Trump Admin 100 Days
The Trump Administration’s First 100 Days
Executive Order on Elections: Nearly every arm of the Democratic Party united in filing a lawsuit against the Trump administration, arguing that a recent executive order seeking to require documentary proof of citizenship and other voting reforms is unconstitutional.
Fitness Standards for Combat Roles: Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary, mandated that physical fitness requirements for combat jobs be “sex-neutral,” a move that is likely to significantly reduce the number of women who qualify.
‘Move It Back to the States’: President Trump justifies his plan to shutter the Education Department by saying that states should control schools. He’s using the mantra for other policies, too.
Immigration Law and Congressional Limits: A crackdown targeting foreign students protesting Israel’s treatment of Palestinians conflicts with free-speech protections that lawmakers added in 1990.
Trump’s Next Law Firm Target: The law firm that employs Doug Emhoff, former Vice President Kamala Harris’s husband, has learned that it is among the next firms that Trump plans to use his power to punish, according to four people briefed on the matter.
Targeting Federal Agencies: The so-called Department of Government Efficiency, led by billionaire Elon Musk, has appeared at agency after agency to slash spending and cut the federal work force. Here’s how DOGE employees do it.
U.S.A.I.D.: The Trump administration detailed its plans to put the government’s main agency for distributing foreign aid fully under the State Department and reduce its staff to some 15 legally required positions. The agency employed about 10,000 people before President Trump entered office.
Smithsonian Institution: Trump intensified his push to impose a more positive view of American history by moving to curb the independence of the institution, which has 21 museums, libraries, research centers and the National Zoo. Here’s what to know.
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