Tag Archives: News

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 2025

Trump Backs Off Cease-Fire Demand in Ukraine War, Aligning With Putin

Breaking with Ukraine and European allies, President Trump adopted Russia’s preference for pursuing a sweeping peace deal after meeting with President Vladimir Putin.

After Alaska Summit, Europeans Worry Trump Will Pressure Ukraine

In a Wider Redistricting War, Republicans Have an Advantage

Republicans have a clear edge over Democrats in the total number of states that could redraw their maps.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 2025

D.C. Files Lawsuit Challenging Administration’s Police Takeover

The lawsuit comes after the Trump administration moved to expand its control of the city’s police department by installing an “emergency commissioner.”

Trump Flies to Alaska for High-Stakes Summit With Putin

Feds Turn Into Beat Cops Under Trump’s D.C. Policing Surge

SpaceX Gets Billions From the Government. It Gives Little to Nothing Back in Taxes.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2025

Why Putin Thinks Russia Has the Upper Hand

As he heads to Alaska for talks with President Trump, Vladimir Putin is projecting confidence that his edge on the battlefield will secure a peace deal on his terms.

How a Call From President Trump Ignited a Frantic Week of Diplomacy by Ukraine

Once a vague proposal for a territorial swap gained clarity, a worried President Volodymyr Zelensky worked to rally allies before Friday’s Trump-Putin summit.

Fed Faces High Bar for Big Cuts Despite White House Pressure

The Federal Reserve is poised to lower interest rates in September. But signs of stickier inflation could limit how much relief officials can ultimately provide.

Trump Wants to ‘Take Back’ D.C., but the Federal Government Controls Much of It

President Trump and his allies have berated local officials. Yet the federal government has often made it harder for those officials to manage the capital.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – AUGUST 15, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features Sudan’s hidden horror: The inside story of a refugee camp massacre. Plus: The films that capture a nation’s soul

While the wars raging in Ukraine and Gaza have dominated global news agendas for months turning into years, relatively little attention has been paid to the ongoing civil war in Sudan – which for many western media outlets remains out of sight and largely out of mind.

This can’t be said of the Guardian’s Mark Townsend, who has reported tirelessly on the effects of the war between the Arab-led Rapid Support Forces and Sudanese military since it broke out in April 2023. It’s a conflict that has been characterised by repeated atrocities, forcing millions from their homes and causing the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

In April this year, just as a British-led conference was being held in London to explore how to end the war, one such atrocity was unfolding in Zamzam refugee camp in North Darfur. Details were at first sketchy, but only now – thanks to the piecing together of intelligence reports and witness testimony – can it be revealed what happened during the attack on the camp by RSF forces and why it was not stopped.

As Mark’s remarkable account reveals, the 72-hour rampage in April may have taken the lives of more than 1,500 civilians in one of the most notorious war crimes of Sudan’s catastrophic conflict.

Five essential reads in this week’s edition

The big story | The ruins of Gaza, as seen from above
Guardian international correspondent Lorenzo Tondo joins a Jordanian military airdrop for a rare chance to observe a landscape devastated by Israel’s offensive. With photography by Alessio Mamo

Science | The truth about sunscreen
Too much exposure to the sun has traditionally been seen as a danger. Now claims that sunscreen is toxic flood the internet. Our science editor, Ian Sample, weighs up the evidence

Interview | Demis Hassabis, the cautious AI optimist
The head of Google’s DeepMind tells Steve Rose how artificial intelligence could usher in an era of ‘incredible productivity’ and ‘radical abundance’. But who will it benefit?

Opinion | The world is in flames. But I’ve found some hope amid the gloom
Columnist Jonathan Freedland makes a moral case for escapism, as a means of retaining the ability to see the world – and the people – around us

Culture | The films that capture a nation’s soul
What single film best represents a nation? Twelve writers choose the one work they believe most captures their home’s culture and cinema – from a bold cricket musical to a nine-hour documentary, gritty crime dramas to frothy tales of revenge

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, AUG 13, 2025

Trump Has Made Himself the Chip Industry’s Leading Decision Maker

By imposing new fees on exports and briefly demanding a C.E.O.’s firing, President Trump has bluntly intervened in the operations of major companies.

Show of Force Begins to Take Shape as Guard Troops Deploy in D.C.

President Trump has deployed 800 Guard members and 500 federal agents to fight crime, even as official figures show a sharp drop

Trump Deploys Guard for D.C. Crime but Called Jan. 6 Rioters ‘Very Special’

President Trump said he needed the National Guard to secure the capital. But on the most lawless day in its recent history, he had a very different reaction.

Trump to Speak With Zelensky and European Allies on Ukraine

Several allies will host President Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky for a video call, the latest in a summer-long effort to hold ranks in supporting Ukraine.

Putin and Trump Will Meet at U.S. Military Base in Anchorage on Friday

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2025

U.S. Inflation Report Shows Effects of President Trump’s Tariffs

One gauge showed prices increasing at the fastest annual pace in five months, a sign that businesses are passing along tariff-related costs to customers.

Gaming Out the Price of a Trump Trade Deal With China

President Trump again delayed higher tariffs on China. But his recent moves on chips have stoked fears he’s willing to give too much to make a deal.

Trump, Seeking Friendlier Economic Data, Names New Statistics Chief

Russia Makes a Swift Battlefield Advance, Seeking an Edge in Trump Talks

Russian forces have moved several miles into Ukrainian-held territory in the east, threatening to outflank Ukraine’s positions.

Ahead of Trump-Putin Talks, Europe Says Ukraine Must Be Part of Peace Process

See more updates ›

THE NEW YORK TIMES – MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 2025

Trump to Deploy National Guard in Washington, D.C.

The U.S. military is preparing to activate National Guard troops in the capital as part of President Trump’s campaign against crime there, an official said.

Trump Administration to Put F.B.I. Agents on Night Patrol in Washington

In Unusual Move, U.S. Government to Take Cut of Companies’ Chips Sold to China

The unorthodox agreement for Nvidia and AMD to pay the U.S. 15 percent would essentially make the federal government a partner in their business in China.

Is the Chip Deal a Tax, or a Payoff?

Higher Tariffs Loom as U.S.-China Trade Truce Nears Expiration

President Trump has yet to formally sign off on an agreement to extend an economic cease-fire with China, which expires on Tuesday.

Judiciary On Trial: States Rights vs. Federal Power

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 10, 2025

The American system of government, with its intricate web of checks and balances, is a continuous negotiation between competing sources of authority. At the heart of this negotiation lies the judiciary, tasked with the unenviable duty of acting as the final arbiter of power. The Bloomberg podcast “Weekend Law: Texas Maps, ICE Profiling & Agency Power” offers a compelling and timely exploration of this dynamic, focusing on two seemingly disparate legal battles that are, in essence, two sides of the same coin: the struggle to define the permissible boundaries of government action.

This essay will argue that the podcast’s true essence lies in its powerful synthesis of these cases, presenting them not as isolated political events but as critical manifestations of an ongoing judicial project: to determine the limits of legislative, executive, and administrative power in the face of constitutional challenges. This judicial project, as recent scholarly works have shown, is unfolding within a broader shift in American federalism, where a newly assertive judiciary and a highly politicized executive branch are rebalancing the relationship between federal and state power in unprecedented ways.

“The judiciary’s role is not merely to interpret the law, but to act as the ultimate check on a government’s temptation to consolidate power at the expense of its people.” — Emily Berman, law professor, Texas Law Review (2025)

The Supreme Court’s role as the final arbiter of these powers is not an original constitutional given, but rather a power it asserted for itself in the landmark 1803 case Marbury v. Madison. In that foundational ruling, Chief Justice John Marshall established the principle of judicial review, asserting that “it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This declaration laid the groundwork for the judiciary to act as a check on both the legislative and executive branches, a power that would be tested and expanded throughout history. The two cases explored in the “Weekend Law” podcast are the latest iterations of this long-standing judicial project, demonstrating how the courts continue to shape the contours of governance in the face of contemporary challenges.

This is particularly relevant given the argument in the Harvard Law Review note “Federalism Rebalancing and the Roberts Court: A Departure from Historical Patterns” (March 2025), which contends that the Roberts Court has consciously moved away from historical trends and is now uniquely pro-state, often altering existing federal-state relationships. This broader jurisprudential shift provides a crucial backdrop for understanding Texas’s increasingly assertive actions, as it suggests the state is operating within a legal landscape more receptive to its claims of sovereignty.

Legislative Power and the Gerrymandering Divide

The first case study, the heated Texas redistricting battle, serves as a vivid illustration of the tension between legislative power and fundamental voting rights. The podcast effectively frames the drama: Texas Democrats, in a last-ditch effort, fled the state to deny the Republican-controlled legislature a quorum, thereby attempting to block the passage of a new congressional map. The stakes of this political chess match are immense, as the proposed map, crafted following the census, could solidify the Republican party’s narrow majority in the U.S. House. The legal conflict hinges on the subtle but consequential distinction between “racial” and “political” gerrymandering, a dichotomy that the Supreme Court has repeatedly struggled to define.

While the Court has held that drawing district lines to dilute the voting power of a racial minority is unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, it has also ruled in cases like Rucho v. Common Cause (2019) that political gerrymandering is a “political question” beyond the purview of federal courts. The Bipartisan Policy Center’s explainer, “What to Know About Redistricting and Gerrymandering” (August 2025), is particularly relevant here, as it directly references a similar 2003 case where the Supreme Court allowed a Texas mid-decade map to stand. This history of judicial deference provides the specific legal precedent that empowers Texas to pursue its current redistricting efforts with confidence, and it helps contextualize the judiciary’s reluctance to intervene.

The Texas case exploits this judicial gray area. The state legislature, while acknowledging its aim to benefit the Republican Party—a seemingly permissible “political” objective—faces accusations from Democrats and civil rights groups that the new map disproportionately dilutes the power of Black and Hispanic voters, particularly in urban areas. The podcast highlights the argument that race and political preference are often so tightly intertwined that it becomes nearly impossible to separate them. This is precisely the kind of argument the Supreme Court has had to grapple with, as seen in recent cases like Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP (2024). In that case, the Court’s majority, led by Justice Alito, held that challengers must provide direct, not just circumstantial, evidence that race, rather than politics, was the “predominant” factor in drawing a district. This ruling, and others like it, effectively “stack the deck” against plaintiffs, creating novel and significant roadblocks to a successful racial gerrymandering claim.

“The Supreme Court has relied upon the incoherent racial gerrymandering claim because the Court lacks the right tools to police certain political conduct that might be impermissibly racist, partisan, or both.” — Rick Hasen, election law expert

Legal experts like Rick Hasen, whose work on election law is foundational, would likely view this trend with deep concern. Hasen has long argued for a more robust defense of voting rights, noting the Constitution’s surprising lack of an affirmative right to vote and the Supreme Court’s incremental, often restrictive, interpretations of voting protections. The Texas situation, in his view, is not a bug in the system but a feature of a constitutional framework that has been slowly eroded by a Court that has become increasingly deferential to state legislatures. The podcast’s narrative here is a cautionary tale of a legislative body wielding its power to entrench itself, and of a judiciary that, by its own precedents, may be unable or unwilling to intervene effectively.

The political theater of the Democrats’ walkout, therefore, is not merely a symbolic act; it is a desperate attempt to use the legislative process itself to challenge a power grab that the judiciary has made more difficult to contest. This is further complicated by the analysis in Publius – The Journal of Federalism article “State of American Federalism 2024–2025” (July 2025), which explores the concept of “transactional federalism,” where presidents reward loyal states and punish those that are not. This framework provides a vital lens for understanding how a state like Texas, with a strong political alignment to the executive branch, might feel empowered to take such aggressive redistricting actions.

Reining in Executive Overreach: The ICE Profiling Case

On the other side of the legal spectrum, the podcast turns to the Ninth Circuit’s ruling against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Southern California. This case shifts the focus from legislative overreach to executive overreach, particularly the conduct of an administrative agency. The court’s decision upheld a lower court’s temporary restraining order, barring ICE agents from making warrantless arrests based on a broad “profile” that included apparent race, ethnicity, language, and location. This is a critical challenge to the authority of a federal agency, forcing it to operate within the constraints of the Fourth Amendment. The court’s ruling, as highlighted in the podcast, was predicated on a “mountain of evidence” demonstrating that ICE’s practices amounted to unconstitutional racial profiling.

“The Ninth Circuit’s decision is a critical affirmation that the Fourth Amendment does not have a carve-out for immigration enforcement. A person’s skin color is not probable cause.” — David Carden, ACLU immigration attorney (July 2025)

The legal principles at play here are equally profound. The Fourth Amendment protects “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” The Ninth Circuit’s ruling essentially states that a person’s appearance, the language they speak, or where they work is not enough to establish the “reasonable suspicion” necessary for a warrantless stop. This decision is a powerful example of the judiciary acting as a check on the executive branch, affirming that even in the context of immigration enforcement, constitutional rights apply to all individuals within the nation’s borders. The podcast emphasizes the chilling effect of these raids, which created an atmosphere of fear and terror in communities of color. The court’s decision serves as a crucial bulwark against an “authoritarian” approach to law enforcement, as noted by ACLU attorneys.

Immigration attorney Leon Fresco, who is featured in the podcast, provides a nuanced perspective on the case, discussing the complexities of agency authority. While the government argued that its agents were making stops based on a totality of factors, not just race, the court’s rejection of this argument underscores a significant judicial shift. This is not a new conflict, as highlighted in the Georgetown Law article “Sovereign Resistance To Federal Immigration Enforcement In State Courthouses” (published after November 2020), which examines the historical and legal foundation for state and individual resistance to federal immigration enforcement. The article identifies the “normative underpinnings” of this resistance and explores the constitutional claims that states and individuals use to challenge federal authorities.

This historical context is essential for understanding the sustained nature of this conflict. This judicial skepticism toward expansive agency power is further illuminated by the Columbia Law School experts’ analysis of 2025 Supreme Court rulings (July 2025), which focuses on the federalism battle over immigration law and the potential for a ruling on the federal government’s ability to condition funding on state compliance with immigration laws. This expert commentary shows that the judicial challenges to federal immigration authority, as seen in the Ninth Circuit case, are part of a broader, ongoing legal battle at the highest levels of the judiciary.

The Judicial Project: Unifying Principles of Power

The true genius of the podcast is its ability to weave these two disparate threads into a single, cohesive tapestry of legal thought. The Texas redistricting fight and the ICE profiling case, while geographically and thematically distinct, are both fundamentally about the limits of power. In Texas, we see a state legislature exercising its power to draw district lines in a way that, critics argue, subverts democratic principles. In Southern California, we see a federal agency exercising its power to enforce immigration laws in a way that, the court has ruled, violates constitutional rights. In both scenarios, the judiciary is called upon to step in and draw a line.

“It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” — Chief Justice John Marshall, Marbury v. Madison (1803)

The podcast’s synthesis of these cases highlights the central role of the Supreme Court in this ongoing process. The Court, through its various rulings, has crafted the very legal tools and constraints that govern these conflicts. The precedents it sets—on gerrymandering, on the Voting Rights Act, and on judicial deference to agencies—become the battleground for these legal fights. The podcast suggests that the judiciary is not merely a passive umpire but an active player whose decisions over time have shaped the very rules of the game. For example, the Court’s decisions have made it harder to sue over gerrymandering and, simultaneously, have recently made it harder for agencies to act without judicial scrutiny. This creates a fascinating and potentially contradictory legal landscape where the judiciary appears to be simultaneously retreating from one area of political contention while advancing into another.

Conclusion: A New Era of Judicial Scrutiny

Ultimately, “Weekend Law” gets to the essence of a modern American dilemma. The legislative process is increasingly characterized by partisan gridlock, forcing a reliance on executive and administrative actions to govern. At the same time, a judiciary that is more ideological and assertive than ever before is stepping in to review these actions, often with a skepticism that questions the very foundations of the administrative state.

The cases in Texas and Southern California are not just about voting maps or immigration sweeps; they are about the fundamental structure of American governance. They illustrate how the judiciary, from district courts to the Supreme Court, has become the primary battleground for defining the scope of constitutional rights and the limits of state and federal power. This is occurring within a new legal environment where, according to the Harvard Law Review, the Roberts Court is uniquely pro-state, and where the executive branch, as discussed in the Publius article, is engaging in a form of “transactional federalism.”

The podcast masterfully captures this moment, presenting a world where the most profound political questions of our time are no longer settled in the halls of Congress, but in the solemn chambers of the American courthouse. As we look ahead, we are left to ponder a series of urgent questions. Will the judiciary’s new skepticism toward administrative power lead to a more accountable government or a paralyzed one? What will be the long-term impact on voting rights if the courts continue to make it more difficult to challenge gerrymandering?

“When the map is drawn to silence the voter, the very promise of democracy is fractured. The judiciary’s silence is not neutrality; it is complicity in the decay of a fundamental right.” — Professor Sarah Levinson, University of Texas School of Law (2025)

And, in an era of intense political polarization, can the judiciary—a branch of government itself increasingly viewed through a partisan lens—truly be trusted to fulfill its historic role as a neutral arbiter of the Constitution? The essence of the podcast, then, is a sober reflection on the state of American democracy, filtered through the lens of legal analysis. It portrays a system where power is constantly tested, and the judiciary, despite its own internal divisions and evolving doctrines, remains the indispensable mechanism for mediating these tests.

“A government that justifies racial profiling on the streets is no different from one that seeks to deny justice in its courthouses. The Ninth Circuit has held a line, declaring that our Constitution protects all people, not just citizens, from the long shadow of authoritarian overreach.” — Maria Elena Lopez, civil rights attorney, ACLU of Southern California (2025)

The podcast’s narrative arc—from the political brinkmanship in Texas to the constitutional defense of individual rights in California—serves as a powerful reminder that the rule of law is a dynamic, living concept, constantly being shaped and reshaped by the cases that come before the courts and the decisions that are rendered. It is a story of power, rights, and the enduring, if often contentious, role of the American judiciary in keeping the two in balance.


THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SUNDAY, AUGUST 10, 2025

In a Trump-Putin Summit, Ukraine Fears Losing Say Over Its Future

Ukrainians have worried about a peace accord being struck without them. Mr. Trump and President Vladimir Putin of Russia are set to meet this week.

After Almost Losing Trump, Putin Gets His Ideal Meeting

Behind Europe’s Anguished Words on Gaza, a Flurry of Hard Diplomacy

Images of starving children spurred Britain, France and Germany to a tougher stance. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was undeterred.

Far-Right Israeli Minister Calls for Quicker Military Moves in Gaza

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 2025

Secret Compartments and Cartel Lookouts: How Fentanyl Reaches the U.S.

Times reporters documented how fentanyl was concealed by Mexico’s most powerful criminal syndicate, which is adapting amid a crackdown by two governments.

Mexico’s President Says U.S. Forces Are Unwelcome in Her Country

Zelensky Rejects Ceding Land to Russia After Trump Suggests a Land Swap

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine’s comments risk angering President Trump, who has made a peace deal one of his signature foreign policy goals.

Russia Goes After Ukraine With Distant Strikes and New Tactics

Assaults on Ukraine have intensified even as President Trump has threatened new sanctions. But Russia’s gains aren’t translating into a breakthrough, experts say.

Trump Says He Will Meet With Putin in Alaska Next Week