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Firefighters shot in Idaho ambush identified

Two Idaho firefighters killed in a shooting near Coeur d'Alene were identified by authorities Monday.

The big picture: The two veteran firefighters, along with a third who was critically injured, were ambushed by a lone gunman who started a wildfire in the state's north Sunday, investigators said.


Details: Kootenai County Fire and Rescue Chief Frank Harwood, 42, and Coeur d'Alene Fire Department Battalion Chief John Morrison, 52, were identified as the fallen firefighters during a Monday evening briefing.

  • Harwood, a member of the county fire department for 17 years, was a husband and a father of two children. He was also a former Army National Guard combat engineer, said Kootenai County Fire and Rescue Chief Christopher Way.
  • Morrison served the city for more than 28 years, working his way up to battalion chief, Coeur d'Alene Fire Chief Tom Greif said during the briefing.
  • Morrison and Harward will be honored with a procession of emergency vehicles on Tuesday morning, per a Coeur d'Alene Fire Department Facebook post.

Situation report: Coeur d'Alene Fire Department engineer David Tysdal, 47, sustained gunshot wounds and was in critical condition in a local hospital.

  • Tysdal, who has been with the fire department for 23 years, had two successful surgeries as of noon Monday, officials said at the briefing.

Go deeper: What we know about Wess Roley, the Idaho fire shooting suspect

Scoop: Roy Cooper leans toward N.C. Senate bid, potential Trump showdown

North Carolina Democrats are getting closer to the gift they've have been asking for all year, with former Gov. Roy Cooper (D) leaning toward a Senate run in the state President Trump has won three times.

Why it matters: The field is essentially frozen until Cooper and Lara Trump, the president's daughter-in-law, decide if they want to be their party's nominees.


  • In their own way, they both have the "right of first refusal" in their party's primaries.

What they're saying: "Governor Cooper continues to strongly consider a run for the Senate and will decide in the coming weeks," said Morgan Jackson, Cooper's top political adviser told Axios.

  • "I'm considering it," Lara Trump told Fox News Radio on Monday.
  • "This is all kind of fresh within the past 24 hours for me," she said.
  • "North Carolina is my home state. It's where I was born and raised. It made me the person I am today."

Driving the news: In a surprise Sunday move, Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) announced in the middle of Senate negotiations over the one "big, beautiful bill," that he would not be seeking a third term.

  • "In Washington over the last few years, it's become increasingly evident that leaders who are willing to embrace bipartisanship, compromise, and demonstrate independent thinking are becoming an endangered species," Tillis said.
  • One longtime Senate Democratic donor told Axios that they expect Cooper to hop in the race after Tillis' retirement.

Zoom out: Even before his announcement, Democrats viewed North Carolina as their best opportunity to chip away at the GOP's 3-seat Senate majority in the 2026 midterms.

  • Tillis had shown a willingness, on a few issues, to buck the president, feeding suspicions in the MAGA base that wasn't on team Trump.
  • In 2023 the state party formally censured him.

Zoom in: Lara Trump, a former RNC vice chair, could rely on the president to clear the field and avoid the messy GOP infighting from some of North Carolina's recent open statewide primaries.

  • National and state Democrats would likely make it clear to any other potential candidates that if Cooper runs, they should exit the race.
  • Former Rep. Wiley Nickel, who served for one term before Republicans redrew his seat before the 2024 election, announced a Senate bid in April.
  • Three freshman congressmen, Reps. Pat Harrigan, Tim Moore and Brad Knott, could jump into the race on the Republican side if Lara Trump passed.

Idaho fire shooting suspect wanted to be a firefighter, family says

More information surfaced Monday about Wess Roley, the 20-year-old suspected shooter in an incident that left two Idaho firefighters dead and another wounded over the weekend, as his family spoke to multiple outlets about the suspect's life and career.

The big picture: Though police have yet to determine what the suspect's intensions or motives were, Wess Roley's family has told multiple outlets that they were shocked over the allegations since he himself sought to be a firefighter.


Here's what we know so far about Wess Roley, based on interviews from his family, information from police and other reports.

The basics

Police said Monday that Roley had previously lived in California, Arizona, and Idaho.

  • He did not have a criminal history with the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office, officials said.
  • The suspect previously had five "minor" interactions with the sheriffs office, police said.

Parents and home life

Roley's family were arborists and they climbed trees, police said at a press conference late Monday. He had a loving family, and recently vacationed in Hawaii, his grandfather, Dale Roley, told CNN.

  • Court documents obtained by NBC News show that in 2015, his mother, Heather Lynn Cuchiara, asked for protection against Roley's father and her then-husband, Jason Roley, for alleged acts of assault and damage.
  • Wess Roley's father told a CNN reporter that he wasn't close with his son.

A running website identified Wess Roley as a track runner at a local high school and a member of the class of 2024. His grandfather told 4 News Now that Wess liked to hike often.

  • "It wasn't like he was a loner," Dale Roley told CNN. "We had no reason to suspect that he would be involved in something like this."

Wess Roley moved to Idaho in 2024, where he had his own apartment, his grandfather told the New York Times.

  • "He was just trying to figure his life out," he said. "He seemed to be a little bit optimistic."

Career

Wess wanted to be a firefighter, Dave Roley told multiple outlets.

  • "He wanted to be a fireman – he was doing tree work and he wanted to be a fireman in the forest," Dale Roley told CNN. "As far as I know, he was actually pursuing it."
  • "He loved firefighters," he told NBC News. "It didn't make sense that he was shooting firefighters. Maybe he got rejected or something."

Was Wess Roley a gunowner?

Wess Roley allegedly owned a shotgun and long rifle, his grandfather told CNN. However, law enforcement officials did not say if those weapons were used in the Idaho shooting.

Go deeper: Suspected shooter identified in Idaho firefighter ambush

Trump attacks Fed again in open letter calling for lower rates

President Trump sent a letter to Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell urging the central bank to lower interest rates "by a lot," the White House said on Monday.

Why it matters: The administration has stepped up public pressure on the Fed, with top officials floating the possibility of announcing Powell's replacement months before his term expires.


What they're saying: "Jerome 'Too Late' Powell, and his entire Board, should be ashamed of themselves for allowing this to happen to the United States," Trump posted on Truth Social.

The intrigue: Trump's post included what appeared to be the letter, which White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump sent to the Fed on Monday.

  • "You have cost the U.S.A. a fortune β€” and continue to do so," the letter, which was written on a document that lists foreign nations' interest rate levels, says. "You should lower the rate by a lot!"
  • Trump again said that the Fed should be lowering rates to help save the government money on interest payments, a suggestion that is at odds with the Fed's mandates.

What to watch: The Fed browbeating of Trump's first term looks mild relative to that of recent months.

  • The threat of a "shadow Fed chair" might become reality, with reports that the Trump administration is considering naming Powell's successor as soon as this summer β€” a move that risks undermining Powell, whose term does not expire for another 11 months.
  • A spot on the Federal Reserve Board opens in January, "so we've given thought to the idea that perhaps that person would go on to become the chair when Jay Powell leaves in May," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Bloomberg on Monday.
  • On Friday, Trump made the clearest suggestion yet that he wants the next Fed chair to do his bidding, saying he was going to nominate somebody who "wants to cut rates."

Reality check: Powell told lawmakers last week that the Fed would have likely kept cutting rates, if not for the economic threats posed by Trump's trade policy.

  • Inflation is at a four-year low, but projections suggest that tariffs will stoke higher prices. "If you just look at the basic data and don't look at the forecast, you would say that we would've continued cutting," Powell said at a congressional hearing.
  • Two Trump-nominated Fed governors, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, support cuts as soon as July β€” though that stance does not appear to be widely shared among other officials on the Fed's rate-setting committee.

Editor's note: This story has been updated with recent background.

Ábrego García's release delayed over deportation concerns

Kilmar Ábrego García will remain in jail for now over concerns from his legal team that he could be deported if released while awaiting trail, a federal judge ruled Monday.

The big picture: It comes after the White House last week called a report that quotes prosecutors saying Ábrego García would be sent to an unnamed third country "fake news."


Zoom in: Ábrego García's lawyers asked a judge to delay his release Friday as he awaits trial on human smuggling charges, to which he has pleaded not guilty.

  • The lawyers said they were concerned that the U.S. Marshals Service could release him from Tennessee on Friday and then Immigration and Customs Enforcement would remove him over the weekend.
  • U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes ruled in an order Monday that he will remain in federal custody until a court appearance in mid-July.

Context: Ábrego García who was wrongfully deported to El Salvador, was returned to the U.S. earlier this month, and the Justice Department was ordered to release him from prison in Tennessee while he awaited trial.

  • A federal judge said last week that Ábrego GarcΓ­a is likely to eventually be deported to El Salvador, where he's originally from.

Go deeper: White House: Report Abrego Garcia will be deported again "fake news"

Justice Department to prioritize revoking citizenship of naturalized Americans: what to know

The U.S. Department of Justice has begun to prioritize stripping naturalized Americans of their citizenship when charged with crimes, according to a recent memo.

Why it matters: It ramps up the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, which it has expanded to target, deport and detain legal permanent residents and citizens.


Driving the news: The DOJ directed attorneys to prioritize denaturalization in cases where naturalized citizens commit crimes, per the memo.

  • The DOJ calls for "civil denaturalization" in the case of "war crimes," "extrajudicial killings," "human rights abuses," and for those "convicted of crimes who pose an ongoing threat to the United States," as well as "terrorists."
  • "The Civil Division shall prioritize and maximally pursue denaturalization proceedings in all cases permitted by law and supported by the evidence," the memo said.
  • Representatives for the White House, DOJ and Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment on Monday evening.

What is a naturalized citizen?

  • Naturalization "is the process by which U.S. citizenship is granted to a lawful permanent resident after meeting the requirements established by Congress in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)," per U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).

How many immigrants are naturalized citizens?

  • Of the 46.2 million immigrants living in the U.S. in 2022, 24.5 million – 53% – were naturalized citizens, according to a Migration Policy Institute analysis of government data.

What people are eligible to become naturalized citizens?

By the numbers: In the past decade, the U.S. naturalized more than 7.9 million citizens, per the USCIS.

  • Naturalized citizens must undergo an involved application process, but eligibility criteria generally includes being a lawful permanent resident for at least five years, with exceptions for spouses of citizens and members of the U.S. military.
  • The median years spent as a permanent resident for all citizens naturalized in 2024 was 7.5 years.

The INA requires that naturalization applicants can read, write and speak words in ordinary usage in the English language and have a knowledge and understanding of U.S. history and government.

How many citizens have been denaturalized?

  • From 1990-2017, the DOJ filed 305 denaturalization cases, about 11 per year.
  • The number has surged since President Trump's first term.

What they're saying: "Denaturalization is no longer so rare," noted Cassandra Burke Robertson, a professor at Case Western Reserve University's law school, in 2019, saying that the rise began under the Obama administration, "which used improved digital tools to identify potential cases of naturalization fraud from years before."

  • "But the Trump administration, with its overall immigration crackdown, is taking denaturalization to new levels."
  • Robertson also noted that denaturalization was a common political tool of the McCarthy era.

Since January 2017, the USCIS has selected some 2,500 cases for possible denaturalization and referred at least 110 denaturalization cases to the Justice Department for prosecution by the end of August 2018.

  • The DOJ filed at least 30 denaturalization cases in 2017 β€” twice the number it filed in 2016, per The Miami Herald.

How does the DOJ guidance change things for naturalized citizenship?

In the memo, Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate wrote that pursuing denaturalization will be among the agency's top five enforcement priorities for the civil division.

  • "The Civil Division shall prioritize and maximally pursue denaturalization proceedings in all cases permitted by law and supported by the evidence," he said.'
  • The DOJ directed attorneys to prioritize denaturalization in cases where "an individual either 'illegally procured' naturalization or procured naturalization by 'concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation.'"

Are the DOJ's denaturalization efforts constitutional?

Robertson told NPR that the DOJ's pursuit of denaturalization cases is particularly concerning.

  • "Robertson says that stripping Americans of citizenship through civil litigation violates due process and infringes on the rights guaranteed by the 14th Amendment," NPR notes.

The denaturalization push gives the Trump administration another tool to police immigrants' free speech rights.

  • The Trump administration has targeted students, universities and immigrants for alleged antisemitism. Frequently, those targeted have been critical of Israel's war in Gaza.
  • The DOJ's memo cites "ending antisemitism" as another priority target.

The Trump administration already detained for months β€” and sought to deport β€” pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, who is a green card holder.

  • The government argued in a memo from Secretary of State Marco Rubio that allowing Khalil to remain in the country would "undermine U.S. policy to combat anti-Semitism around the world and in the United States, in addition to efforts to protect Jewish students from harassment and violence in the United States."
  • That echoes the language of the new memo, pushing for the denaturalization of those "convicted of crimes who pose an ongoing threat to the United States."

Has the Justice Department denaturalized anyone yet?

  • At least one person has already been denaturalized following a conviction recently. That person was a convicted collector and distributor of child sexual abuse material, per the DOJ.

Editor's note: This article has been updated to give more details on the person denaturalized following a conviction.

Trump's megabill: What are the next steps and hurdles

Congressional Republicans are racing toward a self-imposed July 4 deadline to pass President Trump's sweeping domestic policy bill, though its ultimate fate remains uncertain Monday afternoon.

  • This morning, the Senate began its marathon vote-a-rama, or a series of unlimited amendment votes, after finishing initial debate on the underlying bill last night.

Why it matters: Trump's marquee legislation would cement some of the biggest policy goals of his second term. There's been criticism from both parties over the bill's cost as well as its cuts to Medicaid, and Democrats have zeroed in on the social safety net losses, funding for immigration enforcement and rollbacks of clean energy initiatives.


  • The reconciliation package the Senate is considering would add $3.3 trillion in budget deficits over the next 10 years, according to a nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimate.
  • That's more than the estimated $2.8 trillion in the House version passed by just one vote last month.
  • Senate Republicans eked out a late-night win Saturday with a 51-49 vote to take up the bill.

πŸ›οΈ Here's what needs to happen next to meet the July 4 deadline:

1. The full Senate must approve its version of the legislation. This could happen as soon as Monday.

  • Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) only needs a simple majority of 51 votes for passage under budget reconciliation rules. Republicans can only afford to lose three votes.
  • Zoom in: Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) are firm "no" votes.
  • Already, the Senate's version of the bill has significant differences from the House version, including on Medicaid work requirements, the state and local tax (SALT) deduction, wind and solar tax credits and a provision to nix taxes on tips.

2. The House and Senate would have to resolve their different versions and negotiate a unified version of the bill. (Or the House could accept the Senate's changes wholesale and move to a final vote.)

3. Both chambers ultimately must approve the same version of the bill. The House will have to come back from recess to vote on the Senate plan or a compromise β€”Β which wouldn't happen before Wednesday.

4. Trump would then be presented a bill to sign into law, which he wants to do alongside Independence Day celebrations on Friday.

OK, but what are the major hangups?

  • Republican infighting: Tillis has already announced he'll retire after getting Trump-backed primary threats for opposing the bill's cuts to Medicaid. But his exit and his statements about the rank partisanship of Washington underscore the extent to which moderate holdouts who will defy the president are a dwindling breed.
  • Parliamentarian rulings: The parliamentarian has already forced some delays to hammer out revised bill text, like on the Medicaid provider tax. Additional rulings against bill language could lead to more last-minute tweaks β€” and further delays.

Can Democrats do anything?

  • They're expected to uniformly oppose the bill, but since Congress is using the reconciliation process, they don't have the power to stop the bill on their own.
  • The party lacks majorities in either chamber and has little leverage, beyond forcing Senate amendment votes that put Republicans in tricky political positions β€”Β and stacking political messaging attacks for the midterms.

Trump signs executive order lifting most sanctions on Syria

President Trump signed an executive order on Monday rescinding most U.S. sanctions imposed on Syria since the 1970s, a major step toward offering the war-torn country a path to normalization with the West.

Why it matters: Syria's President Ahmed al-Sharaa, a former Islamist rebel who overthrew the Assad regime last year, had urged the U.S to lift sanctions to give Syria a chance to rebuild after 14 years of civil war.


  • Trump's executive order comes six weeks after his historic meeting with al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia, where Trump first announced the U.S. would lift sanctions on Syria to give the country a fresh start.
  • "Now it is their time to shine. We are taking them all off. Good luck Syria. Show us something very special," Trump said in a speech at the time.

Zoom in: Trump's executive order outlines a sweeping reversal of U.S. policy toward Syria dating back to 1979. It includes:

  • A review of Syria's designation as a state sponsor of terrorism.
  • A potential suspension of the Caesar Act, which sanctioned the Assad regime for war crimes against civilians.
  • Steps to remove Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) β€” the Islamist group formerly led by al-Sharaa β€” from the U.S. foreign terrorist organization list.

U.S. officials say sanctions against former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is believed to be living in Moscow, and members of his former regime will not be lifted.

Driving the news: The Trump administration is holding "preliminary discussions" with Israel and Syria on a potential security agreement between the longtime enemy states, U.S. and Israeli officials tell Axios.

  • While normalization isn't on the table yet, the talks could lay the groundwork for future diplomacy β€” starting with efforts to reduce tensions and update security arrangements along the volatile Israel-Syria border.
  • Any breakthrough would represent a major diplomatic achievement for the Trump administration, given the decades of hostilities between Israel and Syria under the rule of the Assad family.

Between the lines: The U.S. favors a gradual process that would slowly build trust and improve relations between Israel and Syria.

  • But Israel is pushing for assurances that any talks will ultimately lead to a full peace agreement and normalization, a senior Israeli official told Axios.
  • Another Israeli official cautioned that a deal is "not around the corner" and said it will take time to achieve meaningful progress.

The intrigue: Israeli officials had hoped the U.S. would retain some sanctions as leverage to push Syria toward full normalization with Israel.

  • But a U.S. official told reporters Monday that the administration didn't see value in that approach.
  • "It's a benefit for Syria to lean toward Israel. President al-Sharaa said he wants to start talks with Israel. The way to entice the Syrians is to make a deal with Israel fruitful for them," the official said.

State of play: In early June, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Trump's Syria envoy Tom Barrack that he was interested in negotiating a new security agreement with Syria's post-Assad government, brokered by the U.S.

  • A senior Israeli official said Netanyahu's goal is a phased set of agreements with Syria β€” starting with a modernized version of the 1974 disengagement of forces accord, and ultimately culminating in a full peace deal and normalization.

When Islamist militants toppled the Assad regime in a stunning rebel offensive last December, Israel responded with waves of airstrikes that systematically destroyed what remained of Syria's air force, navy, air defense, and missile systems.

  • Israel also took control of the buffer zone between the two countries and occupied territory inside Syria, including the Syrian side of the strategic Mount Hermon.
  • Israeli officials now view these areas as their primary leverage in negotiations, and say Israel will only withdraw in exchange for full peace and normalization with Syria.

Behind the scenes: Israel is communicating with Syria through at least four different channels β€” including Netanyahu's national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi, Mossad director David Barnea, Foreign Minister Gideon Saar for political and strategic dialogue, and the Israel Defense Forces for day-to-day military coordination.

  • But Israeli officials say they want the U.S. to take a more active mediating role, believing it would give Syria's new government a stronger incentive to engage seriously.
  • Senior Israeli and U.S. officials said Barrack has been in contact with Syrian officials since his visit to Israel in early June to explore launching formal talks.
  • "We are having very soft preliminary discussions. Diplomatic breakthroughs are like unwrapping an onion β€” we are peeling," a senior U.S. official told Axios. "President Trump and Secretary of State Rubio have been super supportive, and our teams are working well."

The talks are currently limited to officials below the level of Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, and there is no discussion yet of a leaders' summit, a U.S. official added.

  • Two senior Israeli officials said a deal is possible, but emphasized that it will take time.
  • "We hope to see the Trump administration pushing more assertively on this track," one Israeli official said.

Friction point: One of the biggest question marks hanging over any future Israeli-Syrian peace talks is the status of the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria during the 1967 war.

  • In every previous round of negotiations over the past three decades, the Assad regime demanded a full β€” or nearly full β€” Israeli withdrawal from the territory in exchange for peace.
  • During his first term, Trump recognized the Golan Heights as part of Israel β€” a move that the Biden administration did not reverse.
  • Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Monday that Israel is open to an agreement with Syria, but insisted that the Golan Heights will remain part of Israel under any future deal.

A U.S. official told reporters that the Trump administration is ready to assist in brokering an Israel-Syria deal, but that the details β€” including border delineation and the future of the Golan Heights β€” will be left to the two countries.

  • "It is up to them, not up to us," the official said.
  • The official added that the goal is to build trust gradually, starting with a limited security agreement that could lay the foundation for a broader peace.

What to watch: Ron Dermer, Netanyahu's close confidant and minister for strategic affairs, is visiting Washington this week for meetings with White House officials.

  • The potential deal with Syria will be one of the issues discussed, Israeli officials say.
  • Netanyahu will also visit the White House on July 7 and discuss Syria with Trump, in addition to other regional issues, an Israeli official told Axios.

Scoop: Trump customs revenue tops $100 billion, boosted by tariffs

The U.S. has now collected more than $100 billion in customs revenue since President Trump took office, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: The vast majority of that is from tariffs, as Trump's trade policy begins to generate substantial income for the government.


Driving the news: Total customs revenue from actions taken since Jan. 20 β€” including tariffs, taxes and fees β€” hit $106.1 billion as of last Friday, according to Customs and Border Protection documents seen by Axios.

  • Most of that, $81.5 billion in total, is from tariffs imposed since Jan. 20.

Zoom out: The revenue from Trump's sweeping global levies is substantially higher than in past years.

  • For the current fiscal year through the end of May, collections are about 65% higher than the same period the year prior, per Treasury data.
  • The overall effective tariff rate is now at the highest level since the late 1930s, per the Yale Budget Lab.

What to watch: At current levels, annual collections are pacing ahead of the administration's own estimates.

  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and trade advisor Peter Navarro have previously estimated tariffs could generate north of $300 billion in revenue.

Trump heads to "Alligator Alcatraz" to tout new Florida migrant lockup

President Trump heads back to Florida on Tuesday to tour "Alligator Alcatraz," a controversial new detention facility in the Everglades to incarcerate those who immigrated illegally or face deportation.

Why it matters: The $450 million 1,000-bed facility of trailers and tents is the largest of its kind and solidifies Florida's position as the top state cooperating with Trump's immigration crackdown.


  • Florida already leads the nation in cross-deputizing local police to enforce federal immigration laws, a priority of Gov. Ron DeSantis.
  • The idea and name of "Alligator Alcatraz" is the brainchild of Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, who was appointed by DeSantis after serving as his chief of staff.

The intrigue: Uthmeier hatched the plan for Alligator Alcatraz in near-secret and worked with DeSantis's office and the Department of Homeland Security to avoid any opposition before it was too late for significant opposition to materialize.

  • DHS has blessed the project with $450 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency's "Shelter and Services Program," which President Biden had tapped to help house migrants in hotels to welcome them to the United States.
  • Now the Trump administration is using that program to detain and help deport them.
  • The site is owned by Miami-Dade County, but DeSantis is developing the site and essentially taking it over by exercising emergency authority he granted himself in 2023 to deal with a flood of migrants who came during the Biden administration.

Zoom in: Alligator Alcatraz is surrounded by wetlands of the Big Cypress National Preserve next to Everglades National Park and is almost dead center between the East and West coasts of Florida.

  • The nearly 25,000-acre site is not pristine wetlands, however. It's a one-runway airplane facility called the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport.
  • The runway was supposed to be one of six in what was to be the world's largest airport at the time in the 1960s. That project, the Everglades Jetport, was abandoned amid protests from the nascent environmental movement at the time.

Zoom out: Environmentalists oppose the project because of the impacts on wildlife (such as the endangered Florida panther), and development of the site runs contrary to desires to get rid of the jetport.

  • Immigration advocates and Democrats oppose Alligator Alcatraz because it's touted as deliberately cruel to detainees.
  • The state and federal governments say environmental impacts will be minimal and the state has to put detainees somewhere as more migrants are being rounded up and are increasingly overcrowding federal immigration lockups like Krome Detention Center.

Rep. Dwight Evans becomes latest septuagenarian House Democrat not running in 2026

Rep. Dwight Evans (D-Pa.) said Monday he will retire in 2026 after initially telling Axios he planned to run for reelection to his Philadelphia-based seat.

Why it matters: The 71-year-old is the latest in what many younger Democrats hope will be a wave of septuagenarian and octogenarian lawmakers opting not to try to hold onto their seats.


  • The party is engaged in an internal civil war over age, with older lawmakers across the country facing primary challenges from younger insurgents tired of waiting for them to retire.
  • Evans, who suffered a stroke last year that kept him from voting at the Capitol for much of 2024 and has since confined him to a walker, has been among the prime targets of those efforts.

What he's saying: "I remain in good health and fully capable of continuing to serve," Evans said in a statement.

  • But, he added, "After some discussions this weekend and thoughtful reflection, I have decided that the time is right to announce that I will not be seeking re-election in 2026."
  • The House Democrat, who has served in Congress since 2016 and was previously a state legislator for 35 years, said he will serve out the remainder of his term through Jan. 3, 2027.

Zoom out: Evans is the third House Democrat this year to announce their retirement without plans to seek higher office. All were over 70.

  • Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) said in April he would retire β€” and relinquish his role as ranking member of the House Oversight Committee β€” after his esophageal cancer returned. The 75-year-old died the following month.
  • Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), 81, announced in May she would retire amid a primary challenge from 26-year-old progressive Kat Abughazaleh.

What to watch: Democrats' younger wing is hoping this will just be the beginning, with progressive groups saying they expect dozens of older incumbents to face primary challenges.

  • The hope among grassroots activists is that many of these incumbent members will be compelled to retire rather than fight brutal reelection battles after years of facing only token opposition.
  • But more than half of the 30 House Democrats who are 75 or older have told Axios they plan to run for reelection β€” setting the stage for bruising fights across the country.

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

Harvard's treatment of Jewish students violates Civil Rights law, Trump administration says

The Department of Health and Human Services announced on Monday that Harvard violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by "acting with deliberate indifference towards harassment of Jewish and Israeli students" after the Oct. 7 attack.

The big picture: The announcement is yet another escalation in the Trump administration's pressure campaign against the Ivy League institution, which has refused to yield to Washington's demands.


  • Harvard is facing off against the administration in court over the freezing of billions in federal funds and its attempts to block the school from hosting international students.

Driving the news: The findings, per a statement from HHS, document that a "hostile environment existed, and continues to exist, at Harvard."

  • Administration officials, in a letter addressed to Harvard University President Alan Garber, said that "failure to institute adequate changes immediately will result in the loss of all federal financial resources."
  • In a 57-page notice of violation, the HHS office pointed to three areas of "repeated ineffectual action and inaction," alleging Harvard failed to establish clear procedures to report and remediate antisemitic harassment, uniformly implement disciplinary measures and "allowed protesters to flout time, place and manner restrictions."

What they're saying: A university spokesperson condemned antisemitism as "unacceptable" in a statement provided to Axios and said the university has taken "substantive, proactive steps" to address the root causes of it.

  • In response to the federal investigation, the spokesperson said, Harvard shared its Antisemitism and Anti-Israeli Bias Report with the administration and outlined the steps it has taken to strengthen policies and discipline those who violate them.
  • "Harvard has made significant strides to combat bigotry, hate and bias," the statement continued. "We are not alone in confronting this challenge and recognize that this work is ongoing."

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt spoke of the HHS findings during a briefing Monday, calling it a "violent violation" of Title VI.

  • "These are all facts that Harvard cannot dispute, and that's why the administration has found them in violation of Title VI and has threatened to withhold their federal funding," she said. "Because if you break federal law, you should not be receiving federal tax dollars."

Friction point: Despite President Trump recently suggesting a potential detente with Harvard was on the horizon, Monday's notice puts new fuel on the fire.

  • HHS noted that Monday's findings do not address a separate Title VI investigation into the Harvard Law Review over alleged "race-based discrimination."
  • Beyond the investigations, the Trump administration has battered the university from various fronts and has also threatened to revoke the university's tax-exempt status.

Editor's note: This story has been updated throughout with new information.

Canada talks show tariffs have created a new world for investors

The S&P 500 was on track to hit a new record on Friday, but then sank when President Trump announced the termination of trade talks with Canada over a controversial digital services tax.

  • Within an hour, investors decided not to care, and stocks closed at an all-time high for the first time since February.

Why it matters: Wall Street is largely post-tariff. The market is a forward-looking machine, and it's already priced in better-than-expected trade deals before they are signed.


What they're saying: Headline-driven volatility is a given under this administration, so don't let it impact your portfolio, advisors say. (Example A: Canada scrapped the aforementioned tax Sunday night.)

  • Jay Pelosky of TPW Advisors says he pays "no attention" to tariff policy anymore.
  • Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo, indicated that Trump may be "outsmarting everyone" in a recent note, arguing any extension of the 90-day tariff pause, which Trump has signaled, would decrease uncertainty.
  • Lower uncertainty is good news for both businesses and investors.
  • Friday's action was "reflecting the improved investor sentiment and overall investor confidence," says Mike Dickson, head of research and quantitative strategies at Horizon Investments.

Zoom in: There are several bullish signals that strategists would rather focus on than tariffs, which fueled the 19% drop in stocks just a couple months ago.

  • Expectations are building around the "big, beautiful bill" being passed sooner rather than later, which could be a fresh catalyst.
  • Recent declines in the dollar may be a long-term risk, but for now, this could be a cushion that drives earnings beats across the big tech names.
  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent continues to pitch an economic agenda built on a three-legged stool β€” tax, trade and deregulation β€” as investors salivate over the prospect of looser government oversight.

Reality check: Economists caution that a slowdown in consumer spending, which is already happening, could worsen as tariff-driven inflation takes full effect.

  • It will be another couple of months until we know how much increased tariffs have affected inflation, according to Joe Brusuelas, principal and chief economist at RSM US.
  • "It's summer silly season," says Brusuelas, who cautions investors that FOMO is driving positive sentiment while risks remain.
  • He argues a reassessment of valuations will come when, not if, the data shows further tariff impacts.

The other side: Some hyper-optimistic strategists may argue a slowdown in consumer spending off the back of higher prices is bullish since there could be a subsequent rebound if trade deals are struck.

  • Spending slowed when uncertainty was at a record high. If uncertainty wanes, maybe spending roars right back. The argument clashes directly with the idea that the inflation driven by tariffs is just beginning.

The bottom line: Consensus is building around the idea that investors can stomach headline volatility around policy uncertainty, but they can't afford to miss out on the rallies that come after.

New docs get schooled in old diseases as vaccine rates fall

Rush University Medical Center in Chicago is adding a new twist to its curriculum for medical students and residents, using AI tools and learning modules to teach how to more quickly identify measles rashes on different skin tones.

Why it matters: It's another reminder that diseases once thought to have been eradicated are showing up with increased frequency in clinics and ERs, posing challenges for younger physicians and health workers who thought they were relegated to history.


  • Lingering vaccine hesitancy and distrust of the medical establishment stoked by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are leading some health systems to add training on old scourges that were practically wiped out by immunization campaigns and increased surveillance.

"You're taught these things in medical school, and you're taught from a very academic perspective with the sense of measles was eradicated in 2000," said Nicholas Cozzi, EMS medical director at Rush.

  • "Now we're having a resurgence, the highest in 25 years, and you might have not reviewed that since the first year of medical school," he added. "It's a new paradigm and a new normal that we have to adapt to."

The big picture: The focus is particularly acute on childhood illnesses such as measles, chicken pox, invasive strep pneumoniae and pertussis, experts told Axios.

  • Polio and diphtheria, covered by the DTap vaccine, are also a concern. An unvaccinated 10-year-old boy died in Germany after contracting diphtheria, once the leading cause of premature death of children.
  • Rubella β€” a less easily transmitted infection covered by the MMR vaccine β€” can also be a threat, because of the way it can infect a fetus during pregnancy, said Catherine Troisi, professor at UTHealth Houston School of Public Health and chair-elect of the International Network of Epidemiology in Policy.
  • Vaccination rates for U.S. kindergartners were down slightly in 2023-24 for the DTap, polio, chickenpox and MMR shots, according to CDC data.

Zoom in: Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, said rotavirus is another old disease that's being introduced to younger doctors.

  • "That virus dominated my residency [in the 1970s]. We had 400 kids admitted every winter," Offit said. That was before a vaccine was licensed in 2006 and virtually eliminated 70,000 hospitalizations with severe diarrhea annually, he added.
  • "Now it's the rare child who ever gets admitted. Most pediatric residents have never seen a case of rotavirus-induced dehydration in the hospital," he said.

Between the lines: Incidents such as the measles outbreak in Texas and Kennedy's recent changes to federal vaccine policy are heightening vigilance and forcing updates to physician training.

  • It will likely take time for medical schools and residency programs to formally change their training, Troisi pointed out.
  • Medical professionals are being advised to stay current on public health advisories, ask patients about travel histories and be on guard for less likely conditions that may present as more common ailments.

They may also have to brush up on best practices for spinal taps in infants and toddlers, an invasive diagnostic tool that is seldom used today but can quickly turn up telltale signs such as inflamed membranes, said Adrianna Cadilla, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at Nemours Children's Health in Orlando.

  • "When I trained, I would hear my attendings tell us about how often they had to do lumbar punctures because that was when Hemophilus influenza type B was running rampant," Cadilla said. "I only got to do probably one every ER shift, but that was a lot in comparison to now."
  • The hospital is using simulations to get medical students and residents more experienced in doing spinal tap on infants and wriggling older children, she said.

What to watch: New outbreaks could force more on-the-fly adjustments, especially in areas with low vaccination rates and the prospect of fewer recommended childhood immunizations.

  • Artificial intelligence is an emerging as a valuable tool in more quickly recognizing the medical conditions that may be of greater concern, Cozzi said. "That's a game changer," he said.

Millions of U.S. kids attend schools in "urban heat zones"

Data: Climate Central; Chart: Alex Fitzpatrick/Axios

Most K-12 public students in the biggest U.S. cities attend schools in extreme urban heat zones, a new analysis finds.

Why it matters: The heat island effect can make some neighborhoods notably warmer than others, especially during heat waves like the one that recently struck much of the country.


  • Many schools lack adequate air conditioning, jeopardizing students' health and learning abilities in periods of extreme heat while class is in session.

Driving the news: About 76% of public K-12 students in the 65 most populous U.S. cities attend schools where the heat island effect increases temperatures by at least 8Β°F, per a new analysis from Climate Central, a climate research group.

  • Researchers there examined more than 12,000 schools, with nearly 6.2 million students.
  • The group's analysis is based on its previous work modeling urban heat zones, as well as National Center for Education Statistics data.

Zoom in: Among the included cities, Louisville, Kentucky (98%); Orlando, Florida (97%) and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania (97%) have the largest shares of public K-12 students enrolled at schools in extreme urban heat zones.

  • Boston (36%), Providence, Rhode Island (42%) and Richmond, Virginia (49%) have the smallest.

Threat level: Some school districts had early dismissals, canceled classes, or even ended the school year early amid the recent heat wave, The Hill reports.

  • "Tens of thousands of public schools" need new or upgraded HVAC systems to meet increased cooling needs, per a 2024 Center for American Progress report, to the tune of $4.4 billion.

How it works: Heat islands amplify the impact and danger of extreme heat events fueled by human-driven climate change, with the built environment absorbing and trapping heat at the hyperlocal level.

What's next: Cities are increasingly aware of heat islands, and some are taking steps to alleviate it β€” by planting trees and using reflective road paint, for example β€” albeit with mixed results.

Canada axes digital services tax in push to advance trade talks with U.S.

Canada is rescinding its digital services tax "to advance broader trade negotiations" with the U.S., the country's finance ministry announced Sunday.

Why it matters: President Trump cited the tax on U.S. tech firms as he announced Friday he was ending trade talks with Canadian officials and would assign a tariff rate on goods from the country within the next week.


  • Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney have now "agreed that parties will resume negotiations with a view towards agreeing on a deal by July 21," per a statement from Department of Finance Canada.
  • Payments related to Canada's Digital Services Tax were due on Monday, but the statement said the collection would be halted and Finance Minister FranΓ§ois-Philippe Champagne "will soon bring forward legislation to rescind the Digital Services Tax Act."

What they're saying: "In our negotiations on a new economic and security relationship between Canada and the United States, Canada's new government will always be guided by the overall contribution of any possible agreement to the best interests of Canadian workers and businesses," Carney said in a statement.

  • Trump said on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures" earlier in the day that U.S. officials would not negotiate with their Canadian counterparts on trade until "certain taxes" were dropped.
  • "People don't realize, Canada is very nasty to deal with," he said.
  • Representatives for the Trump administration did not immediately respond to Axios' requests for comment on Sunday evening.

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

Retiring GOP senator savages Medicaid cuts in Trump's "big, beautiful bill"

Fresh off announcing he'll retire next year, Sen. Thom Tillis gave a lengthy floor speech Sunday night attacking cuts to Medicaid in the "big, beautiful bill."

Why it matters: The North Carolina Republican is accusing the GOP of breaking President Trump's campaign promises to protect Medicaid.


  • Tillis voted Saturday against starting debate on the bill, and has declared he'll vote "no" on the final version.

Zoom in: "I'm telling the president, you have been misinformed," Tillis said on Sunday night.

  • "What do I tell 663,000 people in two years, three years, when President Trump breaks his promise by pushing them off of Medicaid because the funding's not there anymore," Tillis asked.
  • He compared Trump's promise on Medicaid with former President Obama's "if you like your health care plan, you can keep it" quote on the Affordable Care Act.
  • The Senate's version of the "big, beautiful bill" would result in 12 million more people without health insurance in 2034 than today, the Congressional Budget Office projects.

Between the lines: The Senate is expected to vote on Monday on an amendment by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) that would lower the federal matching share (FMAP) for states that have expanded their Medicaid programs.

  • The plan, which would start in 2031, Semafor reports, would cut billions in federal support for state Medicaid programs.

2 dead, officers "taking sniper fire" after attack on Idaho firefighters, police say

Two Idaho firefighters were killed and another was critically injured in a shooting while responding to a fire near Coeur d'Alene in the state's north on Sunday afternoon, officials said.

The latest: A man was found dead near a firearm on Canfield Mountain, where the shooting occurred, and police believe he's the only suspect in the shooting, Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris said at a briefing late Sunday.


Driving the news: Investigators believe the suspect started the fire near Coeur d'Alene to "ambush" the firefighters.

  • Coeur d'Alene, with a population of about 58,000, is located in northwest Idaho, near the state's border with Washington.

Here's what we know about the attack.

What are local authorities saying about the attack?

Kootenai County Fire & Rescue firefighters were responding to the mountain blaze when "shots were fired" about 2pm local time, per a statement posted on the Kootenai County Sheriff's Office website.

  • The statement urged people to avoid the area and follow shelter-in-place alerts. The shelter-in-place order has since been lifted.
  • At the time law enforcement arrived to the site, Norris said it was unclear how many people were shooting but that officers were "actively taking sniper fire" from what appeared to be high-powered rifles.
  • Norris said later in a separate briefing that they believe just one individual was firing at officers and firefighters.

What do we know about the victims and the suspect?

One firefighter who died was from Coeur d'Alene and the other was from Kootenai County, per Norris.

  • The third firefighter, from the Coeur d'Alene Fire Department, was "fighting for his life, but he's in stable condition," Norris added.
  • The firefighters have yet to be named.

Norris said authorities located and transported a man's body, whom they believe to be the only shooter, but they did not identify him.

  • Around 300 law enforcement officers responded to the scene, Norris said, and authorities exchanged gunfire with the suspect.

Is the fire still burning?

Situation report: The Kootenai County Sheriff's Office cautioned in a Sunday night statement that the fire was still active.

  • "Residents in the area are advised to be prepared and ready should further action need to be taken," per the statement.
  • According to a Sunday night alert from the Idaho Department of Lands, crews estimate the fire spread to around 15 to 20 acres, "with numerous snags and steep terrain."

Are federal authorities assisting?

Zoom out: FBI deputy director Dan Bongino said on X that agents were heading to Coeur d'Alene to "provide tactical and operational support."

  • Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on X that the agency was "actively monitoring the scene" and vowed, "Justice will be served."

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

Trump says Mamdani must "behave" if elected NYC mayor or face funding cuts

Zohran Mamdani shrugged off President Trump's attacks on him and denied he's a communist during a Sunday interview in which the progressive New York City mayoral candidate said he doesn't think there should be billionaires.

Why it matters: Trump in an interview on Sunday doubled down in his assertion that Mamdani is a communist and said the likely Democratic primary winner must "do the right thing" if he's elected mayor of NYC or else he'll withhold federal funding.


  • "I can't imagine it, but let's say this, if he does get in I'm going to be president and he is going to have to do the right thing, but they're not getting any money. He's got to do the right thing," Trump said on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures."
  • "Whoever's mayor of New York is going to have to behave themselves or the federal government is coming down very tough on them financially."

What he's saying: Mamdani said on NBC News' "Meet the Press" he's "had to start to get used to the fact that the president will talk about how I look, how I sound, where I'm from, who I am, ultimately, because he wants to distract from what I'm fighting for."

  • He added, "I'm fighting for the very working people that he ran a campaign to empower, that he has since then betrayed. And when we talk about my politics, I call myself a democrat socialist in many ways inspired by the words of Dr. King from decades ago who said, 'Call it democracy or call it democratic socialism.
  • 'There has to be a better distribution of wealth for all of God's children in this country.' And as income inequality has declined nationwide, it has increased in New York City. And, ultimately, what we need is a city where every single person can thrive."

Of note: Asked whether billionaires should exist, Mamdani said, "I don't think we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality.

  • "And, ultimately, what we need more of is equality across our city and across our state and across our country. And I look forward to work with everyone, including billionaires, to make a city that is fairer for all of them."

More from Axios:

Sen. Thom Tillis won't run for reelection in 2026

Sen. Thom Tillis won't run for re-election in 2026, the North Carolina Republican announced Sunday.

Why it matters: Tillis faced a brutal fight to keep his seat, both in the general election and with the potential of Trump-backed primary challengers.


  • "It's not a hard choice, and I will not be seeking re-election," Tillis said in a statement announcing his plans.
  • He was first elected to the Senate in 2014.

Zoom in: Tillis voted against starting debate Saturday night on the "big, beautiful bill," and told lawmakers he'd also oppose the final version over its cuts to Medicaid.

  • In response, President Trump said he'd meet with Tillis's challengers and accused the North Carolinian of grandstanding.

Between the lines: Some Republicans are breathing a sigh of relief that they don't have to try to navigate a Tillis reelection.

  • His numbers with moderates and the Republican base were creating major concerns for the party's ability to turn out a midterm coalition with Tillis on the ballot, sources told Axios.

What they're saying: "In Washington over theΒ last few years, it's become increasingly evident that leaders who are willing to embrace bipartisanship, compromise, and demonstrate independentΒ thinking are becoming an endangered species," Tillis said in a statement.

What to watch: There's a large pool of potential GOP candidates for Tillis' seat, including RNC chair Michael Whatley and former RNC vice chair Lara Trump.

  • Lara Trump is "thinking" about a campaign, one Trump adviser told Axios.
  • She "would have a hard time saying no if asked by her father in law," another Trump adviser told Axios, although they'd be "surprised if she wants to leave the amazing gig she has at Fox."
  • One top Republican said she would have "right of first refusal."

North Carolina also has a slate of freshman Republican congressmen who could be poised to throw their names in the hat. Among them: Reps. Pat Harrigan, Tim Moore and Brad Knott.

This is a breaking news story and has been updated.

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