LATEST ARTICLES

‘Ruthless’ launches series to help educate voters ahead of midterm elections

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The “Ruthless” podcast kicked off its midterm candidate interview series on Thursday with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton as the program aims to help listeners learn if hopefuls “can hang with the fellas and be a decent human being.”

Paxton, who is leading in the Republican Senate primary polls even without President Donald Trump’s endorsement, sat down with “Ruthless” co-hosts Josh Holmes, Comfortably Smug, Michael Duncan and John Ashbrook for the first of a series of critical interviews designed to educate its audience ahead of “vitally important” midterm elections. 

“The midterms are incredibly important ,and one of the things that we promised you, as a listener of the ‘progrum,’ is we’re going to provide you interviews to get to know every single candidate that matters in every single one of these pivotal races,” Holmes said.

Ruthless

Josh Holmes, Comfortably Smug, Michael Duncan and John Ashbrook host the “Ruthless” podcast.  (Fox News Media)

“Ruthless” also unveiled an interactive map that highlights key Senate races and links to information and interviews on each of the candidates ahead of the GOP primary season. The map, located at Ruthlesspodcast.com/map, will be updated throughout the year. 

“What it is designed to do is provide all of you who are listening throughout the country a real-time, totally accessible opportunity to click on your state and look at the candidates who are attempting to represent you,” Holmes said. 

“Ruthless” hopes the map and interview series will help listeners make more informed decisions.

“We understand that everyone in the mainstream media wants to shade one, or shade another,” Holmes said. “They’ll tell you exactly who it is they think you ought to vote for based on the tenor of the coverage of one candidate or another.”

“We approach this a different way here,” he continued. “You come down, you sit with the fellas, and we have, basically, one litmus test, and that litmus test is, can you hang with the fellas? Like, can you convince an audience that you can hang with the fellas and be a decent human being?” 

Smug added that “unlike the mainstream media,” guests on the podcast won’t face a “firing squad of liberals who are trying to help Chuck Schumer win a race.”

FOX NEWS’ PARTNERSHIP WITH ‘RUTHLESS’ PODCAST IMMEDIATELY MAKING WAVES ACROSS DC, MEDIA LANDSCAPE

Duncan noted that an assortment of interviews is already live on their new website, including with Republican Texas Sen. John Cornyn.

“You’re going to have all of that at your disposal before you cast a ballot,” Duncan said.  “Over the next eight, nine months, we’re going to have a lot more, so it’s going to be a huge resource.” 

Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Texas, another hopeful for the Texas Senate primary, is set to appear next week.

“We’ll have all of them,” Holmes said. 

“You can take some time, not just to get to know them through the wedge questions that the media asks to try to put people on defense, but a little bit about their personality. Who they are. Because, ultimately, what you’re doing, particularly in Republican politics in primaries, is, there are shades of differences in globally recognized facts within the Republican Party,” he added. “But you’ve got to know that the guy, or the woman, that you’re sending there is ultimately going to represent your point of view.”

TEXAS-BASED ABC AFFILIATES FILE EQUAL TIME NOTICES AS FCC CRACKS DOWN ON ‘THE VIEW’ OVER TALARICO SEGMENT

Ruthless

“Ruthless” can be listened to on all podcast platforms and can be watched on YouTube. (Fox News Media)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“Ruthless” has a licensing deal with FOX News Media as part of the company’s expansion of new media. 



Source link

Australia news live: attorneys general to meet to discuss antisemitism and online hate; cheaper mortgages push up cash rate, RBA says | Australia news

0

Attorneys general meet to discuss antisemitism, online hate

Josh Butler
Josh Butler

State and federal attorneys general will meet in Sydney on Friday, with antisemitism and online hate at the top of the agenda. For the first 2026 meeting of the Standing Council of Attorneys-General (SCAG), the group will discuss protecting Australians from the spread of hate, federal AG Michelle Rowland said.

Antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal and eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant will present briefings to the group. SCAG will discuss rising antisemitism in Australia, which Rowland’s office said needed “a coordinated and sustained response”, including in fighting hate via social media.

“There is no place in Australia for hatred of any kind – online or offline,” Rowland said.

double quotation markOnline platforms play a significant role in the prevalence and spread of hateful content – a borderless challenge that demands coordinated national action.

Segal said antisemitism was becoming “more organised, more visible and more harmful”, requiring responses in law, education and enforcement.

Inman Grant said the eSafety office was looking at online hate.

“I am also pleased to have the opportunity to canvas a range of aligned, systemic and individual redress initiatives that could further target the perpetuation of this caustic and corrosive content, and provide education and training for Jewish community leaders and educators,” she said.

Key events

Banks’ cheaper mortgages pushing up the cash rate, RBA research finds

Luca Ittimani
Luca Ittimani

The Reserve Bank will be forced to keep the cash rate higher than it would have before the pandemic because the banks have cut costs to offer cheaper mortgages, according to new RBA research.

Intense competition between banks has produced a cheap loan market, which banks have funded in part by skimping on customers’ savings accounts interest rates, the research suggests.

Banks now fund almost half of their lending with savers’ at-call deposits, up from 30% in 2011, researchers, Sarah Jennison, Josh Spiller and Peter Wallis found. This has helped cut banks’ lending costs to their lowest levels since the global financial crisis, in part because, post-pandemic, banks did not lift the interest paid on those savings by as far as the RBA lifted the official cash rate.

At the same time, banks have competed for mortgage customers by offering lower rates and bigger cashbacks and discounts, the analysts found.

The average outstanding variable rate in December was about 5.5%, while the cash rate was 3.5%. In 2019, the same typical home loan rate was about 4% but the cash was about 1% – implying banks’ profit margin on home loans has shrunk.

With mortgage rates now lower compared to the cash rate, the so-called “neutral” level of the cash rate has automatically become higher, the researchers found. That implies the RBA now has to keep the cash rate higher than it would have pre-pandemic to enable the same level of lending growth.

Lending surged after just three rate cuts in 2025, adding to inflationary pressures and surprising the RBA, according to its deputy governor, Andrew Hauser. This research helps solve part of that puzzle.



Source link

House Democrats join Thomas Massie to curb Trump’s Iran war powers

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A resolution led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., aimed at curbing President Donald Trump’s war powers in Iran is getting the blessing of the House of Representatives’ top Democrat.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., released a statement alongside other Democratic leaders Thursday announcing that they will force a vote on Massie’s resolution next week.

“As soon as Congress reconvenes next week, we will compel a vote of the full House of Representatives on the bipartisan Khanna-Massie War Powers resolution,” the joint statement read.

“This legislation would require the President to come to Congress to make the case for using military force against Iran. The Iranian regime is brutal and destabilizing, seen most recently in the killing of thousands of protesters. However, undertaking a war of choice in the Middle East, without a full understanding of all the attendant risks to our servicemembers and to escalation, is reckless.”

Thomas Massie, Donald Trump, and Hakeem Jeffries

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries is backing an effort by Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna to force a vote on reining in President Donald Trump’s war powers. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images; Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images; Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images)

Jeffries and other top Democrats argued that any military force against Iran would be illegal without approval from Capitol Hill.

“We maintain that any such action would be unconstitutional without consultation with and authorization from Congress. Next week, every Member will have the opportunity to go on the record as to whether they support military action against Iran absent Congressional approval,” they said.

Massie cited Congress’ war powers in the Constitution in unveiling the legislation earlier this month alongside Khanna.

GOP MUTINY FORCES HOUSE SPEAKER MIKE JOHNSON TO DELAY VOTE ON KEY PIECE OF TRUMP’S AGENDA

“Congress must vote on war according to our Constitution,” he posted on X. “[Khanna] and I will be forcing that vote to happen in the House as soon as possible. I will vote to put America first, which means voting against more war in the Middle East.”

Bus burned in Iran

Buses that were burned during Iran’s protests, in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 21, 2026. (Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters)

There are multiple mechanisms for forcing a vote over the will of House leadership. But the quickest route is called a “privileged resolution,” which mandates that a specific piece of legislation is considered by the full chamber within two legislative days of its introduction.

Before a vote on the measure itself, however, House GOP leaders can call for a preliminary vote to “table” the legislation or refer it to the relevant committee, both ways of effectively killing those resolutions. 

It’s considered easier for lawmakers in the majority party to vote to kill resolutions on that procedural vote before they have to take a vote on the bill itself.

Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna

Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., left, and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., conduct a news conference after reviewing unredacted portions of the Jeffrey Epstein files, outside a Department of Justice office in NoMa on Feb. 9, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Privileged resolutions, which are traditionally seldom used, have gained popularity in recent years as Republicans grapple with a razor-thin House majority.

In this case, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., can only afford one GOP defection if all Democrats vote to proceed with blocking Trump’s war powers. 

Because Massie is already likely to vote with the minority party, all remaining Republicans in the chamber must vote in lockstep to block the resolution.

Related Article

Kaine wants to rein in Trump's war powers, but never did the same for Biden, Obama


Source link

Melania Trump to lead UN security council session, White House says | Melania Trump

0

First lady Melania Trump is set to lead a session of the United Nations security council on Monday, coinciding with the US assuming the body’s rotating monthly presidency, the White House announced.

According to a statement, first cited by CNN, Melania Trump plans to spotlight education as a tool for fostering tolerance and promoting global peace at the global body, which has its headquarters in New York.

The session, titled Children, Technology, and Education in Conflict, will mark the first time the first lady to a sitting US president has presided over the 15-member council, and kicks off the first session to mark the United States’s latest stint presiding.

The White House said: “Mrs Trump’s leadership will mark the first time a sitting US first lady presides over the security council, as members consider education, technology, peace, and security.”

The 2 March meeting is expected to include the US ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, fellow security council representatives, and other international participants.

Waltz said on social media: “We are thrilled to have @Flotus gavel in the US Presidency of the Security Council.”

Melania Trump has also focused on efforts to secure the return of children allegedly taken by Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022. She announced in October that some Ukrainian children seized by Russians had been reunited with their families, a cause she has supported during her husband’s second term.

Typically, security council meetings are chaired by a nation’s UN ambassador or a senior cabinet official. While former first ladies such as Eleanor Roosevelt held influential positions within the UN – Roosevelt helped draft the universal declaration of human rights – none have presided over council meetings while serving as first lady.

The move unfolds amid Donald Trump’s hostile approach to the UN. He has often labeled the organization as “ineffective” and called for sweeping changes, while also withdrawing the US from several UN-affiliated agencies, including the World Health Organization and the UN framework convention on climate change (UNFCCC), a foundational international agreement to address the climate crisis.

Additionally, the Trump administration had cut funding for UN entities working with Palestinian refugees, calling it an “irredeemably flawed operation.”

Last week, Trump held the inaugural gathering of his “board of peace”, viewed widely as the president’s attempted alternative to the UN. The initiative, which he says is intended to settle international disputes, has given numerous global leaders pause as they worry the nascent body could serve to supplant the UN.

Reuters contributed reporting



Source link

Vance says Americans ‘cannot give power’ back to Democrats following SOTU antics

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Vice President JD Vance said Thursday that the Democrats’ behavior during the State of the Union address this week “showed us that we cannot give power back to congressional Democrats” in the midterm elections this November. 

Vance, speaking during a visit to a machining facility in Plover, Wis., made the remark before ripping Democrats for not standing up Tuesday in support of Dalila Coleman, a young child who survived after an illegal immigrant from India allegedly struck the car she was in on a highway in San Bernardino County, California, in June 2024. 

“I want to talk about the stakes coming up in November, because it feels like this election in November is very far away. But if anything, the State of the Union should have showed us that we cannot give power back to congressional Democrats,” Vance said. 

“Now, I am fundamentally an optimist about this country. I believe most people, most human beings, most American citizens, whether they got a D next to their name or an R next to the name or they have no political affiliation, they’re good people. They love our country. They want our country to thrive and prosper. But I got to tell you, after the State of the Union, I’m not so sure that is true of the congressional Democrats that we saw at the State of the Union address,” Vance continued.

Vice President JD Vance speaks in Wisconsin

Vice President JD Vance speaks at Pointe Precision in Plover, Wis., on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026.  (Matt Rourke/AP)

“For example, you have this beautiful little girl. She had such a sweet moment with her dad. You may have remembered, she was probably six years old. She had been assaulted by an illegal immigrant. She had had a very bad, I think, medical prognosis. But it turned out that she was okay. This 6-year-old girl, hurt by a human being who never should have been in this country in the first place, who was led into this country by Joe Biden, the Democrats,” Vance said. 

“And she’s hugging her dad, and she’s so excited. And you can tell, and I think everybody’s heart feels very, you know, you get that warm and fuzzy feeling. And then I look over at the congressional Democrats, and they’re just scowling. They cannot clap their hands for a 6-year-old who survived an attack from an illegal alien. What is that?” the vice president added. “What kind of a person can’t stand up and cheer for an innocent young girl who’s doing well, who’s showing the entire country strength and resilience?” 

STEPHEN A SMITH RIPS DEMOCRAT THEATRICS AT TRUMP ADDRESS FOR PLAYING RIGHT INTO PRESIDENT’S HANDS

Marcus Coleman holds his daughter Dalilah Coleman

Marcus Coleman holds his daughter Dalilah Coleman as President Donald Trump delivers his State of the Union address during a Joint Session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 24, 2026, in Washington, D.C.  ( Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The person driving the 18-wheeler that allegedly struck Coleman was identified as Partap Singh, who was charged with three counts of vehicular homicide and immigration-related charges. 

“I think when that little girl was standing up hugging and kissing her dad, that those Democrats, there was at least a part of them, the human part and their soul that wanted to stand up and cheer for that little girl. And all of them sat on their hands. And you have to ask yourself, why is that?” Vance also said.

Donald Trump standing at a podium and speaking during the State of the Union address in the House chamber.

Republican members of Congress stand while Democrats keep their seats during President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress in the House chamber at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026. (Alex Brandon/AP)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

And the answer is because they know they don’t answer to you, they answer to somebody else. They answer to people who have corrupted this country,” he concluded. “They answer to the people who open the border. They answer the people who got rich off of illegal immigrant labor. We want you guys to get rich off of the labor of American citizens. We want American workers to get rich for working hard, not illegal aliens. And that, to me, is the fundamental difference between congressional leadership and congressional Democrats and the congressional Republicans under the leadership of this president.” 

Fox News Digital’s Adam Sabes contributed to this report. 

Related Article

Leavitt says Democrats 'fell right into' Trump's State of the Union 'trap'


Source link

How US economic warfare pushed Cuba to humanitarian collapse | Military

0

NewsFeed

The US has eased its fuel embargo on Cuba, after sanctions helped pushed the country to what the UN calls “humanitarian collapse”. Soraya Lennie looks at the US policy of economic strangulation, and who pays the price.



Source link

Influencer’s hotel hack to use coffee maker for underwear washing sparks disbelief and anger

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A TikTok influencer is responding to outrage online after seemingly recommending that her followers use a hotel coffee maker to wash their underwear while on the road. 

Influencer Tara Woodcox, who has over 700,000 followers on the platform, incurred wrath after her November 2025 video showed travelers how to clean their underwear using a coffee machine.

In the clip, Woodcox suggested placing the garment in the coffee filter compartment and running the brew cycle — so that hot water could flow over it.

“You close it, you press brew, and it puts scorching hot water through it,” she said.

After the TikTok ideo gained traction, Woodcox clarified that she never actually washed underwear herself in a coffee maker.

Person pressing button on automatic coffee machine with mug underneath.

Influencer Tara Woodcox shared a video demonstrating a travel hack (not pictured) that uses a coffee maker. Some people reacted with outrage about the suggestion.  (iStock)

In the new social media post, she claims the idea was something she had heard about years earlier — but had not personally tried.

“I’ve never actually done that — but this is really funny, you guys,” she said.

TRAVELERS SLAM HOTELS FOR ELIMINATING BATHROOM DOORS: ‘I’D LIKE SOME PRIVACY’

Woodcox also noted that she typically avoids using hotel coffee makers altogether because of concerns about cleanliness.

Still, the original video has continued circulating across social media, with many users expressing shock over the idea of using a shared hotel appliance in the way she supposedly suggested.

Woman packing clothes and white headphones into an open suitcase on a bed in a modern hotel room.

Woodcox (not pictured) described placing underwear in the coffee filter, running the brew cycle on a hotel coffee maker — then using a blowdryer on the clothes.  (iStock)

“So every hotel will now be adding a ‘do not use appliances for anything other than their designed purpose,'” one commenter wrote on Instagram.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES

Others said the clip made them reconsider which items they use in a hotel room.

“I will never use a hotel room coffee maker again!” a person chimed in.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

“This is why we only drink at [the] breakfast table at [a] hotel restaurant and not in [the] room. We don’t use it,” a commenter wrote on Instagram.

Many users questioned how the suggestion could ever be considered acceptable.

Businesswoman in hotel room making coffee while preparing for work trip.

Comments quickly poured in, with many people on social media questioning why anyone would ever use a coffee machine to clean their underwear. (iStock)

“How could she think this was OK? It’s revolting,” another person said. 

Whether or not she’s ever washed underwear in a coffee maker, Woodcox included a step-by-step guide for her followers in the original video.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

The influencer also said people could use the hotel’s blowdryer to dry the garment.

“You got yourself a cleaner pair of underwear to wear,” Woodcox said in the original video.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

She added she was surprised by how many people were already familiar with the hack.

She said in the original video, “I learned it years ago from a friend who was a flight attendant, and it’s brilliant.”

Fox News Digital reached out to the influencer for comment, but did not immediately hear back. On Instagram, her bio notes that she’s a fitness and nutrition coach, and also a mom of three. 

Related Article

Unusual airport amenity gains traction as part of healthy travel push: 'Makes a world of difference'


Source link

Hillary Clinton calls for Trump to testify at US House Epstein hearing | Donald Trump News

0

Former United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has condemned the conduct of a Republican-led panel investigating links to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, accusing congressional lawmakers of trying to “protect one political party and one public official”.

Clinton had been subpoenaed to testify before the panel, made up of members of the House of Representatives, on Thursday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

But before her appearance, she published her opening statement online, which criticised an “institutional failure” in the US government to “seek truth and justice for the victims and survivors”.

Clinton’s husband, former US President Bill Clinton, is set to testify before the same panel on Friday. Both are Democrats.

The pair have maintained they had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activity and have long said they have provided all relevant information to the lawmakers on the panel.

In her statement, Clinton also accused the Republicans of using the hearings as a red herring to divert blame away from the administration of President Donald Trump.

“You have compelled me to testify, fully aware I have no knowledge that would assist in your investigation, in order to distract attention from President Trump’s actions and to cover them up,” Clinton wrote.

She also questioned why the panel has allowed other subpoenaed individuals to provide answers in writing, and why its hearings have taken place behind closed doors.

Clinton and her husband, meanwhile, were threatened with charges of contempt, after they resisted the subpoena to appear in person.

Scrutinising Epstein’s social circle

The conflict centres around a long-running push to pursue accountability for those who may have been involved in shielding Epstein from justice.

Epstein, a wealthy financier, had cultivated contacts with high-powered individuals in politics, academia and the arts. His circle of friends included both Bill Clinton and Trump.

But he was also a convicted sex offender, whose victims, experts say, number in the hundreds.

In 2008, he was convicted in Florida of soliciting a minor for prostitution, but he served only 13 months of an 18-month sentence, as part of a plea deal criticised as overly lenient.

In 2019, federal prosecutors charged Epstein with running a sex-trafficking ring, but Epstein, 66, died by apparent suicide while in custody, awaiting trial.

Speculation has continued to grow over how his influential social circle may have aided his crimes.

But the scandal has been a thorn in the side of the Trump administration, which faced backlash over its initial resistance to publishing the government’s full Epstein file.

Media reports over the last year have also highlighted elements of Trump’s past relationship with Epstein, including a sexually suggestive birthday note the Republican leader appeared to have written.

In her statement, Clinton said that, if the House panel were committed to a fair investigation, “it would ask [Trump] directly under oath about the tens of thousands of times he shows up in the Epstein files”.

She also made a reference to an email exchange between Epstein and billionaire Elon Musk, released in a trove of documents by the Department of Justice.

If the panel were “serious”, she wrote, “it would subpoena anyone who asked on which night there would be the ‘wildest party’ on Epstein Island”.

‘A full-blown coverup?’

New details emerged about Epstein and his associates on January 30, when the Department of Justice published nearly 3.5 million government documents related to the convicted sex offender.

A law, passed in November, had compelled the Trump administration to release all its Epstein files within 30 days.

But critics have continued to accuse the administration of failing to release all of the investigative files, as required.

The Justice Department has said it would review claims it has illegally withheld documents containing allegations against Trump.

A person’s appearance in the files does not necessarily imply criminal conduct. But survivors, sexual violence advocates and some politicians have called for greater accountability and transparency, given the scale and nature of Epstein’s crimes.

Speaking on Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called for further action.

“What else is the administration keeping behind a lock and key? Is this incompetence or is it a full-blown coverup?” he said. “Pam Bondi owes the American people some answers.”

For his part, House Oversight Committee chair James Comer denied that the panel’s investigation was a “witch hunt”.

He told supporters in advance of Thursday’s hearing that there was bipartisan support for the Clintons to testify.

Comer also said the government had “failed” Epstein’s victims. While the panel cannot prosecute anyone involved, he added that he hoped it could help bring transparency.

A full transcript and video of the Clinton hearings, which are expected to stretch on for several hours, will be released “as soon as everyone approves it”, according to Comer.

Speaking in advance of the hearing, Robert Garcia, the ranking Democrat on the panel, called for Trump himself to testify “to answer the questions that are being asked across this country from survivors”.



Source link

DHS says Columbia student who was detained had a visa that expired under Obama

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told Fox News Digital that agents detained a Columbia University student who was in the country illegally. The student, who DHS identified as Elmina Aghayeva, had a student visa that expired in 2016.

“ICE arrested Elmina Aghayeva, an illegal alien from Azerbaijan, whose student visa was terminated in 2016 under the Obama administration for failing to attend classes. The building manager and her roommate let officers into the apartment. She has no pending appeals or applications with DHS,” a DHS spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

Columbia University in New York City said on Thursday that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents entered a residential building and detained a student. The university said the federal agents entered the residential building at approximately 6:30 a.m. local time.

Protest at Columbia University

Anti-ICE agitators demonstrated at Columbia University after federal immigration agents detained a student. (WNYW)

“Our understanding at this time is that the federal agents made misrepresentations to gain entry to the building to search for a ‘missing person.’ We are working to gather more details,” Columbia University said in a statement. “It is important to reiterate that all law enforcement agents must have a judicial warrant or judicial subpoena to access non-public areas of the University, including housing, classrooms, and areas requiring CUID swipe access. An administrative warrant is not sufficient.”

The university said law enforcement agents with a judicial warrant or judicial subpoena who are looking to access non-public areas of the university must contact public safety, which will then contact “the Office of the General Counsel to coordinate the university’s response.”

Many Columbia University buildings do not require a Columbia University ID (CUID) to enter, but in order to access the interior of the buildings, one would need to swipe through turnstiles with an ID.

While Columbia spoke about rules on its campus, DHS said that the incident did not take place on campus. 

Anti-ICE agitator at Columbia

An anti-ICE agitator holds a sign during a demonstration at Columbia University. (WNYW)

MORE THAN A DOZEN ANTI-ICE AGITATORS HAULED AWAY BY NYPD NEAR COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

New York City Council Speaker Julie Menin and Majority Leader Shaun Abreu issued a joint statement condemning the incident. They said the agents’ actions have increased “mistrust and danger” in the city and the country.

“ICE has no place in our schools and universities. These activities do not make our city or country safer, but rather drive mistrust and danger. As Columbia College alumni, our hearts are with the community there, and we have been in contact with the University to offer our assistance,” the statement read.

Barricades at Columbia University

Barricades are installed in front of Columbia University after federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security entered a university residential building and detained a student, early Thursday morning, on Feb. 26, 2026. (Ryan Murphy/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat who has been a vocal critic of the Trump administration’s illegal immigration crackdown, held back in her response to the incident when asked about it on Thursday. The governor told reporters that the details of the situation were still “unfolding” and that, if the agents “misrepresented” themselves, that it showed the “out of control” nature of the administration’s crackdown.

“I still have to get the details, this is newly unfolding. I don’t wanna speak outside of turn here, but if that’s the case that just goes to prove our point: this is an organization out of control. They need to be focused, reorganized, retrained. Start over, it’s not working,” she said.

Mamdani’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Related Article

Columbia pulls promotion for DHS career expo after faculty claims university is aiding 'authoritarianism'


Source link

International doctors forced to leave Gaza over Israeli demands | Health

0

NewsFeed

Seventeen aid groups have petitioned Israel’s Supreme Court after the government moved to ban 37 NGOs in Gaza unless they hand over detailed data to on Palestinian staff. Agencies, including Doctors Without Borders, warn the move could trigger humanitarian collapse.



Source link