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Today β€” 4 April 2025Axios News

Mega Millions lottery overhaul starts Tuesday with $5 tickets, new prize structure

4 April 2025 at 19:55

The price of Mega Millions tickets more than doubles starting Saturday as a new version of the game is rolled out.

Why it matters: U.S. lottery sales are big money as Americans play in hopes of winning a life-changing jackpot.


  • Players spent more than $113 billion on lottery products in the 2024 fiscal year, according to the North American Association of State & Provincial Lotteries.

When is Mega Millions' price increase?

State of play: Mega Millions ticket prices increase from $2 to $5 starting Saturday.

  • The April 4 drawing is the final Mega Millions drawing before the overhaul.
  • The $5 tickets will come with a "built-in random multiplier."

Flashback: It's the second time prices have been hiked since Mega Millions tickets debuted more than 20 years ago.

Mega Millions drawing time, how to watch

Mega Millions drawings are held in Atlanta at 11pm ET on Tuesdays and Fridays.

Mega Millions changes debut with April 8 drawing

What we're watching: The April 8 drawing is the first with the new prize structure and ticket prices.

  • Mega Millions says changes include "bigger prizes at every non-jackpot prize tier, better odds to win the jackpot" and a multiplier "that will increase all non-jackpot prizes by 2X-10X."
  • The new game has 24 Mega Balls instead of 25.

New Mega Millions jackpot

The starting jackpot will reset to $50 million following a jackpot win instead of resetting at $20 million.

  • Jackpots are expected to grow faster and get to higher amounts more frequently in the new game.
  • The Mega Millions Consortium said it estimates that the average jackpot win in the new game will be more than $800 million versus around $450 million in the old game.

Between the lines: The April 4 drawing had an estimated jackpot of $43 million with a cash option of $20.5 million, per the lottery.

  • Mega Millions said unless someone wins the jackpot with Friday's drawing, "the jackpot from the current game will roll into the new game and continue to grow with ticket sales from the new game."
Mega Millions odds improve with one Mega Ball option is removed. Photo: Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

Mega Millions odds

The odds of winning the grand-prize jackpot go from astronomical (1 in 303 million) to slightly less astronomical (1 in 290 million) with the removal of one gold Mega Ball from the game.

  • Removing the one gold Mega Ball from the game also improves the overall odds to win any prize from 1 in 24 to 1 in 23.

Mega Millions prize chart

By the numbers: Here are the prize amounts for matching numbers with and without the Mega Ball. Amounts vary because of the multiplier for all prizes except the jackpot (See the chart here):

  • Mega Ball: $10, $15, $20, $25 or $50 β€” up from $2.
  • One number and Mega Ball: $14, $21, $28, $35 or $70 β€” up from $4.
  • Two numbers and Mega Ball: $20, $30, $40, $50 or $100 β€” up from $10.
  • Three numbers: $20, $30, $40, $50 or $100 β€” up from $10.
  • Three numbers plus Mega Ball: $400, $600, $800, $1,000 or $2,000 β€” up from $200.
  • Four numbers: $1,000, $1,500, $2,000, $2,500 or $5,000 β€” up from $500.
  • Four numbers plus Mega Ball: $20,000, $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 or $100,000 β€” up from $10,000.
  • Five numbers: $2 million, $3 million, $4 million, $5 million or $10 million β€” up from $1 million.
  • Five numbers plus Mega Ball: Jackpot.

What states sell Mega Millions tickets?

Mega Millions tickets are sold in 45 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands, with drawings held each Tuesday and Friday.

  • Cutoff times to buy tickets vary by state because tickets are sold by individual lotteries.
  • Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada and Utah do not participate in the lottery.

More from Axios:

The country's top cyber agency is expected to significantly slash its headcount

By: Sam Sabin
4 April 2025 at 16:40

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is looking to push out as much as a third of the agency's total headcount, in addition to contract personnel from a major threat hunting team, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

Why it matters: The cuts are likely to impact "every single part of the agency," one of those sources told Axios β€” dealing a huge blow to the country's cybersecurity posture following earlier rounds of layoffs and contract cuts.


Zoom in: CISA is expected to start reducing its workforce through a second "Fork in the Road" email, two sources told Axios.

  • That email could go out as soon as this weekend, but the specifics of the cuts keep changing, the sources said.
  • Depending on how many people take the offer, the agency could then send out "reduction in force" notices at a later, unspecified date, the sources added.
  • CBS reports that the agency plans to cut as many as 1,300 employees.

Another industry source told Axios that the cuts include 75 contract personnel who work on CISA's threat hunting operations β€” which searches for signs of vulnerabilities or breaches on civilian federal networks.

  • Those personnel worked on threat hunt contracts with Nightwing, a cyber company that spun out of Raytheon last year, and technology services vendor Peraton.
  • Most federal agencies don't have the budget or manpower to set up their own threat hunt teams, and CISA's work typically helped identify hacking campaigns targeting the whole of government.
  • CISA declined to comment.

Catch up quick: This is the latest hit to the nation's cyber defense agency during the second Trump administration.

  • The agency has cut funding to several election security efforts, spurring concerns among state and local election officials who relied on the agency for threat intelligence about adversaries targeting their elections.
  • CISA said last month that it was terminating contracts "where the agency has been able to find efficiencies and eliminate duplication of effort," including in its red team operations.
  • And last month, CISA fired β€” and then had to reinstate β€” more than 130 probationary employees.

The intrigue: The rumored cuts are already raising alarm bells on Capitol Hill.

  • Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), the ranking member of the House Homeland Security Committee's cyber subcommittee, has already requested a briefing on CISA's workforce changes, spokesperson Cassie Baloue told Axios in a statement.
  • Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), ranking member of the House Homeland Security Committee, said in a statement to Axios that he is aware of the rumored plans and called the moves "idiotic" and "irrational."
  • "Trump is intent to do to our security the same as what he's doing to the economy β€” tank it," Thompson said.
  • Even before rumors of the latest agency cuts started swirling, Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), chair of the House Homeland Security Committee's cyber subcommittee, said during an event in D.C. this week that he was "not thrilled" with some of the agency's previous firings.

What to watch: Congress has not yet scheduled a nomination hearing for Sean Plankey, Trump's pick to run the agency.

Go deeper: Federal cyber teams overwhelmed amid workforce disruptions

Tracking Trump: Tariffs spark stock market plunge, and deportations fuel pushback

4 April 2025 at 16:18
Chart: Axios Visuals

President Trump announced sweeping tariffs on goods imported to the U.S., with potentially devastating impacts, while his administration fought aspects of his immigration agenda in court.

Here's our recap of major developments:


Trump ushers in "Liberation Day" tariffs

Trump declared a national emergency under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and introduced a 10% baseline tariff on all imports into the U.S. on Wednesday.

The justification: Other countries need to "stop picking on us," in Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick's words to CNBC Thursday.

Salmon describes it this way: America, a "large, rich country" has a sweet tooth, and Madagascar "a small, poor country" has the vanilla. "There's therefore a natural trade to be made."

  • Madagascar was hit with a 47% tariff.

Go deeper: This is why you can't have nice things in a trade war

Tables of reciprocal tariff rates. Credit: The White House

Trump-era DOJ mistakenly deports Salvadoran man

The Trump administration admitted on Monday it made an "administrative error" leading to the mistaken deportation of a Salvadoran man who was living legally in Maryland.

  • A judge on Friday ordered Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia's return by Monday.
  • The deportation, uncovered by The Atlantic, underscores ongoing missteps in the administration's aggressive immigration push, which has relied on "legally fraught deportation drives," Axios' Russell Contreras writes.

Case in point: U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, suggesting contempt proceedings might be next, said on Thursday there is a "fair likelihood" the administration violated his earlier order and allowed flights to continue deporting migrants to El Salvador.

  • Trump appealed the underlying decision to the U.S. Supreme Court in March.

Other judges:

  • Denied Monday the Trump administration's request to stall a lower court's order halting a ban on transgender individuals in the military. Go deeper.
  • Blocked DOGE from accessing sensitive Social Security data Tuesday. Go deeper.
  • Ruled on Monday Alabama cannot prosecute doctors and others who help patients obtain out-of-state abortion care. Go deeper.
  • Narrowed an order Tuesday to reinstate thousands of fired federal workers so that it only applies to 19 states and the District of Columbia. Go deeper.

Trump fights TikTok ban

The president said on Friday he plans to delay a TikTok ban from going into effect on Saturday despite no change in the company's ownership.

  • A recent law requires the app's Chinese owner ByteDance to sell the company to avoid the ban. It follows bipartisan recognition of national security risks posed by the app's ties to China.

Go deeper: Who might buy TikTok as ban looms

Elon Musk's work could be ending, Trump clues

Trump hinted billionaire Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk's work with the government could end soon.

  • He's employed as a special government employee under the Trump administration and therefore has a 130-day work limit for a year's time.
  • "He's got a big company to run ... At some point he's going to be going back," Trump said on Monday. "He wants to. I'd keep him as long as I could keep him."
  • Restructuring from the Musk-led DOGE has meant widespread layoffs of government employees, including some 10,000 staff members from the Department of Health and Human Services, and protests in response.

Musk's favorability has dropped, as has his first-quarter Tesla vehicle deliveries. Go deeper.

More from Axios:

House Republican plans bill to let Congress block Trump tariffs

4 April 2025 at 16:10

A House Republican is planning to introduce legislation that would give Congress the power to block tariffs imposed by the president.

Why it matters: It's a rare break with President Trump from a Republican lawmaker as markets continue to tumble in response to the White House's sweeping new tariffs.


What we're hearing: Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) confirmed to Axios that he is crafting a companion to the Trade Review Act of 2025 introduced by Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Maria Cantwell's (D-Wash.)

  • The legislation would require the president to notify Congress of any new tariffs within 48 hours with the administration's reasoning and an analysis of their economic impacts.
  • Congress would then have to pass a resolution of approval within 60 days or the tariffs would expire. Lawmakers could also pass a resolution of disapproval at any time to kill the tariffs.
  • Bacon's plans were first reported by Politico.

Reality check: With Republicans in control of both the House and Senate, neither bill is likely to get a vote.

  • Trump could also veto the legislation, meaning Congress would effectively need a two-thirds majority in each chamber to force it into becoming law.

What we're watching: House Democrats are planning to try to force a vote on ending the national emergency upon which Trump's new tariffs are based.

  • Such a vote could put Republicans like Bacon β€” whose constituents are being squeezed by the tariffs with little economic upside β€” in a difficult position.
  • The Senate voted this week on a similar measure to block Trump's tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, in which four Republicans joined with Democrats to provide the necessary votes for it to pass.

Scoop: Netanyahu expected to visit White House on Monday, sources say

4 April 2025 at 15:47

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is planning to visit the White House on Monday, four sources with knowledge tell Axios.

Why it matters: If the visit takes place as planned, Netanyahu will be the first foreign leader to meet President Trump in person to try to negotiate a deal to remove Trump's tariffs. The leaders are also expected to discuss the Iran nuclear crisis and the war in Gaza.


  • To visit this week, however, Netanyahu would have to ask the judges in his corruption trial to cancel planned hearings during which he was expected to continue his testimony.
  • The sources said the plan could still change, in large part for that reason.

Driving the news: Israel tried to avoid the tariffs Trump imposed on nearly every country in the world by announcing it would preemptively lift all tariffs on U.S. products. It didn't work.

  • The 17% rate Trump set for Israel was based on the significant U.S. bilateral trade deficit.

Behind the scenes: Trump called Netanyahu and Hungary Prime Minister Viktor OrbΓ‘n on Thursday while the Israeli prime minister was visiting Budapest.

  • The call was prompted by Hungary's decision to withdraw from the International Criminal Court (ICC), but Netanyahu also raised the newly announced tariffs.
  • Trump suggested Netanyahu come to the White House to discuss the matter, without setting a clear date. Several hours later, Trump told reporters on Air Force One that Netanyahu would be visiting Washington soon, "maybe even next week."
  • Netanyahu and his team were surprised by that remark, as were some of Trump's aides.

Initially, U.S. and Israeli officials had expected the visit to take place later in April, possibly during Passover week, which starts on April 14.

  • But during discussions between the White House and Netanyahu's office on Friday, the idea of visiting sooner began to take shape, the four sources said.
  • The White House and the Israeli Prime Minister's Office didn't immediately respond to requests for a comment.

The big picture: Iran and Gaza are expected to be on the agenda, in addition to tariffs.

  • Netanyahu thinks the chances of a U.S.-Iran nuclear deal are extremely low and wants to reach an understanding with Trump about striking Iran's nuclear facilities when diplomacy fails, a senior Israeli official said.
  • Trump and Netanyahu will also likely discuss the stalled efforts to reach a new Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal.

Go deeper: Trump to visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE

SCOTUS allows Trump to move ahead with cuts to teacher training grants

4 April 2025 at 14:36

The Supreme Court on Friday sided with the Trump administration, allowing it to withhold federal education grants for teacher training while the case proceeds at a lower court.

Why it matters: The decision marks a Supreme Court victory for President Trump as he slashes federal spending with the help of Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency.


  • Chief Justice John Roberts voted with the court's three dissenting liberal justices in the 5-4 decision.

Catch up quick: The Trump administration on March 26 asked the Supreme Court to pause a District of Massachusetts order to reinstate millions in federal education grants.

  • The Department of Education terminated about $65 million, or 104 professional development grants, that it found at odds with the administration's anti-diversity, equity and inclusion policies.

State of play: The Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to intervene in several cases as lower courts block Trump's policies at a particularly high rate.

  • In March, the high court refused to halt a lower court's ruling that required the administration to unfreeze about $1.9 billion in foreign aid payments.

What they're saying: "If respondents ultimately prevail, they can recover any wrongfully withheld funds through suit in an appropriate forum," the majority wrote on Friday.

  • "And if respondents instead decline to keep the programs operating, then any ensuing irreparable harm would be of their own making."

Zoom in: The Massachusetts restraining order called for the government to pay out its obligations, but the Supreme Court majority said the government is likely to prove that the District Court lacked the jurisdiction to order payments.

The other side: "Reinstating the challenged grant-termination policy will inflict significant harm on grantees β€” a fact that the Government barely contests," Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote in a dissent that was joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

  • "Worse still, the Government does not even deign to defend the lawfulness of its actions."

Go deeper: Trump administration asks SCOTUS to allow teaching grant cuts

NOAA research websites slated to go dark get reprieve with contract extension

4 April 2025 at 12:38

NOAA has averted the early cancellation of an Amazon Web Services contract that would have caused a slew of agency websites to go dark beginning at midnight, sources told Axios.

Why it matters: The outages mainly would have affected NOAA's research division, and would have made numerous websites and data sets inaccessible to the public.


Zoom in: Instead of ending at midnight, the contract will now expire on July 31, allowing the agency more time to figure out a different cloud-computing solution, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

  • A social media outcry presented headwinds to the proposed sudden change.
  • Among those protesting was NBC "Today" host Al Roker, who tweeted to his more than 2 million followers: "This is bonkers!! These are the real world impacts of Federal government cuts."

Driving the news: The Commerce Department is requiring NOAA β€” and possibly all department agencies β€” to cut its IT budget by 50% across the board.

  • This is resulting in cloud services contracts being cut β€” and, potentially more significantly, agency networks that transmit weather and climate information.
  • Some of the websites that were slated to go down included the National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL), the Climate Program Office, the home website of NOAA research and the Earth Prediction Innovation Center, which maintains a cloud-based weather forecasting system developed as a public-private partnership.
  • An NSSL outage may have affected some programs, such as the Hazardous Weather Testbed, that the National Weather Service uses for severe weather forecasting.

Bloomberg first reported the impending NOAA IT outages, and Axios independently confirmed them.

NOAA operates complex computer models for weather forecasting and climate change studies, most of which run on supercomputers.

  • It also must consistently keep its weather data flowing to the public to provide accurate, life-saving severe weather warnings.

The intrigue: Some climate data may have gone dark Saturday morning as well. But the National Centers for Environmental Information, the U.S. clearinghouse for global climate data, wouldn't have been affected, sources said.

  • In addition, certain NOAA labs could have seen their websites go down early Saturday.
  • NOAA is facing the prospect of another wave of staffing cuts following the loss of about 800 probationary employees in late February, as well as a new round of early retirements.
  • Already, some Weather Service forecast offices have cut back on some of their services, including weather balloon launches that provide key data for computer models.

The other side: The Commerce Department didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

What's next: Additional contracts for IT services are due to be renewed or canceled in coming days, including ones that if terminated, may have a direct impact on NOAA's weather communication systems.

  • Already, the termination of another contract has stopped the agency from automatically translating its audio forecasts and warnings into Spanish.
  • As Axios reported, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick must approve any contract or contract extension that totals at or about $100,000, which is slowing NOAA to a crawl, along with research institutes it funds.

Editor's note: This story has been updated with new reporting to reflect the extension of the contract.

Go deeper:

Scoop: NOAA operations impaired by Commerce chief's approval mandate

Foreign visits into the U.S. fell off a cliff in March

4 April 2025 at 09:26
Data: Axios analysis of U.S. Customs and Border Protection data; Chart: Erin Davis/Axios Visuals

Foreign arrivals into major U.S. airports tumbled in mid-to-late March compared to the same time last year, based on customs pass-through data.

Why it matters: The findings suggest a sudden reluctance to visit the U.S. isn't a purely Canadian phenomenonΒ and should sound alarm bells for the country's $1 trillion-plus travel industry.


Driving the news: The number of foreigners passing through customs at the 10 busiest U.S. airports fell by over 20% year over year toward late March, based on a seven-day rolling average.

  • A sight uptick followed, but the number was still down 18.4% as of March 28 versus the same time last year.
  • Compare that to the number of U.S. citizens returning to the country, which was up nearly 14% by late March from the year earlier.

Context: Spring break may have played a role here, and many people book trips in advance with little flexibility.

Between the lines: Trade wars, a volatile economic and political climate and fears of detainment or harassment may be dissuading foreigners from visiting the U.S.

  • Several American allies, including Canada, France, Germany and others, recently issued new travel warnings or advisories about U.S. travel.
  • Some of those warnings focus on transgender and nonbinary travelers, following President Trump's recent order mandating that passports "accurately reflect the holder's sex," which his administration says is "not changeable."

What they're saying: "We're certainly starting to hear reports from international airlines about a softening of demand to the U.S.," Sean Cudahy, aviation reporter at The Points Guy, tells Axios via email.

  • "Based on some of the route cuts and overall sentiment we're hearing from airlines, I wouldn't be surprised to see the arrivals rates for international travelers drop even further in the coming weeks."

Zoom in: Some of the "divergence" between foreign arrivals and U.S. returnees (charted above) "is likely attributable to tighter immigration policy," reads a March 31 Goldman Sachs note.

  • "But the timing of the pullback in foreign arrivals β€” which emerged after tariff news escalated in both early February and early March β€” suggests that a more antagonistic policy stance by the Trump administration is contributing to a voluntary decline in visits."

Threat level: Goldman predicts a pullback in foreign tourism plus boycotts of American goods abroad will cause a "modest drag" on U.S. GDP of about 0.1%.

  • "Although small, this headwind provides an additional reason why U.S. GDP growth will likely underperform consensus expectations in 2025," reads the note.

What's next: Goldman's note predates Trump's sweeping new tariffs issued Wednesday, which stand to uproot the global economic order in unpredictable and chaotic ways.

  • If those tariffs hold, they could amplify any potential hit to U.S. travel businesses β€” but their impact remains difficult if not impossible to predict.

Tariffs cause new tumult for dealmakers

4 April 2025 at 07:12

This has been a whipsaw week for understanding deal trends.

The big picture: On Tuesday we got first-quarter data, which showed a 15% increase in global M&A over Q1 2024 and a 14% decline for U.S. M&A.


  • Digging a bit deeper, however, showed that both the global and U.S. markets got busier as the quarter progressed. Particularly when it came to large mergers.
  • That means we entered Q2 with momentum. Not the raucous energy that many dealmakers expected after Trump got elected, but still up and to the right.

State of play: Wednesday may have changed everything.

  • It's way too early to know if we're at the start of a protracted trade war that wrecks global economies, or what will prove to be a short-lived skirmish.
  • Such tumult, however, becomes a brick wall for many companies planning long-term investments like acquisitions. Plus, sellers may hold back while their valuations plunge.
  • It also creates major challenges for the booming AI market, and everything that springs from it, in terms of data center construction.
  • Uncertainty is the only certainty. But there are degrees to that statement, and right now the global economy is running a fever.

What they're saying: "We've gone from animal spirits to animal hibernation," Sen. Dave McCormick (R-Pa.), former CEO of Bridgewater Associates, yesterday told CNBC.

  • One Twitter user replied that it might be closer to "animal abuse."

The bottom line: A top bank exec told Axios in January that everyone would have a much better sense of the deal market during Milken than during Davos. That seems to be bearing out.

Newsom asks other nations to spare California as Trump's trade war intensifies

4 April 2025 at 08:28

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday he is pursuing agreements with other countries to ensure California is exempted from retaliatory tariffs stemming from President Trump's escalating trade war.

Why it matters: Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs spurred global blowback. Newsom β€” a reported 2028 presidential hopeful β€” is looking to insulate his state from the fallout.


Driving the news: "Donald Trump's tariffs do not represent all Americans," Newsom said in a video message Friday.

  • California, whom he touted as "the tentpole of the U.S. economy," aims to maintain "stable trading relationships around the globe," he added.
  • "I've directed my administration to look at new opportunities to expand trade and to remind our trading partners around the globe that California remains a stable partner."
  • California is "ready to talk" with global trading partners, Newsom wrote on X.
  • Referring to the state's economic might, Newsom added his state is "not scared to use our market power to fight back against the largest tax hike of our lifetime."

The other side: "Gavin Newsom should focus on out-of-control homelessness, crime, regulations, and unaffordability in California instead of trying his hand at international dealmaking," White House spokesperson Kush Desai told Axios Friday.

Zoom in: Newsom is particularly concerned with retaliatory measures from other countries could impact California's agricultural sector, especially its almond industry, according to Fox News, which first reported the news of the agreements.

  • California is the world's fifth-largest economy and its agricultural sector is a key economic driver for the state.

The big picture: Trump on Wednesday announced a baseline 10% tariff on U.S. imports, with steeper reciprocal levies on goods from dozens of other nations.

  • Business leaders and many economists said Trump's tariffs risked raising consumer prices and reigniting inflation.
  • The U.S. stock market has spiraled in the wake of Trump's plan and was poised to fall further Friday after China announced it would levy a 34% tariff on imports from the U.S.

Go deeper: A third global recession in 20 years looms

Editor's note: This story was updated with additional developments.

"Makes all of us less safe": Top Dems slam reported firing of National Security Agency chief

4 April 2025 at 10:45

Top congressional Democrats on Thursday night spoke out over reports that Gen. Timothy Haugh has been fired as National Security Agency director.

The big picture: The Washington Post first reported that Haugh had been removed from the NSA role and as U.S. Cyber Command chief, along with his civilian deputy Wendy Noble, citing a former U.S. official and two current ones.


A spokesperson for the Pentagon told Axios they were aware of the reports but did not confirm their veracity.

  • Representatives for the NSA declined to comment and referred Axios to the Pentagon. The White House did not immediately respond to Axios' requests for comment in the evening.

The latest: Loomer took to X early Friday to denounce Haugh and Noble and seemingly confirm their terminations.

  • Loomer wrote that Haugh and Noble have been "disloyal to President Trump. That is why they have been fired."

What they're saying: Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, posted on Bluesky that Haugh had "served our country in uniform, with honor and distinction, for more than 30 years."

  • At a time when the U.S. faces "unprecedented cyber threats, as the Salt Typhoon cyberattack from China has so clearly underscored, how does firing him make Americans any safer?" he wrote.
  • "It is astonishing that President Trump would fire the nonpartisan leader of the NSA while still failing to hold any member of his team accountable for leaking classified information on Signal β€”Β even as he apparently takes staffing direction from a discredited conspiracy theorist in the Oval Office."

Meanwhile, House Intelligence Committee ranking member Jim Himes (D-Conn.), in a statement posted to X, said he's "deeply disturbed by the decision to remove" Haugh from the NSA.

  • "I have known General Haugh to be an honest and forthright leader who followed the law and put national security first β€” I fear those are precisely the qualities that could lead to his firing in this Administration," he said.
  • "The Intelligence Committee and the American people need an immediate explanation for this decision, which makes all of us less safe."

Background: Haugh's career includes more than 30 years with the U.S. Air Force, much of it spent in cyber and intelligence roles, according to his biography.

  • Then-President Biden nominated Haugh in 2023 to serve as leader of Cyber Command and the NSA.
  • Biden announced soon after that Noble would serve as deputy NSA director.
  • Noble began her NSA career in 1987 as a cryptologic linguist and "has served in numerous analytic, technical, and leadership roles spanning target and language analysis, strategy development, joint collection programs, and liaison operations, serving at both NSA Headquarters and various overseas locations," per her bio.

Go deeper... Scoop: Multiple firings on Trump's National Security Council after Loomer visit

Editor's note: This story was updated with additional developments.

Stocks post worst week in five years on tariff chaos

4 April 2025 at 13:11

U.S. stocks finished their worst week in five years with a historic two-day rout, as the realities of President Trump's tariff plan left investors stunned and fearing what comes next.

Why it matters: As opposed to Trump's first term, when sharply negative market moves often influenced him to pull back policy, in the second Trump administration markets are on their own.


By the numbers: The S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq both fell about 6%, while the small-cap benchmark Russell 2000 dropped around 4%.

  • In percentage terms, it was the fifth-largest two-day decline for the S&P 500 in the index's history.
  • The Russell closed in a bear market Thursday, down 20% from its recent highs, and the Nasdaq did the same Friday.
  • Energy and financial stocks broadly led the decline.
  • High-profile "Magnificent 7" names like Apple, Nvidia and Tesla fell as well; most of them are now down more than 20% this year.

Driving the news: China announced a major escalation of the trade war Friday morning, levying a 34% tariff on imports from the U.S. that will take effect on April 10.

  • That news accelerated the overnight decline in stocks.
  • It got worse when Fed chair Jerome Powell gave a speech warning of higher inflation and slower growth but also indicating the central bank was holding steady on interest rates, dashing any market hopes for relief.

What they're saying: "The tariffs have injected a level of uncertainty and volatility we haven't seen since the early days of the pandemic," Matt Burdett, head of equities at Thornburg Investment Management, said in a note.

  • "Markets may actually be underreacting, especially if these rates turn out to be final, given the potential knock-on effects to global consumption and trade."

Go deeper: Why the dollar is doing what it's not supposed to do

Editor's note: This story was updated with closing prices.

Crypto's quiet workhorse is finally going mainstream

4 April 2025 at 02:25

The crypto world's most promising application is bursting into the financial mainstream β€”Β powered not by hype, but by regulation, political backing, and trillions in real-world transactions.

Why it matters: Memecoins, fraudsters and crypto volatility have overshadowed the quiet success of stablecoins β€”Β digital tokens designed to hold a steady value, typically pegged to the U.S. dollar.


  • Stablecoins remain in a legal gray area in the U.S., but both chambers of Congress are racing to draft rules for what's become the most functional use case for blockchain technology worldwide.
  • "We are going to keep the U.S. the dominant reserve currency in the world, and we will use stablecoins to do that," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent vowed at a White House summit last month.

The intrigue: The digital currency has support not just from the Trump administration but from the Trump family itself.

  • Their crypto venture, World Liberty Financial, has announced plans to sell a stablecoin β€” drawing massive backlash from Democrats, who accuse the president of profiting from his office.
  • Democrats who support passing stablecoin legislation fear the Trump family's conflicts could derail the bipartisan efforts to regulate and legitimize the fast-growing industry.

By the numbers: Global asset manager Ark Invest estimates that annual stabelcoin transaction volume hit $15.6 trillion in 2024 β€” basically on par with what the Visa Network reported for its fiscal 2024.

How it works: The most popular stablecoins are backed by dollar deposits and other highly liquid assets, ensuring that each token can be reliably redeemed for actual U.S. dollars β€” even during a bank run.

  • Stablecoins started as liquidity for crypto traders, but they've caught on as a way for companies to manage global treasuries, pay workers around the world and conduct peer-to-peer transactions.
  • There have been questions about the soundness of stablecoin reserves in the past, but it's become normal to release regular statements from accountants verifying their adequacy.
  • Circle's stablecoin β€” the largest based in the U.S. β€” holds its reserves almost entirely at BlackRock, which pays it interest.

Between the lines: Stablecoins are highly profitable. Issuers pocket the interest on the assets backing the tokens β€” a lucrative spread in a high-rate environment.

State of play: After PayPal became the first big brand to release a stablecoin, a wave of new issuers are following suit.

  • A U.S. law will likely permit big banks to issue their own β€” alongside credit unions, financial firms and others.

What we're watching: The Senate Banking Committee has sent its stablecoin bill, GENIUS, to the floor.

  • The House Financial Services Committee did the same Wednesday with its bill, the STABLE Act β€” setting the stage for crucial votes in both chambers of Congress.

Scoop: Stephen Miller's Senate GOP marching orders on tariffs, judges

3 April 2025 at 17:25

White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller brought a one-two combo to his old Senate stomping grounds on Thursday, according to Senate aides.

Why it matters: With the market melting down, the White House wants to stay on offense on judges and ensure the GOP presents a united front on tariffs.


  • Miller is essentially calling for more cavalry for President Trump's attacks on the judiciary, which has blocked some of the president's boldest, and most controversial, moves.
  • At the same time, he wants the Senate to extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts while also defending Trump's tariff-happy finger.

Between the lines: Expect an additional $6 trillion in tariff revenue over the next decade, Miller told GOP chiefs of staff on Thursday.

  • That number was also offered by White House trade adviser Peter Navarro on "Fox News Sunday," and assumes the tariffs will be permanent.

Miller is enormously influential in the West Wing, but the former Senate staffer also has a feel for how to light (and put out) fires on Capitol Hill.

  • He acknowledged to the group the legislative process can get bumpy and he understood their bosses were taking some heat on tariffs.
  • Stocks were cratering while Miller spoke, on their way to their biggest one-day decline since March of 2020.
  • But Miller told them to hold the line and trust the president.

Zoom in: He argued Trump's plan to lift burdensome regulations, plus extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act β€” along with another $6 trillion in new revenue from tariffs β€”would lead to an enduring manufacturing boom.

  • Top White House officials promised senators on Monday they would show their math on how the president's agenda would lead to 3% growth and lower deficits, we scooped.
  • Today, the White House provided their official analysis, which included estimates of an additional $4.1 trillion in revenue, relative to CBO's projection if the tax cuts expire.
  • They didn't include the potential economic impact of Trump's aggressive tariffs.

The bottom line: Some Senate Republicans remain hopeful the tariffs will be temporary or are just a negotiating tool.

  • The $6 trillion estimate, over 10 years, should destroy that optimism.

Editor's note: This story has been corrected to note that Miller said $6 trillion over ten years (not $600 billion.)

Tech jobs, robots are Lutnick's vision for America's "manufacturing renaissance"

3 April 2025 at 15:36

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Thursday touted the use of robotics in his pitch for an American "manufacturing renaissance."

The big picture: While President Trump's tariffs are meant to boost American manufacturing and jobs, U.S. manufacturers will likely hurt from these tariffs, at least in the short run. Whether they lead to more jobs in the long term remains an open question.


What he's saying: Lutnick made the case in several TV interviews this week that tariffs will bring jobs and factories back to the U.S., saying they'll utilize robotics to make American workers "more efficient."

  • Speaking on CNBC, he said that with the use of robotics, factories are "going to see the greatest surge in training for what we call trade craft β€” teaching people how to be robotics, mechanics, engineers and electricians for high tech factories."
  • On CNN, Lutnick said, "We use robotics here. It's cheaper than cheap labor overseas." He added, "The renaissance will be the greatest factories in the world, high-tech people. What are the jobs Americans are going to have? We are going to have mechanics who fix robotics."
  • On Fox News' Hannity on Wednesday, Lutnick touted that "a high school-educated workforce is going to get trained to do robot mechanic," adding that it'll bring the "coolest" and "highest-paying jobs" to the U.S.

Between the lines: If the jobs are for repairing and maintaining robots to do the factory work, blue collar jobs likely won't be as plentiful.

Flashback: Former President Biden had also floated the use of robotics in his clean energy push, including for solar panel installation and wind turbines.

  • But the interest in automation paired with a vow to create millions of jobs as part of the clean energy boom proved to be a difficult undertaking β€” and one that could take years to come to fruition.

Our thought bubble, via Axios' Emily Peck: American manufacturing is already quite advanced and has increased in productivity overall.

  • That means fewer workers are needed. So while the industry has grown over the past decade, there hasn't been a proportionate increase in jobs.

Go deeper: Tariffs will squeeze manufacturers and jobs may not follow

Trump deals a brutal blow to Mike Johnson in his battle for the House floor

3 April 2025 at 15:09

President Trump threw his weight behind Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) in her fight with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) over proxy voting that has paralyzed the House floor.

Why it matters: His comments will likely further embolden Luna and make it even more difficult for Johnson to defang her efforts to force a vote on the issue.


What he's saying: "I don't know why it's controversial," Trump said Thursday of Luna's proposal to let House members vote by proxy for three months after the birth of their child.

  • Trump told reporters on Air Force One that he will "let the speaker make the decision," but added, "I like the idea. … I'm in favor of that."
  • "You're having a baby, you should be able to call in and vote," he said, according to the Associated Press.
  • Johnson and Trump spoke by phone after the president made his comments on Air Force One, Punchbowl News reported.

What happened: Luna succeeded last month in obtaining the 218 discharge petition signatures necessary to bypass Johnson and force a vote.

  • But Johnson, a bitter foe of proxy voting in all forms, attached a motion killing the vote to unrelated GOP legislation on non-citizen voting in an attempt to pressure all Republicans into siding with him.
  • After his maneuver fell short Tuesday, Johnson scrapped House votes for the rest of the week and sent lawmakers home.

What we're hearing: Trump and Luna have spoken by phone about her discharge petition, according to a lawmaker familiar with the discussion.

  • Luna said last week she didn't want to burden Trump with the issue while he was handling sensitive foreign policy matters, adding that "these should be internal discussions."
  • But she also noted that Trump's daughter Ivanka has championed maternity leave for federal workers, arguing her proposal is "well in line with the administration."

The other side: Johnson said Wednesday in a post on X that he "simply cannot support the change" Luna is proposing, which he believes violates the Constitution.

  • Johnson signaled he would continue to try to kill Luna's discharge petition rather than give it an up-or-down vote on the floor β€” in which it would likely succeed.
  • He said he is "actively working on every possible accommodation to make Congressional service simpler for young mothers."

Between the lines: Trump's support for the substance of Luna's proposal could grow the anti-Johnson coalition, further complicating the speaker's efforts to regain control of the House floor.

  • Johnson's effort to block Luna from bringing her bill to the floor failed after eight Republicans broke with the party and sided with her.
  • Several Republicans expressed discontent with Johnson's attempts to effectively kill rank-and-file members' one tool for bypassing leadership on legislation that a majority of the House supports.

Yesterday β€” 3 April 2025Axios News

15 Senate Dems vote to cancel billions in Israeli military aid

3 April 2025 at 13:22

Fifteen Senate Democrats backed a pair of resolutions from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to withhold billions of dollars in offensive weapons sales and other military aid to Israel.

Why it matters: The votes split the party, revealing continued internal divisions over Democrats' views on the war in Gaza and support for the Israeli government. The measures failed 15-82 and 15-83.


  • Sanders wants to cancel the Trump administration's proposed sales of $8.8 billion in bombs and other munitions to Israel.
  • In addition to Sanders, Democratic Sens. Richard Durbin (Ill.), Martin Heinrich (N.M.), Mazie Hirono (Hawaii), Ben Ray LujΓ‘n (N.M.), Tim Kaine (Va.), and Andy Kim (N.J.) voted in favor.
  • So did Ed Markey (Mass.), Jeff Merkley (Ore.), Chris Murphy (Conn.), Brian Schatz (Hawaii), Tina Smith (Minn.), Chris Van Hollen (Md.), Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) and Peter Welch (Vt.).
  • No Republicans supported the measures.

The big picture: Sanders forced similar votes under the Biden administration to call out U.S. support for Israel's war efforts in Gaza.

  • "The United States must end our complicity in these atrocities, we cannot be part of this any longer," Sanders said in a video he released on Wednesday.
  • The vote comes as Israel resumed its war in Gaza last month, despite a ceasefire deal between the two sides that was signed earlier this year.

Between the lines: Senate Democrats facing reelection next year were split on the resolution. "No" votes could open up incumbents to attacks from their left.

  • Sens. John Hickenlooper (D-Col.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) and Jack Reed (D-R.I) β€” all up for reelection next year β€” voted "no."

Go deeper: Israel resumes war in Gaza with a series of massive airstrikes against Hamas

Editor's note; This story has been updated with additional reporting.

Exclusive: Jared Kushner's Abraham Accords Peace Institute to merge into Heritage Foundation

3 April 2025 at 19:51

The Heritage Foundation is going to acquire the Abraham Accords Peace Institute (AAPI), which was established by President Trump's son-in-law and former senior adviser Jared Kushner, according to a statement shared with Axios.

Why it matters: The move by the conservative think-tank which is considered highly influential on Trump administration policies could reenergize the efforts to push for new normalization agreements between Israel and the Arab world β€” something the president has said he wants to do.


Flashback: The Abraham Accords, signed in September 2020, were arguably Trump's biggest foreign policy achievement and the biggest breakthrough for relations between Israel and the Arab world for 25 years.

  • Kushner, who negotiated the Abraham Accords, founded the non-profit in May 2021 after he left government. The goal was to develop programs that will help in strengthening the normalization between Israel, the UAE, Bahrain and Morocco.

Driving the news: Robert Greenway who worked at the national security council when the Abraham Accords were signed was the first CEO of Kushner's institute.

  • Now as the director of the Allison Center for National Security at The Heritage Foundation, he will chair the merger initiative.
  • Kushner said the Abraham Accords Peace Institute's outgoing CEO Aryeh Lightstone joined the Trump administration and will work on White House Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff's team.

What they're saying: Lightstone said that with the Trump administration's focus on expanding the Abraham Accords, the mission of the institute "will move to its proper home β€”Β the administration."

  • He added: "Several of its data collection functions, as well as the efforts to coordinate the many complementary and supporting efforts to the current administration, will continue under the leadership of Robert Greenway."
  • Dr. Victoria Coates, vice president of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy at The Heritage Foundation, said she is looking forward to continued close collaboration with Kushner and his team on new opportunities to support peace initiatives in the Middle East.

South Korea court removes impeached President Yoon from office over martial law declaration

3 April 2025 at 20:40

South Korea's impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol has been removed from office over his brief martial law declaration last December that saw troops deployed to the National Assembly.

Why it matters: The South Korean constitutional court's unanimous ruling on Friday morning local time upholding Parliament's impeachment vote means the country must hold a snap election to replace Yoon within 60 days, per Yonyap news agency.


The big picture: Yoon is due to stand trial on insurrection charges in relation to the emergency declaration that sparked massive protests and threw the U.S. ally into political turmoil before he rescinded it.

  • He denies any wrongdoing and claimed the declaration was necessary to defend Seoul from "pro-North Korean" elements.
  • Yoon is the first sitting president in South Korea to be both arrested and indicted on criminal charges.

State of play: His supporters swarmed the streets of the South Korean capital Seoul and video from the scene showed a heavy police presence as the court's verdict was delivered.

In photos: Yoon impeachment ruling sparks rallies

Anti-Yoon protesters react after the constitutional court's verdict on the impeachment of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol in Seoul. Photo: Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images
The ousted South Korean president is shown on a big screen as his supporters react to the verdict in Seoul. Photo: Jung Yeon-je/AFP via Getty Images
Anti-Yoon protesters react to the verdict in Seoul. Photo: Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images
Supporters of Yoon after the verdict in Seoul. Photo: Anthony Wallace/AFP via Getty Images
Police stand guard as Yoon supporters gather Friday before the announcement of the court's verdict. Photo: Anthony Wallace/AFP via Getty Images

Go deeper: Yoon becomes South Korea's first sitting president to be indicted

Editor's note: This article has been updated with new details throughout.

In photos: Deadly storm system slams U.S. South and Midwest with tornadoes and flooding rains

3 April 2025 at 20:57

A powerful multi-day storm system that's lashing the U.S. South and Midwest has killed at least seven people as it unleashes tornadoes and flooding rains.

The big picture: The storm that ramped up Wednesday has brought a "life-threatening, catastrophic," flash flood event to the Lower Ohio Valley and Mid-South. The National Weather Service said more "significant severe weather" was "expected from the Mid-South through the Ozarks and ArkLaTex," with "very large hail and strong tornadoes possible."


Parts of Tennessee, Kentucky and Arkansas were the most at risk for possibly widespread life-threatening flash flooding on the night of April 3 before the high-risk area shifts west slightly the following day. Screenshot: Nashville Fire Department, Tenn./ X
Structural damage at Christ Community Church after the tornado struck. The storm's focus on April 3 has been the Lower Ohio Valley into the Mid-South and Lower Mississippi Valley. The storm's High Risks of Excessive Rainfall (level 4/4) are in effect through April 6. Photo: Michael Swensen/Getty Images
Downed trees and heavy structure damage are seen after tornadoes moved through Selmer, Tennessee, on April 3. At least five people have died in storms this week in the state. Photo: Jason Davis/Getty Images
Floodwater from Whites Creek carries debris over a pedestrian bridge on the Fontanel greenway in Nashville, Tenn., where Axios Nashville reports flooding rains have inundated the city, resulting in temporary road closures. Photo: Jason Davis/Getty Images
Downed trees and heavy structure damage are seen on April 3 after tornadoes moved through Selmer. Tornado and flash flood watches remained in place through the night. Studies show extreme precipitation events are becoming more common and severe due to climate change. Photo: Jason Davis/Getty Images
A driver walks with a police officer after their car is swamped by standing floodwater beneath the B-Line Trail on West Third Street, Bloomington, Indiana, on April 2 during a torrential downpour from a severe thunderstorm that passed through the city. At least one storm-related death has been reported in the state. Photo: Jeremy Hogan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
The scene in Missouri, where at least one storm-related death has been reported. Whitewater Fire Protection District chief Garry Moore died after responding to a presumed tornado, per a Facebook post from the fire department. "Chief Moore observed a vehicle off the roadway and stopped to assess the incident and render aid if needed," the post says. "A short time later, Chief Moore was found unconscious at the scene." Screenshot: Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop F/X
Screenshot: Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee/X

Go deeper: Rainstorms are getting more intense amid climate change

Editor's note: This a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

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