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Trump admin live updates: Judge blocks IRS sharing taxpayer data with ICE
In April, the IRS agreed to begin sharing information with ICE.
President Donald Trump on Thursday called several Democratic veterans and national security specialists "traitors" who should face the death penalty for releasing a joint video in which they said that U.S. service members could refuse illegal orders.
This week, the House and Senate overwhelmingly approved a measure to force the Department of Justice to release all files related to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Trump signed the legislation on Wednesday night, starting the clock on the 30 days the DOJ has to release the documents.
Key Headlines
- Trump says lawmakers who made military video 'SHOULD BE IN JAIL RIGHT NOW'
- Judge blocks IRS-ICE data sharing
- Trump on Zelenskyy and Ukraine peace plan: 'He'll have to like it'
- Trump congratulates Mamdani: 'The better he does, the happier I am'
- Trump says Thanksgiving is an 'appropriate time' for Ukraine to accept peace deal
Trump admin seeks stay of order barring National Guard deployment in Oregon
President Donald Trump and his administration filed on Sunday a motion to stay an order from a federal judge who had earlier this month ruled the president "exceeded" his authority by sending the National Guard to Oregon.
"The President was well within his discretion to consider months-long unrest in Portland, as well as the potential for continuing unrest over the foreseeable future," the White House wrote in its motion, which was filed Sunday on in the 9th Circuit Court.
District Judge Karin Immergut ruled in early November that Trump "exceeded the President's authority" when he sent federalized National Guard troops into Portland.
The administration on Sunday argued that the court should place an administrative stay on the part of Immergut’s order that required a defederlization of those Guardsman.
The administration argued that the court had "downplayed the dangerous conditions" at a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, where public demonstrations were ongoing throughout the summer.
"The court acknowledged large-scale violent protests in June, but treated them as irrelevant to the President's determination just a few months later," the Sunday filing said. "And while the court attempted to paint a picture of sharp decline in violent activity since then, the record shows that violence and threats of violence recurred more-or-less continuously."
Officials in Portland have "publicly opposed the use of excessive force by federal agents and the broader enforcement approach of the Trump Administration," according to the city's official website.