Hundreds of people rallied at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, to mark 60 years since "Bloody Sunday," when authorities beat peaceful protesters who were marching against race discrimination in voting.
People march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge during 'Bloody Sunday" commemorations on March 9. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
A rally outside Selma's Brown Chapel AME Church during "Bloody Sunday" commemorations on March 9. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
A contingent of Masons marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge during commemorations of the 60th anniversary of 'Bloody Sunday' on March 9. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
People hold signs with a picture of late civil rights leader and congressman John Lewis on them before marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 9 in Selma, Alabama. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
Selma's foot soldiers walk across Edmund Pettus Bridge as they commemorate the 60th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" on March 9. Photo: Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
People sing "We Shall Overcome" while marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 9. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
People march to the Edmund Pettus Bridge during commemorations of the 60th anniversary of 'Bloody Sunday' on March 9 in Selma. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
Attendees at a rally near a monument to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. outside Brown Chapel AME Church on March 9. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images
Martin Luther King III, Waters, Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson, and Jonathan Jackson walk across Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 9. Photo: Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Canada's ruling Liberals elected a new party leader in Ottawa, Ontario, on Sunday who will serve as the nation's next prime minister, replacing outgoing premier Justin Trudeau.
Why it matters: Liberal Party members' vote for Mark Carney, former governor of the Banks of Canada and England, comes as the Liberals are experiencing a polling boost amid widespread opposition to President Trump's U.S. policies targeting its northern neighbor.
Little more than 150,000 Canadians chose who the country's new leader would be as the leadership was decided in a vote by Liberal Party members who registered and were verified to vote.
What they're saying: "These are dark days brought on by a country we can no longer trust," Carney said, in reference to U.S. tariffs after the 59-year-old won 85.9% of the vote to be elected Liberal Party leader.
Carney vowed to stand up to Trump over the tariffs. "America is not Canada. And Canada never, ever, will be part of America in any way, shape or form," Carney said.
"We didn't ask for this fight, but Canadians are always ready when someone else drops the gloves."
State of play: The election of Carney marks a new era for Canadian politics.
Trudeau served as the leader of Canada's Liberal Party for 11 years and the country's prime minister for nine.
Trudeau told the Liberal crowd in his farewell speech that their country "needs you, maybe more than ever," adding: "Democracy is not a given. Freedom is not a given."
The big picture: Trudeau resigned as Liberal Party leader in January amid deep unpopularity, as polls showed the Conservative Party was set to trounce the Liberals in the upcoming federal election.
Trudeau said he would remain prime minister until a new party leader was chosen.
Yet anti-Trump sentiment, spurred by Trump's tariffs and boasts about making Canada the 51st state, have raised the party's fortunes, with one poll giving the Liberal Party its first lead since 2021.
Zoom in: Trudeau's resignation triggered a race in the Liberal Party to choose his successor, with the winner becoming the country's next prime minister for the duration of the party's ruling term.
Liberal Party members cast ballots in the ranked choice election until the winner was declared after a candidate garnered over 50% of the votes.
Trudeau's successor will serve as prime minister until at least the election, which us due to take place by Oct. 20. However, Canadian Global Television Network notes the new PM could call for elections at anytime, even before Parliament resumes on March 24.
What's next: Carney is set to be sworn in as prime minister in the coming days.
Flashback: Carney helped guide Canada through the 2008-09 global financial crisis before going on to become the first non-British Bank of England governor in 2013, a position he held until 2020.
Thought bubble, via Axios' Felix Salmon: It's vanishingly rare for central bankers to enter electoral politics, but Carney's thumping win shows that in Canada, at least, there's a real desire for competence rather than rhetoric.
What we're watching: Carney's election could further reenergize the Liberals' base as they prepare to square off in the federal election against the Conservatives, led by Pierre Poilievre, whom Liberals have sought to compare to Trump.
If so, Canada could provide a blueprint for liberal parties looking to stave off the global populist surge that ushered Trump into office.
U.S. Air Force fighter jets intercepted an aircraft that flew over President Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida in violation of a temporary flight restriction on Sunday, NORAD said.
The big picture: It was the second time in 48 hours F-16s from the Continental U.S. NORAD region had responded to such aircraft violations over Palm Beach, Fla., per a statement from the North American Aerospace Defense Command.
"NORAD has responded to over 20 tracks of interest entering the Palm Beach, Florida TFR area" since Trump's presidential inauguration on Jan. 20, according to the statement.
Zoom in: The jets fired flares that may have been visible to members of the public during the intercept "to draw attention from or communicate with the pilot" of the civilian aircraft, NORAD said.
Flares "burn out quickly and completely, and pose no danger to people on the ground," the statement added.
Sunday's incident occurred while Trump was at his West Palm Beach golf course, according to a White House pool report.
Representative for the White House did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment in the evening.
Editor's note: This a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
Thousands of residents in eastern Australia were ordered to evacuate, as Tropical Cyclone Alfred's heavy rains and powerful winds blast two states ahead of it's expected landfall near Brisbane, the country's third-largest city.
The big picture: It's already caused widespread power outages and triggered storm surge along the southern Queensland and northern New South Wales coasts. Those who haven't evacuated were urged to stay inside ahead of its expected hit as a Category 2 storm, per the Bureau of Meteorology.
Airports, schools and businesses were closed, as the Australian Bureau of Meteorology warned that heavy to locally intense rainfall would bring heavy flooding ahead of it's expected landfall around lunchtime Saturday local time (Friday morning ET).
Cyclone Alfred is the equivalent of a strong tropical storm in the U.S., but its slow rate of speed and unusual landfall location make it an especially heightened threat.
Threat level: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at a Friday briefing that rainfall and wind impacts were expected to continue increasing.
"This is a serious weather event, with heavy rain, destructive winds and major flooding expected," Albanese said.
Queensland Premier David Crisafulli at a briefing called Cyclone Alfred an "extremely rare event," with the last such storm hitting state capital Brisbane in 1974.
"Overnight we saw it packed a punch," he said, after some 82,000 properties on Queensland's Gold Coast and northern NSW lost power.
Between the lines: Tropical cyclones aren't usually so intense this far south and they don't usually make landfall in this region.
Research suggests tropical cyclones are intensifying more quickly, with stronger wind speeds and heavier rainfall and they may "retain their strength for longer, and move more slowly" across areas in "our rapidly changing climate," per the Australian nonprofit the Climate Council.
Cyclone Alfred was primarily influenced by human-driven climate change, which intensified the meteorological conditions that led to the event, according to new analysis by ClimaMeter, which provides a rapid framework for understanding extreme weather events in a changing climate.
What they're saying: "Cyclone Alfred is a striking example of how human-driven climate change is altering the intensity and behavior of tropical cyclones in Australia," said Stavros Dafis, a researcher at the National Observatory of Athens, Greece, who's involved in the ClimaMeter project, in an emailed statement.
"The combination of higher sea surface temperatures and increased atmospheric moisture is fueling heavier rainfall and stronger winds," he added.
"Our analysis of historical cyclone records suggests that storms like Alfred are becoming more intense and producing more extreme precipitation, raising the risk of catastrophic flooding and coastal erosion."
In photos: Cyclone Alfred bears down on Australia's east coast
The scene in Queensland state capital Brisbane. Photo: Albert Perez/Getty Images
Electricity workers repair lines causing power outages in heavy rain on March 7, 2025 in Lennox Head in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, where authorities say flash flooding is possible. Photo: James D. Morgan/Getty Images
A group of onlookers look out towards the encroaching waves on March 7 in Tweed Heads in the Northern Rivers region of NSW. Photo: Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images
Cattle walk in a flooded paddock during heavy rain on March 7 in Alstonville in the Northern Rivers region of NSW. Photo: James D. Morgan/Getty Images
Storm clouds move over Brisbane on March 7. Photo: Albert Perez/Getty Images
A federal judge gave the Trump administration until 6pm Monday ET to make some outstanding foreign aid payments to USAID partners, per multiple reports on Thursday.
The big picture: U.S. District Judge Amir Ali's ruling during a case involving several nonprofits and aid groups including the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition and the Global Health Council comes one day after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to halt the lower court judge's order requiring the Trump administration to unfreeze some $1.9 billion in foreign aid payments.
State of play: The groups sued the Trump administration after it froze foreign aid as part of a DOGE-led effort to cut federal spending and largely dismantle USAID, which was the world's largest humanitarian aid organization.
Ali said Thursday he thought it was "feasible" for the first set of payments to be made by the Monday deadline, per the Washington Post.
What they're saying: "During a 4-hour hearing, the government continued to insist that shutting down humanitarian assistance was both reasonable and lawful," said Allison Zieve, director of the Public Citizen Litigation Group, which is representing the groups, in an emailed statement late Thursday.
"In response, though, the court set a deadline of Monday evening for payments to our clients that are overdue," Zieve added.
"He also indicated that he will set a timeline for payment of others' overdue invoices. And we are hopeful that the judge will provide additional relief when he rules on the full scope of our preliminary injunction motion on Monday."
The other side: Attorneys for the Trump administration said in a filing officials had worked overnight to certify some "$70.3 million in additional payments" to the groups, which were expected to be released on Thursday.
"It will take another day or so for those payments to be received vendors accounts," the filing added.
"It is currently anticipated that all legitimate payments owed to the Plaintiffs will be processed within days, and not more than ten working days."
Representatives for the Trump administration and did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment in the evening.
History is set to be made on the Moon again this week, with Intuitive Machines' IM-2 mission Nova-C class lunar lander Athena scheduled to land there at 12:32pm ET on Thursday.
The big picture: Intuitive Machines has partnered with Lunar Outpost to roll out the first commercial rover on the Moon and with Finnish multinational tech firm Nokia to deliver the first cellular network on Earth's only natural satellite.
This mission comes after the Cedar Park, Texas-based company Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost lunar lander achieved on Sunday the first successful commercial Moon landing.
State of play: Intuitive Machines' second lunar mission is part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services ("CLPS") initiative, which allows the agency to hire private space companies to deliver its lunar instruments.
Athena is "slated to land in Mons Mouton, a lunar plateau near the Moon's South Pole, as part of NASA's CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative and Artemis campaign to establish a long-term lunar presence," per a NASA statement.
It will be carrying "NASA technology demonstrations and science investigations," the space agency added.
What to expect: "Two device modules make up additional components of Nokia's LSCS, and they have been installed in two lunar mobility vehicles: Intuitive Machines' Micro-Nova Hopper and Lunar Outpost's Mobile Autonomous Prospecting Platform (MAPP) rover," per a Nokia statement.
"Upon landing on the Moon, the two vehicles are designed to deploy on the lunar surface where they would immediately use the Nokia device modules to establish connections to the network on Athena."
The rover will deploy Nokia's 4G/LTE antennas to establish connection on the Moon.
π§΅1/2: Flight controllers confirmed that Athena completed lunar orbit insertion with enough accuracy to forego the IM-2 mission's optional lunar correction maneuver.
Athena continues to be in excellent health, completing lunar orbits every two hours, waiting for the sun to rise⦠pic.twitter.com/dPt2bXLGMX
β Intuitive Machines (@Int_Machines) March 4, 2025
Zoom in: The Lunar Outpost MAPP is on a mission to explore the uncharted territory of the Moon's South Pole β which the Arvada, Colorado-headquartered firm noted in a statement is "a region critical to future lunar infrastructure and sustainability."
It will also "execute the first sale of space resources with NASA" through the collection of regolith, rock and dust from the Moon's surface and "gather critical data to shape the future of lunar exploration," Lunar Outpost added.
Meanwhile, Massachusetts Institute of Technology's AstroAnt robotic swarm prototype will "wheel around MAPP's roof to take temperature readings and monitor its operation," according to Lunar Outpost.
The intrigue: Lego announced on Friday it was "teaming up" with Lunar Outpost "over a shared love of space, the exploration of space and building ridiculously cool things," telling fans to watch out for "a future product and more than a few surprises along the way."
The Danish toymaker also published a cryptic post on the matter on Facebook:
T-minus π... 9οΈβ£... 8οΈβ£... The launch countdown has begun as we prepare to blast off π with Lunar Outpost later this year π§βπ
When asked for comment on the partnership, a spokesperson for Lunar Outpost said in an emailed statement on Wednesday night "yes, we're partnered with LEGO, but there's not much more I can share quite yet... More to come!"
How to watch: The mission landing will be live-streamed on Intuitive Machines' YouTube channel and on the NASA+ streaming service on Thursday.
Broadcast is due to begin at 11:30am ET.
What's next: The mission team will "begin transmitting the first images, data, and discoveries from the Moon's surface over Nokia's LSCS using a device module integrated in the MAPP rover," per a Lunar Outpost statement.
Los Angeles County is suing Southern California Edison over the Eaton Fire, which killed 17 people in January.
The big picture: The cause of the blaze that was one of California's most destructive wildfires on record remains under investigation, but LA County alleges in a lawsuit there's "clear evidence" from images and witness statements that SCE's equipment was responsible for it.
It's one of several lawsuits the utility faces over the Eaton Fire. The cities of Pasadena and Sierra Madre also announced suits against SCE.
Zoom in: The wildfire that was one of several to erupt on Jan. 7 during dry, windy conditions destroyed 9,414 properties and damaged 1,074 others as it burned for 24 days over 14,021 acres in the Altadena and Pasadena, Calif., areas, injuring nine firefighters, per Cal Fire.
LA County said in a statement it filed the lawsuit to "recover costs and damages sustained" from the blaze, which it's estimated "will total at least hundreds of millions of dollars."
The lawsuit alleges that the Eaton Fire has "massively impacted the County's natural resources, harmed the environment and wildlife, and threatened public health," the statement added.
What they're saying: "Our hearts are with the communities affected by the wildfires in Southern California," said Brian Leventhal, a spokesperson for SCE.
"We are reviewing the lawsuits that were recently filed and we'll address them through the appropriate legal process."
President Trump's 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, as well as new levies on Chinese imports took effect on Tuesday.
Why it matters: Trump's confirmation of the tariffs sent markets sliding amid fears it could raise prices for U.S. customers, hurt the economy and prompt a trade war.
Canada and China took retaliatory action against U.S. products as tariffs targeting their countries took effect.
What to watch: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick suggested that a deal with North American allies could be announced as soon as Wednesday, opening the door for potential tariff relief.
"I think he's going to work something out with them," Lutnick told Fox Business on Tuesday, referring to Trump.
"It's not gonna be a pause. None of that pause stuff. But I think he's gonna figure out, 'you do more, and I'll meet you in the middle,'" Lutnick added.
Where it stands: Lutnick spoke after financial markets fell for the second straight day.
Canada and China announced retaliatory measures after the tariffs took effect on Tuesday.
Mexico's president, Claudia Sheinbaum, said Tuesday she would hold a rally in Mexico City in the days ahead to announce a package of response measures.
Zoom in: In a statement, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the nation would impose tariffs on "$30Β billion worth of goods immediately, and tariffs on the remaining $125Β billion on American products in 21 days' time."
After Chinese imports were hit with an additional 10% tariff on top of the 10% Trump had imposed earlier this year, officials in Beijing announced 15% tariffs on some U.S. agriculture imports, including chicken, corn, cotton and wheat.
State of play: Trump last month struck a deal on border security with Canadian and Mexican officials and paused the tariffs for 30 days. President Trump said no progress had been made during negotiations.
In a statement, the White House said the tariffs would "combat the extraordinary threat to U.S. national security, including our public health posed by unchecked drug trafficking."
What they're saying: Trudeau said that Canada has "worked relentlessly" to address concerns about fentanyl entering the U.S., although a minuscule amount originates from the nation.
Vice President JD Vance said Monday the Trump administration is working with Russia to end its war on Ukraine and that the "door is open" for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky if he's "willing to seriously talk peace."
Why it matters: In his first interview since Friday's heated White House exchange that Vance and President Trump had with Zelensky, the vice president on Fox News criticized Ukraine's leader and argued that it's in Kyiv's best interests to sign a minerals deal with the U.S.
Driving the news: "If you want real security guarantees, if you want to actually ensure that [Russian leader] Vladimir Putin does not invade Ukraine again, the very best security guarantee is to give Americans economic upside in the future of Ukraine," Vance said on Fox News' "Hannity."
"That is a way better security guarantee than 20,000 troops from some random country that hasn't fought a war in 30 or 40 years."
Zoom in: During the interview, Vance told Fox News host Sean Hannity that Zelensky had "showed a clear unwillingness to engage in the peace process" that Trump has said is "the policy of the American people and of their president."
He accused Zelensky of showing "a certain sense of entitlement" at the Oval Office.
Zoom out: Zelensky said on X Sunday he's "ready to sign" a minerals deal with the the U.S., but a "ceasefire without security guarantees is dangerous for Ukraine."
The Ukrainian president has said security guarantees are needed due to Moscow's breach of a ceasefire agreement after its annexation of Crimea in eastern Ukraine in 2014.
Meanwhile, officials in the U.S. and France are working on a plan for a European peacekeeping force, an idea that Axios' Barak Ravid reports Trump has endorsed.
Editor's note: This article has been updated with additional details throughout.
Firefighters in North and South Carolina were battling dozens of wildfires over the weekend during dry, windy conditions that saw authorities order some residents to evacuate.
The big picture: South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) declared a state of emergency Sunday after officials declared a statewide burn ban the previous day that the governor said would remain in effect indefinitely.
I have declared a State of Emergency to further support wildfire response efforts across the state and ensure our first...
Evacuation orders were temporarily issued in response to the state's largest blaze, the Carolina Forest Fire, near Myrtle Beach, S.C. β which officials said had razed some 1,600 acres at 30% containment on Sunday evening as residents were permitted to return home.
North Carolina officials also issued evacuation orders in response to a fire in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The 176 Fire had burned over 500 acres by 8pm and was 30% contained Sunday, per a Polk County Emergency Management Facebook post that said a decision on lifting evacuation orders would be made Monday.
Zoom out: Strong winds and very dry conditions were promoting "critical to extremely critical fire weather conditions across portions of the Southern Plains, especially across eastern New Mexico and far western Texas" on Sunday, per the National Weather Service.
"As this system initially comes through the Southwest and out into the southern High Plains, there will be concerns for gusty winds, and this coupled with the dry conditions will support elevated to critical fire weather concerns," the NWS said in Sunday forecast discussion.
"Areas of southern Arizona through southern New Mexico and western Texas will see the greatest fire weather concerns through Sunday and early Monday."
In photos: Firefighters tackle fires across the Carolinas
Firefighters tackle a blaze in the Carolina Forest neighborhood on March 2 in Myrtle Beach. Photo: Sean Rayford/Getty Images
Firefighters attend to a flare-up in the Carolina Forest neighborhood on March 2 in South Carolina. Photo: Sean Rayford/Getty Images
The scene in a neighborhood of Myrtle Beach on March 2. Photo: Sean Rayford/Getty Images
A firefighter battles a flare-up in the Carolina Forest, South Carolina, on March 2. Photo: Sean Rayford/Getty Images
New York launched a job recruitment ad campaign targeting fired federal workers at midnight Monday.
The big picture: Gov. Kathy Hochul's (D) "you're hired" campaign to fill 7,000 public sector roles follows similar jobs initiatives in other states aimed at people who were laid off in the Trump administration's federal government overhaul, driven by DOGE, which billionaire Elon Musk is the face of.
Screenshot: N.Y. governor's office
The latest: N.Y. has opened a portal with resources for job-seekers that updated early Monday, with the message: "If you have lost your federal job due to cuts, or just want to get out, New York says 'You're Hired!'"
The message notes that N.Y. has more than 7,000 current job openings in a "wide range of career fields" and that the state "values its state workforce, providing a host of benefits, including a nation-leading Paid Parental Leave policy."
Meanwhile, recruitment ads were displayed on digital directory displays throughout New York City's Union Station from midnight, per an emailed statement Sunday from Sam Spokony, a spokesperson for the governor.
Zoom in: Spokony said in a text message Monday evening some of the most in-demand jobs that were currently vacant included for engineers, educators, health care workers, attorneys, technologists and public policy experts.
"We'll continue to update our online resources whenever new job opportunities become available," Spokony added.
What they'e saying: "Elon Musk and his clueless cadre of career killers know nothing about how government works, who it serves, and the tireless federal employees who keep it running," Hochul said in a statement to Axios.
"Here in New York we don't vilify public servants, we value them and their efforts. So when DOGE says 'You're fired,' New York is ready to say 'You're hired' β and we're making sure talented, experienced federal workers know about the many opportunities available in our state workforce."
The other side: White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in a statement shared with outlets including Axios,"Leave it to the failed New York State bureaucracy to stack their payrolls with more bureaucrats β¦ Growing the public sector is not President Trump's definition of job creation."
Representatives for the Trump administration did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment in the evening.
Zoom out: Other states to announce recruitment and support campaigns for fired federal workers include Virginia, which has launched a resources roundup page.
"Come experience those powerful words of 'You are hired.' Take advantage of the resources that will help you find your pathway to that career of your dreams," said Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) at a briefing announcing the drive to promote the state's more than 250,000 open positions.
In Maryland, Gov. Wes Moore (D) on Friday announced "expanded resource webpages across state government, partnerships to launch job fairs across the state, and directives for agencies to facilitate public servant transitions to new careers in Maryland," per a statement from the governor's office.
In Hawai'i, Gov. Josh Green (D) signed an executive order designed to expedite the state's hiring process and attract fired federal workers, and the City and County of Honolulu launched the Federal-to-Municipal Workforce Transition Initiative.
Editor's note: This article has been updated with additional developments in N.Y. since the ad drive launched and with details of other states' campaigns.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. spoke of the benefits of the MMR vaccine on Sunday in response to a growing measles outbreak in Texas.
Why it matters: Kennedy has a long record of sowing skepticism about vaccines and last week appeared to downplay the situation in Texas when he described such outbreaks as "not unusual."
Driving the news: Kennedy wrote an op-ed for Fox News Digital on Sunday with the headline "Measles outbreak is call to action for all of us" and the subheading "MMR vaccine is crucial to avoiding potentially deadly disease."
Kennedy wrote that before the introduction of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine in the 1960s, "virtually every child in the United States contracted measles."
"Vaccines not only protect individual children from measles, but also contribute to community immunity, protecting those who are unable to be vaccinated due to medical reasons," Kennedy wrote.
Yes, but: Kennedy emphasized that the decision to vaccinate is "a personal one."
Situation report: At least 146 measles cases have been identified in the South Plains and Panhandle since January, according to the latest available information from the Texas Department of State Health Services.
A school-aged child in Lubbock who was not vaccinated against measles died after contracting the highly contagious virus, according to the department.
The human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine is having a huge impact on cervical cancer prevention among young women, a U.S. government report published Thursday suggests.
Why it matters: The CDC report shows that rates of precancerous lesions among women aged 20-24 screened for cervical cancer dropped by about 80% from 2008 to 2022. The report comes just days after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. β who once called the HPV vaccine "dangerous and defective" β was confirmed as health and human services secretary.
Screenshot: CDC
During questioning from senators ahead of his confirmation, Kennedy said he was divesting his financial interest in legal challenges against Gardasil, an HPV vaccine made by Merck.
By the numbers: Human papillomavirus is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the U.S. and the virus is responsible for some 10,800 cases of cervical cancer every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
State of play: The CDC report found drops in precancerous lesion rates in other age groups screened, falling 37% among women who were 25 to 29 years old for the same period.
"Observed declines in cervical precancers are consistent with HPV vaccination impact and support Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommendations to vaccinate children against HPV at age 11β12 years with catch-up through age 26 years," the CDC said.
"The data are consistent with a considerable impact from the U.S. HPV vaccination program on cervical precancers, with the largest decreases in the youngest age group for which benefit of vaccination would first be observed," it added.
"As vaccinated women age into older age groups, declines in cervical precancers are expected."
Zoom in: The CDC noted limitations, including that cervical cancer screening numbers were estimated using claims, survey data, and ecological trends rather than individual records.
However, the CDC said "trend analyses such as these are routinely used to evaluate the impact of vaccination programs, and no other plausible explanations for the decreases in precancers have been identified."
The bottom line: The CDC findings add to growing global evidence that the uptake vaccine is helping to cut cases of cervical cancer.
Cancer-prevention researcher Jane Montealegre told AP the rise in uptake of the safe, effective HPV vaccine can be credited for the substantial drop in precancerous lesions.
"This should reassure parents that they're doing the right thing in getting their children vaccinated against HPV," added Montealegre, of MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
The Pentagon is moving to disqualify transgender service members from the military within 30 days, per a policy memorandum included in a Wednesday court filing.
The big picture: The memo that builds on existing Trump administration restrictions that target transgender troops states the military will consider granting waivers on a "case-by-case basis," but only if there's "a compelling government interest in retaining the service member that directly supports warfighting capabilities."
Driving the news: The Trump administration was responding on Wednesday to a lawsuit filed in D.C. on behalf of six transgender service members who are challenging the legality of President Trump's January executive order targeting transgender troops.
The suit contends the order that states that the federal government will recognize only two sexes, male and female, and which calls on the Pentagon to formulate a policy that would target transgender service members is unconstitutional.
Zoom in: "Service members who have a current diagnosis or history of, or exhibit symptoms consistent with, gender dysphoria will be processed for separation from military service," states the policy, which echoes language similar to that used in Trump's order.
Service members who seek to obtain a waiver must show they never tried to transition, according to the Pentagon.
They must also demonstrate "36 consecutive months of stability in the Service member's sex without clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning."
Between the lines: Gender dysphoria is defined as distress related to gender incongruence.
The number of transgender people serving on active duty in the military was estimated to be up to 8,000, per a 2020 study published by the NIH that notes the actual number may be greater due to factors including fear of disclosure.
Flashback: Trump rescinded on his first day in office a policy allowing trans people to serve, implemented by his predecessor, former President Biden.
The Trump administration is axing 92% in foreign assistance-related grants to save nearly $60 billion as part of a budget cuts drive across all federal agencies, the State Department confirmed on Wednesday night.
The big picture: It plans to terminate nearly 10,000 contracts and grants given out by the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), per a Wednesday court filing from administration attorneys.
It's the administration's latest effort to cap U.S. spending abroad, after a federal judge this month ordered the administration to resume $1.9 billion in foreign aid payments it had frozen β which the Supreme Court temporarily paused on Wednesday night.
The impacts of the freeze on aid have been felt by organizations across the globe, as have the firings at USAID, despite Secretary of State Marco Rubio announcing waivers for "life-saving humanitarian assistance programs."
Driving the news: Nearly 5,800 USAID awards and another 4,100 from the State Department will be cut, the filing states.
Some 500 USAID awards and about 2,700 State Department ones will remain.
"USAID evaluated 6,200 multi-year awards with $58.2 billion in value remaining," a State Department spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
Zoom in: The State Department conducted a 90-day review of foreign assistance at the State Department and USAID that saw it examine 9,100 grants valued at $15.9 billion, the Washington Free Beacon first reported.
"At the conclusion of a process led by USAID leadership, including tranches personally reviewed" by Rubio, the State Department spokesperson said "nearly 5,800 awards with $54 billion in value remaining were identified for elimination as part of the America First agenda."
What we're watching: Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts granted a stay and requested aid groups that sued the administration respond by 12 noon Friday ET.
Meanwhile, the State Department and USAID is set to undergo a process in consultation with Congress to reform the way the U.S. delivers foreign assistance.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday night temporarily paused a lower judge's order that would've required the Trump administration to restart $1.9 billion in foreign aid payments by midnight.
Why it matters: In the first case the Supreme Court has intervened in since the Trump administration moved to overhaul the federal government and make drastic budget cuts, Chief Justice John Roberts granted a stay and requested aid groups that sued the administration to respond by 12 noon Friday ET.
Last week, the high court declined to immediately intervene in a lower court decision to block the administration from firing Hampton Dellinger, the head of independent watchdog agency the Office of Special Counsel, postponing its decision until the lower court's ruling expired.
Driving the news: U.S. District Court Judge Amir Ali had given the administration until 11:59pm Wednesday to resume payments for contracts and grants related to foreign aid work contracted by the State Department and USAID.
Acting solicitor general Sarah Harrisasked the justices to vacate the midnight deadline, which she called an "arbitrary timeline."
Justice Department lawyers said in a filing earlier Wednesday that the D.C. Circuit Court of AppealsΒ moved to dismiss that "regardless whether this Court stays the district court's order, agency leadership has determined that the ordered payments 'cannot be accomplished in the time allotted by the' district court."
Two groups, the Aids Vaccine Advocacy Coalition and the Global Health Council, are suing the administration after President Trump signed a Jan. 20 executive order pausing U.S. foreign aid amid a wider, DOGE-led cost-cutting overhaul of the federal workforce and agencies.
Apple said Tuesday it's working to fix an iPhone bug after some users reported its automatic dictation feature briefly displays "Trump" when they say "racist" before the text-to-speech transcription software corrects itself.
The big picture: A viral TikTok video of the glitch that Apple says erroneously suggests the word "trump" when users dictate some words that also include an "r" consonant caused outrage among conservatives online who've accused Big Tech of political bias.
Zoom in: Apple says the glitch is sometimes occurring during initial analysis when the speech recognition models that power dictation have on occasions displayed words that contain some phonetic overlap, but then further analysis identifies the intended word.
What they're saying: "We are aware of an issue with the speech recognition model that powers Dictation and we are rolling out a fixΒ today," an Apple spokesperson said in an emailed statement Tuesday evening.
Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, said Tuesday more than 100 intelligence officers will be fired for taking part in sexually explicit discussions in agency chat rooms.
The big picture: Gabbard said on Fox News she "put out a directive" on Tuesday that those who took part in these chats on the National Security Agency's (NSA) "Intelink" messaging platform will also have their security clearances revoked.
Driving the news: Gabbard earlier Tuesday confirmed a report by conservative activist Christopher Rufo, who writes for City Journal, that the DNI was sending a memo directing all intelligence agencies to identify the employees who participated in the chats that included discussion on transgender identity.
DNI spokesperson Alexa Henning said on X Tuesday that the memo was sent to "all intelligence agencies" over the "obscene, pornographic, and sexually explicit" chats.
Gabbard said on "Jesse Watters Primetime" there "are over 100 people from across the intelligence community that contributed to and participated in what is really just an egregious violation of trust."
She added to Fox News' Jesse Watters: "They were brazen in using an NSA platform intended for professional use to conduct this kind of really, really horrific behavior."
Zoom in: The National Security Agency/Central Security Service said in a post to X Tuesday it was aware of posts that "appear to show inappropriate discussions" by intelligence personnel and investigations to "address this misuse of government systems" were ongoing.
"Potential misuse of these platforms by a small group of individuals does not represent the community," the post said.
Undocumented immigrants age 14 or older must register and provide fingerprints or face a fine or even imprisonment under new Trump administration plans announced Tuesday.
The big picture: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced the escalation in the administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants that she vowed the administration would enforce.
Driving the news: Undocumented immigrants will from Tuesday be required to register and create anΒ USCIS online account, per a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services online page.
The Department of Homeland Security will soon announce a form to complete the registration requirement, according to the post.
The requirement applies to anyone in the U.S. for 30 days or longer.
Once a person has registered and been fingerprinted, DHS will issue "evidence of registration," which immigrants over 18 must carry and keep with them at all times, according to USCIS.
Zoom in: Per a DHS statement, penalties will be imposed on undocumented immigrants who:
Willfully fail to depart the U.S.
Fail to register with the federal government and be fingerprinted.
Fail to tell the federal government of changes to their address.
What they're saying: Noem said on Fox News' "Jesse Watters Primetime" Tuesday evening those who follow the requirements "can avoid criminal charges and fines and we will help them relocate right back to their home country."
The program provides "them an opportunity to come back someday and to be a part of the American dream," but if they don't register, "they're breaking the federal law, which has always been in place," Noem told Fox News' Jesse Watters.
"We're just going to start enforcing it to make sure" the undocumented immigrants go "back home," Noem said. "And when they want to be an American, then they can come and visit us again."
Between the lines: The new order will likely face strong opposition from civil liberties organizations and immigrant rights groups since it attempts to criminalize undocumented immigrants.
Being in the country illegally is a civil violation and not a criminal one.
Critics will likely say such requirements would require new laws, not executive orders or policy changes.
DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement Trump and Noem were sending a "clear message for those in our country illegally" with the latest drive.
"The Trump administration will enforce all our immigration laws β we will not pick and choose which laws we will enforce," McLaughlin said. "We must know who is in our country for the safety and security of our homeland and all Americans."
Mars once featured sun-soaked, sandy beaches with gentle, lapping waves from an ancient ocean, a new study suggests.
Why it matters: The research marks the "clearest evidence yet" that the Red Planet once contained a major body of water and a more livable environment for life, per a statement from study co-author Benjamin Cardenas, assistant professor of geology at Pennsylvania State University.
A hypothetical image of Mars 3.6 billion years ago. The blue areas show the depth of the ocean filled to the shoreline-level of the ancient, now-gone sea, dubbed Deuteronilus. The orange star indicates the landing site of the Chinese rover Zhurong. The yellow star is the site of NASA's Perseverance rover, which landed a few months before Zhurong. Screenshot: Robert Citron/University of California, Berkeley/X
"When we look back at where the earliest life on Earth developed, it was in the interaction between oceans and land, so this is painting a picture of ancient habitable environments, capable of harboring conditions friendly toward microbial life," Cardenas said.
Driving the news: A team of Chinese and U.S. researchers identified hidden layers of rock under Mars' surface that strongly suggested the presence of a past northern ocean while analyzing data from China's Zhurong Mars rover, according to the study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Zhurong sent back data in 2021 while searching for signs of ancient water or ice after landing in an area known as Utopia Planitia.
What they found: The scientists discovered "extensive dipping deposits in the subsurface" of this area, the study notes.
Analysis of radar data indicated "foreshore deposits" similar to beaches on Earth with sediments.
The research indicates the presence of "coastal sedimentary deposits formed by ancient ocean waves and possibly composed of sand and pebble gravels transported by tidal currents," per the study.
Cardenas said this "stood out to us immediately because it suggests there were waves, which means there was a dynamic interface of air and water."
Contributing author Michael Manga, a University of California, Berkeley, professor of Earth and planetary science, said in a statement the research showed "classic indications of sloping, sandy beaches lining an ocean."
Zoom in: Manga said the "sand that's on those beaches is coming in from the rivers, and then it's being transported by currents in the ocean and continually being transported up and down the beaches by the waves coming and going up and down the beach."
He noted that Mars has many features that resemble ancient rivers. "So there must have been rivers transporting sediment to the ocean, though there's nothing in the immediate vicinity that would have disturbed these beach deposits," Manga added.
The bottom line, via Cardenas:"We're finding places on Mars that used to look like ancient beaches and ancient river deltas.
"We found evidence for wind, waves, no shortage of sand β a proper, vacation-style beach."
Between the lines: Aaron Cavosie, a planetary scientist at Curtin University in Australia, said the find marked an "extraordinary contribution" to research into water on the Red Planet, per the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"There is abundant evidence from orbital images and mineral mapping that surface water was present during the Noachian period from 4.1β3.7 billion years ago," added Cavosie, who was not involved in the study.
"Its origin and duration continue to be debated."
"Comparison between the dipping reflectors detected on Mars with those of marine sedimentary deposits on Earth. (A) The GPR radargrams detected in Shark Bay, Australia (1)," per the study. "Note that the dipping reflectors represent marine sediments formed in the foreshore area, (B) The processed radar profile of RoPeR low-frequency channel. The dipping reflectors show similar features to those on Earth." Screenshot: PNAS