Land Media,
by
Tyson Fisher
Original Article
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sunset
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6/26/2026 6:22:44 PM
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Hundreds of commenters are taking part in the debate over whether DACA recipients should be allowed to receive a CDL directly to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. Earlier this month, FMCSA published an exemption request related to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients. Jenifer Sanchez Vilchis, a DACA recipient from California, seeks an immediate, temporary exemption allowing states to issue Class B CDLs to DACA holders. FMCSA gave the public 30 days to comment on the exemption request. Under the rule, an Employment Authorization Document would no longer be enough to obtain a non-domiciled CDL. Additionally, asylum seekers, asylees, refugees and DACA recipients would be ineligible.
Center for Immigration Studies,
by
Andrew R. Arthur
Original Article
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6/26/2026 6:14:46 PM
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On June 23, DHS announced it was seeking to impose fines of $255,232 against Vinod Doddamani, an immigration lawyer operating “a nationwide practice in which he mostly represents Indian nationals”, for allegedly filing “false asylum claims on behalf of his clients”. The basis of that action isn’t mentioned, but it appears the department is dusting off section 274C of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), a little-used civil (not criminal) provision that can result in not-insignificant money penalties for certain immigration-related fraud offenses. Practitioners should take notice — as should applicants.
Signal Cleveland,
by
Andrew Tobias
Original Article
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6/14/2026 2:47:30 AM
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A progressive organization that says it was raided by the FBI is a little-known but integral player in progressive politics in Ohio.
The Ohio Organizing Collaborative is a nonpartisan organization, but works closely with Democrats on issues like voter registration, political organizing and ballot-issue campaigns.
The group was founded in 2007 and has since grown to be one of the most well-funded political organizing operations in the state. The OOC and its political arm, the Ohio Organizing Campaign, together received nearly $55 million from 2020-2024
Deutsche Welle,
by
Rana Taha
Original Article
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6/13/2026 11:49:26 PM
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The US has deported a number of migrants to the Central African Republic, one of the world's poorest and most troubled states, under a controversial deal that allows Washington to deport migrants who cannot be sent back to their home countries.
The flight that took off from Louisiana on Thursday night was carrying some two dozen migrants, including an Iranian pro-democracy activist, her lawyer has said. It landed in Bangui on Friday.
Other migrants set to be on the flight included nationals of Jordan, Armenia, Turkey, Georgia and Afghanistan, according to Ali Rahnama, interim executive director of the Iranian American Legal Defense Fund.
Washington Examiner,
by
Molly Parks
Original Article
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6/10/2026 4:43:05 PM
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The Postal Service proposed a new rule pushing states to turn over their mail-in and absentee voter rolls to the agency, a move in line with President Donald Trump’s March executive order tightening regulations on mail-in voting in federal elections. Since the start of his second administration, Trump has made election integrity and security a central issue, signing multiple executive orders to require proof of citizenship and crack down on mail-in voting fraud, essentially establishing a national voter verification system. His efforts have run into several legal hurdles, with judges ruling against requirements for proof of citizenship, and several Democratic states sue over the mail-in voting order.
Pittsburg's Public Source,
by
Lucas Dufalla
Original Article
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sunset
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6/9/2026 11:08:04 AM
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U.S. Steel plans to invest up to $2.5 billion into upgrades to its Mon Valley Works, which it forecasts will generate $1.7 billion for the state’s economy, according to a Monday report from the steelmaking giant. The economic impact is expected to include the combined dollars spent on things such as wages and construction costs associated with the upgrades, according to the report. The investment will preserve the roughly 3,000 jobs at Mon Valley Works and create 3,200 jobs. It is part of the company’s commitment to invest $11 billion into its domestic footprint by 2028, on the heels of a $15 billion acquisition by Japan-based Nippon Steel last year.
Fox,
by
C.J. Womack
Original Article
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6/2/2026 1:57:56 PM
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Bill Maher used Friday's "Real Time with Bill Maher" to criticize California Democrats over education and green energy, arguing that Mississippi and Texas are outperforming the deep-blue state on issues Democrats often campaign on. "Democrats, these are your issues: education, race, the environment," Maher said. "And I say this with love: you’re losing to the Waffle House, car-on-the-lawn states." Maher said California’s school outcomes were especially difficult to defend when compared with Mississippi, citing fourth-grade results for Black students. "Did you know that a Black fourth grader in Mississippi is two and a half times as likely to be proficient in math and reading as one in California?"
New York Post,
by
Jaime Paige
Original Article
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6/1/2026 9:42:39 PM
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Mayor Karen Bass is being slammed as un-American for a last-minute decision to pull funding for a neighborhood group who wanted to close their main street for a Fourth of July Parade marking America’s 250th birthday.
The Sunland-Tujunga Fourth of July Parade, the longest-running Independence Day parade in the San Fernando Valley, has been canceled after organizers say the city withdrew support and left them facing at least $20,000 in traffic control and street closure costs. “The mayor’s office jerked us around for so long,” said Lydia Grant, president of the Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council. “It’s devastating. We’ve been doing this parade for over 50 years.”
Business Insider,
by
Olamilekan Okebiorun
Original Article
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6/1/2026 3:13:07 AM
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The United States has secured long-term access to one of the world's largest untapped rare earth deposits, a move that could reduce its future dependence on mineral-rich African nations as Washington races to build a critical minerals supply chain independent of China. REalloys, a Florida-based rare earth materials company, has signed a 15-year offtake agreement with Critical Metals Corp. covering 15% of Phase 1 production from the Tanbreez project in southern Greenland.
The deposit is among the world's largest known sources of heavy rare earth elements, including dysprosium and terbium, two minerals essential for fighter jets, missile systems, radar platforms, drones and other advanced defence technologies.
Washington Examiner,
by
Britta Miller
Original Article
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5/31/2026 2:49:17 PM
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Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt said he’s focusing on laws that already exist to make “the streets safe.” “We are going to make sure that moms feel safe in Los Angeles,” Pratt said on Fox News’s Saturday in America. Pratt said current city Mayor Karen Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) made up statistics, calling it a “homeless industrial complex scam,” and accused them of laundering money to increase homelessness. “Anybody with eyeballs in the state of California, or Los Angeles, knows that there has not been a reduction in one homeless person,” Pratt said. “Actually, there’s been an increase of naked, drug addict zombies.”
Sunday Guardian,
by
Brijesh Singh
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5/30/2026 8:49:41 PM
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As BRICS challenges Bretton Woods dominance, India balances de-dollarisation, sovereignty, and global financial realignment.
Deep in the vaults of the Reserve Bank of India, a quiet metamorphosis is unfolding. Over one decade, India’s gold reserves have doubled to $682 billion—the yellow metal’s share rising steadily. In Moscow, the Central Bank executed something more dramatic: a total liquidation of its $90-billion U.S. Treasury portfolio, replaced by 2,330 metric tonnes of physical gold now comprising 44 per cent of reserves—a sovereign reallocation without precedent in modern monetary history. These are symptoms of a tectonic shift reshaping global finance’s architecture
Fox,
by
Michael Ruiz
&
Robert McGreevy
Original Article
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5/29/2026 11:31:27 AM
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The FBI says it has seized a record-setting $8 billion in cryptocurrency and arrested hundreds of suspects as part of an intercontinental crackdown on "scam compounds" and organized crime, including one group known as the "Democratic Karen Benevolent Army." They have been blamed for a global wave of theft from Americans who fell victim to an online scam. The FBI confiscated more than 127,000 bitcoin during the arrest of one leader of a Cambodian enterprise called the Prince Holding Group. That's worth more than $8 billion — possibly more than $15 billion at the time of seizure — and officials are calling it the largest forfeiture in U.S. government's history.
Comments:
FMCSA will continue to accept comments on the Class B exemption request through July 2. Link to submit a comment is in the article.