Russia launches deadliest attack on Kyiv this year
Headline update to reflect proper location and scope of attack: A previous version of this video misstated today’s attack as the deadliest on Ukraine in months.
President Donald Trump said his meeting in Rome with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “went well” and expressed disappointment with Russian President Vladimir Putin‘s attacks on Ukraine, urging him to sign a peace deal.
“I want him to stop shooting, sit down and sign a deal,” Trump said of Putin, speaking to reporters at the Morristown Municipal Airport in New Jersey while traveling back to the White House on April 27. “We have the confines of a deal, I believe. And I want him to sign it.”
Trump met with Zelenskyy on the sidelines of Pope Francis‘ funeral. Trump said Zelenskyy told him “he needs more weapons, but he’s been saying that for three years.”
Meanwhile, Trump envoy Steve Witkoff met with Putin in Moscow on April 25 as U.S. officials pressed to halt the three-year conflict, and warned they could walk away from the peace talks.
This is a “very critical week” that will determine whether the Trump administration continues with negotiations over ending the war, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in an April 27 interview. Rubio told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he believes the two sides are “close” to reaching a deal and there are “reasons to be optimistic,” but “we’re not close enough.”
“This week is going to be a really important week in which we have to determine whether this is an endeavor that we want to continue to be involved in,” Rubio added.
Trump repeatedly has expressed his frustration with Putin on social media in recent days. He chided Putin in an April social media post after Russia bombed Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.
“I am not happy with the Russian strikes on KYIV. Not necessary, and very bad timing. Vladimir, STOP!” Trump wrote, adding: “Let’s get the Peace Deal DONE!”
On April 26, Trump wrote that there was “no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns, over the last few days” and that “it makes me think that maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently.”
Trump tells European leaders: ‘Let’s see what happens’
Trump, Rubio, and Vice President JD Vance have warned Ukraine that Washington could abandon trying to negotiate a Ukraine-Russia peace settlement if there is no progress on a deal soon.
“If it’s not possible, if we’re so far apart that this is not going to happen, then I think the president is probably at a point where he’s going to say, ‘Well, we’re done,’” Rubio said on April 18.
Trump was asked during a meeting with Norwegian leaders whether the U.S. would stop sending Ukraine weapons and sharing military intelligence with the country if the administration decides to walk away from peace negotiations.
“Let’s see what happens,” Trump said. “I think we’re gonna make a deal. And if I make a deal that will be wonderful, we won’t have to worry about your question.”
As the U.S. works to get a peace deal, where to draw territorial lines is a big sticking point. Trump made it clear in a Time magazine interview that Ukraine will not regain control over Crimea, which Russia seized in 2014.
“Crimea will stay with Russia. And Zelenskyy understands that, and everybody understands that it’s been with them for a long time,” Trump said.
Trump also said Ukraine can’t join NATO.
Trump said he discussed Crimea with Zelenskyy and believed the Ukrainian leader is prepared to give it up.
“I see him as calmer. I think he understands the picture, and I think he wants to make a deal,” Trump said of Zelenskyy.
Contributing: Kim Hjelmgaard and Francesca Chambers, USA TODAY
Browns GM Andrew Berry on why they drafted Shedeur Sanders
Despite already drafting Dillon Gabriel to an already crowded Browns QB room, GM Andrew Berry explains why they couldn’t pass up Shedeur Sander in the fifth round.
While hosting a Twitch livestream on Saturday during the 2025 NFL Draft, Shilo Sanders told his viewers that – after starting the draft process with his dad representing him – he had signed with an agent.
“Dad was our agent,” Sanders said, referring to his brother Shedeur and himself, “but that hasn’t been working out too good. So today I had to sign with an agent.”
The elder Sanders brother appeared to be referring to Shedeur’s draft slide from potential first-round pick to fifth-round selection by the Browns. And though Sanders was smiling as he broke the news on the livestream, he wasn’t entirely joking.
Sanders had indeed “fired” his father and hired NFL agent Drew Rosenhaus to represent him.
Rosenhaus announced Sanders’ signing with a social media post on Saturday evening welcoming the defensive back to the Rosenhaus Sports Representation “family.”
Sanders didn’t hear his name called during the 2025 NFL Draft. He signed a contract with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent shortly after the draft ended.
He started 19 games at safety for the Colorado Buffaloes across the 2023 and 2024 seasons after two years at South Carolina and two years at Jackson State. In his time in Boulder, Sanders tallied 134 tackles with five forced fumbles, one sack and an interception that he returned for a touchdown.
In the April 27 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame-themed episode, the contestants had a vast catalog of songs to perform, with their assignment being to sing a track from one of the nearly 400 Rock Hall inductees. “You’ve Got a Friend” singer James Taylor took on a mentorship role.
In a bold move, Desmond Roberts sang The Commodores in front of Lionel Richie – and taking a risk paid off, as Richie and Luke Bryan insinuated Desmond outdid the former frontman with his cover. Carrie Underwood also stepped outside her comfort zone, hesitantly providing critical feedback (but always couching it with praise, of course).
Desmond Roberts ‘tried to take my song,’ Lionel Richie claims
As Desmond rehearsed with Taylor, he admitted in an interview, “It’s a risk to play (‘Jesus is Love’) in front of Lionel.”
He started at the piano and made his way to center stage, where he let out several consecutive notes that showed off his head voice. His rendition was so successful that Desmond had Richie feeling self-conscious.
“You found some octaves that I didn’t sing,” Richie said. “You tried to take my song. That is a very hard song to sing, and you did it so well.”
Bryan cheekily agreed: “The whole time I was like, ‘Lionel didn’t sing it like that.’” He added that he didn’t believe the falsettos were necessary, but ended the compliment sandwich with “You’ve got one of the most dynamic voices I’ve ever heard.”
Carrie Underwood issues challenges to Canaan James Hill, Mattie Pruitt
In a rare moment, Underwood offered a well-couched rebuke of aspiring preacher Canaan James Hill, who took the stage with Aretha Franklin’s “Mary Don’t You Weep.”
“I kind of think you cheated the system a little on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame,” she said.
Bryan agreed with Underwood, though he noted, “We love the gospel stuff.”
Earlier in the episode, Mattie Pruitt, this season’s youngest contender, unleashed her signature rasp in “Piece Of My Heart” by Big Brother and the Holding Company (featuring Janis Joplin). Underwood presented Mattie with a challenge: “If there’s anything I can say to you, (it) is you’ve gotta find your sass. … You need some sass, girl, come on!”
Who went home on ‘American Idol’?
Despite the unanimous praise he’d received, Desmond did not receive enough votes to crack the Top 12. Powerhouse singer Amanda Barise, no longer a self-described underdog, was also sent home.
Watch Mark Carney sworn in as Canadian prime minister
Mark Carney, who has never held political office, was sworn in as prime minister of Canada.
As Canadians prepare to vote for prime minister in an election where President Donald Trump looms large, Secretary of State Marco Rubio reiterated the president’s desire to make Canada a U.S. state.
“They’ll have their elections this week,” Rubio said about Canada on NBC’s “Meet the Press”. “They’re going to have a new leader, and we’ll deal with a new leadership of Canada. There are many things we work with cooperatively on Canada on, but we actually don’t like the way they treated us when it comes to trade.”
Pressed by “Meet the Press” host Kristen Welker whether Trump still wants to make Canada part of the United States, Rubio responded: “I think the president has stated repeatedly he thinks Canada would be better off as a state. I mean, he has said that based on what he was told by the previous prime minister, who said Canada can’t survive unless it treats the U.S. unfairly in trade.”
Trump began pressuring Canada on trade issues before taking office and repeatedly said the country should become a new U.S. state. He recently told Time magazine that he’s serious about Canada becoming part of the United States.
“I’m really not trolling,” Trump told Time. “Canada is an interesting case.” He complained about the U.S. trade deficit with Canada and said the United States doesn’t need Canadian products.
“And I say the only way this thing really works is for Canada to become a state,” he added.
Trump’s comments are roiling Canadian politics ahead of the April 28 vote for prime minister. The Liberal Party was trailing in polling when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced in January that he would resign.
But the latest CBC polling average shows Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney with a slight edge in the race over Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre. Trump’s trade policies and comments about becoming a U.S. state provoked a backlash in Canada and have become a major issue in the race for prime minister.
NBA playoff preview: Who can beat Boston or Cleveland?
Analyzing if the Bucks, Knicks, or Pacers have what it takes to beat Boston or Cleveland in the playoffs
If there’s one series this NBA playoffs that has been a throwback, fittingly, it’s the one between the New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons.
Sunday’s Game 4 thriller saw the Pistons turn a 16-point deficit into an 11-point lead midway through the fourth quarter, only for the Knicks — who fought off a Jalen Brunson injury scare — to rally late and steal a 94-93 victory.
The Knicks now carry a 3-1 series lead into Game 5, which will be Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.
The game was marked by intensity and physicality, and the officiating crew, by and large, ate their whistles and let contact slide. The biggest question now turns to a no-call on the final shot attempt of the night, a 3-point try from Pistons guard Tim Hardaway Jr.
Here are three takeaways from Game 4 of the series between the New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons:
Series outcome will be marred by crucial no-call
The Knicks relied on massive shot making down the stretch from Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns to carry a one-point lead in the final minute of play.
The Pistons inbounded the ball with 11.1 seconds left in the game. After All-Star Cade Cunningham missed his mid-range jumper, the ball leaked out to Hardaway in the corner. As he attempted his would-be game-winning 3-point try, Knicks forward Josh Hart made contact with the right side of Hardaway’s body.
The officiating crew ate its whistle and the game ended, but crew chief David Guthrie said later Sunday in a pool report that Hart made “body contact that is more than marginal to Hardaway Jr. and a foul should have been called.”
Hardaway, an 85.5% free throw shooter this season, should’ve had three chances at the line to make two shots to win the game.
While there’s no guarantee Hardaway would’ve converted them to win, the loss is nonetheless debilitating for the Pistons, who fell behind 3-1 and now face an elimination game Tuesday at Madison Square Garden.
In NBA history, only 13 teams have rallied from a 3-1 series deficit in the playoffs to advance.
“You go back and look at the film, (Hart) leaves his feet and there’s contact on Tim Hardaway’s jump shot,” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff told reporters after the game. “I don’t know any other way around it: there’s contact on his jump shot. The guy leaves his feet, he’s at Timmy’s mercy — I repeat, there was contact on his jump shot.”
Shot making when it counts
The shame about the conversation concerning officiating is that it’s overshadowing the superb shot making both teams flashed in the clutch. In particular, Towns swished a pair of high-difficulty shots inside the final two minutes. Both came on what were becoming broken possessions as the shot clock was winding down.
The first was a spinning fadeaway as Towns was drifting out of bounds, the shot just missing the backboard and arcing high into the bottom of the net. The second was a logo 3 inside the final minute that gave the Knicks a one-point lead. It would be the final bucket of the game.
And with it, Towns proved, once again, the value that his acquisition has brought New York. Because in previous seasons, the offensive burden would’ve fallen solely on Brunson.
Pistons are still too mistake-prone
This young Detroit team does deserve credit for ramping up its defensive intensity to frustrate the Knicks late in the second quarter and into the third. But the Pistons, as they have all series long, have been far too careless with the ball.
Sunday, they committed 19 turnovers, many of which came early in the game and put Detroit in a severe disadvantage; by one point early in the second quarter, the Pistons had more turnovers (10) than converted field goals (eight).
The giveaways also prevented the Pistons from settling into a steady offensive rhythm and contributed to their missing their first 10 shots from beyond the arc.
Cunningham has arrived as an elite playmaker. Now he must work on efficiency; through the four games in the series, he alone has committed 24 turnovers.
What to know about the growing threat of gun violence
Find out about the growing problem of gun violence and mass killings in the USA and learn how the Gun Violence Archive (GVA) categorizes different types of gun violence.
At least one person is dead and six others were injured after a shooting at a small university in northeastern North Carolina early April 27, authorities said.
The shooting occurred at the center of Elizabeth City State University’s campus following Yard Fest, a school spirit event that is part of the university’s weeklong Viking Fest celebration, according to a statement from the university. The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation said the shooting took place at around 12:30 a.m.
A 24-year-old man, who was not a student at the school, was pronounced dead, the university said. His identity was not immediately released pending notification of his next of kin.
Four people — including three students — sustained gunshot wounds, according to the university. Two other students were injured during the “subsequent commotion,” the university said.
None of the injuries were considered life-threatening, according to the university, and all victims were transported to a local medical center for treatment.
The shooting prompted a campus lockdown, and the university issued a shelter-in-place order for all students. The lockdown was later lifted, and the school said it increased police patrols across campus as a precaution.
The university also restricted access to the center of campus through April 27.
Latest school shooting to rock a U.S. college campus
The Elizabeth City State University Police Department, along with the Elizabeth City Police Department, Pasquotank County Sheriff’s Office, Camden County Sheriff’s Office, and the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, responded to the incident, according to the school.
“The (North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation) is currently on the scene, gathering evidence and collaborating with local authorities,” the agency said in a statement. “As this is an ongoing investigation, information is currently limited.”
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation is asking for the public’s assistance in the investigation and has urged anyone with information, videos, or pictures of the event to contact the agency or the Elizabeth City State University Police Department.
Elizabeth City State University is a public, historically Black university in Elizabeth City, about 26 miles south of the North Carolina and Virginia state border. The university, which is also a member of the University of North Carolina System, had 2,261 students enrolled as of fall 2024.
The incident at Elizabeth City State University is the latest school shooting to rock a U.S. college campus. On April 17, two people were killed and six others were wounded in a mass shooting at Florida State University. Police in Tallahassee said a 20-year-old student opened fire near the student union with a gun that belonged to his stepmother, a local sheriff’s deputy.
As of April 27, there have been 88 mass shootings in the U.S., according to the Gun Violence Archive. A mass shooting is defined by the Gun Violence Archive as an incident in which at least four people are shot, not including the shooter.
One person is dead and multiple people are injured after a boat collided with a ferry in Clearwater, Florida, on Sunday night, officials said.
The Clearwater Ferry was carrying 45 people when a boat struck it and fled, the city of Clearwater said in a statement. The ferry came to a stop on a sandbar under the Memorial Causeway bridge.
“We believe that the boat responsible for hitting the ferry left the scene immediately, and we believe that our law enforcement partners may have that boat,” Clearwater Police spokesperson Rob Shaw said.
One person died from injuries suffered in the collision, the city said.
It was not immediately clear how many people were injured. Police said the injured were all passengers.
All were removed from the vessel, police said.
Investigators search the wreckage of a Clearwater Ferry after a boat crashed into the ferry causing multiple injuries near the Clearwater Memorial Causeway Bridge, on Sunday, April 27, 2025, in Clearwater, Fla.
Douglas R. Clifford/Tampa Bay Times / AP
The city said that the fleeing boat has been identified and that the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will lead the investigation.
Two seriously injured passengers were flown by helicopter to hospitals, the police department said. Bayfront Hospital received one patient with a femur fracture and one with unknown injuries, an Orlando Health spokesman said.
The Clearwater Fire Department declared the crash a “mass casualty incident” because so many people were injured. Shaw said there were six trauma alerts.
Shaw said that officers are still working to account for all of the people who were on the ferry but that he believes everyone has been rescued.
Clearwater police are leading the investigation with assistance from the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office. The Coast Guard is on the scene, it said on X.
A spokesperson for the Clearwater Ferry confirmed the vessel was in an accident Sunday but declined to provide further information, citing the ongoing investigation.
Clearwater is about 23 miles northwest of St. Petersburg.
Mariah Carey & Oasis Among 2025 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Nominees.
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame has revealed the 14 artists nominated for induction in 2025, eight of whom are first-time nominees.
unbranded – Entertainment
The boys club that comprises this year’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame class also contains a female solo musician who has always been a striking presence: Cyndi Lauper.
She’s among the seven new inductees, whittled from a list of 14 announced earlier this year, who spotlight a more conventional rock lineup – excepting Atlanta hip-hop innovators Outkast – than the genre diverse classes of recent years.
The newest entrants, announced during the live broadcast of the “Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Night” episode of “American Idol” on April 27, are:
When does the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony air?
The full induction ceremony airs live Nov. 8 from the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Disney+ and arrives on Hulu the next day. A condensed version will air on ABC at a yet-to-be-announced date.
Those who didn’t make the cut this year include The Black Crowes, Billy Idol, Maná and Phish – all first-time nominees – along with Mariah Carey and Oasis (both nominated in 2024 for the first time) and Joy Division/New Order (nominated once before in 2023).
Veteran jam band Phish won the fan vote with almost 330,000 – about 50,000 more than the next highest, Bad Company – but contrary to popular belief, winning the fan vote does not guarantee induction.
Phish are only the second artist since the Dave Matthews Band in 2020 to earn fan kudos but not induction the same year (DMB joined the Rock Hall in 2024).
When voting closed April 21 after a two-month window, the top seven earners in the fan vote received one vote each toward their final total.
The top fan vote earners in order were Phish, Bad Company, Idol, Lauper, Cocker, Soundgarden and Checker.
Who is being honored at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2025?
In addition to the performer inductees, the Rock Hall presents several more awards.
Salt-N-Pepa and Warren Zevon will be recognized with the Musical Influence Award. Thom Bell, Nicky Hopkins and Carol Kaye will be honored for Musical Excellence. Lenny Waronker, noted producer and DreamWorks/Warner Bros. Records executive, will receive the Ahmet Ertegun Award.
How do you get into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?
To be eligible for induction into the Rock Hall, an individual artist or band must have released its first commercial recording at least 25 years before the year of nomination.
Melissa Ruggieri is among the more than 1,200 voting members – composed of artists, historians and members of the music industry – of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
Protests break out over judge’s arrest as politicians weigh in
Protesters demanded the release of Judge Hannah Dugan after the FBI arrested her for allegedly helping an immigrant escape arrest.
More than 100 people who are allegedly in the U.S. unlawfully were arrested in an overnight raid at an underground nightclub in east-central Colorado, the Drug Enforcement Administration said.
At least 114 people were detained and placed on “buses for processing and likely eventual deportation” in Colorado Springs on April 27, according to the DEA’s Rocky Mountain Division. The arrests were part of an enforcement operation and drug investigation involving over 300 officers and agents from federal and local agencies, said DEA Rocky Mountain Division Special Agent in Charge Jonathan Pullen.
“This is an underground illegal nightclub,” Pullen said at a news conference on April 27. “What was happening inside was significant drug trafficking, prostitution, (and) crimes of violence. We seized a number of guns in there.”
Dozens of “small packages of drugs” were also recovered at the scene, including cocaine and a concoction of substances known as “pink cocaine” or “tusi,” Pullen added. More than a dozen active-duty service members were also at the nightclub, with some working as armed security and others as patrons, according to Pullen.
Immigrants who are believed to be undocumented were taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Pullen said. The Army Criminal Investigation Division will investigate the active-duty service members who were detained, he added.
No one who was arrested at the nightclub has been publicly identified.
The raid occurred just a day after ICE authorities announced that nearly 800 people were arrested in the first few days of Operation Tidal Wave, a multi-agency immigration enforcement crackdown in Florida.
AG Pam Bondi alleges nightclub ‘frequented’ by Tren de Aragua
Over 200 people had been inside the underground nightclub for an “illegal party” early on April 27 when officers and agents entered the building, according to the DEA. The agency said it gave multiple warnings telling people inside the building to come out before arrests began at around 3:45 a.m. local time.
Videos and images shared on social media by the DEA showed officers and agents in tactical gear swarming outside the building. One video showed an officer smashing a window on the front of the building as people fled through a door, where additional armed officers and agents were waiting.
In the video, law enforcement authorities were seen shouting at people to stop and get down on the ground. That video showed many people complying by putting their hands up or getting down on their knees.
Attorney General Pam Bondi alleged that the nightclub was “frequented by TdA and MS-13 terrorists.” According to Bondi, two people at the nightclub were also arrested on existing warrants.
The Trump administration has been targeting Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang known as “TdA” for short, blaming the gang for violence and drug trafficking in the U.S. Federal officials have also used the gang as a reason to deport hundreds of Venezuelan migrants, who they claim are members of the gang.
Venezuelan officials have said Tren de Aragua was effectively wiped out in 2023, and the idea that it still exists is based on a claim from the country’s political opposition. Venezuela’s Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said in March that none of the hundreds of Venezuelans deported by the U.S. to a Salvadoran prison is a member of Tren de Aragua.
In a statement on social media, Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD) Chief Adrian Vasquez said the April 27 raid was a “result of a months-long investigation into serious criminal activity in our community.”
“While the investigation is ongoing, arrests for these criminal violations are expected. CSPD is aware that our federal partners also detained multiple people for suspected immigration violations during the operation,” Vasquez said. “CSPD is not authorized to conduct immigration enforcement under Colorado law, and our participation in this operation was solely to address criminal violations affecting the safety of our community.”
During last year’s presidential campaign, Donald Trump constantly repeated his intention to bring about dramatic change as soon as he returned to the White House.
But few expected it to come at such breakneck speed.
In the three months since he took the oath of office, the 47th president has deployed his power in a way that compares to few predecessors.
In stacks of bound documents signed off with a presidential pen and policy announcements made in all caps on social media, his blizzard of executive actions has reached into every corner of American life.
To his supporters, the shock-and-awe approach has been a tangible demonstration of an all-action president, delivering on his promises and enacting long-awaited reforms.
But his critics fear he is doing irreparable harm to the country and overstepping his powers – crippling important government functions and perhaps permanently reshaping the presidency in the process.
Here are six turning points from the first 100 days.
A social media post sets off a constitutional firestorm
For once, it wasn’t a Trump social media post that sparked an outcry.
Three weeks into the new term, at 10.13am on a Sunday morning, Vice-President JD Vance wrote nine words that signalled a strategy which has since shaped the Trump administration’s second term.
“Judges aren’t allowed to control the executive’s legitimate power,” he declared on X.
In the media frenzy that followed, legal experts lined up to challenge that assertion, pointing to a 220-year-old principle which lies at the heart of American democracy.
Courts have the power to check and strike down any government action – laws, regulations and executive orders – they think violates the US Constitution.
Vance’s words represented a brazen challenge to judicial authority and, more broadly, the system of three co-equal branches of government crafted by America’s founders.
But Trump and his team remain unapologetic in extending the reach of the executive branch into the two other domains – Congress and the courts.
Getty Images
Three co-equal branches of government – legislative, executive, and judicial – were crafted by America’s founders
The White House has moved aggressively to wrest control of spending from Congress, unilaterally defunding programmes and entire agencies.
This erosion of its power has been largely met by silence on Capitol Hill, where Trump’s Republicans hold slim majorities in both chambers.
The courts have been more resistant, with well over 100 rulings so far halting presidential actions they deem to be unconstitutional, according to a tally by the New York Times.
Some of the biggest clashes have been over Trump’s immigration crackdown. In March, more than 200 Venezuelans deemed a danger to the US, were deported to El Salvador, many under sweeping wartime powers and without the usual process of evidence being presented in court.
A Republican-appointed judge on a federal appeals court said he was “shocked” by how the White House had acted.
“Now the branches come too close to grinding irrevocably against one another in a conflict that promises to diminish both,” Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson wrote.
Trump and White House officials have said they will obey court rulings, even as the president lambasts many of the judges who issue them and the administration at times moves slowly to fully comply.
It all amounts to a unique test of a constitutional system that for centuries has operated under a certain amount of good faith.
While Trump has been at the centre of this push, one of his principle agents of chaos is a man who wasn’t born in the US, but who built a business empire there.
Brandishing a chainsaw, dressed in black
Elon Musk, dressed in black from head to toe and wearing sunglasses, stood centre stage and basked in the adulation of the Conservative Political Action Conference crowd.
The richest man in the world, who wants to cut trillions of dollars from the federal government, said he had a special surprise.
Argentinian President Javier Milei, known for his own budget-slashing, emerged from backstage and handed him a shiny gold chainsaw.
“This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy,” Musk exclaimed. “CHAINSAW!!”
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Elon Musk leaves the stage holding a chainsaw after speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference
It was a dramatic illustration not only of Musk’s enthusiasm for his “Department of Government Efficiency” (Doge) assignment, but also of the near rock-star status that the South African-born technologist has developed among the Trump faithful.
Since that appearance, Musk has dispatched his operatives across the federal government, pushing to access sensitive government databases and identify programmes to slash.
Although he has not come anywhere near to finding the trillions of dollars of waste he once promised, his cuts have drastically reduced dozens of agencies and departments – essentially shutting down the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and attempting to dismantle the Department of Education.
While pledges to cut “waste, fraud and abuse” in government and trim the ballooning federal deficit typically have broad appeal, the manner in which Musk has used his metaphorical chainsaw has led to conflict with senior government officials and stoked anger among some of the American public.
Some Trump supporters may approve of the administration’s aggressive budget-cutting but other constituents have berated Republican legislators at town hall events.
Hecklers have expressed fear that the cuts will adversely affect popular government programmes like Social Security retirement plans, veterans benefits, and health insurance coverage for the poor and elderly.
Their concerns may not be entirely misplaced, given that these schemes make up the bulk of federal spending.
If these programmes are not cut back, sweeping tax cuts that Trump has promised would further increase the scale of US government debt and put at risk arguably his biggest election promise – economic prosperity.
‘I had to think fast as billions was lost before my eyes’
When trader Richard McDonald saw Trump hold up his charts in the White House Rose Garden showing a list of countries targeted by US tariffs, he knew he had to act fast.
“I jumped to my feet because I wasn’t expecting a board [of charts] – I was expecting an announcement,” he says.
McDonald expected tariff cuts of 10% or 20%, but says “nobody expected these huge numbers”.
He raced to understand which companies might be worst hit. Then he sold.
“There are billions being wiped off share prices every second, so it’s really ‘fastest finger first’.”
He is one of the many traders who were at the coal face of global markets when share prices plunged everywhere following Trump’s so-called “Liberation Day” tariff announcement.
The S&P 500 index of the largest firms listed in the US was hit particularly hard – and even though the White House has reversed course on some of the highest tariffs, it hasn’t fully recovered since.
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The US stock market plummeted after President Trump announced “Liberation Day” tariffs
The economy was the biggest concern for US voters in November’s election, and Trump rode a tide of deep unhappiness over Biden’s handling of inflation all the way to victory.
His pledge to cut prices, pare back government regulation and boost homegrown industry was a pro-business message warmly welcomed on Wall Street and by many working Americans.
But as Trump tries to follow through on his promise of new tariffs, the economic costs, at least in the short term, have become painfully apparent.
The stock market is sinking, interest rates – including for home mortgages – are rising, and consumer confidence is down. Unemployment is also ticking up, in part due to the growing number of federal employees forced out of their jobs.
The Federal Reserve Bank, along with economic experts, warn Trump’s plan will shrink economic growth and possibly lead to a recession.
While the president’s approval ratings on his handling of the economy have tumbled, many of his supporters are sticking with him. And in former industrial areas hollowed out by the loss of manufacturing jobs, there are hopes that tariffs could even the global playing field.
“Trump has earned back the respect,” says truck driver Ben Maurer in Pennsylvania, referring to tariffs on China. “We are still the force to be reckoned with.”
Economic concerns have contributed to Trump’s overall decline in the polls, but in one key area, he is still largely on solid ground in the public’s eye – immigration.
Spotted in a photo – ‘My son, shackled in prison’
“It’s him! It’s him! I recognise his features,” says Myrelis Casique Lopez, pointing at a photo of men shackled and cuffed on the floor of one of the most infamous prisons in the world.
She had spotted her son in the image, taken from above, of a sea of shaven heads belonging to men in white T-shirts sat in long, straight rows.
At home in Maracay, Venezuela, Ms Casique was shown the photograph, first shared online by the El Salvador authorities, by a BBC reporter.
When she last had contact with her son, he was in the US and facing deportation to Venezuela but now he was 1,430 miles (2,300 km) away from her, one of 238 men sent by US authorities to a notorious mega-jail in El Salvador.
Reuters
US deports alleged members of the Venezuela gang Tren de Aragua to Cecot prison in El Salvador
The Trump administration says they are members of the Tren de Aragua gang – a powerful, multi-national crime operation – but Ms Casique insists her son is innocent.
A tough stance on immigration was a central plank of Trump’s re-election campaign, and the president has used his broad powers of enforcement to deliver that pledge.
Illegal border crossings were falling at the end of the Biden presidency, but are now at their lowest monthly total for more than four years.
A majority of the US public still backs the crackdown, but it has had a chilling effect on communities of foreign students who have found themselves caught up in the blitz.
Some, including permanent residents, have been detained and face deportation because of their role in pro-Palestinian campus protests. They have rejected accusations that they support Hamas.
Civil rights lawyers warn that some migrants are being deported without due process, sweeping up the innocent among the “killers and thugs” that Trump says are being targeted.
While so far there haven’t been the level of mass deportations that some hoped for and others feared, newly empowered immigration enforcement agents have taken action across the US in businesses, homes and churches.
They have been active in universities too, which have become a prominent target of President Trump in several other ways.
A clash with academic, media and corporate worlds
On 21 April, Harvard University’s president, Alan Garber, decided to confront the White House head-on.
In a letter to the university community, he announced a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s move to freeze billions of dollars in federal grants.
It was, he said, an illegal attempt to “impose unprecedented and improper control” over Harvard’s operations.
The White House said it had to take action because Harvard had not tackled antisemitism on campus – an issue that Garber said the university was taking steps to address.
But the Ivy League college’s move was the most prominent display of resistance against Trump’s use of presidential power to target American higher education, a longstanding goal energised by pro-Palestinian protests that engulfed campuses in 2024.
The president and his officials have since impounded or threatened to withhold billions of dollars in federal spending to reshape elite institutions like Harvard, which the president and many of his supporters think push a liberal ideology on students and researchers.
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Protesters gather inside Harvard University
Earlier in the month, Columbia University in New York City had agreed to a number of White House demands, including changes to its protest policies, campus security practices and Middle Eastern studies department.
A similar dynamic has played out in the corporate and media worlds.
Trump has used the withholding of federal contracts as a way to pressure law firms to recruit and represent more conservatives.
Some of the firms have responded by offering the Trump administration millions of dollars in free legal services, while two firms have filed suit challenging the constitutionality of the administration’s punishments.
A defamation lawsuit Trump brought against ABC News has led to the media company contributing $15m (£11m) to Trump’s presidential foundation.
CBS is also in talks to settle a separate lawsuit over a Kamala Harris interview, as its parent company Paramount seeks federal approval for a merger with Skydance Media.
The Associated Press, by contrast, has resisted administration pressure to accept Trump’s “Gulf of America” name change despite the White House’s efforts to block the news agency from coverage of the president.
On the campaign trail, Trump warned about the runaway power of the federal government. Now in office, he is wielding that power in a way no previous modern president has attempted.
Nowhere, however, have the impacts of his efforts been more visible than within the federal government agencies and departments that he now controls.
A retreat on race and identity
The press conference at the White House began with a moment’s silence for the victims of an aircraft collision over the Potomac River.
Within seconds of the pause coming to an end, however, Trump was on the attack.
A diversity and inclusion initiative at the Federal Aviation Agency was partly to blame for the tragedy, the president claimed, because it hired people with severe intellectual disabilities as air traffic controllers. He did not provide any evidence.
It was a startling moment that was emblematic of the attack his presidency has launched against inclusivity programmes that have proliferated in recent years across the US government and corporate world.
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A crane removes plane wreckage from the Potomac River
Trump has directed the federal government to end its diversity and equity (DEI) programmes and investigate private companies and academic institutions thought to be engaged in “illegal DEI”.
His directive has accelerated moves among leading global companies like Meta and Goldman to cut back or eliminate these programmes.
First introduced in the 1960s in the wake of civil rights victories, early forms of DEI were an attempt to expand opportunities for black Americans. They later expanded to take in women, LGBT rights and other racial groups.
Efforts were stepped up and embraced by much of corporate America in the wake of the 2020 Black Lives Matters protests following the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis Police officers.
But to its critics, DEI was putting politics and race above talent, creating division and was no longer needed in modern America.
While Trump’s directive seems to have support from a narrow majority of voters, some of the unexpected consequences have raised eyebrows.
Arlington National Cemetery scrubbed from its website all mentions of the history of black and female service members. And the Enola Gay aircraft that dropped an atomic bomb on Japan was initially flagged for removal from Pentagon documents, apparently due to the word “gay”.
Donald Trump’s first 100 days have been an unprecedented display of unilateral power exercised by a modern American president.
His efforts to dismantle large swaths of the federal government will take years, if not decades, for subsequent presidents to restore – if they so desire.
In other ways, however, Trump’s efforts so far may end up being less permanent. Without the support of new laws passed by Congress, many of his sweeping reforms could be wiped away by a future president.
And so to what extent this whirlwind start leads to lasting change remains an open question.
Later this year, the narrow Republican majorities in Congress will attempt to provide the legislative backing for Trump’s agenda, but their success is far from guaranteed.
And in next year’s mid-term congressional elections, those majorities could be replaced by hostile Democrats bent on investigating the administration and curtailing his authority.
Meanwhile, more court battles loom – and while the US Supreme Court has a conservative tilt, its decisions on a number of key cases could ultimately cut against Trump’s efforts.
The first 100 days of Trump’s second term have been a dramatic show of political force, but the next 1,361 will be the real test of whether he can carve an enduring legacy.
Additional reporting by Mitch Labiak, Nicole Kolster, Gustavo Ocando Alex and Madeline Halpert.