The News And Times Review - NewsAndTimes.org | Links | Blog | Tweets  | Selected Articles 

Categories
Newscasts

AP Headline News – Mar 11 2025 22:00 (EDT)

Spread the news


Spread the news
Categories
Audio Posts: Selected Articles

Trump slashes US Education Department staff in step towards dismantlement

Spread the news

US Secretary of Education Linda McMahon says administration will work with the US Congress to abolish department.

Spread the news
Categories
Audio Posts: Selected Articles

Portugal’s government loses confidence vote, setting stage for new election

Spread the news

Portugal could be heading to the polls for a third time in three years as minority government loses vote in parliament.

Spread the news
Categories
Newscasts

9PM ET 03/11/2025 Newscast

Spread the news

9PM ET 03/11/2025 Newscast
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Spread the news
Categories
Audio Posts: Selected Articles

Greenland votes in election dominated by Trump’s pledge to control island

Spread the news

Voting was extended at some polling stations amid high voter turnout in an election dominated by Trump’s control pledge.

Spread the news
Categories
Newscasts

NPR News: 03-11-2025 9PM EDT

Spread the news

NPR News: 03-11-2025 9PM EDT Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy

Spread the news
Categories
Newscasts

AP Headline News – Mar 11 2025 21:00 (EDT)

Spread the news


Spread the news
Categories
Full Text Articles - Audio Posts

Dems for Some Reason Expect Trump to Follow the Law on Detention of Mahmoud Khalil

Spread the news

As protests arise and First Amendment questions mount surrounding the immigration detention of Mahmoud Khalil, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich. penned and circulated a letter demanding the immediate release of the recent Columbia University graduate. 

It found little support among Tlaib’s colleagues in Washington, with a mere 14 Democrats signing their names on the letter condemning Khalil’s detention as an “illegal abduction.” 

Instead, statements from prominent Democrats suggest much of the party is taking the Trump administration’s targeting of Khalil in good faith.

Rep. Adriano Espaillat, D-N.Y., who counts Khalil as one of his constituents, did not sign the letter. When contacted by The Intercept about the case, Espaillat said he expects the Trump administration – which has explicitly flouted and sought to circumscribe federal legal protections for civil liberties – to adhere to the rule of law.

“Regarding the case of Mahmoud Khalil, a constituent who lives in my district, my office has been following this case closely and as a former green card holder, I expect the Department of Justice to work within the confines of the law and that due process is guaranteed to him and his family,” Espaillat said in a statement Tuesday morning. “The rule of law must be respected.” 

In a statement on Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., condemned Khalil’s activism and “antisemitic actions at Columbia,” without providing examples of those actions. He said that the administration should release Khalil if it could determine he had not broken any laws. 

“This illegal justification has been stated clearly by figures throughout the administration, including the president himself.”

The Trump administration itself has admitted the case against Khalil does not hinge on allegations that he broke the law and told a conservative news outlet that it will these proceedings as a blueprint to target other students.

Tlaib’s letter — first reported by Jewish Insider — specifically calls out the Trump administration’s campaign for pushing to expel Khalil despite the fact he “has not been charged or convicted of any crime.”


Related

If Trump Can Deport Mahmoud Khalil, Freedom of Speech Is Dead


“As the Trump administration proudly admits, he was targeted solely for his activism and organizing as a student leader and negotiator for the Gaza Solidarity Encampment on Columbia University campus, protesting the Israeli government’s brutal assault on the Palestinian people in Gaza and his university’s complicity in this oppression,” the letter said. “This illegal justification has been stated clearly by figures throughout the administration, including the president himself.”

In a bid to find additional backers, the letter was distributed among all 100 House members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus on Monday evening with a 10 a.m. deadline, according to a source familiar with the letter. Less than 15 percent of CPC members signed onto the letter, which was published Tuesday morning.

Signatories of the letter include: Andre Carson, D-Ind., Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, Al Green, D-Texas, Summer Lee, D-Penn., Jim McGovern, D-Mass., Gwen Moore, D-Wisc., Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., Reps. Mark Pocan, D-Wisc., Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., Delia Ramirez, D-Ill., Lateefah Simon, D-Calif., Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., Nydia Velázquez, D-N.Y. and Nikema Williams, D-Ga. 

At least one Democrat reportedly consulted about Khalil prior to his arrest. According to The Forward, an aide for Sen. John Fetterman, D-Penn., discussed Khalil’s situation with a former operative for the Zionist group Betar. The group has taken credit for sending a list of students it wanted deported to the White House. Betar named Khalil, misspelling his first name, in a tweet in January.

In response to a tweet on Monday from the Senate Judiciary Democrats calling to free Khalil, Fetterman replied: “Free all the hostages who have been tortured, starved, raped, beaten and STILL in tunnels in Gaza by Hamas since October 7th, 2023.” Fetterman’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Correction: Tuesday, March 11, 11:09 p.m. ET
An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the publication that first that reported an aide for Fetterman discussed Khalil prior to his detention. That was first reported by The Forward.

The post Dems for Some Reason Expect Trump to Follow the Law on Detention of Mahmoud Khalil appeared first on The Intercept.


Spread the news
Categories
Full Text Articles - Audio Posts

Anti-Israel Agitators Arrested in New York Amid Nationwide Walkouts Protesting Pro-Hamas Activist’s ICE Arrest

Spread the news

Several anti-Israel agitators were arrested in New York on Tuesday after clashing with police during a protest against the detainment of Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University student activist and foreign national whom the Trump administration moved to deport over his pro-Hamas campus organizing. It was part of a nationwide student and faculty walkout at several elite colleges across the nation.

NYPD moved in after the protesters refused to clear the roadway in front of City Hall. Agitators pushed back, and police began making arrests.

Among the crowd was Aidan Parisi, a Columbia graduate student who was arrested for storming Hamilton Hall last year. He was suspended last spring over his involvement in an event that featured a number of terror-tied speakers who advocated for violence against Jews. Also in attendance was Barnard College student and anti-Israel activist Maryam Iqbal, who was arrested with Parisi during last spring’s illegal encampments at Columbia.

Anti-Israel activist Maryam Iqbal

The crowd first gathered at Washington Square Park before marching to City Hall as part of a protest organized by New York University’s Faculty and Students for Justice in Palestine chapters and joined by the anti-Semitic group Within Our Lifetime. During the event, billed as a “rally against compliance with fascist policies,” hundreds chanted in unison, “We want justice, you say how, release Mahmoud Khalil now.”

One attendee sported a Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine headband, while others displayed posters of militants holding AK-47s with the caption “Palestine will be free.”

“By resistance … we mean action. We mean taking to the streets, mobilizing in our thousands, no, in our millions, and dealing blow after blow to our enemies,” one agitator told the crowd.

At Columbia, a smaller crowd of about 40 faculty and students walked out of their classes and assembled outside the Low Memorial Library. Similar walkouts were staged at the City University of New York, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of California, Los Angeles—most of which have faced anti-Semitism in the wake of Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, terror attack. National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP)—an anti-Israel group accused of providing material support to Hamas—urged the protests, calling on “individuals to walk out of class, take over central spaces on campus, and assert our mass power” on Tuesday.

“In the face of the state’s existential attacks on the Student Movement and popular education, we declare that we, the united students, faculty, staff, and workers, are the university,” NSJP posted to Instagram on Monday. “The popular movement against Zionism, imperialism, and fascism will not shy away in the face of federal threats; we will show our Board of Trustees, administrators, and the state that we will not back down.”

At Columbia, protesters wore shirts and held signs sporting slogans like “FUCK ICE” and “PIGS ARE NOT KOSHER.” Among the crowd was Joseph Howley, a Columbia classics professor and member of Faculty and Staff for Justice in Palestine (FSJP). Also in attendance was Bruce Robbins, a Columbia humanities professor who falsely denied that protesters at the encampment chanted for the “destruction of civilian lives.”

Columbia professor Joseph Howley in the background of a protest

The crowd sang the “Ruth Song,” which agitators also crooned the evening the New York Police Department cleared Hamilton Hall after a mob stormed it. They also chanted, “Free Mahmoud,” and “Immigrants are welcome here.” The protesters called out the interim Columbia president, chanting, “We will never let this slide, Katrina Armstrong you can’t hide” and “Katrina Armstrong what do you say, how many boots did you lick today.”

Aharon Dardik, a founding member of the anti-Israel student group CU Jews4Ceasefire, which condemned Columbia’s Hillel for hosting an exclusive event with former Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett last week, led the crowd in prayer to bring Khalil home safely, a protest attendee told the Washington Free Beacon.

One demonstrator asked bystanders to bring the protesters food, water, and sunscreen since they were exposed to the “very hot sun,” a witness told the Free Beacon. “We need that support from our communities so if you are someone who has access to those things, please pull up and help us!”

“We are aware of a small protest on the steps of Low Library,” a Columbia spokesperson told the Free Beacon. “Our public safety and University delegates were monitoring for any disruptions to campus activity. Our focus is to preserve our core mission to teach, create, and advance knowledge.”

Khalil was taken into ICE custody Saturday night after the Trump administration pulled his visa and green card.

“This should serve as a warning to foreign students on temporary status in America—under this administration, if you support terror groups, we will deport you,” a State Department official told the Free Beacon. Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a similar statement on Sunday, saying he will “be revoking the visas and/or green cards of Hamas supporters in America so they can be deported.”

President Donald Trump issued his own statement Monday, declaring Khalil’s detention marks “the first arrest of many to come.”

That same day, a federal judge paused deportation proceedings pending a ruling on a petition Khalil filed in court claiming there was “no basis” for his arrest and subsequent detention.

In April, Khalil spearheaded negotiations with Columbia administrators during the pro-Hamas student encampments, representing Columbia University Apartheid Divest—the Ivy League institution’s most anti-Semitic student organization—and demanding divestment from Israel. He pledged further unrest in the buildup to the fall semester, telling The Hill he would continue to push Columbia to divest from the Jewish state by “any available means necessary.”

“And we’ve been working all this summer on our plans, on what’s next to pressure Columbia to listen to the students and to decide to be on the right side of history,” Khalil said in August. “We’re considering a wide range of actions throughout the semester, encampments and protests and all of that. But for us, encampment is now our new base.”

Last week, Khalil again served as a negotiator for CUAD after a mob of radical Columbia activists stormed a Barnard library. Once inside the building, the agitators distributed Hamas propaganda meant to justify Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attack. A week earlier, CUAD stormed a separate campus building at Barnard, resulting in the hospitalization of a security guard and $30,000 in damages.

On Monday at least three Columbia professors canceled in-person classes in support of Khalil, the Free Beacon reported. English professor Joseph Albernaz, philosophy lecturer Ruairidh MacLeod, and an unnamed third emailed students to cancel courses or remove attendance requirements. MacLeod ditched the “discussion requirement for [his] Marx class,” citing “sensitivity to the situation arising from the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil.” Albernaz went as far as to give every student an “A” on an upcoming midterm scheduled for Thursday, saying he was “sickened at the news of the ICE detainment of a student.” The third instructor canceled courses for the rest of the week, arguing it was “unsafe to continue teaching as usual.”

Update, 11:30 p.m.: This story has been updated to include comment from a Columbia spokesperson.

The post Anti-Israel Agitators Arrested in New York Amid Nationwide Walkouts Protesting Pro-Hamas Activist’s ICE Arrest appeared first on .


Spread the news
Categories
Newscasts

Ukraine accepts 30-day ceasefire

Spread the news

Ukraine accepts 30-day ceasefire in war with Russia. After day of talks in Saudi Arabia, US agrees to resume military aid to Kyiv and intelligence sharing. Secretary of State Rubio says ball is now in Russia’s court.

Spread the news