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Tag: administration

Legal expert slams Supreme Court Justice for attempt to ‘narrow the forces he unleashed’

The Supreme Court dropped a bombshell on Tuesday by handing President Donald Trump a rare loss, ruling 6-3 to deny a stay on deploying the National Guard to Illinois but the rebuke of Trump was not the only thing some legal experts noticed in the opinion. Specifically, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who drafted a concurrence with the majority on one of the key issues in the decision, made statements in his opinion that suggest he may regret one of the most controversial court decisions in recent months. In a ruling in September that stayed a lower court block on certain kinds of immigration raids in California, Kavanaugh authored a concurrence in which he appeared to endorse profiling by federal agents outright, while simultaneously denying that American citizens have anything to fear from this. “The Government sometimes makes brief investigative stops to check the immigration status of those who gather in locations where people are hired for day jobs; who work or appear to work in jobs such as construction, landscaping, agriculture, or car washes that often do not require paperwork and are therefore attractive to illegal immigrants; and who do not speak much if any English,” he wrote. This ruling sparked a wave of outrage, and several legal and political observers began calling immigration enforcement based on racial or ethnic profiling “Kavanaugh stops,” and tallying up the growing number of alleged incidents of this type occurring under the Trump administration. All of this may have stung the justice, because he appeared to qualify or walk back this sentiment in his concurrence in the Illinois case.”The basic constitutional rules governing that dispute are longstanding and clear: The Fourth Amendment requires that immigration stops must be based on reasonable suspicion of illegal presence, stops must be brief, arrests must be based on probable cause, and officers must not employ excessive force,” wrote Kavanaugh. “Moreover, the officers must not make interior immigration stops or arrests based on race or ethnicity.”This change of tone was not lost on New York University law professor and former Defense Department special counsel Ryan Goodman.”Kavanaugh goes out of his way to pen a footnote not having to deal with the case at hand,” Goodman wrote on X. “He appears to be trying to narrow the forces he unleashed with his prior opinion allowing for race- and ethnicity-based #KavanaughStops.”.

Senator Eric Schmitt on Restricting Immigration in Light of Deadly Attack in DC on National Guard, Blasts Democrats for America Last Policies (VIDEO)

Senator Eric Schmitt was on “Sunday Morning Futures” with guest host Jackie DeAngelis to talk about restricting immigration in light of the deadly attack on National Guard members in DC. The post Senator Eric Schmitt on Restricting Immigration in Light of Deadly Attack in DC on National Guard, Blasts Democrats for America Last Policies (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Trump says the U.S. will ‘very soon’ take action on land to stop alleged Venezuelan drug traffickers

Even as he increases military pressure, Trump has said that he could still hold talks with Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, suggesting a possible diplomatic off-ramp.

BREAKING: National Guard Shooter Identified as Illegal Afghan National

UPDATE 8: 41 CST: President Trump just addressed the nation from Mar-A Lago🚨@POTUS: “I can report tonight that based on the best available information, the Department of Homeland Security is confident that the suspect in custody is a foreigner who entered our country from Afghanistan, a hellhole on earth. He was FLOWN IN by the Biden Administration in in September 2021, on those infamous flights that everybody was talking about.” pic. twitter. com/KjLVnwEt7f- Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) November 27, 2025.”Nobody knew who was coming in, knew anything about it! And his status was extended by legislation signed by Biden”He said the suspect had.

US Nasdaq, Germany’s Deutsche Boerse lead lobby against relaxed SEC crypto regulation

The post US Nasdaq, Germany’s Deutsche Boerse lead lobby against relaxed SEC crypto regulation appeared com. In a letter published on the SEC’s website and dated November 21, the World Federation of Exchanges (WFE), whose members include Nasdaq and Deutsche Boerse, stated that the regulator must avoid allowing crypto companies to “bypass regulatory principles that have safeguarded markets for decades.” WFE chief executive Nandini Sukumar stated that exempting unregistered crypto firms would risk allowing products that look like equities to be offered without the protections that accompany real stock ownership. The body representing exchanges voicing its concerns comes as the SEC considers whether to issue a form of “innovation exemption” that would allow crypto companies to offer blockchain-based tokens representing exposure to listed stocks, instruments that would be sold to US retail investors without the platforms registering as broker-dealers. This proposal, which is supported by several crypto platforms, is being considered by SEC chair Paul Atkins, highlighting the agency’s recalibrated approach to digital assets under the Trump administration. The tokenization debate divides traditional and crypto finance This is not the first time the WFE has raised concerns about tokenized equities. In August, it wrote to regulators in the U. S., Europe, and Asia, urging a crackdown on unlicensed platforms offering tokenized stocks, warning of investor-protection issues and reputational risks for listed companies whose names are used without consent. It went further to ask that regulators apply the same rules used on securities to tokenized assets. Despite the body’s concerns, interest in tokenization continues to grow across the financial sector. Large banks, asset managers, and trading venues have begun exploring blockchain-based settlement and token-form assets as part of efforts to modernize financial infrastructure. The trend has gained more traction this year as crypto-native platforms seek direct access to the US equities market, while traditional exchanges experiment with on-chain settlement models. Nasdaq’s push for regulated tokenized securities. Nasdaq, one.

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