Category: usa news today

  • At least nine killed in Vancouver after vehicle plows into festival

    At least nine killed in Vancouver after vehicle plows into festival

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    At least nine people were killed when a man drove through a crowd at a Filipino community festival in Vancouver on Saturday evening, Canadian police said in an X post on Sunday.

    Police said they had arrested a 30-year-old Vancouver man at the scene, who was “known” to them. The suspect was initially chased down and held by people at the scene. A number of people were also injured.

    “At this time, we are confident that this incident was not an act of terrorism,” Vancouver police said in an X post.

    The incident happened shortly after 8 p.m., as the Lapu-Lapu Day Block Party, celebrating a Philippine national hero, was taking place.

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on X: “I am devastated to hear about the horrific events at the Lapu-Lapu festival in Vancouver earlier this evening.”

    Canada’s federal election takes place on Monday.

    Vancouver’s Mayor Ken Sim and British Columbia Premier David Eby posted similar comments on X.

    The government of British Columbia officially recognised April 27 as Lapu-Lapu Day in 2023, acknowledging the cultural contributions of the Filipino-Canadian community, one of the largest immigrant groups in the province.

    One witness told CTV News he saw a black vehicle driving erratically in the area of the festival just before the crowd was struck.

    ‘Horrific’

    Jagmeet Singh, leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party, was among the attendees at the event, but left minutes before the vehicle arrived, CTV News said.

    “This is so horrific, I don’t even know what to say,” CTV quoted Singh as saying. “I was just there, and I just imagine the faces of the kids that I saw smiling and dancing.”

    Another witness, who did not wish to be identified, said he had seen about 15 people lying on the ground after the dark SUV plunged into the crowd. The witness said the driver had tried to run but was chased down by festival-goers and held against a fence for about 10 minutes until police arrived.

    Vancouver city councillor Peter Fry told CTV News he had also been at the event earlier in the day.

    “This was a great day. A wonderful event. Huge community event. And to have it end in tragedy like this, it won’t break us or the community but it’s horrible,” he said.

    The festival, celebrated especially in the central Philippines, honors Datu Lapu-Lapu, a Filipino chieftain who defeated Spanish forces led by Ferdinand Magellan in the Battle of Mactan in 1521.

    The centerpiece of the festivities in Vancouver is a multi-block street party in the Sunset neighborhood featuring Filipino food and traditions, live performances and cultural displays.

    The Vancouver Sun said thousands of people had been in the area.

    “I didn’t get to see the driver, all I heard was an engine rev,” Yoseb Vardeh, co-owner of food truck Bao Buns, said in an interview with Postmedia.

    “I got outside my food truck, I looked down the road and there’s just bodies everywhere,” said Vardeh, his voice breaking with emotion. “He went through the whole block, he went straight down the middle.”

    (Reporting by Harshita Meenaktshi, Devika Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Kim Coghill, Alex Richardson and Ros Russell)

  • Trump promised Day 1 economic boom. Americans are still waiting.

    Trump promised Day 1 economic boom. Americans are still waiting.


    Nearing Trump’s 100th day in office, economy isn’t getting better for most, with tariffs, stock market convulsions and high grocery bills.

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    From near the bottom rung of the economic ladder, certified nursing assistant Traci Dixon looks a long way up to the White House, occupied by billionaire President Donald Trump.

    For more than 20 years, the Independence, Missouri, woman has struggled to pay her bills, feed her family and make sure the kids get to school. She’s seen Democratic and Republican presidents come and go, celebrated and suffered from the ups-and-downs of the nation’s economy, and kept her wife by her side as they’ve raised kids and grandkids.

    But despite Trump’s promises of a rapid economic turnaround, life has never felt tougher than right now, she said.

    “I felt this year was going to be a dramatic change for all the better,” said Dixon, 37, who was working a long shift on Election Day and didn’t vote in last year’s presidential election. “But there’s all this darkness that’s already here and it’s only April.”

    Nearly 100 days after Trump took the oath of office for a second time, consumer and business sentiment is spasming from widespread federal job cuts, a ping-ponging stock market and president’s on-again, off-again tariffs.

    Leading economists are predicting the U.S. could enter a recession, and millions of Americans are struggling with the continuing high cost of gas and groceries while getting buried beneath a growing mountain of credit card bills and car payments.

    Business leaders are desperate for a few weeks of consistent policy, farmers have seen their federal food funding contracts dry up, and nonprofits across the country are laying off staff as the White House slashes spending.

    Trump’s tariffs in particular have injected broad uncertainty into the economy, with some businesses already passing those additional costs to consumers, who have been rushing to buy big-ticket items in anticipation of higher prices, according to JPMorgan analysts.

    Delivering on campaign promises

    As he first battled incumbent President Joe Biden and then Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump promised big changes to the nation’s economy, and he’s delivering on some of them.

    Pushed by tariff threats, some large companies, including Apple, Johnson & Johnson and Abbott Labs have announced they’re investing hundreds of billions of dollars in new factories to produce cars, computer chips and pharmaceuticals.

    The stock market has bounced around under Trump ‒ it’s down about 9% since he took office, and wiping billions from the 401Ks and retirement accounts of people across the political spectrum. But many of the president’s supporters remain committed.

    On Cape Cod in Massachusetts, two-time Trump voter James McMorrow, 22, said he appreciates that gas prices have eased ‒ it now costs him $60 instead of $90 to fill up his vintage BMW sedan. Before the election, McMorrow worked a construction job 40 hours a week, then tied on an apron as a restaurant server.

    Now, he said, he’s got a better construction job paying 50% more than he was earning previously, allowing him to quit the $18-an-hour serving job.

    “I wouldn’t say everything he’s doing is moving in the right direction, but it seems to be going well overall,” he said. “I feel like with Harris, nothing would have changed, and it would have gotten worse because nothing would have changed.”

    McMorrow said he’s been saddened to watch immigration agents detaining and deporting Brazilian immigrants who make up a significant portion of the Cape’s workforce. The Portuguese fishing heritage of the area has long drawn Brazilians to fish or work construction, and McMorrow said he considered many of them friends.

    “There a lot of good people getting deported, which I’m not a fan of,” he said. “I wish there was a better way to weed out the bad ones and Trump is just doing everyone. Unfortunately, I really do think it’s worth it.”

    ‘I will immediately bring prices down’

    Trump specifically promised to end inflation on Day 1, cut energy bills in half within 12 to 18 months through expanded oil drilling, and bring down food costs right away.

    “When I win, I will immediately bring prices down,” Trump said during the campaign.

    In interviews with hundreds of voters across the country last year, USA TODAY reporters overwhelmingly found that those who supported Trump believed he would be best for the economy. They said they trusted his policies would lead to higher wages, lower prices and more affordable housing.

    Unlike McMorrow, Dixon said she’s not yet seeing much relief.

    She’s particularly sensitive to gas prices ‒ her family rents a double-wide trailer 15 miles from where she works, and said she sometimes calls in sick when a tank of gas for her 2013 Nissan Pathfinder costs too much to make it worth the drive. Her family’s old apartment was much smaller but closer to work.

    “Living nowadays is just hard,” Dixon said. “I feel like 20 years ago things were still a struggle, but it was easier.”

    Inflation slowed slightly in March ‒ rising 2.4% compared to 2.8% in February ‒ which means prices in general fell 0.1%, driven largely by a 10% drop in gas prices, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Travel costs, including airplane tickets also dropped, in part because Americans dialed back their vacation plans, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    During the campaign, Trump specifically promised to drive gas prices below $2 per gallon. AAA reports that the national gas price average in mid-April was $3.22, up from $3.08 in March but down from $3.61 a year ago. The recent high was about $4.75 per gallon in summer 2022, driven up by Americans hitting post-pandemic roads.

    The uncertainty is having an impact on Trump’s popularity: Most Americans now express little or no confidence in how Trump is handling the economy, a new Pew Research Center survey shows.

    Trump’s poll numbers sinking

    Last November, Americans, by a margin of 59% to 40%, said they were very or somewhat confident about Trump’s ability to make good decisions about economic policy. In the new poll, that assessment has flipped. Now, 54% say they have little or no confidence in his handling of the economy, while 45% are confident.

    During their respective campaigns, Democrats Biden and Harris often discussed measures they had taken to shore up the American economy, which fared better after the COVID-19 pandemic than other large nations.

    Trump meanwhile keyed into the emotions of Americans who saw the prices of eggs, gas, food and car insurance skyrocketing. Trump assured them he could fix things ‒ fast.

    Instead, financial experts say Trump may be discovering an important fact about the presidency: It’s hard to bring prices down and frighteningly easy to tank the stock market.

    In the weeks after stocks plummeted following Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcement on tariffs, Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell began warning Trump’s approach will lead to higher costs, higher inflation and rising unemployment. The stock market has slid when Trump has attacked Powell, and risen when he’s backed off threats to try fire him.

    Trump has urged Americans to keep the faith: “BE COOL! Everything is going to work out well. The USA will be bigger and better than ever before!” he said in an April 9 social media post.

    ‘Medicine’ is causing pain now

    Nationally, leading Republican lawmakers say they’re confident the president’s plans will ultimately unleash a new era of American prosperity driven by low taxes and limited government, even if it means short-term pain. 

    They said it will inevitably take more than 100 days to reverse the decades of hollowing-out of American manufacturing of everything from generic drugs to ships.

    While Biden often prioritized policies that provided targeted assistance to low-income Americans, building the economy from the bottom up, voters endorsed Trump’s plan to shrink the size of government. He’s promised to remove taxes on tips, overtime and Social Security, and continue tax cuts that primarily benefited the wealthy, passed during his first term.

    Trump argues his tariff policy will generate vast wealth for the country, allowing tax rates to drop even further.

    “We are doing really well on our TARIFF POLICY. Very exciting for America, and the World!!! It is moving along quickly,” Trump wrote on Truth Social earlier in April.

    But data suggests the “medicine” Trump’s administering is causing Americans pain now.

    The Yale Budget Lab predicts the average household will pay an additional $3,800 this year due to Trump’s tariffs, particularly those impacting food and clothing.

    Shaking up the stock market, driving up the price of cars and houses, and failing to quickly lower grocery costs adds to the damage in a country where the collective household debt now runs more than $18 trillion.

    Requests for help from the national 211 helpline have been growing since the COVID-19 pandemic, when the government handed out billions in dollars to taxpayers, businesses and human-service agencies. That funding has largely now ended.

    Last year, the 211 service, which is supported by the global nonprofit United Way, received more than 16.8 million requests for assistance, with housing, food and utilities topping the list. United Way officials noted that they serve anyone who calls ‒ and that both natural disasters and personal crises affect people of all political persuasions.

    “It is a lifeline into what is happening within communities at very granular levels,” said United Way CEO Angela Williams said of the 211 call volume. “We tend to overlook the emotional drain and mental health impact and trauma that not having money for food or to pay bills has on people. People are too proud to ask for help.”

    Dixon, the Missouri nursing assistant, was one of those who did ask. Although she and her wife both work fulltime, the three-bedroom, two-bathroom trailer they rented farther away from work in 2022 costs $750 a month more than their previous two-bedroom apartment, where they crammed in six people for two years.

    She counts herself lucky that the kids get two meals a day when school is in session.

    “Even though the cost of living is going up, my paycheck isn’t going up. I’m working as hard as I ever have been working but…” she said, her voice trailing off. “We’re blessed to have the jobs that we have, but a lot of places don’t give raises.”

    ‘Times are tough out there.’

    Nationally, Americans are increasingly pulling money from home equity lines of credit, slapping down credit cards or turning to buy now, pay later services. Credit card delinquencies are hitting levels not seen in more than a decade, the New York Federal Reserve reported, and overall credit card balances have risen more than 7% in a year.

    “Times are tough out there. Times are really hard,” said Aaron Washington, 50, of Chicago.

    Washington lost his family’s California home to foreclosure about two years ago when prices rose and the family’s income shrank. He moved into his car, battling addiction as he traveled the country looking for a job he could hold down.

    Washington said he bounced around the country for about two years before nearly ending his life in front of a train in Chicago. 

    An intervention team got him stabilized and then helped him find a residential drug-treatment center. He’s now living in bridge housing but got hurt recently while working. As he‘s aged, he said, his body couldn’t handle the industrial packaging jobs that once paid the bills.

    He said he worries government cuts will harm the nonprofit and health care services that helped him, but he’s also skeptical that government has all the solutions. He said that thanks to the grace of God and his own hard work getting sober, he’s pulling himself together.

    But he’s not optimistic about the future as he edges closer to the typical retirement age.

    “To me, the economy feels like a dark dangerous alley, walking down with all of the little money you have in the world, hoping you don’t get clubbed over the head,” he said. “If you are at the bottom, it’s a lot harder to punch up right now. I can’t imagine making it to middle class in the next 10 years.”

    This story has been updated with additional information.

  • Ranking all 32 teams’ 2025 classes best to worst

    Ranking all 32 teams’ 2025 classes best to worst

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    Now complete, the 2025 NFL draft will go down as one of the league’s more memorable ones – though it’s destined to mostly be remembered for Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders’ free fall to the fifth round, which made Aaron Rodgers’ infamous wait 20 years before seem like a mere glitch.

    The Sanders saga aside, this draft also produced the drama, head-scratching decisions and OMG moments inherent to the annual “Player Selection Meeting.” And speaking of any draft’s endemic components, it’s now time to prematurely grade its results … about three years before that’s a remotely fair exercise. But we eat from microwaves far more routinely than slow cookers, right?

    One note about the report card methodology: As I grade each team, the goal is to pull back for a big-picture look at its performance holistically rather than judging from a narrow perspective that doesn’t include trades and other considerations that more accurately frame the decisions.

    With that in mind, here are your ridiculously hasty 2025 NFL draft grades, with team classes ranked from best to worst:

    A team that had to get a transfusion of offensive talent – regardless of circumstances, but especially to give QB Drake Maye a fighting chance in his second NFL season – wisely spent its first four picks on that side of the ball. First-round OT Will Campbell, second-round RB TreVeyon Henderson, third-round WR Kyle Williams and third-round C Jared Wilson will likely not only play significant snaps as rookies – even if they’re not all necessarily starters – but could all have exceptional impacts. Henderson’s could be the most noticeable given his ability to thrive on every down – though the large chunks he rips off as a runner and the protection he provides on passing downs should most benefit Maye.

    They might have gotten the draft’s best player in OLB Abdul Carter, who could be a reasonable facsimile of fellow Penn Stater Micah Parsons … even if Carter doesn’t understand he’s not worthy of wearing GOAT OLB Lawrence Taylor’s No. 56. But to get back into the first round for QB Jaxson Dart, essentially at the cost of two third-rounders and with no reason to play him prematurely with Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston round, might be the move that truly gets this franchise back on course … while keeping HC Brian Daboll and GM Joe Schoen in their posts. All that aside, good odds that bulldozing fourth-round RB Cam Skattebo winds up as the favorite pick of Big Blue’s starved fans.

    No. 6 overall pick Ashton Jeanty was one of this draft’s few apparent blue-chippers and should instantly catalyze what was the league’s worst ground game in 2024. Aside from being inspirational, second-rounder Jack Bech might immediately emerge as new QB Geno Smith’s top wide receiver. Third-rounders Darien Porter, a corner, and Charles Grant, an offensive tackle, could wind up as high-quality starters at mid-range draft cost. Seemingly nice debut by rookie GM John Spytek.

    Notable that they hired a defensive-minded coach – and one of the best corners in franchise history – in Aaron Glenn only to opt for an offensive-centric draft, and one that seemed modeled on the Lions blueprint Glenn saw work so well as their defensive coordinator. First-round RT Armand Membou and second-round TE Mason Taylor, son of former Jets OLB Jason Taylor, should either provide immediate help to new QB Justin Fields … or whomever replaces him in a year or two. Third-round CB Azareye’h Thomas will be tested opposite Sauce Gardner but represents good value. Fourth-round WR Arian Smith is pure speed, which could open the field for Mason and WR Garrett Wilson. Glenn and rookie GM Darren Mougey nicely drove the fairway on their first tee shot.

    Let’s call this a progress report grade – at least until they officially have Rodgers in the building (though worth noting that HC Mike Tomlin didn’t seem too worried about it during an NFL Network interview Saturday). But assuming Rodgers ultimately arrives, he should walk into a locker room that’s more talented than the version that qualified for the playoffs last season. First-round DL Derrick Harmon could be the next Cam Heyward, even as he plays alongside the perennial All-Pro in the short run. Fourth-round OLB Jack Sawyer should juice a pass rush that already had plenty of it beyond T.J. Watt and Alex Highsmith. But the real delta here could be third-round RB Kaleb Johnson, perhaps a substantial upgrade from departed Najee Harris and who ought to really thrive if a heavily resourced offensive line fully jells in 2025. And getting Ohio State QB Will Howard in Round 6 at least indicates something of a developmental plan for a team that’s spun its wheels behind center since Ben Roethlisberger retired.

    It might not have been exactly what the fan base was hoping for – Jeanty – but owner Jerry Jones and his front office generally do a pretty solid job this time of year. Aside from being a bully on the field, first-round G Tyler Booker not only fills a need but could provide fresh leadership in the locker room in time. Second-round DE Donovan Ezeiruaku and third-round CB Shavon Revel Jr. were certainly worthy of being taken a round earlier than they were. Fifth-round RB Jaydon Blue brings sub-4.4 speed if not the background to suggest he can shoulder the load on the ground. Receiving depth behind WR CeeDee Lamb still looms as a significant question.

    EVP/GM Howie Roseman isn’t satisfied unless he’s made a few trades, added blockers … and reeled in a University of Georgia defender. Check, check and check, ex-Bulldogs LB Smael Mondon Jr. arriving in Round 5. Nearer the top, it’s also very Roseman to get a sublime talent such as multi-dimensional LB Jihaad Campbell, who could fill multiple needs in Philly once his shoulder is sound, at the end of Round 1. Same goes for second-round S Andrew Mukuba. Sixth-round QB Kyle McCord could blossom into a quality backup in time. And, yes, Roseman added three O-linemen.

    Nice to see them break their 23-year streak of not taking a wideout in Round 1, especially considering what Matthew Golden can bring to this offense in terms of game-changing speed and clutch plays. GM Brian Gutekunst stuck with the TLC theme for the offense, adding OT Anthony Belton in the second round and a nice toy in the third with plus-sized WR Savion Williams (6-4, 220) – the classic “find a way to get the ball into his hands” guy.

    Already set up nicely in 2026 with extra picks in Rounds 2, 3 and 4 – two courtesy of the Laremy Tunsil trade to Washington – GM Nick Caserio did a nice job working the board this year, too. And the focus was helping QB C.J. Stroud after a slight sophomore slump largely beyond his control. Moving forward, he’ll operate behind a promising blocker – second-rounder Aireontae Ersery – on a new-look line and will be throwing to talented former Iowa State WRs Jayden Higgins (Round 2) and Jaylin Noel (Round 3), who round out a receiver group that was wiped out at times in 2024.

    All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

    Mid-rounders like CB Caleb Ransaw, OL Wyatt Milum and RB Bhayshul Tuten all have nice upside, lightning fast and powerful Tuten in particular. But rookie GM James Gladstone’s first draft will be completely defined by the bold move to trade up three spots for WR/CB Travis Hunter with the second overall pick – a gambit that also cost the Jags their second-rounder and a first in 2026. Yet Hunter just might be the generational prospect worth the price – especially if he can become a security blanket for QB Trevor Lawrence while Brian Thomas Jr. hits the home runs. And maybe Hunter provides situational reps at corner.

    They got a “joker” … on defense. DB Jahdae Barron might turn out to be a steal with the 20th pick and could elevate an already formidable D to the elite tier. Second-round RB RJ Harvey will give the ground game needed horsepower, though it remains to be seen who primarily shares the load since he wouldn’t seem well suited at his size (5-8, 205) to take 20 touches a game in the NFL. Third-round WR Pat Bryant has a chance to chip in early.

    GM John Schneider and HC Mike Macdonald sure have been busy transforming the roster during a frenetic offseason. That continued in a draft that should be a boon to the present and possibly the longer-range future. First-round OL Grey Zabel addresses a clear and present need at guard. Second-round S Nick Emmanwori, whom Schneider moved up for, could be the next coming of Kam Chancellor. Second-round TE Elijah Arroyo will also have a chance to be a significant presence in a new-look passing attack. But the obvious wild card is third-round QB Jalen Milroe, a tantalizing prospect whom the Seahawks should have the luxury of developing on a reasonable timeline … especially if new QB1 Sam Darnold retains his newly found Pro Bowl form.

    This haul will rise or fall depending on the success, or lack thereof, realized by No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward. And while there’s not a ton of doubt the Titans got this year’s best quarterback – and filled a glaring need in doing so – what’s less clear is how good Ward actually is. After pulling out of the 2024 draft – when he likely would have been no better than the sixth quarterback selected – he truly blossomed at the University of Miami. Whether that success and his alpha personality translate to Nashville is TBD, but rookie GM Mike Borgonzi was confident enough in Ward to resist the significant trade overtures he received. As for the rest of Borgonzi’s first crop? Meh?

    After watching their defense and blocking collapse in Super Bowl 59, HC Andy Reid and GM Brett Veach targeted fortifications – first-round LT Josh Simmons the most intriguing, particularly if he’s available ahead of schedule coming off the torn patellar tendon he suffered last October. Reid expressed confidence in Simmons’ progress, so the Chiefs might have committed quite the heist. Second-round DT Omarr Norman-Lott, third-round DE Ashton Gillotte and third-round CB Nohl Williams could all provide valuable reps immediately, the latter potentially allowing All-Pro Trent McDuffie to revert to slot duties.

    There’s a reason underrated GM Mickey Loomis has been on the job for a quarter century. Good chance he just about perfectly married value to need with his first three selections, who might all be starters in 2025: First-round OT Kelvin Banks Jr., second-round QB Tyler Shough and third-round DL Vernon Broughton. Third-round S Jonas Sanker and fourth-round LB Danny Stutsman could find themselves in prominent roles – and making an impact – soon enough.

    From a football perspective, they got two standouts in the first two rounds with S Malaki Starks and OLB Mike Green, respectively – each addressing what are among the few needs for one of the league’s powerhouses, Starks likely to start from Day 1. Green led FBS with 17 sacks in 2024 and could make an immediate splash, too. Still, as much as GM Eric DeCosta defended Green’s selection, it’s a pretty bad organizational look. The Ravens have significant issues here currently with K Justin Tucker (who they are apparently in the process of replacing with sixth-rounder Tyler Loop) and in their past – yet chose a guy with multiple sexual assault allegations in his past (Green has denied both). Baltimore is a more talented football team today than it was a week ago, but at what cost?

    First-round TE Tyler Warren fell into their lap at No. 14 – and could be ideal for a team that ought to be running the ball while providing help to its muddled quarterback situation … which has a new ingredient in sixth-rounder Riley Leonard, most recently of Notre Dame. Second-round DE JT Tuimoloau arrives at the intersection of value and need.

    It’s gotten to a point where GM Brad Holmes and HC Dan Campbell are almost above reproach as it pertains to their roster-building acumen. Did DT Tyleik Williams seem like a bit of a reach at the end of Round 1? Maybe … but you tell Holmes and Campbell they’re wrong. Second-round G Tate Ratledge seems made to order for this culture while patching a hole.

    GM Jason Licht is another guy – one who doesn’t seem to get deserved credit – who does a heckuva job in the draft-and-develop space. A bit surprising the Bucs went with a wideout – Emeka Egbuka – in Round 1, but he’s among this draft’s safest players … and Mike Evans isn’t getting any younger (though Egbuka’s game more closely resembles Chris Godwin’s). The team needed reinforcements at corner, and second-rounder Benjamin Morrison and third-rounder Jacob Parrish should check that box nicely. Might have been nice to see NT Vita Vea get some help on the D-line, though.

    Not especially sexy, but second-round TE Terrance Ferguson, third-round OLB Josaiah Stewart and fourth-round RB Jarquez Hunter should all be able to claim instant roles on a team that could be the biggest threat to the Eagles in the NFC next season. But the big win was GM Les Snead obtaining the Falcons’ first-rounder in 2026, which he might need for QB Matthew Stafford’s successor.

    They’re not afraid, that’s for sure – and the decision to take QB Michael Penix Jr. at No. 8 a year ago has aged well despite all the handwringing at the time. This year, GM Terry Fontenot snagged OLB Jalon Walker at No. 15, potentially one of this draft’s best selections – particularly given the Falcons’ years-long inability to rush the quarterback. Yet dealing back up to No. 26 for OLB James Pearce – generally nothing wrong with doubling down – will likely render as the tipping point. Pearce’s talent is undeniable, so there was a reason he was still available at that juncture. Also, Fontenot mortgaged that 2026 first-rounder to get him – quite a risk since this team doesn’t exactly appear ready to win the Super Bowl given it still hasn’t managed to win the NFC South since 2016. Safeties Xavier Watts (Round 3) and Billy Bowman Jr. (Round 4) will add juice to a secondary that shed Justin Simmons.

    This defense badly needed attention, so credit GM John Lynch for earmarking his first five picks on it. First-round DE Mykel Williams and second-round DT Alfred Collins could help Nick Bosa get back to being the dominant player he should be. Third-round LB Nick Martin ought to flourish alongside All-Pro Fred Warner.

    It was a lighter class in part because veteran CB Marshon Lattimore came at the price of a third- and fourth-rounder at last year’s trade deadline, a transaction that has yet to bear sufficient fruit. Still, GM Adam Peters did a nice job while picking OT Josh Conerly Jr. in the first round and CB Trey Amos in the second. Fourth-round WR Jaylin Lane could capably take over for departed Dyami Brown as the deep threat.

    A team that seems oh-so-close to its first Super Bowl win didn’t seem to come out of this draft with that player or two who seem capable of putting it over the top. We’ll see how the trade up for DT T.J. Sanders in the second round plays out, but going heavy on defense – including Round 1 CB Maxwell Hairston and Round 3 DE Landon Jackson – seems sensible given how the AFC East champs faltered on that side of the ball down the stretch in 2024.

    GM Ryan Poles, who’s known for his aggressive maneuvers, continues to build out the support system for second-year QB Caleb Williams. But did Poles hit the optimal notes? Time will tell if first-round TE Colston Loveland was the correct choice over Warren. Poles also stood pat at No. 39 and wound up with WR Luther Burden III, who loosely compares to Deebo Samuel, but Chicago missed out on what appeared to be this draft’s top running back prospects. Poles did wind up with three stabs in Round 2, and DT Shemar Turner might have been the best of the trio (OT Ozzy Trapilo being the other).

    Could be an especially wide variance of outcomes with their first two picks, first-round DT Walter Nolen and CB Will Johnson – the latter’s knee likely to determine if he was a steal or a player with diminishing returns. Third-rounder Jordan Burch joins a D-line that may be morphing from weakness to strength.

    Nothing wrong with amassing quality depth. But what if it’s overly redundant? First-round RB Omarion Hampton might not need long to displace fellow banger Najee Harris, but would a back like Henderson have provided a better change-of-pace option? Second-round WR Tre Harris is a nice player but not the deep threat this passing game seemingly needs. Outside corner and tight end remain open questions.

    From a macro perspective, they resourced their draft properly by investing heavily in the defense and offensive line – this team’s major issues in 2024 giving up too many points and its ongoing penchant for getting QB Joe Burrow sacked three times a week. But first-round DE Shemar Stewart is your classic boom-or-bust prospect – how often does that work out in Cincinnati? – and going for a pair of linebackers afterward seemed a bit … odd. The best thing that arguably “happened” was retaining 2024 Defensive Player of the Year runner-up Trey Hendrickson on the roster, though it’s past time to address his woefully underfunded contract.

    They might have overspent on WR Tetairoa McMillan at No. 8. And they might have struck gold on OLB Nic Scourton at No. 51. Fourth-round RB Trevor Etienne is a nice player, though it’s worth wondering if GM Dan Morgan should have attacked other parts of the roster given the presence of recently extended RB Chuba Hubbard and newly signed Rico Dowdle in the backfield.

    Previous deals left them with one pick in the top 100, though taking G Donovan Jackson was prudent with QB J.J. McCarthy coming back from his knee injury … even if Jackson is a Buckeye protecting a Wolverine. Otherwise, a team that spent freely in free agency seemed largely relegated to targeting depth.

    They absolutely needed to get tougher in the trenches – on both sides of the ball. So from that standpoint, spending their only picks ahead of the fifth round on DT Kenneth Grant (Round 1) and G Jonah Savaiinaea (Round 2) made sense. Conversely, were they both slight reaches relative to their draft position or even the best available options at their respective positions? The team’s spotty track record, especially on the O-line, makes one wonder.

    Think this assessment is a copout? Fine. But there’s no legitimate way to know what to make of this until the bigger picture comes into focus – at least a year from now. It’s tough to even know where to begin.

    But let’s start with Thursday, when the Browns stunningly vacated the No. 2 spot and opportunity to take Hunter, the 2024 Heisman Trophy winner quite possibly a generational prospect – not to mention one who seemingly would have fit well onto this roster and was glowingly praised by GM Andrew Berry the week before the draft. But Berry punched out and wound up with DT Mason Graham (No. 5 pick) and battering ram RB Quinshon Judkins (No. 36 pick) as part of the compensation – both very good football players and doubtless Week 1 starters. Second-round LB Carson Schwesinger should also be instantly productive, while electric fourth-round RB Dylan Sampson could be a fantastic foil to Judkins, who paired so well with Henderson at Ohio State.

    But what to make of the quarterback situation, which was the scintillating tandem of Joe Flacco and Kenny Pickett a week ago? By obtaining Jacksonville’s 2026 first-rounder, the Browns seemed well positioned to draft a passer next year, which is expected to have far better options as it pertains to the slingers likely inbound from NIL land. Taking former college star Dillon Gabriel, most recently of Oregon, in Round 3 added intrigue to the mix – which, sure, fine.

    But by taking Sanders in the fifth round, the quarterback situation is now as muddled as ever (and this is a team that’s been paying Deshaun Watson a fully guaranteed $230 million to be horrible), the body language of Berry and HC Kevin Stefanski after taking Sanders leading many to wonder if owner Jimmy Haslam had mandated the pick. Put such speculation aside, and Berry and Stefanski tried to downplay it afterward. Stefanski is a two-time Coach of the Year who’s gotten a ton out of this roster – when Watson isn’t on the field, and he won’t be in 2025 after multiple Achilles surgeries. Yet the worse the Browns are next season – and, just maybe, the worse Sanders is (and after all the NFL has already put him through) – the better the shot Cleveland will have to get a 2026 rookie quarterback who could quite reasonably be clearly better than anyone currently on this depth chart.

    So, yeah … get back to me in a year.

  • See who attended, what happened

    See who attended, what happened


    President Donald Trump did not attend the event. He has not been to the dinner since 2015, and never attended during his years in office.

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    From “The White Lotus” to “Breaking Bad,” a handful of actors, entertainers and other notable figures turned up for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, an event that President Donald Trump and his administration opted to skip.

    The annual dinner, which raises funds to support the journalists who cover the president, was held at the Hilton in Washington, D.C. The event is famous for being an inside-the-Beltway opportunity to poke fun at U.S. presidents and unite celebrities, media executives and luminaries under one roof.

    Trump, who has not attended the dinner since 2015, indicated he would not attend the gala. He did not attend it during his first term as president. He and first lady Melania Trump attended the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome on April 26. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said previously that she would not attend either.

    Last year Colin Jost, a “Saturday Night Live” standout known for cohosting the sketch show’s “Weekend Update” segment, headlined the affair.

    That’s usually how these evenings go. But unlike at previous dinners, a comedian did not headline the April 26 dinner. The White House Correspondents’ Association disinvited Amber Ruffin after she was booked to appear. The decision came after White House staffers criticized comments made by Ruffin that were critical of the Trump administration.

    Association President Eugene Daniels explained the thinking in a note to press colleagues in March, saying:”At this consequential moment for journalism, I want to ensure the focus is not on the politics of division but entirely on awarding our colleagues for their outstanding work and providing scholarship and mentorship to the next generation of journalists.”

    Here is a roundup of what happened at the 2025 White House Correspondents’ Dinner.

    Jason Isaacs, Dean Norris and other celebs walk the red carpet

    The red carpet at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner featured a smattering of celebrities, including Jason Isaacs, who starred on Season 3 of “The White Lotus,” Dean Norris, who played Walter White’s DEA agent and brother-in-law in “Breaking Bad,” and Tim Daly, who played Henry McCord on “Madam Secretary.”

    Lynda Carter, known for her portrayal of Wonder Woman in the 1970s TV series of the same name, actress Alex Borstein, from “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “Family Guy,” and “Shark Tank” personality, Kevin O’Leary, also appeared at the event.

    ‘What we are not is the enemy of the people’

    After awards were bestowed upon an array of journalists, Daniels, president of the WHCA, discussed threats to journalism. He paused to thank previous U.S. presidents who attended the dinner in years prior.

    “We don’t invite presidents of the United States to this because it’s for them, we don’t invite them because we want to cozy up to them or curry favor (and) we don’t only extend invites to the presidents who say they love journalists or who say they’re defenders of the First Amendment and a free press,” Daniels said. “We invite them to remind them that they should be.”

    Daniels acknowledged Trump’s absence before screening a video compilation of previous presidents at the event, including clips of Joe Biden, Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan.

    Daniels defended journalism, a profession he said is under attack nationally and globally:

    “What we are not is the opposition. What we are not is the enemy of the people. And what we are not is the enemy of the state.”

  • Trump news at a glance: US president meets Zelenskyy at Vatican as popularity plunges at home | Trump administration

    Trump news at a glance: US president meets Zelenskyy at Vatican as popularity plunges at home | Trump administration

    Donald Trump spent his Saturday at the Vatican, attending the funeral of Pope Francis along with his wife Melania and leaders from more than 150 countries. Before the ceremony, the US president met with the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, for the first time since their heated Oval Office exchange in February.

    This time, the two men sat face to face on chairs drawn up in St Peter’s Basilica, after huddling briefly with the French president, Emmanuel Macron. The results of the quiet conversation were apparent soon after, when Trump posted on his social media platform that there was “no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas, cities and towns, over the last few days. 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”.

    The two men then emerged to take their places among the guests of honor at the funeral, with the one notable difference being that Zelenskyy was greeted with cheers from the assembled crowd outside.

    Trump listened as Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re read a homily that seemed to nod at the tensions between Trump and the late pontiff, particularly over the White House policies on migration and the recent executive order on deportations.

    “‘Build bridges, not walls’ was an exhortation he repeated many times,” Re said during his homily.

    Trump then flew home on Air Force One to be greeted by new polling from a number of organizations that shows he is historically unpopular for a president nearing Day 100 of his term.

    Here are the key stories at a glance:


    At papal funeral, Trump has a revelation – about Russia

    “It was a fitting moment for an epiphany, if that’s what this was” our global affairs correspondent Andrew Roth wrote of the Trump-Zelenskyy meeting. “The photographs released from the summit were dramatic: the two men sat alone in simple chairs in front of a mosaic of Jesus being baptised in the river Jordan. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s envoy to Ukraine, felt compelled to quote the book of Matthew. ‘Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God’”, he wrote.

    Soon after, came the Truth Social post from Trump suggesting that Russia’s slaughter of Ukrainian civilians this week, “makes me think that maybe [Putin] doesn’t want to stop the war.”

    It was a “very symbolic meeting”, Zelenskyy said later, and it had the “potential to become historic, if we achieve joint results”.

    Read the full story


    Polling shows Trump is historically unpopular

    Americans, including some Republicans, are losing faith in Donald Trump across a range of key issues, according to polling released this week. One survey found a majority describing the president’s second stint in the White House so far as “scary”.

    A poll by the Associated Press-Norc Center for Public Affairs Research published this weekend, found that even Republicans are not overwhelmingly convinced that Trump’s attention has been in the right place.

    Read the full story


    Vicious interpersonal conflicts among Hegseth staff cloud leak investigation

    Defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s orbit has become consumed by a contentious leak investigation that those inside the Pentagon believe is behind the firing of three senior aides last week, according to five people involved in the situation.

    The secretary’s office has been marked for weeks by ugly internal politics between chief of staff Joe Kasper, who left the department on Thursday, and the three ousted aides, including senior adviser Dan Caldwell, deputy chief Darin Selnick, and the chief to the deputy defense secretary, Colin Carroll.

    Read the full story


    Trump officials deport two-year-old US citizen ‘with no meaningful process’

    The Trump administration has deported a two-year-old US citizen “with no meaningful process”, according to a federal judge, while in a different case the authorities deported the mother of a one-year-old girl, separating them indefinitely.

    Lawyers in the two cases, the first in Louisiana and the second in Florida, say their clients were arrested at routine check-ins at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) offices and were given virtually no opportunity to speak with them or family members.

    They are the latest examples of the White House cracking down on documented immigrants, including green card holders and also even citizens who have the status by birth or naturalization.

    Read the full story


    Democrats decry Wisconsin judge’s arrest as Republicans call to remove her

    The FBI’s arrest of Wisconsin judge Hannah Dugan has triggered strong reactions from Republican and Democratic politicians, as the Trump administration veered closer to direct confrontation with the judiciary over its crackdown on immigration.

    Following the Milwaukee county circuit judge’s arrest on Friday, over allegations that she helped a man evade US immigration officers at her courthouse, Republicans have called for her removal while Democrats regard her arrest as a reflection of the administration’s increasing disregard of judicial independence amid its push to deport immigrants on an enormous scale.

    Read the full story


    Trump mega-donor’s paper savages his pardon of Las Vegas Republican

    A Nevada newspaper owned by a Donald Trump mega-donor has savaged the US president’s decision to pardon a Republican councilwoman who was convicted of using donations intended to fund a statue of a police officer to pay for cosmetic surgery.

    The Las Vegas Review-Journal, owned by the billionaire Miriam Adelson, described the decision as a “debasement of presidential pardon power” in a scathing editorial published after Trump granted clemency to Michele Fiore, a former Las Vegas councilwoman and Nevada state lawmaker.

    Fiore was convicted of fraud last year. Federal prosecutors said at trial that she had raised more than $70,000 for the statue of a Las Vegas police officer who was fatally shot in 2014 in the line of duty, but had instead spent it on cosmetic surgery, rent and her daughter’s wedding.

    Read the full story


    What else happened today:

    • As the US health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, makes major cuts in funding, the infrastructure built to mitigate Covid-19 has become a clear target – an aim that has the dual effect of weakening immunization efforts as the US endures the largest measles outbreak since 2000.

    • Tributes have been paid to Virginia Giuffre one of the most prominent victims of the disgraced US financier Jeffrey Epstein who also alleged she was sexually trafficked to Prince Andrew, who died by suicide on Friday. “Virginia was a fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse and sex trafficking. She was the light that lifted so many survivors,” her family said in a statement.


    Catching up? Here’s what happened on 25 April 2025.

  • Jimmy Butler’s Game 3 status for Warriors vs. Rockets

    Jimmy Butler’s Game 3 status for Warriors vs. Rockets

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    Jimmy Butler’s status for Saturday has been determined.

    The Warriors forward who helped revive Golden State’s season has officially been ruled out of Saturday’s key Game 3 matchup in the team’s first-round playoffs series against the Houston Rockets.

    Butler was diagnosed with a “pelvis and deep gluteal muscle contusion” after suffering a hard fall in the first quarter of Wednesday’s Game 2. Golden State’s offense struggled without Butler, who has helped the team go 25-9 — including the postseason and Play-In Tournament — in games he has played for the franchise. He had been officially listed as questionable heading into Saturday.

    Tipoff for Game 3 is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. ET at the Chase Center in San Francisco.

    Here’s everything you need to know about Butler’s playing status ahead of Game 3:

    No, the Warriors ruled Butler out of Saturday’s Game 3 against the Houston Rockets, according to the NBA’s official injury report

    By Saturday afternoon, it had still been unclear if Butler would play. Golden State had planned to assess Butler’s response to his pre-game workout before making a game-time decision on his availability, a person with knowledge of the matter confirmed to USA TODAY Sports.

    The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly on Butler’s playing status.

    Speaking a little less than two hours prior to Game 3, Warriors coach Steve Kerr had said that there was still no official determination on Butler’s status, and that Butler would get some pre-game treatment for his injury.

    “He’ll try to get some work done downstairs and see if he can go,” Kerr told reporters Saturday.

    The Warriors announced Friday that Butler would be listed as questionable for Saturday’s game.

    How did Jimmy Butler get injured vs. the Houston Rockets?

    Butler sustained the injury after suffering a hard fall onto the court during Wednesday’s game, an eventual 109-94 Rockets victory.

    The play happened late in the first quarter, when Butler jumped in an attempt to grab a defensive rebound. As he was in the air, Rockets forward Amen Thompson stumbled and undercut Butler, causing Butler to lose his balance and land directly on his tailbone.

    Butler writhed on the floor for a few moments before he got up gingerly. He converted 1-of-2 free throws and exited the game, heading directly to the locker room. The Warriors eventually ruled him out.

    “Hopefully, he’s OK,” Kerr said Wednesday after the game. “We’ll see. … Jimmy always says he’s going to be fine. But we have to wait and see with the MRI.”

    The MRI results from Thursday confirmed the injury and showed that Butler had avoided any structural damage, clearing his way for a potential return to play.

  • Texas federal judge blocks deportations to Venezuela

    Texas federal judge blocks deportations to Venezuela


    The couple and their three children have lived in the United States since 2022 under temporary protected status.

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    A federal judge in Texas ruled against deporting Venezuelan immigrants, finding it inappropriate for President Donald Trump to invoke the 1798 wartime law, the Alien Enemies Act.

    U.S. District Judge David Briones, of El Paso, made the ruling on April 25, and ordered the release of Julio Cesar Sanchez Puentes and Luddis Norelia Sanchez Garcia from a federal detention facility in El Paso, a couple accused of being members of the Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, according to the court opinion obtained by USA TODAY.

    Briones’ decision found that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials failed to prove “any lawful basis” indicating why the couple should be detained any longer for an alleged alien enemy violation, according to the judge’s opinion.

    “There is no doubt the Executive Branch’s unprecedented peacetime use of wartime power has caused chaos and uncertainty for individual petitions as well as the judicial branch in how to manage and evaluate the Executive’s claims of Tren de Aragua membership, and the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act as a whole,” wrote Briones, who was appointed in 1994 by President Bill Clinton.

    Couple lived in Washington, D.C. area since 2022

    When the couple entered the United States Oct. 13, 2022, in El Paso, they were initially detained by immigration officials, according to the court document. They were then arrested and “accused of being aliens to the United States,” a criminal complaint against the couple says.

    The court opinion states that the couple was paroled the following day and lived in D.C. with their three children after being granted temporary protected status. They were notified on April 1, 2025, that their status was terminated due to their alleged “association with a Foreign Terrorist Organization,” the document continues.

    Briones’ ruling says the allegations against the couple are based on “multiple levels of hearsay, hidden within declarations of declarants who have no personal knowledge about the facts they are attesting to.”

    In a statement emailed April 26 to USA TODAY, the couple’s attorney, Chris Benoit, said: “We are thrilled that Cesar and Norelia will finally be able to go home and be reunited with their children.”

    “We are grateful for the Court’s careful consideration of all the issues and delighted to see this thoughtful, well-reasoned decision ordering their release,” the attorney continued. “There was no basis for any of the accusations the government was making against them, and the ordeal they have been through is tremendous.”

    Trump invoked Alien Enemies Act in March

    The couple’s attorneys filed multiple petitions to challenge the legality of their clients’ imprisonment, including in a Virginia federal court, which led to their release on April 16. The couple was detained by ICE agents at the El Paso International Airport, following the judge’s ruling to allow them to return to Washington, D.C., according to Briones’ opinion.

    “Cesar and Norelia have now gone in front of four different judges, none of whom thought they should be detained,” Benoit said in his statement. “They have deep ties to their community. They have three minor children. They have Temporary Protected Status. And they have been living peacefully in the United States since 2022.”

    Briones’ ruling comes after Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act on March 15 in an attempt to deport alleged members of the Tren de Aragua criminal organization. Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court paused Trump’s administration from deporting Venezuelan men in immigration custody after their lawyers argued that they would be removed from the country without the due process mandated by the justices.

    The Trump administration urged the Supreme Court to allow the deportations, with Solicitor General John Sauer saying in a filing on April 19: “Those aliens are Venezuelan nationals who are unlawfully present in the United States and subject to removal under other authorities, but who the government has determined are members of the foreign terrorist organization Tren de Aragua and thus subject to removal pursuant to the AEA. This Court should deny applicants’ extraordinary request.”

  • Shedeur Sanders taken by Cleveland Browns in 2025 NFL draft

    Shedeur Sanders taken by Cleveland Browns in 2025 NFL draft

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    The NFL dream of Shedeur Sanders began with a bit of a nightmare. 

    The son of Hall of Famer Deion Sanders had to wait until the third day of the 2025 draft to hear his name called from the stage in Green Bay, Wisconsin, which finally happened when the Cleveland Browns selected him with the sixth pick of the fifth round (144th overall), making him the sixth quarterback taken in the draft.

    Sanders, who played for his father “Coach Prime” at Jackson State and Colorado and has been coached by him for his entire life, was the sixth quarterback taken in the class. Miami’s Cam Ward (first overall, Tennessee Titans), Mississippi’s Jaxson Dart (25th, New York Giants) and Louisville’s Tyler Shough (40th overall, New Orleans Saints) were both selected ahead of Sanders. The Cleveland Browns, thought to be a landing spot for Sanders, didn’t use either of their early picks in the second round on him before taking him with their first of two third-round selections. They then selected quarterback Dillon Gabriel in the third round (94th overall) after the Seattle Seahawks picked Jalen Milroe two picks earlier.

    Sanders started his college career at Jackson State and transferred to Colorado to continue playing for his father. Over two seasons, he posted a 13-11 as a starter in the Big 12. He set a Colorado single-season record with 4,134 passing yards last season – having No. 2 overall pick and Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter as a target certainly helped – and accounted for 41 touchdowns (37 passing) with 10 interceptions.

    That Sanders was not taken during Thursday’s first round became a lightning rod in spaces that ranged from sports talk shows to the President of the United States. Sanders had been forecasted as a first-round pick, while others classified him as a second-round talent. ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. pounded the table for Sanders throughout the first round and continued to do so as the second round started. President Donald Trump wrote on social media that Sanders should be drafted “IMMEDIATELY.” 

    The Browns also have Deshaun Watson on the roster, who is currently rehabilitating a torn Achilles. The owner of the team, Jimmy Haslam, recently said the team “took a big swing and miss” on Watson.

    Sanders felt he was worthy of a first-round pick and told a group gathered at the Sanders family home in Texas “this shouldn’t have happened.” Many wondered whether the presence of “Coach Prime” and the hype surrounding his son affected Shedeur Sanders’ evaluation within NFL front offices and coaching staffs. Sanders does not possess the same athleticism as his father, a defensive back who also played Major League Baseball. Rather, he’s a pure pocket passer who is polished mechanically and takes care of the football. 

    The Browns also have Deshaun Watson on the roster, who is currently rehabilitating a torn Achilles. The owner of the team, Jimmy Haslam, recently said the team “took a big swing and miss” on Watson.

    Prior to the draft, Sanders had been linked to the Browns and Steelers, in addition to the Giants and Raiders. Sanders and Hunter both had their Colorado jerseys retired earlier in April. 

  • Why is Trump not at White House Correspondents’ Dinner?

    Why is Trump not at White House Correspondents’ Dinner?

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    The White House Correspondent’s Dinner, known for mocking presidents and poking fun at their policies, will commence April 26.

    But at the dinner, dubbed “nerd prom” by Washington insiders, no Trump roast will be served.

    As journalists covering his second term gather for the glitzy fête at the Washington Hilton hotel, President Donald Trump will likely skip the event. Trump skipped three times during his last presidency (the 2020 affair was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic).

    He did attend in 2015, the year before he was elected president. Trump is not expected to attend this year’s dinner. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said previously that she also would not attend.

    The annual dinner raises funds to support the White House Correspondents Association’s First Amendment scholarships and programs to promote its work. The dinner features a star-studded audience with A-list guests from media and entertainment industries. C-SPAN will carry coverage of this year’s WHCA dinner with red carpet arrivals beginning at 6 p.m. ET before the dinner starts at 8 p.m.

    Typically, a comedian roasts the president, after the president presents a comedy set or speech. Hasan Minhaj headlined the 2017 edition. After Michelle Wolf’s controversial monologue in 2018 received mixed reviews from critics, the WHCA chose historian Ron Chernow to present a speech the following year.

    For this year’s installment of the biggest night in the nation’s capital, there will again be no comedian. After “Saturday Night Live” standout and “Weekend Update” host Colin Jost headlined the 2024 affair, the WHCA shelved left leaning Amber Ruffin as marquee comic amid criticism from Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich on X.

    The WHCA president Eugene Daniels, the former Politico star and incoming MSNBC anchor, announced the change in a March note to press colleagues first shared by CNN’s chief media analyst Brian Stelter

    “As the date nears, I will share more details of the plans in place to honor journalistic excellence and a robust, independent media covering the most powerful office in the world. As a first step, I wanted to share that the WHCA board has unanimously decided we are no longer featuring a comedic performance this year,” Daniels wrote at the time.

    WHCA dropping comedian comes as Trump administration makes press changes

    The decision to shelve talent was made as the second Trump administration ramped up its pressure on the press.

    In February, the White House announced that that it would decide which news outlets have access to President Donald Trump, ripping power away from the WHCA, an independent association of journalists who have traditionally determined which publications are part of the press pool.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced the changes at a press briefing following a judge’s preliminary ruling in a free speech lawsuit filed by the Associated Press, a prominent news wire service.

    “Moving forward, the White House press pool will be determined by the White House press team,” Leavitt announced. “Legacy media outlets who have been here for years will still participate in the pool, but new voices are going to be welcomed in as well.”

    The AP sued the White House after the administration repeatedly barred AP reporters from attending events with press availability over a dispute involving the president’s renaming of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. The AP refused to update its guidance to reflect the president’s chosen name for the body of water.

    The correspondents’ association is a nonprofit organization that represents those outlets and vets potential new members of the press pool. It is comprised of a nine-member board of White House correspondents who are elected to serve by their peers.

    Leavitt has invited more nontraditional media outlets to participate in press briefings since the decision was made including conservative influencers.

    Some speculate that WHCD sparked Donald Trump‘s political ambitions

    The dinner once made headlines of its own. In 2022, fans keeping up with reality TV star Kim Kardashian and her “Saturday Night Live” alum boyfriend Pete Davidson were delighted when the pair made their red-carpet debut at the dinner.

    A decade earlier, in 2011, then-President Barack Obama mocked Trump, who was in the audience with now-first lady Melania Trump, telling the crowd his eventual successor lacked the “experience” necessary to be president. Some believe the incident sparked Trump’s political ambitions and led him to seek the U.S. presidency in 2015.

    “I know that he’s taken some flack lately,” Obama said, in reference to Trump’s birtherism claims about him. “But no one is happier, no one is prouder to put this birth certificate matter to rest than The Donald.”

    He added: “And that’s because he can finally get back to focusing on the issues that matter, like — did we fake the moon landing? What really happened in Roswell? And where are Biggie and Tupac?”

    “Say what you will about Mr. Trump. He would certainly bring some change to the White House,” Obama quipped. “All kidding aside. Obviously we all know about your credentials and breadth of experience.”

    Now, Trump is president for a second term, no longer a dinner guest or laughing matter. For a fourth time, he has declined to be a butt of the joke once again.

    Contributing: Franchesca Chambers, James Powel; USA TODAY