House Republicans broke the record Wednesday for the lower chamber's longest vote in history after more than seven hours of grueling negotiations over President Trump's "big, beautiful bill."
Why it matters: The extended vote time reflects the severe reluctance among some on the House GOP's right flank to support the marquee tax and spending package.
The previous record was in 2021, when the House took seven hours and six minutes on a procedural vote related to then-President Biden's Build Back Better legislation.
House Republicans overtook that record at 9:15pm ET on Wednesday, then went another 15 minutes before finally closing the vote.
Assistant House Minority Leader Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) needled Republicans on the vote time by suggesting they were violating House rules by holding the vote open for so long.
State of play: The lengthy vote came about as a result of negotiations between House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and members of the right-wing Freedom Caucus.
The hardliners are upset that the Senate bill adds more to the deficit than the House-passed version while also excluding several key provisions they secured to cut green energy tax credits and Medicaid.
Some moderates have also had concerns about the bill, saying it cuts too much into Medicaid and other key programs.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said during a public meeting on Wednesday that she is trusting advisers to provide counsel on how to fire people who "don't like us."
Why it matters: Noem's comment sends a chilling message to the DHS, which has gone through a mass exodus and public backlash over its immigration policies.
Zoom in: During the first Homeland Security Advisory Council meeting held at the DHS headquarter, Noem gave opening remarks by saying there is a lot of people in the department "that don't support what we are doing."
"What we have to be aware of is that we're working with the department that for the last four years hasn't been required to do much," Noem said.
She then blamed former Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for telling DHS workers "not to do a lot."
Zoom out: The Trump administration has been increasingly vocal about drastically restructuring the DHS.
Noem has privately supported the idea of shrinking FEMA's role in disaster planning, per CNN. She later walked back the claim.
Officials staffing the U.S. legal immigration system have been asked to volunteer to help deportation operations spearheaded by ICE, according to CBS.
Context: The advisory council consists of 22 members appointed by President Trump and Secretary Noem. The council provides the secretary of Homeland Security with real-time, real-world and independent advice on homeland security operations.
Notable members include former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, billionaire Marc Andreessen, and Fox News host Mark Levin.
The White House on Tuesday published a list of staff salaries, revealing how much each West Wing employee makes.
Why it matters: The annual report to Congress gives a peek into the more than 400 staffers who surround President Trump, from his closest advisers to more junior aides.
The intrigue: With a salary of $225,700, adviser Jacalynne B. Klopp is the top-paid person in the White House.
Second is associate counsel Edgar Mkrtchian who makes $203,645.
What should have been a five-minute procedural vote on President Trump's "big, beautiful bill" has stretched for more than 90 minutes with no clear end in sight due to firm opposition from some corners of the GOP.
Why it matters: House Republican leaders are working furiously to pass the sweeping reconciliation bill before their stated July 4 deadline โ but persistent delays threaten to put that goal out of reach.
A group of GOP deficit hawks have been meeting off the House floor since returning from their meeting at the White House.
State of play: An hour into the vote, Republicans were told to head back to their offices and sit tight while more meetings occur, per a source familiar with the matter.
Lawmakers in both parties were told they will have at least an hour before they are needed back on the floor, aides and members told Axios.
In addition to intra-party defections, Republicans have also been wracked by weather-related tardiness and absences from their members.
A group backed by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller has filed a federal complaint against the Los Angeles Dodgers over the team's diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices.
Why it matters: The Dodgers are one of the most popular MLB teams among Asian, Black and Mexican American fans and recently committed $1 million to help immigrants affected by President Trump's immigration raids in Southern California last month.
The big picture: The complaint is part of a larger strategy by MAGA conservative-led groups to attack private companies that are keeping programs aimed at helping or recruiting people of color.
Zoom in: America First Legal (AFL) announced this week it has filed a federal civil rights complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) against the Dodgers and the investment firm Guggenheim Partners.
The group says the reigning World Series champions are "engaging in unlawful discrimination under the guise of 'diversity, equity, and inclusion' (DEI), in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964."
The complaint alleges that the Dodgers "appear to be engaging in similar unlawful DEI practices by allowing race, color, and sex to motivate employment decisions."
AFL specifically attacks Dodgers' programs that seek to help Asian Americans, Black Americans and Latinos, which the group claims are unlawful.
The Dodgers and controlling owner Mark Walter's Guggenheim Partners did not immediately respond to Axios for comment.
The team participated on Sunday in a "Salute to the Negro Leagues" game against the Kansas City Royals where Dodgers player wore Brooklyn Dodgers caps.
The intrigue: AFL in its announcement cited the Dodgers saying U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were denied access to parking lots outside Dodger Stadium last month.
MAGA conservatives responded angrily on social media to the Dodgers, and the Department of Homeland Security denied that it had asked for access.
Between the lines: The complaint comes as Trump's Justice Department is using a broad reinterpretation of Civil Rights-era laws to focus on "anti-white racism" rather than discrimination against people of color.
In March, MLB removed the word "diversity" from its MLB Careers home page in reaction to Trump's executive order ending "equal opportunity" for people of color and women in recruiting.
The change appears to affect MLB's Diversity Pipeline Program, which Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred launched in 2016.
What they're saying: "Stephen Miller's group is dressing up vengeance as legal action," Jared Rivera, chief of staff of the advocacy group PICO California, said after the complaint was filed.
Retaliating against the Dodgers for their compassion shows Miller is threatened when the team and its fans stand up for what is moral and right."
PICO California was one of the groups urging the Dodgers to speak out more about the immigration raids.
Context: The Dodgers had come under criticism earlier this month for failing to speak out against ICE raids in LA and for unsuccessfully pressuring a singer not to perform a Spanish version of the national anthem at a Dodgers game.
Latino fans โ especially Mexican Americans โ comprise a large percentage of the Dodgers' fan base, a trend that has been ongoing since the late 1980s, when Mexican-born left-handed pitcher Fernando Valenzuela played for the team.
Fun fact: The Dodgers are credited with helping spark the civil rights movement by calling up Jackie Robinson in 1947, which broke MLB's modern-day color line.
His courage paved the way for Black athletes across all sports as he endured racist taunts from opposing white managers and fans and had to travel amid segregation.
Robinson was friends with Martin Luther King Jr. and spent his post-playing career as a civil rights activist.
House Democrats and Republicans on Wednesday powered through flight cancellations and medical challenges in their efforts to return to Capitol Hill to vote on President Trump's "big, beautiful bill."
Why it matters: With the House divided by just a handful of votes, both parties are straining to ensure that as many of their members as possible are in attendance.
Republicans are furiously trying to stem defections on their side, with several groups of lawmakers unhappy with the Senate version of the bill meeting with Trump at the White House.
Democrats are using procedural tactics to delay the vote as long as possible and hoping their unanimous opposition to the bill leaves Republicans short of the votes they need to pass it.
Driving the news: Severe weather in D.C. on Tuesday caused members from across the country to face unexpected flight delays and cancellations, with some even stuck at layovers.
Several lawmakers, including Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) and Chris Deluzio (D-Pa.), opted to drive to D.C. rather than attempt to re-book their flights.
By Wednesday morning, Democrats were mostly present and voting while Republicans had to keep a procedural vote open for over an hour as their members straggled in.
Zoom in: Some Democrats were so determined to vote that they ventured to Capitol Hill just a day after surgery.
Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio), still in a wheelchair from a recent procedure, showed up with a cast over her eye, telling reporters she underwent eye surgery that she had scheduled for this week, thinking there wouldn't be votes.
Similarly, Rep. Jonathan Jackson (D-Ill.) had his arm in a sling, telling Axios he had planned rotator cuff surgery: "4th of July, how about that? I trusted them."
Data: Oxford Economics/Cato Institute/Deportation Data Project/CBO/DHS/TRAC. Chart: Axios Visuals
President Trump's immigration crackdown is hitting key pockets of the economy, disrupting workplaces and communities around the country.
Why it matters: The sharp fall in immigration this yearthreatens to slow down economic growth,ย particularly in the sectors and cities that relied on newcomers to the U.S. in recent years.
What they're saying: With the push against immigration, "the economy will find itself slightly diminished in the long run and inflation will run a touch higher," economist Bernard Yaros writes in a report for Oxford Economics.
There will be fewer workers to produce goods and services, slowing down growth and putting pressure on wages.
By the numbers: Net immigration started to fall last summer after the Biden administration took a harder line. This year, Trump's crackdown has been far more aggressive.
Net immigration โ inflows of people minus outflows โ is running at an annualized rate of 600,000, down about a third from where it was in the last three months of 2024, per the analysis by Oxford Economics, which looks at several sources of public data.
The decline is almost entirely due to a sharp drop in unauthorized immigration. Border crossings are stalled, and deportations are up.
What to watch: Yaros estimates in the long run, GDP will be 0.25% lower as a result.
That's a relatively modest macroeconomic effect, but there's a wild card. The "big, beautiful bill" that passed the Senate contains about $175 billion for even more immigration enforcement.
That could mean an even bigger decline going forward.
Between the lines: Immigration's effects on the economy are a slow burn, and it'll take a while before it shows up in the macro data.
For now they are rippling through industries that rely on immigrant workers, like farms, hotels, construction and meatpacking plants.
Zoom in: Smaller cities are feeling the hit from deportations and ICE raids, places like St. Louis, Buffalo and Pittsburgh where immigration had boosted faltering economies, the Wall Street Journal reports.
"The arrests cast a shadow over the local economy. Restaurant tables emptied. Kitchen workers stayed home. Fruit vendors disappeared from the streets. The number of shoppers at stores shrank, and those who still went didn't linger for long," the paper writes.
The nation's farms are in a tough spot, too, and employees are fearful of showing up to work.
"That means crops are not being picked and fruit and vegetables are rotting at peak harvest time," farmers and farmworkers told Reuters.
ICE is also going through carwashes, construction sites and meatpacking plants, the Washington Post reports.
In Los Angeles, immigration raids are slowing down the rebuilding efforts from the devastating fires earlier this year, the Los Angeles Times reports.
Even the horse racing industry is sweating the crackdown. "Scary times," a Louisville racehorse trainer tells a local news station about ICE raids.
Yes, but: Immigration opponents say the crackdown will translate into more and better-paying jobs for native-born Americans.
The bottom line: Until recently, a surge in immigration drove solid economic growth and a robust labor market. Now, policy is pushing it the other way.
If you're in the defense business, you've seen this meme in one form or another.
"Born too late to deploy to the Middle East," it reads.
"Born too early to deploy to the Middle East," it continues.
"Born just in time to deploy to the Middle East," it concludes.
Why it matters: Flippant? Yes. Compelling? Also yes, as the image's virality today reflects just how entangled the U.S. is in the troubled region, even as it promises to pivot more fully to the Chinese and Russian threat.
This is geopolitical tug of war, spiked with public cynicism.
Driving the news: Surprise strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities using B-2 Spirit bombers and 100-plus other aircraft marked Washington's latest foray into the Middle East, where for decades it's expended taxpayer dollars and lives. (Think Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen.)
Meanwhile, the Pentagon frets over Beijing and Moscow and their global ambitions. But the resources needed for that competition โ including heavy-duty, traditional military hardware like aircraft carriers โ are in high demand elsewhere.
Friction point: "There is a disconnect between what we, the United States, say in our national defense strategies and those sorts of products and what actually happens on the ground," Brian Carter, a Middle East expert at the American Enterprise Institute, told Axios.
"The problem is: We episodically prioritize the Middle East over China," he said. "Wehaven't been good about ensuring that we put enough effort into the Middle East to make sure that things don't spiral out of control."
"When we have to surge all this stuff in, we're always reactive."
Between the lines: Pentagon officials and military leaders have been hinting at this dynamic.
Elbridge Colby, the undersecretary of defense for policy, has long lobbied for prioritizing China over Europe and the Middle East. During his March confirmation hearing, Colby told senators the U.S. lacks "a multi-war military."
Indo-Pacific Command boss Adm. Samuel Paparo in November said support provided to Israel and Ukraine was "eating into" some of the most precious U.S. weapons stockpiles. In April, he revealed it took at least 73 flights to move a Patriot air-defense battalion out of China's backyard and into Central Command.
And most recently โ just days ago โ Acting Chief of Naval Operations Adm. James Kilby told lawmakers the Navy is chewing through Standard Missile-3s at "an alarming rate." The service has used more than $1 billion in munitions fighting Houthi rebels near the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, and the USS Harry S. Truman has lost three Super Hornet aircraft, including one to friendly fire.
Zoom out: "The Middle East is the space where four things come together," Daryl Press, the faculty director at the Davidson Institute for Global Security, said in an interview.
The cities of Baltimore, Chicago and Columbus, Ohio, on Tuesday asked a federal court to overturn new regulations from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that place tighter restrictions on Affordable Care Act enrollment.
Why it matters: Shortening the enrollment period and other changes would increase the uninsured and underinsured population and place more financial pressure on city-funded public health programs, the cities argue in their complaint.
They also argue that the loss of health insurance will make city residents less able to participate in civic lifeand have "cascading negative effects on city programs and communities."
The Main Street Alliance โ a small business advocacy group โ and Doctors for America are also plaintiffs in the lawsuit, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for Maryland.
State of play: Health and Human Services' regulation shortens the enrollment window for ACA plans on the federal insurance exchange and imposes a $5 monthly premium for consumers with fully subsidized coverage who are automatically reenrolled in ACA coverage, among other changes.
HHS projects the policies will decrease ACA exchange plan enrollment by between 725,000 and 1.8 million people.
The finalized rule "sets forth a wide range of changes that will render coverage on the Exchanges less affordable, less generous, and harder to obtain," the complaint reads.
The complaint states that the Trump administration violated administrative law in finalizing the rule.
But HHS maintains that its rule strengthens access to health insurance.
"The rule closes loopholes, strengthens oversight, and ensures taxpayer subsidies go to those who are truly eligible โ that's not controversial, it's common sense," HHS communications director Andrew Nixon said in an email.
The agency has said the rule is necessary to improve program integrity in ACA markets and that it should lower enrollee premiums by 5% next year.
Majority Leader John Thune pressed Senate Republicans over the last 48 hours to go big or go home on the "big, beautiful bill." But over the next 24 hours, he'll learn if he broke the House's spirit in the process.
Why it matters: The Senate's spending cuts are deeper, the tax cuts are longer and the debt ceiling is steeper.
Thune (R-S.D.) lost three of his own members on his way to a 51-50 win, and he has left House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) with a "non-starter," Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) told reporters.
One GOP lawmaker told Axios' Andrew Solender that Johnson is short "well over 20" votes.
Driving the news: It was an aggressive and risky move for a new majority leader, and it wasn't the light touch House leaders wanted.
But failure is a real possibility on Wednesday, with Johnson pronouncing himself "not happy with what the Senate did to our product."
Zoom out: All reconciliation bills eventually turn into a power struggle between the House and Senate.
In the first inter-chamber conflict of 2025, Thune actually lost the procedural battle. President Trump sided with the House and decreed that there would be one bill and not two separate ones.
But if the current Senate bill prevails, Thune will end up winning on three much more consequential issues: baseline policy, permanence for the business tax cuts, and the scope of entitlement reform.
Zoom in: For months, Thune and Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) insisted that the Senate parliamentarian should use baseline policy to determine how much tax proposals will cost. This will have implications for future Congresses.
That accounting change, which gives Congress a pass on counting the cost of extending tax cuts that are on the books, allowed Crapo to make Trump's business tax cuts permanent, which was one of his top priorities.
Senate Republicans are convinced that will spur the kind of investment the economy will need to achieve 3% growth.
In all, the tax and spending cuts in the Senate amount to $3.3 trillion in deficit spending, compared to $2.8 trillion in the House, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Between the lines: On the trickiest part of the Senate debate, lowering the threshold for the Medicaid provider tax, Thune maintained an aggressive and ideological posture.
"This is the first time we've done anything meaningful on entitlement reform," he told reporters.
With Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) demanding a smaller debt ceiling increase, Thune was forced to negotiate with his old friend Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) for the 50th vote. Vice President Vance got him to 51.
Murkowski extracted changes to allow Alaska to keep more SNAP benefits and helped secure a $50 billion fund for rural hospitals.
The bottom line: Democrats are outraged by the cuts to the social safety net.
But the cuts were important enough to Thune and Senate conservatives to lose Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who announced his retirement last weekend, and Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), the only GOP senator representing a state Kamala Harris won.
OCHOPEE, Fla. โPresident Trump began Tuesday by stoking his on-again feud with Elon Musk and joking about alligators chasing immigrant detainees.
He later basked in the Senate's passage of his signature tax and spending bill โ and enthusiastically lobbed threats toward an array of perceived enemies, from immigrants to the media to Zohran Mamdani, New York City's Democratic nominee for mayor.
Why it matters: Trump and his team seemed to view it as his best day as president โ a day when his brash, norm-crushing style was paying off in a series of "wins" in D.C. and Florida, where he visited a new immigration lockup dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz."
Reality check: To Trump's critics, it all seemed to capture what they see as his cruel recklessness.
Some warned that caging thousands of immigration detainees in tents on an airstrip in Florida's Everglades โ during summer and hurricane season โ was inviting an environmental and humanitarian disaster.
Trump brushed it off, and state officials pointed out the tents are air-conditioned.
Others noted that congressional analysts estimate 11.8 million Medicaid recipients could lose coverage under his big bill, which the analysts project would add $3.3 trillion to the nation's debt. And core inflation is rising, despite Trump's claims to the contrary.
"Could this not work out the way we want it to? Yes," a top Trump adviser said of the bill, which already is drawing fire from conservatives in the House who want debt reduction.
"If it doesn't work, then we have a problem," the adviser said. "And we'll deal with it. No other administration is better equipped to handle crisis."
Zoom out: Trump's White House began the week buoyed by a series of recent events.
On Saturday, his political committees announced a historic $1.4 billion war chest for the 2026 primaries.
The day before, the Supreme Court limited lower courts from using nationwide injunctions to block presidential policies nationwide.
And the weekend before that, Trump had ordered what the administration says were successful strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Meanwhile, the stock market has regained the losses suffered after Trump's announcement of tariffs, which have added an additional $100 billion to U.S. coffers.
Trump's chipper vibe was evident early Tuesday, when he stopped to chat with reporters before boarding Marine One.
Wearing a red, "Gulf of America" cap, Trump threatened to sic DOGE on Musk after the billionaire criticized Trump's megabill.
"I don't think he should be playing that game," Trump said of Musk, warning that the DOGE "monster" could "eat Elon" by eliminating government subsidies to Musk's companies.
That was the first of what would be seven sessions Trump had with reporters on Tuesday. In subsequent ones, he:
Threatened to arrest Mamdani if the New York City Democrat is elected mayor and doesn't allow federal immigration officials to arrest undocumented immigrants in the city. Trump also called him a communist. (Mamdani said he wouldn't "accept this intimidation.")
Threatened to deport U.S. citizens who commit violent crimes, which isn't legal.
Threatened, along with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, to prosecute CNN for reporting about an app that warns people of immigration raids.
Also said CNN should face criminal charges for revealing an initial Pentagon estimate that said the strikes on Iran weren't as successful as Trump claimed. (CNN rejected the notion it did anything improper, noting the app is available to the public and that its report on the bombing assessment emphasized it was preliminary.)
The intrigue: Trump was magnanimous toward Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a close ally whom Trump dubbed "DeSanctimonious" when DeSantis challenged him in the 2024 GOP primaries. On Tuesday, Trump called him a friend.
"We have blood that seems to match pretty well," Trump said at the "Alligator Alcatraz" press conference.
Trump introduced DeSantis to Real America's Voice chief White House reporter Brian Glenn, noting the reporter is the boyfriend of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), a Trump loyalist who has expressed concern about the president's big bill.
"You think it's easy being with Marjorie?" Trump deadpanned to DeSantis.
Trump also described his relationship with DeSantis as a 10. Then he joked, "Maybe 9.9, because there might be a couple of little wounds."
When DeSantis asked Trump to remove a bureaucratic hurdle with the Army Corps of Engineers for an Everglades restoration project, Trump quickly granted it.
"Oh, I would do that. Let me ask myself permission," Trump said, pausing for a moment. "Permission granted! Go ahead and get the thing, get it complete."
Later in the day, the White House said the University of Pennsylvania, under pressure from Trump's administration, had retroactively stripped the records and titles of transgender swimmer Lia Thomas.
Thomas' participation in the NCAA women's swim championships in 2022 helped inspire Trump's push against transgender women in women's sports.
Trump then wrapped up the day by announcingIsrael had agreed to a ceasefire with Hamas in Gaza. Trump urged Hamas to accept the deal.
"Look at the press I'm getting!" Trump crowed to his team at one point, as he kept returning to the cameras and reporters.
Editor's note: This story has been updated to state that the tariffs have added $100 billion to U.S. coffers (not $100 million).
A growing number of local law enforcement officials are alarmed about their jails and prisons holding immigration detaineeswithout warrants, saying it exposes their departments to legal risks.
Why it matters: It's the latest sign of tension between local authorities and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, whose strong-arm tactics in arresting immigrants have shocked communities across the nation.
Zoom in: As part of President Trump's push to deport "millions" of unauthorized immigrants, ICE has leaned on local agencies to help arrest and temporarily detain unauthorized immigrants.
Over the past decade most of ICE's arrests involved people who already were in law enforcement custody, according to a review of 10 years of data from Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC).
But with ICE arrests soaring to more than 2,000 a day under Trump, local jail and prison officials are increasingly concerned about being liable for detainees' care โ particularly when ICE leaves them in local facilities for lengthy periods.
The officials note that in the past, lawsuits filed on behalf of ICE detainees wrongly left languishing in local jails have cost local governments enormously โ $92.5 million in one New York City case involving 20,000 people who were held in prison for ICE without due process between 1997 and 2012.
How it works: ICE can ask a local agency to hold someone they believe isn't legally in the U.S., using a request called a detainer. Usually there's a 48-hour limit on this request.
A detainer request from ICE isn't the same as a warrant issued by a judge, which local agencies require to hold their suspects.
"The ICE administrative warrant is not enough to hold somebody's liberty away," Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) told Axios. "It's essentially holding somebody and locking them up when there's no legal, lawful authority to do so."
"The risk to the institution that's holding them is civil liability," he added. "They could end up paying a lot of money โ and not just money, but injunctive relief."
The National Sheriffs' Association has asked the Trump administration to clarify how long someone should be held on ICE's behalf, and has raised the issue with Border Czar Tom Homan.
The group also has been lobbying Congress to pass a law addressing the issue for sheriffs, who often manage jails.
Between the lines: A few law enforcement officials have spoken publicly about their concerns for ICE detainees' civil liberties under Trump's deportation push โ and have faced a backlash from GOP officials for doing so.
In February, Sheriff Dan Marx of Winneshiek County, Iowa, aired his concerns about cooperating with ICE detainers in a since-deleted Facebook post.
"The only reason detainers are issued is because the federal agency does not have enough information or has not taken the time to obtain a valid judicial warrant," Marx wrote.
"These detainers are violations of our 4th Amendment protection against warrantless search, seizure and arrest, and our 6th Amendment right to due process."
Marx's post led Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds โ a Republican who has ordered the state's local law enforcement to "fully cooperate" with Trump's deportation mission โ to file a formal complaint against the sheriff.
Marx was investigated by Iowa's attorney general over whether he violated a state law mandating such cooperation.
He deleted his first post and issued another statement that said in part: "I do not believe law enforcement officials should have to choose between upholding their sworn duty to the Constitution and following the state statute."
He declined to be interviewed because of the investigation.
"From a constitutional standpoint, if we're going to hold somebody in jail or detain them, we want to be doing so lawfully and have legal grounds to do so. And I think for a sheriff to ask for a judicial warrant is reasonable," Michael Tupper, a former police chief in Marshalltown, Iowa, told Axios.
In a New Orleans court, the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office is being sued by Louisiana's attorney general for not honoring ICE detainers.
Orleans Parish has a policy of honoring ICE detainers only when a detainee has a warrant for a violent offense.
The policy stems from has a legal settlement from 2010, when two men in the Orleans jail were held without due process for two months longer than their sentences, waiting for ICE.
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill (R) argues it amounts to a sanctuary policy, in violation of state law. The case is ongoing.
Several other jurisdictions nationwide have faced similar lawsuits when people have been held on ICE detainers longer than their sentences or after their cases were dismissed. Some, like Orleans Parish, are changing their policies to limit their exposure to such suits.
Montgomery and Delaware counties in Pennsylvania, for example, now require judicial warrants in addition to an ICE detainers to hold immigration detainees.
What they're saying: "When a sheriff or a police chief stands up and voices concerns, they are oftentimes painted as soft on crime, or, you know, they don't care about keeping their community safe," Tupper said. "It's really the opposite. These folks are trying to do the right thing for the community."
As Trump's deportation effort continues, that pressure on police chiefs and sheriffs is likely to build.
"If they speak up too much," said retired police chief Mark Prosser of Stormlake, Iowa, "then perhaps an immigration enforcement activity is going to come to a community near you."
Managers are trusting AI to help make high-stakes decisions about firing, promoting, and giving their direct reports a raise, according to a new study from Resume Builder.
Why it matters: AI-based decision-making in HR could open companies up to discrimination and other types of lawsuits, experts tell Axios.
The big picture: Employers are increasingly pushing workers to incorporate genAI into their workflows, and gaining AI skills has been linked to better pay and increased job choices.
But genAI training and policies at work are still rare, and the tools are changing so fast that it's hard to keep up.
Using AI to assess people's careers is risky, especially when the tools are prone to hallucinations and poorly understood.
What they did: The study was conducted online late last month with 1,342 U.S. full-time manager-level employees responding.
What they found: 65% of managers say they use AI at work, and 94% of those managers say they look to the tools "to make decisions about the people who report to them," per the report.
Over half of those managers said they used AI tools to assess whether a direct report should be promoted, given a raise, laid off or fired.
A little over half of the managers using AI in personnel matters said they used ChatGPT. Others used Microsoft's Copilot, Google's Gemini or different AI tools.
A majority of these managers said they were confident that AI was "fair and unbiased," and a surprising number of managers (20%) said they let AI make decisions without human input.
Only one-third of the managers who are using AI for these decisions say that they've received formal training on what the tools can and cannot do.
Managers are looking for new ways to implement AI, probably under pressure from their organizations, Stacie Haller, chief career adviser at Resume Builder, told Axios.
"Everybody's sort of trying things out. But to me, it raises a huge red flag when you're talking about people's careers," Haller said.
"If somebody's making a decision to fire you based on AI, I'm imagining there could be lawsuits. I mean, people who felt they were fired unfairly [sued] before AI."
"I think they're ahead of their skis on this," she added.
Yes, but: It's not clear from the data exactly how managers are using AI to automate managing.
They could be using it to organize data for performance reviews. Or they could be asking ChatGPT, "Who should I lay off next?"
Zoom in: AI can help synthesize employee feedback or highlight patterns across team assessments, Lynda Gratton, professor of management practice at London Business School, told Axios via email.
But there could be issues with the quality of the data going into the model, she says.
And even if it is accurate, Gratton said, "it replicates any bias already in the system."
CBS parent Paramount Global on Tuesday said it would pay $16 million to settle a voter interference lawsuit filed by President Trump last October, even as press freedom advocates warned the company was buckling to political pressure.
Why it matters: A settlement likely clears the way for Paramount Global to merge with Skydance Media.
Paramount and Skydance agreed to merge in a deal worth more than $8 billion last July.
The deal is largely seen as an escape valve for owner Shari Redstone, who has faced pressure from shareholders to offload the legacy TV asset while it still has value.
Zoom in: "The settlement does not include a statement of apology or regret," per a statement from Paramount Global on the deal to settle the suit Trump filed over the editing of a "60 Minutes" interview with his 2024 election rival, former Vice President Harris.
"The Company has agreed that in the future, 60 Minutes will release transcripts of interviews with eligible U.S. presidential candidates after such interviews have aired, subject to redactions as required for legal or national security concerns," according to the statement.
Paramount said no amount will be paid directly or indirectly to the president or fellow plaintiff Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) under the agreement, but it will go towardย their legal fees and costs and Trump's future presidential library.
Catch up quick: Trump alleged that CBS News had engaged in election interference in the way it edited the Harris interview.
He originally sought $10 billion in damages and later increased his claim in an amended filing to $20 billion.
CBS denied wrongdoing and in March filed two motions to dismiss the amended complaint.
Between the lines: The lawsuit became more complicated in January, when the new, Trump-appointed Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr said the agency would probe WCBS New York, claiming the same "60 Minutes" interview that aired on WCBS and other CBS affiliate stations violated its "news distortion" rules.
CBS quickly complied with the investigation, handing over unedited transcripts of the interview.
What they're saying: Press freedom groups called Trump's suit "beyond frivolous."
The Freedom for the Press Foundation has threatened to sue Paramount if it settled with Trump.
Paramount emphasized in its statement that the lawsuit was "completely separate from, and unrelated to, the Skydance transaction and the FCC approval process" and that it "will abide by the legal process to defend our case."
For the record: A spokesperson for Trump's legal team said the president had delivered "another win for the American people" in the settlement "as he, once again, holds the Fake News media accountable for their wrongdoing and deceit."
The spokesperson added in the statement, "CBS and Paramount Global realized the strength of this historic case and had no choice but to settle."
How it works: The FCC doesn't have jurisdiction over transactions related to national broadcast networks, as they don't have public broadcast licenses that require FCC approval. But local broadcast networks are subject to FCC rules.
Paramount, in addition to the national CBS network, owns a slew of local CBS broadcast affiliates. A merger with Skydance would require FCC approval for the transfer of its local affiliate broadcast licenses.
Typically, regulators โ and especially pro-business Republicans โ have ruled favorably on local broadcast deals.
But this FCC probe of WCBS, the Freedom of the Press Foundation argues, is "a scare tactic, spectacle, and show trial" designed to "intimidate media organizations, influence editorial decisions, and suppress speech that's critical of the administration."
What to watch: How the settlement affects CBS' editorial reputation and morale at CBS News.
Two major CBS News executives, CBS News and Stations president and CEO Wendy McMahon and longtime "60 Minutes" executive producer Bill Owens, abruptly exited in the last few months, citing concerns about journalistic independence.
Editor's note: This article has been updated with new details throughout.
The Pentagon is pausing some shipments to Ukraine of precision munitions that include air defense missiles amid concerns about declining U.S. stockpiles, Politico first reported on Tuesday.
The big picture: "This decision was made to put America's interests first" following a Defense Department review of U.S. military "support and assistance to other countries across the globe," per a statement from White House spokesperson Anna Kelly that was shared with outlets including Axios.
"The strength of the United States Armed Forces remains unquestioned โ just ask Iran," Kelly added.
Some Democrats warned halting the weapons shipments could have a devastating impact on Ukraine, as the country faces intense battles with Russia's invading forces โย a concern Trump administration officials rejected.
State of play: The U.S. has provided Ukraine with billions of dollars in military assistance since Russian forces launched a full-scale invasion of the country in 2022 and former President Biden stepped up efforts to send arms to Kyiv before he left office, leading to some officials to raise concerns about depleted stockpiles.
Elbridge Colby, Defense Department undersecretary for policy, emphasized in a statement shared with outlets including Axios that the Pentagon "continues to provide the President with robust options to continue military aid to Ukraine."
Colby noted, "At the same time, the Department is rigorously examining and adapting its approach to achieving this objective while also preserving U.S. forces' readiness for Administration defense priorities."
Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement that U.S. service members were "fully equipped to deter against any threat," and that the Senate's passage Tuesday of Trump's big, beautiful bill "ensures that our weapons and defense systems are modernized to protect the homeland against 21st century threats for generations to come."
What they're saying: Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in a media statement said, "The Pentagon is significantly weakening Ukraine's defense against aerial attacks even as Russia pounds Ukrainian cities night after night, with numerous civilians dead and wounded."
Ukrainian officials did not immediately respond to the weapons shipments pause.
A federal judge in Rhode Island on Tuesday ordered HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to halt his reorganization of federal health agencies, in response to a lawsuit brought by 19 Democratic-led states.
The big picture: Kennedy will not be able to shutter HHS divisions or undertake additional layoffs as the lawsuit moves through the courts.
"The Executive Branch does not have the authority to order, organize, or implement wholesale changes to the structure and function of the agencies created by Congress," Judge Melissa DuBose, a Biden appointee, wrote in her decision.
The states argued that Kennedy's changes stopped health agencies from carrying out legally required functions, such as food safety inspections and infectious disease prevention.
Their attorneys general say HHS is violating the Constitution's requirements on separations of power and running afoul of administrative procedure laws.
State of play: Kennedy in March announced that he'd combine HHS's 28 divisions into 15 in a bid to streamline functions and cut costs.
The plan included placing on administrative leave and eventually firing some 10,000 HHS employees, though some of those employees have been reinstated.
Fired employees have filed a separate lawsuit arguing that their terminations were based on error-ridden personnel data.
What they're saying: "We stand by our original decision to realign this organization with its core mission and refocus a sprawling bureaucracy that, over time, had become wasteful, inefficient and resistant to change," HHS communications director Andrew Nixon said in an email.
Nixon said that HHS strongly disagrees with the court ruling and is considering next steps.
The Trump administration released some 150 California National Guard troops from federal duties over the Los Angeles protests on Tuesday, as the region faces threats from multiple wildfires.
Why it matters: It's the first time the administration has released National Guard members since President Trump deployed thousands of troops and 700 U.S. Marines to LA protests over ICE raids despite objections from California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D).
Driving the news: AP first reported that the commander of U.S. Northern Command, which has been overseeing the deployment of troops to the protests, had requested 200 members return to wildfire response duty.
USNORTHCOM confirmed in a statement that it was releasing about 150 California National Guard members from the federal protection mission at the recommendation of the commander, Gen. Gregory Guillot, in a move that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth approved.
The mission "is protecting federal personnel conducting federal functions, as well as federal property," the statement noted.
Newsom claimed victory after the announcement in a post to X that called on the administration to release all troops from federal duties in LA:
Screenshot: California Gov. Gavin Newsom/U.S. Northern Command/X
Situation report: Wildfires erupted in California this week amid dry conditions and interior areas "will continue to be dry and breezy with elevated fire weather through at least Friday," per a forecast discussion from the National Weather Service's LA office.
More than a dozen wildfires were burning in California over Tuesday night, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
The biggest was the Wolf Fire in Riverside County, where evacuation orders were in effect as the blaze burned across more than 2,400 acres at 40% containment after igniting on Sunday, per Cal Fire.
Zoom out: Newsom is suing the Trump administration over the military deployment to LA, while the Justice Department alleged in a lawsuit filed Monday against the city of Los Angeles that its sanctuary policies led to "lawlessness, rioting, looting, and vandalism."
Unrest in downtown LA during protests prompted Mayor Karen Bass to last month impose a nighttime curfew in the area that she lifted two weeks ago, citing "successful crime prevention and suppression efforts" while blaming the Trump administration for escalating the situation.
Representatives for the White House did not immediately respond to Axios' Tuesday evening request for comment on Newsom's remarks.
Since Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced plans to build an immigration detention center in the middle of the Everglades, he has repeatedly said it would be temporary.
But during a press event Tuesday to mark the facility's opening, President Trump suggested that "Alligator Alcatraz" could be around "for a long time."
Why it matters: Plans for a temporary facility sparked swift backlash and concern from conservation groups, residents and Miami-Dade County officials, who cautioned against the lasting environmental impacts on a stretch of wilderness that's vital to the state's ecosystem.
In a letter to state officials, Miami Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said the impacts "could be devastating."
Driving the news: Gov. Ron DeSantis said Tuesday the facility would be ready to receive people as soon as Wednesday. And Trump said he'd like to see similar facilities constructed "in many states."
What they're saying: "The incredible thing is picking the site [...] it might be as good as the real Alcatraz, so I really think it could last for as long as they want to have it. You could morph this into the prison system."
"[It's] not that far away from jails that take years to build," he added.
Catch up quick: Last month, Uthmeier proposed building the temporary detention center to support the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
In a video posted to social media, he suggested the 30-square-mile airstrip in the middle of the Everglades, calling it "a unique opportunity for a low-cost detention facility."
Despite opposition, the DeSantis administration seized the land, which is owned by Miami-Dade County, and began building.
Zoom in: The facility has 3,000 beds, with the space to fit more, officials said, and a staff village for up to 1,000 people.
It has air conditioning, is equipped to handle Category 2 hurricane winds and has local fire and health professionals on site.
Friction point: Environmental groups, some of which have sued the state, say the center will generate sewage, use water and create light pollution that will harm the habitat and endangered species, including the Florida panther.
"We've seen pollutants on the site and expect them to be produced there, including the use of diesel fuel in generators," Elise Bennett, senior attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a news conference Tuesday afternoon.
The other side: On Tuesday, Trump dismissed environmental concerns, saying the land "is still going to be here" in the coming years.
"It's not like you're dropping dirt; this was already here. I don't think you've done anything to the Everglades."
DeSantis echoed Trump, arguing the project has plans to export waste and that "there's zero land being disturbed."
Yes, but: Paul Schwiep, an attorney representing the groups that sued, argued the site's footprint has expanded, noting trucks carrying concrete and building materials have been seen and some areas appear freshly paved.
"It's visible from the air ... the proof is in the photos," Schwiep said.
Editor's note: This story has been updated to add comments from environmental groups.
In as little as 30 seconds, hackers are using a popular generative AI development tool to build phishing sites mimicking login pages, according to researchers at identity management company Okta.
Why it matters: At least one of the cloned phishing pages was a replica of Okta's own login portal.
If successful, such a lure could have allowed attackers to harvest users' Okta credentials and gain access to sensitive corporate systems.
Driving the news: In a report first shared with Axios, Okta revealed that threat actors have been abusing Vercel's v0 to generate a fake Okta sign-in page.
Brett Winterford, vice president of Okta Threat Intelligence, told Axios that this is the first time the company has seen cybercriminals use a generative AI tool to create the phishing infrastructure itself, not just the contents of a phishing email or other lure.
How it works: v0 allows users to create websites using only natural-language prompts.
In a video shared with Axios, Okta researchers demonstrated how easily they could create a convincing phishing page simply by prompting v0 to "build a copy of the website login.okta.com."
While investigating the incident, Okta also uncovered phishing sites hosted on Vercel's platform targeting users of cryptocurrency services and Microsoft 365.
Threat level: Winterford said Okta doesn't have any evidence yet that hackers successfully harvested credentials through these sites.
But in the weeks that Okta spent investigating the one instance of a phishing site targeting one of its customers, researchers observed threat actors had used v0 to spin up new sites targeting other tech platforms.
Vercel has since removed access to the identified phishing sites and is collaborating with Okta to develop mechanisms for third-party reporting of abuse on the v0 platform.
"Like any powerful tool, v0 can be misused," Ty Sbano, CISO at Vercel, told Axios in a statement. "This is an industry-wide challenge, and at Vercel, we're investing in systems and partnerships to catch abuse quickly and keep v0 focused on what it does best: helping people build powerful web apps."
The big picture: Security researchers have long warned that generative AI could accelerate low-sophistication cyberattacks like phishing.
"We've got to stop adding to our defensive measures by increment and just tweaking around the edges," Winterford said. "The attackers are going to innovate faster than we can as defenders."
The intrigue: Okta also found cloned versions of the v0 tool circulating on GitHub, meaning hackers could continue generating phishing sites even if Vercel cracks down on abuse.
The bottom line: Okta says the only way to defend against these phishing attacks is to turn to passwordless technologies, noting that the old ways of spotting a phishing website don't apply anymore.
President Trump announced Tuesday that Israel has agreed to an updated proposal for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza that would secure the release of some hostages.
He urged Hamas to accept the deal, warning on Truth Social that "it will not get better โ IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE."
Why it matters: Fresh off brokering a ceasefire between Israel and Iran after 12 days of war, Trump is now pressing for a breakthrough in Gaza, where the conflict has dragged on for more than a year and a half.
The 60-day ceasefire, which has been under negotiations for months, would mark a significant step in this direction.
There's no indication yet that Hamas is prepared to accept the terms of the deal.
Driving the news: Trump's announcement followed several hours of meetings Tuesday at the White House between his envoy Steve Witkoff and Israeli Minister for Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer, a top adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The two discussed an updated ceasefire and hostage-release proposal put forward by Qatar.
Dermer informed Witkoff that Israel accepts the Qatari proposal and is prepared to begin indirect talks with Hamas to finalize the deal, a senior Israeli official told Axios.
What they're saying: "Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalize the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
He said Qatar and Egypt, which have been mediating between the two parties, would deliver this "final proposal" to Hamas.
"I hope, for the good of the Middle East, that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better โ IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE," the president warned.
Yes, but: It remains unclear whether the latest proposal addresses the core sticking point in the talks: Hamas' demand for a firm U.S. commitment that a 60-day ceasefire will lead to a permanent end to the war.
In previous rounds, proposals were coordinated in advance by the U.S., Qatar, and Israel, but ultimately fell short of Hamas' expectations.
Behind the scenes: "We came with ideas, and our objective today was to get Israelis to agree. And they did," a U.S. official told Axios.
Zoom in: The draft agreement envisions Israel and Hamas using the 60-day ceasefire to negotiate both a permanent end to the war and a road map for governing post-war Gaza.
For Israel, any long-term ceasefire must include the removal of Hamas from power, the dismantling of its military wing and the exile of its senior commanders.
Israel wants Gaza to be administered by local Palestinian officials unaffiliated with either Hamas or the Palestinian Authority โ with Arab states like Egypt, Jordan, the UAE and Saudi Arabia playing active roles.
What to watch: Israel on Monday ordered civilians in additional areas of Gaza City to evacuate south, signaling preparations for a potential expansion of the IDF's ground offensive.
Israeli officials warn that if negotiations on the ceasefire and hostage deal don't advance soon, the military will escalate its operations.
"We'll do to Gaza City and the central camps what we did to Rafah. Everything will turn to dust," a senior Israeli official told Axios. "It's not our preferred option, but if there's no movement toward a hostage deal, we won't have any other choice."