabinet appointment

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

Sen. Jim Banks, R-Ind., opened his line of questioning by slamming the protesters, several of whom identified themselves as teachers, who interrupted McMahon’s confirmation hearing.

“I’m struck by the outburst of some of the protesters in the room,” Banks said. “A number of them have told us that they’re teachers. Can you imagine them teaching, these people teaching our kids in classrooms across America?” 

Banks said the protesters were acting like “children.” 

McMahon’s Cabinet nomination has drawn national pushback from educators. The National Education Association, one of the nation’s largest teachers unions, penned a letter urging senators to reject McMahon’s confirmation. 

Sen. Ed Markey and McMahon spar over public education and DOGE cuts

During his questioning time, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., railed against Elon Musk and the so-called Department of Government Efficiency's plan to gut the Department of Education.

"They have to go for all — to all of the programs that they are calling waste, fraud and corruption," Markey said. "But that's just another way of saying the programs that help the poor and the sick and the elderly and the disabled in our society, that's what we are talking about, because they want all of these programs gutted to find the funding for the tax breaks."

He added, "So DOGE, as it's rumbling through the Department of Education right now, just stands for Department of Gutting Education. That's what they're doing."

When he offered McMahon an opening to respond, she told him, "Well, that was certainly a broad view of what is going on right now."

As she went on to defend the DOGE employees evaluating the Education Department, Markey cut her off, prompting McMahon to say: "If I may, senator, you've asked me a question and I'd really like the opportunity to answer."

Markey continued, "What they're doing is, first, they announce the cuts, then they go to find where it is. So it's all backwards."

Brooke Rollins confirmed as agriculture secretary

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

Kate Santaliz

Sydney Carruth and Kate Santaliz

The Senate confirmed Brooke Rollins to serve as the secretary of agriculture in a 72-28 vote. Nineteen Democrats joined Republicans in voting for Rollins, who faced questions from Democrats in her confirmation hearing on whether Trump’s tariffs and mass deportations could cause farm labor shortages.

Rollins served as Trump's domestic policy adviser in his first term and is the president of the America first Policy Institute, a think tank that has been involved in crafting Trump administration policies.

Sen. Bill Cassidy sided with Trump on RfK Jr., but he still faces a tough primary race

Bridget Bowman and Natasha Korecki

Sen. Bill Cassidy publicly struggled with whether to back Robert f. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services before he fell in line behind President Donald Trump’s pick. 

It may have done little to help him politically.

Cassidy, R-La., hasn’t formally announced whether he will seek re-election next year, though he has signaled that he intends to run. Problems await him if he does.

The never-doubt-Donald-Trump wing of the Republican Party has yet to forgive Cassidy for having voted in 2021 to convict Trump on impeachment charges that he incited the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Cassidy already has at least one primary challenger should he seek a third term, and others are waiting in the wings.

Read the full story here.

McMahon spars with Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester over discrimination in schools

Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and McMahon had a contentious exchange during Blunt Rochester's questioning time, as the senator called out McMahon for failing to answer her questions about whether private schools that accept public funding are allowed to discriminate against students with disabilities or students of certain races and religions.

"So, private schools should not be able to turn away a student with a disability or a student based on their religion or their ethnicity or race?" Blunt Rochester asked.

"Private schools aren't taking federal dollars, so they have the ability to say ... if they believe that they cannot best serve that student and they’re not taking federal dollars, then they have the right not to accept that student," McMahon answered.

Blunt Rochester then clarified her question.

"I'm speaking specifically when we talk about — there's a lot of conversation about vouchers. If private schools take federal dollars, can they turn away a child based on a disability or religion or race?" the senator asked.

McMahon started to answer, saying, "Well, I think that there are also some public schools who are saying that they don't have the," before the senator cut her off.

"It's really just a yes or no," Blunt Rochester said, to which McMahon replied, "No, it's not for me."

The two later agreed to follow up on the line of questioning, and Blunt Rochester moved on.

McConnell: RfK Jr. has a record of ‘eroding trust in public health institutions'

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

Sen. Mitch McConnel, R-Ky., said he voted against RfK Jr.’s confirmation to lead the Department of Health and Human Services because the American people deserve a leader who acknowledges the efficacy of vaccines and understands the intricacies of public health. 

“Individuals, parents, and families have a right to push for a healthier nation and demand the best possible scientific guidance on preventing and treating illness,” McConnell said in a statement shortly after he cast his vote. “But a record of trafficking in dangerous conspiracy theories and eroding trust in public health institutions does not entitle Mr. Kennedy to lead these important efforts.”

Striking a personal note, McConnell said he is a survivor of childhood polio who has watched and experienced the impact of lifesaving vaccines across the country and the world. 

“I will not condone the re-litigation of proven cures, and neither will millions of Americans who credit their survival and quality of life to scientific miracles,” McConnell said. 

McConnell said Kennedy had failed to prove himself capable of handling the American health care system. 

As HHS secretary, DOGE and Trump may pose biggest hurdles for RfK Jr.

Now that he’s got the job, Robert f. Kennedy Jr. may struggle to navigate his new position as secretary of health and human services as the agency contends with potential job cuts and the administration works to pursue Trump’s agendas, experts say.

The high-profile anti-vaccine activist, known for spreading misinformation, was confirmed by the Senate in a 52-48 vote today. (Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was the only Republican to break with his party and vote no.) His selection in November sparked outrage within the scientific community, with many fearing his appointment could undermine decades of public health — particularly vaccination efforts — in the U.S.

However, as HHS secretary, Kennedy may find himself at a disadvantage, as the Department of Government Efficiency, the group headed by billionaire Elon Musk, moves to cut down the size of the federal workforce and reduce spending. Last month, the administration offered roughly 2 million federal workers the option to resign but be paid through the end of September. Yesterday, a federal judge ruled that the buyout plan can proceed.

With the possibility of limited resources and manpower, Kennedy could have a hard time pushing forward his own priorities — including making changes to vaccine policies and eliminating unhealthy foods, according to Dorit Reiss, a vaccine policy expert at the University of California, San francisco.

Read the full story here.

More protesters interrupt McMahon's confirmation hearing

A fourth protester disrupted McMahon's confirmation hearing, cutting off Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., to express outrage at her nomination.

"I'm a teacher and this nominee will be terrible for my district," the protester can be heard saying, adding that McMahon will be terrible for "my students" and "education."

Minutes later, a fifth protester, who characterized herself as a "public school graduate" interrupted the proceedings.

"Linda McMahon, you're fired," the protester said. "Vote 'no' on billionaires who want to privatize public education."

Both protesters were promptly escorted out of the hearing by Capitol Police.

McMahon: 'The president will not ask me to do anything that is against the law'

Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., asked McMahon whether she would "do what you are legally required to do" if Trump "gives you a directive that breaks the law."

"The president will not ask me to do anything that is against the law," McMahon answered.

Hassan responded, saying, "The last month has told us that it is quite likely he may," citing several Trump executive actions that federal judges have blocked.

McMahon says colleges that don't address antisemitism on campus would face defunding

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., brought up the increase of antisemitism on college campuses since Oct. 7, 2023, and asked if she would make sure that it stops at schools that receive federal funding.

"Absolutely, or face defunding of their monies," she said.

Hawley also asked if students studying at U.S. colleges on visas who have threatened Jewish students, supported terrorist groups or have broken the law would have their visas revoked. He then asked if she would return "some common sense to our campuses in this way."

"Yes," she said.

Hawley rails against transgender women playing women's sports on college campuses

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., used his questioning time to rail against colleges and universities that allow transgender women to play on women's sports teams, accusing the Biden administration of allowing men in women's locker rooms and in female dorms.

"The last four years have been, in many ways, absolutely hellacious for students on our college campuses," Hawley said, adding, "You had multiple universities claiming the mandate — claiming the cover of the Biden administration — forcing women to accept biological men in women's sports."

He alleged that allowing transgender women into women's facilities resulted in "young woman after young woman [being] denied basic safety in their changing facilities — for heaven's sake — basic safety in their dorm rooms."

Border-state Democrat expresses support for Trump’s executive order on cartels

Rep. Gabe Vasquez, a two-term Democrat from Texas, expressed support for Trump’s executive actions to combat cartels in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, co-written with a Republican colleague. 

Vasquez and Arizona Republican Rep. Juan Ciscomani, leaders of the bipartisan Southwest Caucus in Congress, asked Rubio to work “collaboratively with border communities and Mexico to combat the cartels,” according to the letter first obtained by NBC News. 

The lawmakers said they support “additional efforts to combat the cartels” beyond the executive order Trump issued during the first week of his second term, which directs the secretary of state to decide which cartels will be designated as foreign terrorist organizations.

Days after Trump hit Mexico with 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum, Ciscomani and Vasquez said they “urge this administration to maintain and bolster our trade relationship with Mexico.” 

“Efforts to combat cartels can be successful without hurting the American economy or disrupting legal commerce,” they wrote. “We strongly support investments in border infrastructure, screening technology to detect illicit goods, and additional staffing to promote legal trade.”

The lawmakers, who launched their bipartisan caucus in 2023, also requested a meeting with Rubio within the first 100 days of the administration.  

The House is expected to vote today on a bill from Ciscomani that would impose tougher penalties on “bad actors,” including migrants, who lead law enforcement on high-speed chases near the border.

Musk says U.S. needs to 'delete entire agencies'

Elon Musk reiterated his commitment to reducing the size of the federal government during virtual remarks at the World Governments Summit in Dubai, telling attendees the U.S. needs to "really delete entire agencies, many of them."

“I think we do need to delete entire agencies as opposed to leave part of them behind," Musk said. "It’s kind of like leaving a weed, if you don’t remove the the roots of the weed, then it’s easy for the weed to grow back."

Musk's Department of Government Efficiency has led the Trump administration's efforts at dismantling or weakening several federal agencies and organizations, including USAID, the Consumer financial Protection Bureau and the Education Department.

On Tuesday, Trump signed an executive order further empowering Musk by directing federal agencies to "coordinate and consult" with DOGE to cut jobs and limit hiring to only "essential positions."

Musk also said at the summit that his efforts to reduce the federal workforce will benefit other countries as they'll prevent the U.S. from "interfering with the affairs of other countries."

"I think we should, in general, leave other countries to their own business. Basically, America should mind its own business, rather than push for regime change all over the place," Musk said.

RfK Jr. confirmed as health and human services secretary

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

In a 52-48 vote, the Senate has confirmed Robert f. Kennedy Jr. to serve as secretary of health and human services. 

Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was the only Republican to vote against Kennedy's nomination.

McMahon says she commits to fully implementing public service loan forgiveness programs

During an exchange with Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., McMahon confirmed that she commits to fully implementing public service loan forgiveness programs.

"Yes, that's the law," she said.

Kaine said that during the first Trump administration, then-Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and the department slow-walked approvals of public service loan forgiveness, leading to only a 3% acceptance rate of fully qualified applicants.

"During the Biden administration, more than a million applicants were approved for forgiveness, as was appropriate, given the congressional directive," Kaine said. "If the DOGE brothers or somebody else tells you, 'We don't like these programs and we don't want you to implement them,' I can count on you to stand up and fully implement them to benefit those who are entitled to the benefit by the congressional statute."

"Yes, because that's the law," she said.

Murphy questions the implications of Trump's anti-DEI order on schools

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., questioned McMahon on the impacts of Trump's executive orders that ban diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the federal government.

The senator highlighted public school classes, clubs and celebrations that center on certain identities or cultural affiliations.

"Would public schools be in violation of this order? Would they risk funding if they had clubs that students could belong to based on their racial or ethnic identity?" Murphy asked McMahon, who was not able to give a concrete answer.

"I certainly, today, don't want to address, you know, hypothetical situations," McMahon said, before Murphy offered a more direct example, asking whether Vietnamese American students or Black students meeting for a club could potentially jeopardize public funding for their school.

"I would like to fully understand what that order is and what those clubs are doing," McMahon said, answering the question in a way that Murphy described as "chilling."

McMahon says U.S. needs to expand skills-based learning

Education secretary nominee Linda McMahon testified at her confirmation hearing that there should be more skills-based learning, which she said existed in schools when she was younger.

She said, for example, that high school seniors would have classes for the first part of the day and would learn a skill or trade in the second part of the day.

"Those credits would count towards your education, she said. "I think we need to get back to more of that."

McMahon added, "We don’t have enough skill-based learning. We don’t have enough internships or apprenticeship programs. I’d also like to see more dual credits in our high schools, our junior and senior years, that would count towards community colleges or other institutes that would get students through college faster."

McMahon is pressed on sexual harassment rules

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., quizzed McMahon on specific legal distinctions between the Biden and Trump-era Title IX regulations with regard to how schools must address sexual assault and harassment. 

The Trump administration’s rules used a more narrow legal definition of sexual harassment, that the conduct is prohibited if it is both severe and pervasive. The Obama and Biden administrations imposed the standard under employment law, that sexual harassment is prohibited if it is severe or pervasive, a less stringent standard.

“Do you believe that sexual harassment that is severe should be prohibited under Title IX?” Baldwin asked.

“I think sexual harassment should be prohibited in any case,” McMahon answered.

“Do you believe that sexual harassment that is pervasive should be prohibited by Title IX?” Baldwin said. 

“Yes,” McMahon said. 

“Do you believe that harassment that is either severe or pervasive should be prohibited under Title IX?” Baldwin asked. 

“I don’t believe there should be any acceptance of sexual harassment, senator,” McMahon responded.

Baldwin then asked McMahon whether she believed schools should investigate sexual assaults that occur between two students off campus. 

“I think the school should investigate that matter,” McMahon said. She added that a school “should be required” to investigate and “notify the parties that are involved so that both sides of the equation can have due process.”

Democratic Sen. Tina Smith won't run for re-election

Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., will not run for re-election. Her decision, a surprise to many, will make the 2026 midterm election even more complicated for Democrats trying to chip away at the new Republican majority.

In a post on X, Smith thanked Minnesotans and said working in the Senate "has been the honor of a lifetime."

Read the full story here.

McConnell votes against RfK Jr. to lead HHS

Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

former Republican Leader Mitch McConnell voted against RfK Jr.'s nomination to lead the Department of Health and Human Services.

McConnell, who survived polio, had expressed concern over Kennedy’s anti-vaccine activism, saying in a December statement that anyone seeking Senate confirmation should avoid “efforts to undermine public confidence" in vaccines.

Other Republican senators, including Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, were hesitant to support Kennedy’s confirmation but said their concerns were assuaged after he assured them he would not use his position to spread anti-vaccine rhetoric.

McConnell, of Kentucky, has voted against the confirmations of two other Trump Cabinet picks, Pete Hegseth and Tulsi Gabbard.

Third protester removed from McMahon hearing

McMahon's confirmation hearing just endured its third interruption of the morning as Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., questioned McMahon.

The protester was removed from the hearing room by Capitol Police.

Senate Judiciary Committee advances Patel's nomination

The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 12-10 along party lines to advance Kash Patel’s nomination to be fBI director. 

Democrats issue warnings about confirming Patel as fBI director

The Senate Judiciary Committee’s vote on Kash Patel’s nomination to be Trump’s fBI director is ongoing, as Democrats issue dire warnings about his confirmation.  

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said that “we need to begin to prepare ourselves for Trump-Russia 2.0,” pointing to Patel’s desire to take actions that would reduce the fBI’s counterintelligence work along with Attorney General Bondi shutting down the DOJ’s “Klepto Capture” operations and Tulsi Gabbard's appointment as director of national intelligence. Whitehouse said they have “sent powerful signals that they are shutting down our defenses when it comes to Russia.”

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., focused on Patel’s past comments and promises to take retribution against Trump’s political enemies. “A director’s loyalty to the American people, the Constitution and the rule of law is paramount, but Mr. Patel made it abundantly clear that he is loyal to the president,” she said. 

“If you are affiliated with any kind of case that Mr. Patel did not like in the past, well then you need to be on some list,” Klobuchar said, calling out the targeting of people who worked on Jan. 6 cases. “People assaulted police officers, and now those agents who are simply doing their job find themselves on a list for personnel action. That is not right, that will not make Americans safe, and that will destroy the federal Bureau of Investigation.”

“Mr. Patel did not even have the integrity to stand by his own words to this committee, his own words,” Klobuchar added later. “Repeatedly I asked about these statements. Own them, man! Just say, 'Yeah, I said it. I believe that. I believe we should shut down the fBI headquarters. I believe they’re all corrupt.'”

Murray presses McMahon on DOGE access

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., grilled McMahon on how much access employees of DOGE, Elon Musk’s government team, should have to personal information housed by the Education Department. 

McMahon responded that DOGE was just doing an audit, and later said that members of Musk’s team had been onboarded as employees of the department and would operate under typical restraint applied to staff at the agency.

“There is a real potential for that kind of information to be abused or for student privacy to be in jeopardy,” Murray said. “DOGE could use that highly personal information to then target students, target their families or cut off access to Pell grants for students in college that someone perceives opposes President Trump’s policies.”

Murray said she’s concerned that they do not know who the DOGE staff are at the department, and that they are “not held accountable.” 

“Well, again, I’m not there,” McMahon responded.

Second protester removed from McMahon confirmation hearing

A second protester was just removed from the committee hearing room where McMahon's confirmation hearing is ongoing.

"No more vouchers, no more charters," the protester shouted before being removed by security.

A protester disrupts Linda McMahon as she testifies during her Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee confirmation hearing on Feb. 13, 2025.
A protester interrupts Linda McMahon as she testifies today.Win McNamee / Getty Images
A protester interrupts Linda McMahon as she testifies during her confirmation hearing
A second protester interrupts the hearing.Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images

Cassidy questions McMahon on Trump plan to eliminate DOE

During his question time, Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., asked McMahon about Trump's plan to have the education secretary gut the department entirely.

"Yes or no, do you agree that, since the department was created by Congress, it would need an act of Congress to actually close the Department of Education?" Cassidy asked.

"Certainly President Trump understands that," McMahon said, adding: "We'll be working with Congress. We'd like to do this right. We'd like to make sure that we are presenting a plan that I think our senators could get on board with, and our Congress could get on board with."

Asked more specifically about Trump's plans to downsize the department, McMahon said: "I am really all for the president's mission, which is to return education to the states. I believe, as he does, that the best education is closest to the child and not certainly in Washington, D.C." 

McMahon vows to 'return education to the states'

During McMahon’s opening remarks, the education secretary nominee said that she would focus on emphasizing technical education and apprenticeship programs and expanding support for parents who want to enroll children in private schools. 

McMahon, the former president of World Wrestling Entertainment and the current chair of a Trump-aligned think tank, was briefly interrupted by a protester before she could start speaking. McMahon’s son, Shane, her daughter, Stephanie, and Stephanie’s husband, Paul Levesque, the WWE chief creative officer who wrestled under the moniker “Triple H,” sat behind her. 

McMahon described an educational landscape where test scores are lagging, public colleges “beset by violent crime on campuses every year, and most tragically, student suicide rates have dramatically increased over the last two decades. We can do better.”

“So what’s the remedy? fund education freedom, not government,” she said. “Run systems. Listen to parents, not politicians. Build up careers, not college debt.”

She also pledged to combat harassment against Jewish students, and that the department would not allow transgender students into single-sex spaces that do not match their birth sex. 

The Education Department under her leadership, she said, “will protect the rights of parents to direct the moral education of their children. The opportunity before us these next four years is momentous.”

Senate is voting on RfK's nomination

The Senate is voting now on Robert f. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination to be health and human services secretary. RfK needs a simple majority to be confirmed, and it is expected he has the votes needed. 

All eyes will be on former Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, who has not publicly said how he will vote today. McConnell, a polio survivor, had expressed concerns about RfK’s anti-vaccine rhetoric and wrote in a public statement in December that “anyone seeking the Senate’s consent to serve in the incoming administration would do well to steer clear” of “efforts to undermine public confidence” in the polio vaccine.

While McConnell voted to advance RfK’s nomination yesterday, he also voted to advance Pete Hegseth and Tulsi Gabbard but ultimately opposed both of them in their final confirmation votes. 

If RfK is confirmed, the Senate will then vote on Brooke Rollins' nomination to be agriculture secretary. 

Budget Committee member previews this morning's markup

Ali Vitali

House Budget Committee member Becca Balint, D-Vt., said in an interview on "Way Too Early" that the panel's vote kicking off the GOP reconciliation process on the Hill this morning would be a test for Democrats in pushing back on cuts to Medicaid, food stamps and student loans that Republicans are seeking.

“They’re talking about over $800 billion of cuts to Medicaid … millions of dollars not going to people who need SNAP benefits, that’s what they’re looking at,” she said, underscoring some of the ways that Republicans plan to achieve roughly $2 trillion in spending cuts. “So, it’s about Democrats standing up against that, it’s not about wanting to shut down the government.”

Balint was referring to public and private sentiments from some Democratic lawmakers that they should use the upcoming March 14 government funding deadline as leverage to stop the Trump administration’s slash-and-burn efforts within government agencies.

Balint suggested a shutdown might be warranted. “If what they want to push through is going to hurt millions of Americans and give that money ... to another tax cut for the extremely wealthy? No, I will never allow that to happen,” she said.

Balint also reacted to a federal judge’s ruling allowing Trump’s federal worker buyouts to move forward, and urged people not to trust the offers.

 “When you look at the track record that Elon Musk has that is following him from Tesla, he did not make good on promises to employees at Tesla," she said. "I don’t have any confidence that the people who took the buyouts are actually going to see that money.

"And let’s say, let’s say it is a legitimate offer," she continued. "You’ve got a man who says he’s there trying to fight waste, fraud and abuse, who is basically saying we are going to pay you for months to actually do no work? And I was with employees at the Consumer financial Protection Bureau the other day. They want to work. They want to do their jobs. These are committed people who believe in the mission of getting money back to the American people. So it’s just, it’s all madness, all of this.”

Sanders slams Republican efforts to abolish Education Department

Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., ranking member of the Senate HELP committee, said in his opening statement that Americans can't allow the education system to become "a two-tier system" that says if you have money, you can send your child to a private school while "public schools will end up being segregated, not just by race, but by class."

"The people who are trying to privatize Social Security, privatize Medicare, privatize Medicaid, privatize the Veterans Administration, are precisely the same people who are trying to privatize public education in America. We must not allow that to happen in America," Sanders said.

He said the goal should not be to abolish the Education Department but to make it more effective.

"In my view, we need a secretary of education who understands that in the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, we should have the best educational system on this planet, from child care to graduate school," he said. "We need a secretary of education who understands that schools do not end at 2:30 or 3. We need strong after-school programs. We need strong summer programs."

He added that the U.S. needs an education secretary who "understands that we’ve got to invest in mental health" and "that we have got to fully fund the individuals with Disability Education Act."

Cassidy blames Biden administration for Education Department flaws

In his opening statement, Committee Chair Bill Cassidy, R-La., blasted the Biden administration for placing "hoops and red tape" on federal grants for K-12 education and for expanding the college and university student loan program.

"I’m hearing from schools across the country that they have stopped going after federal competitive grant funding because it is not worth the hoops and red tape the Department of Education has placed on those dollars," Cassidy said. "If schools are not eager to apply for competitive grants to improve operations, something is wrong and something should change."

He added, "Under the last administration, the Department of Education ... dramatically increased the scope and authority of the student loan financing program, clearly outside of what Congress previously intended," before highlighting McMahon's experience running the Small Business Administration during Trump's first term.

"Your experience overseeing SBA loans will be a great asset as the department looks to reform a very broken student loan program," Cassidy said.

The senator also addressed the elephant in the room: Trump's plan to dismantle the Education Department completely, which would effectively eliminate McMahon's role if she is confirmed.

"There's been a lot of talk about dismantling the Department of Education, and I'm sure that you will be asked this today," Cassidy said.

Democrats deliver late night speeches in protest of RfK Jr.'s nomination

Kate Santaliz and Megan Lebowitz

A group of Senate Democrats held the Senate floor delivering late night speeches in protest of RfK Jr.'s nomination to be health and human services secretary.

Democrats, however, do not appear to have the necessary support to stop his confirmation. A vote on his confirmation is expected this morning.

Senate committee sets date for McMahon vote

The Senate HELP committee will vote on McMahon’s nomination to be education secretary next Thursday. If she clears that hurdle, which is expected, her nomination will move on to a full Senate vote.

WWE sex abuse suit raises concerns ahead of McMahon’s hearing to run Education Department

As Linda McMahon is set to face a confirmation hearing today to lead the Education Department, several former WWE employees, their family members and two current and former education officials are raising concerns about whether she is fit for the position overseeing more than 50 million students in about 98,000 public schools and 32,000 private schools around the United States.

At issue, these people say, is her commitment to safeguarding children and overseeing Title IX, which protects students against discrimination, amid allegations in an October lawsuit that she was involved in turning a blind eye to child sex abuse at the hands of a World Wrestling Entertainment employee during her tenure as an executive at WWE. An attorney for McMahon has denied the claims. McMahon isn’t accused of sexual abuse.

Read the full story.

Judiciary Committee is meeting to consider Kash Patel's nomination for fBI director

The Senate Judiciary Committee is meeting to consider advancing Kash Patel's nomination to serve as fBI director.

Amid Washington rancor, Trump basks in the glow of a hostage release deal

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Jonathan Allen

Olympia Sonnier

Julia Ainsley

Abigail Williams

Jonathan Allen, Olympia Sonnier, Julia Ainsley and Abigail Williams

Presidents love to bask in the patriotic glow of bringing hostages home — none more than Donald Trump.

Negotiations over prisoner swaps can be tough and the prices can be high, and experts warn that quickly giving hostage-takers the concessions they want gives them incentives for further kidnappings. But the immediate rewards are unambiguous: Americans, regardless of party, want their compatriots back.

Read the full story.

Judge lifts freeze on Trump and Musk’s federal worker buyout plan

Trump and billionaire Elon Musk’s plan to reshape the federal government is entering a new phase after a judge lifted a temporary freeze on their federal employee buyout program. Meanwhile, Musk is previewing more dramatic changes. “We do need to delete entire agencies,” he said. NBC’s Peter Alexander reports for "TODAY."

Linda McMahon to face Senate confirmation hearing as DOGE targets Education Department cuts

Linda McMahon will appear before a Senate committee for her confirmation hearing to be education secretary today as Trump publicly floats dismantling the department she’s seeking to lead. 

McMahon, 76, previously was the chief executive of World Wrestling Entertainment, the company founded by her husband, Vince McMahon, a Trump ally. She was also the head of the Small Business Administration in Trump’s first term and went on to lead several pro-Trump political groups. 

The Education Department has come under scrutiny by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, which has claimed credit for canceling $881 million in contracts at the department — though the administration has refused to release details. Some of Musk’s aides have also gained access to Education Department systems and been granted administrator email accounts, a development that longtime employees call highly unusual.

Read the full story.

Trump says reciprocal tariffs are coming

Trump said this morning that he will be taking action on reciprocal tariffs today.

"Three great weeks, perhaps the best ever, but today is the big one: reciprocal tariffs!!! Make America Great Again!!!" he wrote in all caps on his Truth Social account.

Trump said yesterday, "The world has taken advantage of the United States for many years. They’ve charged us massive tariffs that we haven’t charged them."

He said Sunday that he would impose reciprocal tariffs on “every country” that places import duties on the U.S.

Here's what Trump has previously said about the Education Department

Megan Lebowitz, Yamiche Alcindor, Alexandra Marquez and Rebecca Shabad

Trump has previously said he would close the Education Department.

"One other thing I’ll be doing very early in the administration is closing up the Department of Education in Washington, D.C., and sending all education and education work and needs back to the states," he said in a 2023 video.

NBC News has reported that the White House is preparing an executive order to eliminate the Education Department, according to two sources familiar with the plans.

However, Trump would need to enlist the help of Congress to eliminate a federal agency.

Senate expected to vote on confirmations of RfK Jr. and Brooke Rollins today

frank Thorp V, Kate Santaliz and Megan Lebowitz

The Senate is expected to hold final confirmation votes this morning on Robert f. Kennedy Jr.'s nomination to be HHS secretary and Brooke Rollins' nomination to be agriculture secretary.

Two other nominees, Howard Lutnick for commerce secretary and Kelly Loeffler for administrator of the Small Business Administration, are set to face procedural votes to advance their nominations this afternoon.