“The top Republican and Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee said on Friday that the Pentagon had refused for weeks to share with Congress key information about its strikes on marine vessels that the Trump administration says are carrying drugs, despite repeated requests that it divulge the directives initiating the operation as well as its legal justification,” the New York Times reports.
United Nations Accuses U.S. of Illegal Airstrikes on Boats
The United Nations said Friday that U.S. airstrikes on alleged drug trafficking boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific Ocean violate international human rights law and must stop, ABC News reports.
Said U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk: “These attacks – and their mounting human cost – are unacceptable. The U.S. must halt such attacks and take all measures necessary to prevent the extrajudicial killing of people aboard these boats, whatever the criminal conduct alleged against them.”
More Than 100 Judges Have Ruled Against Detention Policy
“It’s one of the most thorough legal rebukes in recent memory,” Politico reports.
“More than 100 federal judges have now ruled at least 200 times that the Trump administration’s effort to systematically detain immigrants facing possible deportation appeared to violate their rights or was just flatly illegal.”
“The rulings come from judges appointed by every president since Ronald Reagan, including 12 appointed by President Donald Trump. One of those appointees took the bench just last month.”
Nancy Mace Curses at Cops in Airport Meltdown
At an airport in South Carolina on Thursday, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) called police officers “fucking incompetent” and berated them repeatedly, Wired reports.
Can You Compete?
So far, just 15% of weekly news quiz takers have gotten every question right.
Trump Returns to a Capital at a Standstill
“President Donald Trump returned from an action-packed and trade-focused swing through Asia to the U.S. government still stuck in shutdown mode,” Bloomberg reports.
“But negotiating an end to the standoff, now in its 31st day, wasn’t on the agenda. The president left this morning for a weekend in Palm Beach, Florida, where he will attend a Halloween event tonight and a MAGA Inc. dinner tomorrow at his Mar-a-Lago estate.”
Pentagon Shifts to Pacific Strikes
“The Pentagon has deliberately shifted its strategy in recent weeks to striking suspected narcotraffickers in the eastern Pacific Ocean, rather than the Caribbean Sea, because administration officials believe they have stronger evidence linking cocaine transport to the US from those western routes,” CNN reports.
‘The intelligence suggests that cocaine is far more likely to be trafficked from Colombia or Mexico, rather than Venezuela, the sources said, raising more questions about the true purpose of the US military buildup in the Caribbean Sea.”
Vance Defends Saying He Hopes His Wife Will Convert
Vice President JD Vance, who drew scrutiny this week by saying he hopes his Hindu wife converts to Christianity, pushed back against critics, accusing them of “anti-Christian bigotry,” the Washington Post reports.
Said Vance: “Most Sundays, Usha will come with me to church. Do I hope eventually that she is somehow moved by the same thing that I was moved in by church? Yeah, I honestly do wish that. Because I believe in the Christian Gospel, and I hope eventually my wife comes to see it the same way.”
Air Travel Delays Piling Up
“U.S. air travel is beginning to show real signs of strain as the government shutdown drags on, with traffic controller shortages snarling thousands of flights running into the weekend,” Bloomberg reports.
The Origins of the Government Shutdown
Russell Berman: “Government shutdowns are a relatively modern phenomenon. For most of America’s nearly 250-year history, a lapse in congressional appropriations forced federal agencies to limit their spending, but not to close entirely. That changed only under Carter. In 1980, his attorney general, Benjamin Civiletti, wrote a memo in which he argued that according to federal law, the government could not operate once funding bills expired.”
“The era of shutdowns had begun, and from that point on, legislative impasses over spending have put hundreds of thousands of federal employees out of work and reduced government services for millions more.”
Trump Says He’s Renovated the Lincoln Bathroom
President Trump posted side-by-side photos of the before and after of the rehab of the bathroom attached to one of the most famous rooms in the White House.
Trump Ordered to Pay Food Stamp Benefits
“Two federal judges ruled nearly simultaneously on Friday that President Donald Trump’s administration must continue to fund SNAP, the nation’s biggest food aid program, using contingency funds during the government shutdown,” the AP reports.
“The rulings came a day before the U.S. Department of Agriculture planned to freeze payments to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program because it said it could no longer keep funding it due to the shutdown.”
“The program serves about 1 in 8 Americans and is a major piece of the nation’s social safety net.”
Ossoff Will Be Tough to Beat
Overlooked in today’s Atlanta Journal Constitution poll: 20% of Republican voters in Georgia either “strongly” or “somewhat” approve of Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA).
He’s also got $21 million in the bank.
A Confident DNC Chair Defends His Party
DNC Chair Ken Martin projected confidence about next week’s elections, telling Semafor that he sees a solid path forward for the Democrats.
He also dismissed the prospect of Republicans making an issue of Democrats for calling Trump a fascist: “This not only has the hallmarks of a fascist regime, it is a fascist regime.”
Moment of Truth for SNAP
“The moment of truth for SNAP is drawing near, as federal rulings could come at any moment on whether the Agriculture Department legally has to tap emergency money to fund the program ahead of tomorrow’s shutdown-induced cliff,” Politico reports.
“Food aid for tens of millions of low-income Americans hangs in the balance, though many states have plans to step in with funding temporarily.”
Kash Patel Leaked ‘Potential’ Terror Plot
“Senior Justice Department and FBI officials expressed frustration Friday that FBI Director Kash Patel publicly disclosed an investigation into what he called a ‘potential’ Halloween weekend terrorist plot near Detroit — before investigators had a chance to flesh out key details, including whether the attack actually was imminent,” MSNBC reports.
Maryland Justice in Hot Seat Over Halloween Display
Maryland Supreme Court Justice Peter Killough “is in the hot seat over a politically charged Halloween display on his lawn that an expert said casts doubt on his ability to rule impartially on a high-stakes case currently before the court,” Fox News reports.
“The display included an environmentalist sign, which the expert said is particularly concerning since Killough is currently involved in a high-stakes environmental case.”
“The signs, painted on Halloween-style gravestones, depict politically charged messages like, ‘Here lies the Constitution,’ ‘RIP Freedom of Speech,’ ‘RIP Food Aid,’ ‘Beware Health Insurance Cuts,’ ‘RIP Due Process’ and ‘RIP Climate Science.'”
Bloomberg Pours Money Into Anti-Mamdani Effort
“Michael Bloomberg donated a combined $5 million to a couple of anti-Zohran Mamdani super PACs earlier this week, making the billionaire ex-mayor the general election cycle’s single largest political contributor,” the New York Daily News reports.
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