White House says some employees were fired by mistake

After taking the recent buyout offer, some employees were fired, a source said.

President Donald Trump's administration, including Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, is continuing its sweeping effort to cut much of the federal government -- but it's being met with legal challenges.

Trump is also making his second administration's first forays on the diplomatic front with calls to Russia's Vladimir Putin and Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy on ending the 3-year-old war that began in February 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine.

And a day after Hamas released more hostages taken when it attacked Israel in October 2023, Secretary of State Marco Rubio agreed with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the militant organization needs to be "eliminated."


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Fact check: DOGE hasn't been transparent despite Musk's assurances

When pressed by ABC News' Rachel Scott in the Oval Office Tuesday about potential conflicts of interest, Elon Musk claimed that he and DOGE have been "fully public" with "all of our actions," but much of DOGE's activity across numerous federal agencies has been learned through reporting and not by the group's public disclosures.

The updates DOGE provides on X are often vague and often don't contain specifics or documentation.

Musk has repeatedly promised DOGE would use "maximum transparency" in its actions, even saying so prior to the election.

He said it would do weekly "DOGE casts" on X and update its Doge.gov website with its activity, but so far, Musk has held one DOGE cast and the group's website remains empty beyond a logo.

-ABC News' Will Steakin and Katherine Faulders


Appeals court denies Trump's request to lift block on funding freeze

A federal appeals court denied the Trump administration's request to lift a lower court’s order that blocked the president from unilaterally freezing billions in funding.

In a 2-page order, a panel of three judges on the First Circuit Court of Appeals denied Trump’s request for an administrative stay of the lower court’s temporary restraining order, deferring to the district court to issue clarification about its earlier order.

Each of the three judges who made the decision were nominated to the bench by Democratic presidents.

In making their decision, the judges noted that lawyers for the Department of Justice "do not cite any authority in support of their administrative stay" or articulate the harm they suffered from the lower court’s order.

"This Circuit has not addressed whether or when an administrative stay of the sort being requested here may be issued, and there is well-recognized uncertainty as to what standards guide the decision to issue one or not," the judges added.

The court will consider issuing a stay pending appeal later this week, the order said.

-ABC News' Peter Charalambous


AP says it's ‘barred’ from Oval Office unless it ‘align its editorial standards’ with Trump’s executive order

The White House informed The Associated Press that it would be barred from "accessing an event in the Oval Office" if it did not align its editorial standards with Trump's executive order renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, AP Executive Editor Julie Pace said in a statement.

The AP said one of their reporters was “blocked from attending an executive order signing” this afternoon.

The statement added that it is “alarming that the Trump administration would punish AP for its independent journalism” and argued that this “plainly violates the First Amendment.”


Trump says he'll meet with Marc Fogel this evening

Following the news that American hostage Marc Fogel has been freed from Russia, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that Fogel will be at the White House at around 10 p.m. tonight.

When asked if Trump asked Russia for anything in return, Trump said, “Not much, no. They were very nice. We were treated very nicely by Russia, actually,” reiterating the need to end the Russia-Ukraine war.