Close Menu
WarWatchNowWarWatchNow
    What's Hot

    Israel’s Dangerous Overreach in Syria

    April 23, 2025

    Who will be the next Pope? The top candidates in an unpredictable contest

    April 23, 2025

    Russia-Ukraine war: London ceasefire talks downgraded

    April 23, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • South Sudan urged to avoid slide to war, Türk calls on EU not to weaken landmark law, Ukraine and Mali updates
    • Mexico is suing Google over ‘Gulf of America’ label, Sheinbaum says | US-Mexico Border News
    • Ultrasound diagnosis could lead to faster treatment of endometriosis | Health
    • Pakistan launches retaliatory strikes targeting India, says state-run Pakistan television – live updates | India
    • The Hollywood films made in the UK
    • World could be witnessing ‘another Nakba’ in Palestine, UN committee warns | Israel-Palestine conflict News
    • Newark Mayor Ras Baraka arrested during ICE detention centre protest | Migration News
    • Columbia suspends over 65 students following pro-Palestinian protest in library
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    WarWatchNowWarWatchNow
    Saturday, May 10
    • Home
    • News
    • Global
    • History
    • Security
    • Conflicts
    • Strategy
    • Veterans
    • Weapons
    WarWatchNowWarWatchNow
    Home»News

    Tufts student detained by US immigration authorities must be released, judge rules – live | Trump administration

    War Watch NowBy War Watch NowMay 9, 2025 News No Comments13 Mins Read
    Tufts student detained by US immigration authorities must be released, judge rules – live | Trump administration
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Trump to unveil Medicare drug pricing plan after teasing ‘earth-shattering’ announcement – CBS News

    The major “earth-shattering” announcement Donald Trump teased earlier this week in the Oval Office is a “most favored nation” plan to cut Medicare drug prices, sources have told CBS News.

    Trump speaking from the Oval Office
    Donald Trump said the announcement would be ‘as big as it gets’ in the Oval Office on Tuesday. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

    In his first administration, Trump signed an executive order to implement a “most favored nation” clause that would have required Medicare to pay drug companies the lowest price paid in similar countries for some expensive, physician-administered drugs. The Biden administration rescinded the proposal under pressure from hospitals and drug companies.

    Trump teased in the Oval Office on Tuesday that in the coming days, he would reveal “a truly earth-shattering and positive development for this country and for the people of this country”. He said:

    We’re going to have a very, very big announcement to make – like as big as it gets. It will be one of the most important announcements that have been made in many years about a certain subject.

    “The president will make a big and historic announcement on Monday. Until then, everyone can keep guessing!” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said coyly.

    CBS reports: “Court orders sought by the drug industry and others blocked the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services from implementing the proposal in Trump’s first term, saying that the government failed to go through the proper rulemaking steps to create and implement the policy, which was finalized in late 2020.

    “The Biden administration abandoned the proposal in 2022, blaming court orders blocking the model and concerns raised by stakeholders, including fears that it could cut off some Medicare beneficiaries from drugs and strain providers.”

    Politico reported earlier this week that Trump would direct aides to pursue the initiative to reintroduce the drug pricing plan he wanted in his first term.

    Share

    Updated at 16.24 CEST

    Key events

    Tufts student Rümeysa Öztürk detained by US immigration authorities must be released, judge rules

    A federal judge ordered the Trump administration on Friday to release Rümeysa Öztürk, a Tufts University student from Turkey who has been held for over six weeks in a Louisiana immigration detention facility after she co-wrote an opinion piece criticizing her school’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza.

    US district judge William Sessions during a hearing in Burlington, Vermont, granted bail to Öztürk, who is at the center of one of the highest-profile cases to emerge from Donald Trump’s campaign to deport pro-Palestinian activists on American campuses.

    The judge ruled shortly after a federal appeals court rejected the Trump administration’s bid to re-detain Columbia University student Mohsen Mahdawi, a Palestinian campus activist who a different judge in Vermont ordered released last week after immigration authorities arrested him as well.

    Ozturk’s arrest on 25 March by masked, plainclothes law enforcement officers on a street in Somerville, Massachusetts, near her home was captured in a viral video and occurred after the state department revoked her student visa.

    The sole basis authorities have provided for revoking her visa was an opinion piece she co-authored in Tufts’ student newspaper criticizing the school’s response to calls by students to divest from companies with ties to Israel and to “acknowledge the Palestinian genocide”.

    Her lawyers at the American Civil Liberties Union had argued that her arrest and detention were unlawfully designed to punish her for speech protected by the constitution’s first amendment and to chill the speech of others.

    Öztürk was moved to a detention center in Basile, Louisiana, even though her lawyer filed a lawsuit in Massachusetts the day she was arrested and a judge there barred her from being moved out of the state without 48 hours’ notice.

    By the time that order came down, Immigration and Customs Enforcement had already taken her to Vermont, where she was held briefly before being flown to Louisiana.

    Rather than dismiss her case as the administration wanted, a Massachusetts judge transferred the case to Vermont, saying it could be properly heard there.

    Sessions then ordered Öztürk transferred to Vermont so she could be available as he weighed ordering her release and considered the “significant constitutional concerns” she had raised.

    A federal appeals court on Wednesday ordered her transferred to Vermont by 14 May, but Sessions opted to proceed with a previously-scheduled bail hearing to go forward on Friday and allow Ozturk to appear remotely after her lawyers said she was suffering from worsening asthma attacks while in custody.

    Share

    Updated at 19.28 CEST

    Earlier we brought you CBS News’s report on Trump’s proposal to push drugmakers to charge the US government the same as other countries, a policy he pursued unsuccessfully in his first term.

    It’s unclear, reports NBC News, whether Trump’s new plan will once again target only Medicare Part B drugs or include other medications covered under the program.

    One official told NBC said the proposal hasn’t been finalized and could still change. The White House did not respond to a request for comment, but Karoline Leavitt will no doubt be asked about it during the White House press briefing shortly.

    “I don’t see an excuse for why prices should be all over the place, and we wind up getting charged the most,” Arthur Caplan, the head of the medical ethics division at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, told NBC in support of the proposal. “If this can do something about what is clearly an emergency, which is the ever-increasing cost of drugs as one major source of inflation, I’m for it.”

    However, experts also doubted the new policy would withstand pushback from the drug industry. “I am unsure the new executive order will fare any better,” Stacie Dusetzina, a health policy professor at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, told NBC.

    Tricia Neuman, executive director for the program on Medicare policy at KFF, a health policy research group, told NBC it would likely have public support if implemented. But added: “The idea of making sure the US pays no more than similar countries polls well, but it’s controversial, and will likely face fierce opposition from the pharmaceutical industry.”

    Share

    White House press briefing

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is due to speak to reporters shortly on Trump’s agenda and trade negotiations. I’ll bring you all the key points from that.

    Share

    Updated at 19.00 CEST

    Pope Leo unhappy with US immigration policy and won’t stay silent, brother says

    Sam Jones

    Despite the pronouncements of veteran Vatican-watchers, the rash of profiles and the raking over of old statements, very few people seem to know exactly where Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost – now known as Pope Leo XIV – stands on the big issues of the day.

    But one person who has a better idea than most is the new pontiff’s elder brother John Prevost.

    In a recent interview with the New York Times (paywall), Prevost noted his brother’s emotional and ideological proximity to his friend Pope Francis and said he shared Leo predecessor’s concerns about the US’s immigration policy.

    Prevost described his brother as middle-of-the-road, adding: “I don’t think we’ll see extremes either way.” He also said the new pope would not hesitate to speak out against injustices. “I don’t think he’ll stay quiet for too long if he has something to say.

    I know he’s not happy with what’s going on with immigration. I know that for a fact. How far he’ll go with it is only one’s guess, but he won’t just sit back. I don’t think he’ll be the silent one.

    Newly elected Pope Leo XIV was ‘not happy with what’s going on with immigration’, according to his brother. Photograph: Yara Nardi/Reuters

    Francis made no secret of his opposition to Donald Trump’s border and mass deportations plans, and also took issue with Vice-President JD Vance’s interpretation of the church’s teaching on our responsibilities to others.

    Hours after Prevost was elected pope, many seized on posts from an X account apparently belonging to the cardinal that criticised Trump and Vance’s positions. One post shared an article from the National Catholic Reporter, headlined “JD Vance is wrong: Jesus doesn’t ask us to rank our love for others”. Another reposted a report on California Catholic bishops complaining that Trump’s use of the phrase “bad hombres” to describe some Mexicans fuelled “racism and nativism”.

    Share

    Updated at 18.40 CEST

    Trump envoy Witkoff to travel to Oman for Iran talks on Sunday – Reuters

    Donald Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff will travel to Oman on Sunday for a fourth round of talks on Iran’s nuclear program, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Friday.

    I’ll bring you more detail when I get it.

    Share

    Updated at 18.29 CEST

    People told they were being deported to Libya waited hours on airfield tarmac – Reuters

    People in Texas who were told they would be deported to Libya sat on a military airfield tarmac for hours on Wednesday, unsure of what would happen next, an attorney for one of the men told Reuters.

    The attorney, Tin Thanh Nguyen, said his client, a Vietnamese construction worker from Los Angeles, was among the people woken in the early morning hours and bused from an immigration detention center in Pearsall, Texas, to an airfield where a military aircraft awaited them.

    After several hours, they were bused back to the detention center around noon, the attorney said on Thursday.

    The Department of Homeland Security, the Pentagon and the state department did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

    Reuters reported earlier this week that Donald Trump’s administration was poised to deport migrants to Libya, a move that would escalate his immigration crackdown which has already drawn legal backlash.

    Officials had told Reuters the US military could carry out the flights as soon as Wednesday, but stressed that plans could change.

    A US official told Reuters the flight never departed. As of Friday, it was unclear if the administration was still planning to proceed with the deportations.

    A federal judge in Boston ruled on Wednesday that any effort by the Trump administration to deport non-Libyan migrants to Libya without adequate screenings for possible persecution or torture would clearly violate a prior court order.

    Lawyers for a group of migrants pursuing a class action lawsuit had made an emergency request to the court hours after the news broke of the potential flight to Libya.

    Share

    Updated at 18.23 CEST

    Chris Stein

    Chris Stein

    The House Democratic caucus chair, Pete Aguilar, said the party would make a renewed push to ban stock trading by members, accusing Republicans of misusing their positions and undermining public trust.

    Lawmakers have for years discussed limiting trading by members, but legislation to do so has failed to be enacted. In a recent interview with Time, Donald Trump endorsed a ban, though it’s unclear if Congress’s GOP leaders will take up the issue.

    Aguilar, a California congressman who is the third-highest ranking House Democrat, said the party would make a renewed push for such legislation.

    “I think that’s something that we will get behind and embrace,” Aguilar told broadcaster KQED. He pointed to recent revelations that Bruce Westerman, the Republican chair of the House natural resources committee, had bought stocks in mining and energy firms that could benefit from legislation working its way through the chamber. In an interview with Politico, Westerman said his financial adviser made the purchases, and he had asked him to divest from them.

    “This is the chair of the natural resources committee that is guiding reconciliation efforts that are opening up our public lands to more drilling that those companies will benefit from,” Aguilar said. “I know the country is cynical of politicians, but those types of things just are absolutely detrimental to having trust in government.”

    Share

    Updated at 18.02 CEST

    A member of the board that oversees the US Holocaust Memorial Museum criticized other board members for the institution’s silence after president Trump’s recent firings in a letter on Friday, reports the New York Times.

    Kevin Abel, who was appointed to the museum’s board by President Biden in 2023, warned about the dangers of “not speaking up” and wrote that Trump’s “campaign of retribution” had been met with troubling “public silence” by the museum in his letter.

    Trump fired a number of board members at the museum appointed by former president Biden, including Doug Emhoff, the husband of former vice-president Kamala Harris. The firings sparked backlash by those concerned that Trump’s moves were an effort to politicize a museum dedicated to educating and memorializing.

    Share

    Updated at 17.45 CEST

    US Postal Service names David Steiner as the next postmaster general

    The US Postal Service has named David Steiner as the next postmaster general after the Trump administration pressured the prior leader to resign in March. Steiner is a former Waste Management CEO and has served on the board of FedEx.

    Amber McReynolds, chair of the USPS board of governors, announced the new head on Friday at an open session of a board meeting. She added that Steiner was set to begin in his position in July.

    The board’s appointment comes amid concerns surrounding the future of the Postal Service, with the Trump administration remaining determined to tighten control over an agency that Congress established to be independent decades ago. The agency reported a net loss of $3.3bn for the three months ending 31 March as it continues to increase stamp prices and look for ways to cut costs.

    Share

    Updated at 17.34 CEST

    David Richardson, the new head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), told staff on Friday he will “run right over” anyone that resists changes in the agency, reports Reuters.

    “I, and I alone in Fema, speak for Fema. I’m here to carry out the president’s intent for Fema,” Richardson, a former marine artillery officer and combat veteran, told the staff.

    Richardson spoke just a day after he was appointed to replace the acting Fema chief Cameron Hamilton, who was ousted by the Department of Homeland Security secretary, Kristi Noem, after telling a congressional hearing he did not support eliminating the agency.

    President Trump and Noem have called for the agency to be shrunk or potentially even eliminated, arguing that many of its functions can be carried out by the states, a stance that is already leading to decreased federal aid for disasters.

    Share

    Updated at 17.14 CEST

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams says he’ll meet with Trump on Friday to discuss “priorities” for the city, reports the Associated Press.

    Adams did not offer other details about the planned meeting in Washington, which comes a month after a federal judge approved a US justice department request to dismiss the criminal corruption case against the NYC mayor.

    Adams was accused last year by the Biden administration of accepting illegal campaign contributions and travel discounts from a Turkish official and others, in exchange for helping Turkey open a diplomatic building without passing fire inspections, among other things. He had pleaded not guilty and a trial was set for April.

    Share

    Updated at 16.51 CEST

    administration authorities Detained immigration Judge live released rules student Trump Tufts
    War Watch Now
    • Website

    Keep Reading

    Mexico is suing Google over ‘Gulf of America’ label, Sheinbaum says | US-Mexico Border News

    Pakistan launches retaliatory strikes targeting India, says state-run Pakistan television – live updates | India

    The Hollywood films made in the UK

    Columbia suspends over 65 students following pro-Palestinian protest in library

    Turkish Tufts University student released on bail

    What is Pope Leo XIV doing on his first full day as head of the Catholic Church?

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks

    South Sudan urged to avoid slide to war, Türk calls on EU not to weaken landmark law, Ukraine and Mali updates

    May 10, 2025

    Mexico is suing Google over ‘Gulf of America’ label, Sheinbaum says | US-Mexico Border News

    May 10, 2025

    Ultrasound diagnosis could lead to faster treatment of endometriosis | Health

    May 10, 2025

    Pakistan launches retaliatory strikes targeting India, says state-run Pakistan television – live updates | India

    May 10, 2025
    Latest Posts

    Israel’s Dangerous Overreach in Syria

    April 23, 2025

    Who will be the next Pope? The top candidates in an unpredictable contest

    April 23, 2025

    Russia-Ukraine war: London ceasefire talks downgraded

    April 23, 2025

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    News

    • Conflicts
    • Global
    • History
    • News
    • Security

    Legal Pages

    • About Us
    • Get In Touch
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & condition

    Latest

    South Sudan urged to avoid slide to war, Türk calls on EU not to weaken landmark law, Ukraine and Mali updates

    May 10, 2025

    Mexico is suing Google over ‘Gulf of America’ label, Sheinbaum says | US-Mexico Border News

    May 10, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 warwatchnow. developed by Pro.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.