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Maddow on her ‘profoundly funny’ new documentary on Trump-Ukraine scandal, ‘From Russia with Lev’

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Maddow on her ‘profoundly funny’ new documentary on Trump-Ukraine scandal, ‘From Russia with Lev’
  • UP NEXT

    Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber

    05:28

  • ‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making

    07:52

  • ‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term

    07:48

  • ‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion

    11:46

  • ‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations

    08:10

  • ‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’

    09:19

  • ‘Trump will consider running in 2028’: Fmr. GOP leader warns he’s ‘not going anywhere’

    06:40

  • Joy: ‘Make sure on the morning of November 6th, you can say you’re proud of what you did’

    11:33

  • ‘Sick of the B.S.’: Trump suggests Cheney should have ‘guns trained on her face,’ GOP says nothing

    11:17

  • ‘Heartbreaking’: Superstar Janelle Monáe decries women killed by Trump abortion bans

    06:53

  • ‘Trump’s critics will be investigated, prosecuted’: Trump second term plan to ‘ruin lives’ with DOJ

    07:36

  • ‘They want to turn the clock back to the 1850s, not 1950s’: Trump’s final, shocking message to women

    11:42

  • ‘This could cost Trump’: 923,003 Puerto Ricans in swing states might decide election

    07:24

  • ‘Sorry, Donald! Her crowd was bigger’: Trump accuses PA of voter fraud after Harris claims 75K crowd

    11:01

  • ‘Margin of effort race’: Harris to ‘criss-cross’ battleground states to win over undecided voters

    05:25

  • Maddow: I’m grateful Harris chose The Ellipse, ‘reconsecrating ground’ after Jan. 6

    11:54

  • ‘Trump means it’: Trump’s GOP makes lame excuses for rally attacks on Puerto Ricans, Blacks, women

    07:06

  • ‘Typical Trump’: Racist rally slandering Puerto Ricans could cost him Pennsylvania and more

    11:06

  • ‘Republicans have laid their own trap’: Trump, Cruz vs. voters at war with abortion bans

    03:22

  • Joy: ‘If I missed something great the Trumps have contributed to America, please fill me in’

    10:47

  • UP NEXT

    Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber

    05:28

  • ‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making

    07:52

  • ‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term

    07:48

  • ‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion

    11:46

  • ‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations

    08:10

  • ‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’

    09:19

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Politics

Judge orders restoration of Voice of America

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NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the Trump administration to restore the government-run Voice of America’s operations after it had effectively been shut down a year ago, putting hundreds of employees who have been on administrative leave back to work.

U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth gave the U.S. Agency for Global Media a week to put together a plan for putting Voice of America on the air. It has been operating with a skeleton staff since President Donald Trump issued an executive order to shut it down.

A week ago, Lamberth said Kari Lake, who had been Trump’s choice to lead the agency, did not have the legal authority to do what she had done at Voice of America. In Tuesday’s decision, Lamberth ruled on the actions she had taken to respond to Trump’s order, essentially shelving 1,042 of VOA’s 1,147 employees.

“Defendants have provided nothing approaching a principled basis for their decision,” Lamberth wrote.

There was no immediate comment on the decision by the agency overseeing Voice of America. Lake had denounced Lamberth’s March 7 ruling, saying it would be appealed. Since then, Trump nominated Sarah Rogers, the undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, to run USAGM. That requires Senate approval, a step that was not taken with Lake.

Patsy Widakuswara, Voice of America’s White House bureau chief and a plaintiff in the lawsuit to restore it, said she is deeply grateful for the decision.

“We are eager to begin repairing the damage Kari Lake has inflicted on our agency and our colleagues, to return to our congressional mandate, and to rebuild the trust of the global audience we have been unable to serve for the past year,” she said.

“We know the road to restoring VOA’s operations and reputation will be long and difficult,” she said. “We hope the American people will continue to support our mission to produce journalism, not propaganda.”

Voice of America has transmitted news coverage to countries around the world since its formation in World War II, often in countries with no tradition of a free press. Before Trump’s executive order, VOA had operated in 49 different languages, broadcasting to 362 million people.

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Politics

Judge orders restoration of Voice of America

Published

on

NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the Trump administration to restore the government-run Voice of America’s operations after it had effectively been shut down a year ago, putting hundreds of employees who have been on administrative leave back to work.

U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth gave the U.S. Agency for Global Media a week to put together a plan for putting Voice of America on the air. It has been operating with a skeleton staff since President Donald Trump issued an executive order to shut it down.

A week ago, Lamberth said Kari Lake, who had been Trump’s choice to lead the agency, did not have the legal authority to do what she had done at Voice of America. In Tuesday’s decision, Lamberth ruled on the actions she had taken to respond to Trump’s order, essentially shelving 1,042 of VOA’s 1,147 employees.

“Defendants have provided nothing approaching a principled basis for their decision,” Lamberth wrote.

There was no immediate comment on the decision by the agency overseeing Voice of America. Lake had denounced Lamberth’s March 7 ruling, saying it would be appealed. Since then, Trump nominated Sarah Rogers, the undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, to run USAGM. That requires Senate approval, a step that was not taken with Lake.

Patsy Widakuswara, Voice of America’s White House bureau chief and a plaintiff in the lawsuit to restore it, said she is deeply grateful for the decision.

“We are eager to begin repairing the damage Kari Lake has inflicted on our agency and our colleagues, to return to our congressional mandate, and to rebuild the trust of the global audience we have been unable to serve for the past year,” she said.

“We know the road to restoring VOA’s operations and reputation will be long and difficult,” she said. “We hope the American people will continue to support our mission to produce journalism, not propaganda.”

Voice of America has transmitted news coverage to countries around the world since its formation in World War II, often in countries with no tradition of a free press. Before Trump’s executive order, VOA had operated in 49 different languages, broadcasting to 362 million people.

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Politics

Quick vote on Mullin’s DHS nomination hangs on classified briefing

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Quick vote on Mullin’s DHS nomination hangs on classified briefing

The Oklahoma senator’s secretive travel a decade ago has emerged as an issue in his confirmation…
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