The Supreme Court is reviewing a case challenging President Trump's administration's attempt to revoke Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitians and Syrians, with arguments focusing on whether the government followed proper legal procedures and whether racial bias influenced the decision, as TPS holders argue they could face life-threatening situations if forced to return to their home countries.
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Musk vs. Altman, and a Pivotal Immigration Case at the Supreme CourtAdded:
From The New York [music] Times, it's The Headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Wednesday, April 29th. [music] Here's what we're covering.
Today is the last day of arguments this term at the Supreme Court, and the justices are set to consider a pair of cases that they fast-tracked to get on the schedule.
The cases both center on temporary protected status, or TPS, a decades-old legal protection that has allowed migrants from countries facing war or other humanitarian crises to live and work in the US.
President Trump, though, has moved to revoke those protections immediately for hundreds of thousands of Haitians and Syrians, and to expel them from the country.
TPS holders, including students, doctors, and engineers, have pushed back in the courts, saying they could be killed if they're forced to return.
The arguments the justices will hear today will focus on how and why the administration tried to revoke their status.
By law, the government must review conditions in the countries in question before making a decision, among other steps. Lawyers representing the TPS holders say that didn't happen here, and they argue that in the case of the Haitians, specifically, the administration acted with racial bias.
They've pointed to Trump's false accusations about Haitians eating people's pets and being undesirable because they come from what Trump called a filthy, disgusting country.
On the administration's part, it has denied that race is a factor, and said the terminations are based on foreign policy and national security considerations.
The justices' ruling will likely also have implications for more than a million other TPS holders from other countries, whose protections the administration is also trying to terminate.
The TPS arguments are just one of several high-stakes cases the court took on in its last week of the term. We'll hear argument next in case 24-1068, Monsanto Company versus Darnell. One case earlier this week involved the weed killer Roundup. There have been widespread claims that the product causes [music] cancer, and ultimately, the court's decision could determine whether thousands of lawsuits against the company that makes it can go forward.
And What's to prevent the government from using this to find [music] out the identities of everybody at a particular church, a particular political organization?
The court also grappled this week with the issue of just how much personal cell phone data police can sweep up in an investigation.
Some authorities have been using a technique called geofencing, >> [music] >> which lets them gather location data from all cell phone users near a crime scene.
That's helped them track down suspects, but critics of the practice argue that it's unconstitutional and puts the privacy of everyday Americans at risk.
Decisions from the court on all of these cases, as well as other critical issues like birthright citizenship and the Voting Rights Act, are expected starting in late June.
Now, two other updates from Washington.
You know how sometimes, uh, you wake up in the morning and, uh, the first lady puts out a statement demanding you be fired from your job?
We've all been there, right? As the feud between Jimmy Kimmel and the White House has kicked back up recently, federal regulators have ordered an unprecedented review of ABC's broadcast licenses. Back in the fall, Kimmel was briefly pulled off the air by ABC, his home network, after the Trump administration criticized comments he'd made in the wake of Charlie Kirk's assassination.
This past week, Kimmel drew the White House's anger again after he joked that First Lady Melania Trump had the glow of a quote, "expectant widow." Just days before an alleged assassination attempt at the White House Correspondents Dinner.
Now, the Federal Communications Commission says it's reviewing all of ABC's broadcast licenses, not because of the joke, but as part of what it says is an investigation into the network's DEI policies.
The move all but guarantees a drawn-out legal battle that will lock ABC in an expensive running war with the federal government.
And Well, they're back.
This time about a picture of seashells on a North Carolina beach a year ago.
James Comey, the former director of the FBI and frequent critic of President Trump, has been indicted again.
>> [music] >> Trump has been openly calling for the Justice Department to prosecute people he sees as his political enemies, like Comey.
In the fall, [music] DOJ lawyers brought their first case against him, though a judge dismissed it. In the new indictment, [music] they're claiming that a picture Comey posted online was a threat on the president's life. It showed shells arranged to say 8647. [music] 86 being slang to get rid of something, and 47 being a reference to Trump, the 47th president. The indictment claims a reasonable person would interpret the message, quote, "as a serious expression of intent to do harm."
In a video released yesterday, Comey vowed to fight the charges. I'm still innocent. I'm still not afraid. And I still believe in the independent federal judiciary, so let's go.
Back in 2015, Sam Altman sent an email to Elon Musk. He pitched an idea, a Silicon Valley research lab that would build powerful AI systems as part of what he called some sort of nonprofit.
Soon, that nonprofit was founded, largely with donations from Musk. It was called OpenAI, and would go on to lead the tech industry into a new era of artificial intelligence.
But over the course of the next decade, that relationship fractured. Musk quit OpenAI, and he and Altman went from being collaborators to competitors.
Now, their simmering feud has come to a head with Musk suing Altman in a blockbuster trial that kicked off this week. People in Silicon Valley are expecting high drama. But the implications of this trial are much larger than that. Cade Metz has been reporting for The Times from the California courthouse where Musk's testimony is expected to continue this morning, and where Altman is also slated to take the stand. Cade says Musk is claiming that Altman took his money, deceived him, and abandoned OpenAI's original humanitarian mission, instead building the company into a roughly $700 billion tech juggernaut. In opening arguments yesterday, OpenAI's lawyers said those claims are basically all just, quote, "sour grapes," as they worked to convince the jury not to take Musk's side. If Elon Musk wins his case, it could shift the balance of power in the AI race.
Musk seeks tens of billions of dollars in damages, but he also wants to OpenAI.
He wants to remove Sam Altman from the OpenAI board of directors, [music] and he wants to unravel the company that oversees ChatGPT [music] and so many other AI technologies.
And in the end, that benefits the company's many rivals, including [music] xAI, the artificial intelligence company run by Elon Musk.
>> [music] >> And finally, in Japan, there is a problem. Like in many countries, they're short on nursing home staff to take care of their aging population. But there's also a potential solution that involves, hear me out here, bodybuilders. I visited a few centers in Japan, and it was a really heartwarming scene. There were these young bodybuilders, and they were in their tank tops showing off their muscles to this crowd of elderly patients.
And they really brought a lot of joy and excitement to the centers. You know, the residents were smiling, they were like punching their muscles and doing exercises with them. Javier Hernandez is The Times' Tokyo bureau chief. He says a number of Japanese companies are specifically trying to recruit not just bodybuilders, but also MMA fighters and sumo wrestlers to work in senior care facilities. They're offering them, in some cases, housing, plus gym memberships, and even protein supplements. It's a bit unconventional, but it actually makes sense. A lot of these athletes are looking for work.
They have shorter careers. Once they get older, they don't have the opportunity to win contests or enter any kind of event, so they're struggling often for jobs.
But in the care industry, there's actually a huge demand for this kind of skill set. They are physically strong, they have stamina, they can work with people, and so these jobs, in many ways, make sense for elite athletes. Javier says the recruiting push is also about helping to change perceptions around who is a caregiver. The field is often dominated by women, and Japan is no exception to that. One staffer who has helped recruit men who are MMA athletes said, quote, "There's a lot of testosterone in the room, but when it comes to taking care of the elderly, the fighters are very tender and [music] very caring."
Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, the controversial [music] fight over taxing billionaires in California.
You can listen to that in The New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts. [music] I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
>> Mhm.
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