Trump says he does not know if El Salvador would return mistakenly deported Kilmar Ábrego García and hasn’t asked
Donald Trump said on Wednesday he did not know how El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, would respond to a request to return a man his administration mistakenly deported from Maryland, adding he has not spoken to him.
The reporter had pulled Trump up on his comments in his ABC News interview last night that he “could” secure Kilmar Ábrego García’s return but won’t do so, despite the supreme court’s ruling that his administration must facilitate Ábrego García’s return to the US.
Trump said:
I don’t know. I haven’t spoken to him. I really leave that to the lawyers and I take my advice from Pam [Bondi] and everybody that is very much involved. They know the laws and we follow the laws exactly.
Key events
Federal judge limits Trump’s ability to swiftly deport migrants held at Guantánamo Bay
A federal judge ordered the Trump administration on Wednesday to ensure migrants held at Guantánamo Bay are given a chance to raise any concerns about their safety before deporting them to El Salvador or countries other than their places of origin, per Reuters.
US district judge Brian Murphy in Boston issued the order after immigrant rights advocates argued the administration had violated a court order he issued by flying four Venezuelans held at the US naval base in Cuba to El Salvador on a flight conducted by the Department of Defense.
Murphy in late March had issued a temporary restraining order, which he later extended into an injunction, restricting the Department of Homeland Security’s ability to rapidly deport migrants to countries other than their own without allowing them to first raise concerns about their safety or potential torture.
Donald Trump’s administration argued it did not violate the judge’s order as it only applied to the Homeland Security Department, which oversees US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice), not the Defense Department.
The Department of Justice called three of the four migrants members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua and said the Department of Defense removed them to El Salvador without the knowledge or direction of the Homeland Security Department.
Trump says he does not know if El Salvador would return mistakenly deported Kilmar Ábrego García and hasn’t asked
Donald Trump said on Wednesday he did not know how El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, would respond to a request to return a man his administration mistakenly deported from Maryland, adding he has not spoken to him.
The reporter had pulled Trump up on his comments in his ABC News interview last night that he “could” secure Kilmar Ábrego García’s return but won’t do so, despite the supreme court’s ruling that his administration must facilitate Ábrego García’s return to the US.
Trump said:
I don’t know. I haven’t spoken to him. I really leave that to the lawyers and I take my advice from Pam [Bondi] and everybody that is very much involved. They know the laws and we follow the laws exactly.
‘Stay as long as you want,’ Trump tells Musk at cabinet meeting as billionaire transitions away from Doge role
At his 100th day cabinet meeting earlier, Donald Trump said Elon Musk, who has taken more of a backseat in the administration recently but was in attendance, could stay “as long as he wants” in his administration, before adding that “at some point he wants to get back home to his cars”.
Musk is in damage control mode after Tesla reported a huge dip in both profits and revenues in the first quarter of 2025 amid backlash against his polarizing role in the White House. Tesla has also been hit by a wave of vandalization, attacks and protests during Musk’s time as Trump’s chainsaw-wielding sidekick. “Starting probably next month, May, my time allocation to Doge will drop significantly,” he said last week, adding that he expects to spend one to two days a week continuing his “critical work” at Doge “for as long as the president would like me to do so and as long as it is useful”.
During the cabinet meeting, Trump said to Musk: “We just want to thank you very much. And, you know, you’re invited to stay as long as you want. At some point, he wants to get back home to his cars.”
The billionaire replied: “Great to work with you,” before donning his Doge hat and then his Gulf of America hat, before stacking them on top of one another. “I love the double hat by the way. He’s the only one who can get away with it,” said Trump, to which Musk replied: “I told you I wear a lot of hats. Even my hat has a hat.” All to avid laughter from those in attendance, I kid you not.
“Well, Mr. President, they say I wear a lot of hats. It’s true. Even my hat has a hat.” – @elonmusk at the first Trump Cabinet meeting after reaching 100 days. pic.twitter.com/s7jWrUjb65
— Beatrice Peterson (@MissBeaE on all platforms) (@MissBeaE) April 30, 2025
Earlier this month, the White House said the plan had always been for Musk to refocus on Tesla once he’d completed his “incredible work” at Doge, while the New York Post reported that Musk is “transitioning” from his role – he’s no longer physically based on the White House grounds and is working remotely.
As an unpaid special government employee, Musk is limited to working for the government for 130 days – which expires on 30 May. His looming exit is widely seen as indicative of the unpredictable billionaire having become too great a political liability for Trump.
Earlier this week a Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll found that 57% of Americans surveyed disapproved “somewhat” or “strongly” in the way Musk is handling his role in the administration.
Tulsi Gabbard says 11 people under investigation for media leaks – report
Eleven people are under investigation for “illegal, unauthorized leaks to the media of classified intelligence”, the US director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, has said.
The announcement, reported by ABC News, comes nearly a week after Gabbard said three intelligence officials were referred to the justice department for criminal prosecution.
It comes as part of a wider crackdown by the Trump administration on leaks to the media. Last week the Associated Press reported that attorney general Pam Bondi said prosecutors would once again have authority to use subpoenas, court orders and search warrants to hunt for government officials who make “unauthorized disclosures” to journalists.
ABC also reported that Gabbard said security clearances have been revoked for 67 individuals. Those include former secretary of state Antony Blinken, former national security adviser Jake Sullivan, and former deputy attorney general Lisa Monaco.
Columbia student Mohsen Mahdawi freed after federal judge orders release

Anna Betts
Mohsen Mahdawi has walked out of immigration detention after a federal judge in Vermont ordered his release. The Palestinian green-card holder and student at Columbia University had been detained and ordered deported by the Trump administration on 14 April despite not being charged with a crime.
“The two weeks of detention so far demonstrate great harm to a person who has been charged with no crime,” said Geoffrey Crawford, a US district judge, at a hearing on Wednesday, according to ABC News. “Mr Mahdawi, I will order you released.”
In his ruling, Crawford stated that the evidence before the court “suggests that Mr Mahdawi is neither a flight risk or a danger to the community, and his release will not interfere with his removal proceedings”.
Crawford wrote that the government “failed to demonstrate any legitimate interest in Mr Mahdawi’s continued confinement” and that his “continued detention would likely have a chilling effect on protected speech”.
Crawford ordered that Mahdawi be released from prison on bail, pending the resolution of his case in federal court.
The order allows Mahdawi to continue residing in Vermont and to travel to New York to attend school and meet with his lawyers. His case in federal court will continue alongside separate immigration proceedings.
House speaker Mike Johnson is renting a house from his congressional colleague Darrell Issa, a Republican representative for California, Semafor reports.
In late February, ProPublica reported that the speaker was sharing a home with evangelical pastor Steve Berger (who has attacked the separation of church and state as “a delusional lie” and called multinational institutions “demonic”), just blocks away from the Capitol, in a property owned by a wealthy Tennessee donor who has joined Berger in advocating for and against multiple bills before Congress. A spokesperson told ProPublica at the time that Johnson “has never once spoken to Mr Berger about any piece of legislation or any matter of public policy”. Johnson relocated a month later.
“He’s a friend and needed a place,” Issa told Semafor of the arrangement. Issa purchased the home in March from Republican representative Mark Green of Tennessee, for over $1.5m. A spokesperson with the speaker’s office said: “Representative Issa negotiated a fair market price for the lease of the property to the speaker.”
USPS law enforcement assists ‘mass deportation’ effort using data from mail to find undocumented migrants – report
US Postal Service law enforcement has started working with immigration officials to find undocumented immigrants via mail surveillance, the Washington Post (paywall) has been told.
Citing two people familiar with the effort, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the Post reports that the US Postal Inspection Service recently joined a federal task force to locate undocumented migrants using data from mail and packages, to assist the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) with its tracking, detaining and deporting efforts.
The sources said immigration officials are looking to gain access to the Postal Inspection Service’s vast surveillance systems such as online account data, package and mail-tracking, credit card and financial information, IP addresses, and even photographs of the exterior of envelopes and packages, known as “mail covers”.
GOP poll shows plurality of voters opposed to cuts to Medicaid even to lower national debt
New internal GOP polling shows a plurality of American voters are opposed to spending cuts to Medicaid even when framed as an effort to lower national debt, Axios reports.
In a warning sign for Republican lawmakers weighing deep spending cuts, a plurality of independent voters – and voters overall – were opposed to Medicaid cuts to lower the national debt, according to the poll by Gray House shared with Senate Republicans.
A number of key moderate Republicans in both chambers have made clear they will not vote for any bill that includes such cuts to Medicaid. But, Axios notes, conservatives eager to make a dent in the growing national debt are pushing for more than $1tn in spending cuts – which would be likely impossible without impacting Medicaid.
Confusingly, last night at his 100-day rally, Donald Trump proclaimed that Republicans were going to somehow increase spending on Medicaid. It’s set to be a major political fight over what will be Trump’s flagship legislation – his “one big, beautiful bill” – with a current expected deadline of 4 July.

Chris Stein
Rodney Scott’s answers were not good enough for top Senate finance committee Democrat Ron Wyden, who said it remained unclear if he followed the law during the investigation of a man who died in Customs and Border Protection (CBP) custody in San Diego 15 years ago.
“We didn’t hear any response to the internal affairs high-ranking official who at the time said the investigation was a cover up,” Wyden said, adding that he was also not assured that Scott used a subpoena to obtain the victim’s medical records legally.
The senator also questioned Scott about a comment he made on social media to a former border patrol employee turned critic, where he said “lean back, close your eyes and just enjoy the show” – a comment Wyden noted a judge said was a “classic rape threat”. Scott replied that he had apologized in-person to the critic.
Wyden also demanded answers about Scott’s presence in a Facebook group in which border patrol employees mocked immigrants and shared fake, sexually explicit images about members of Congress.
“Should you have been a member of this Facebook group with all of this ugliness being sort of business as usual?” Wyden asked.
“There were 9,000 people on that group. To say that a few that actually posted something inappropriate, were held accountable, and were disciplined are a reflection of everyone else on that group, I think, is just a [mischaracterization],” Scott replied.

Chris Stein
At Rodney Scott’s confirmation hearing to lead Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Republican chair of the Senate finance committee Mike Crapo questioned him about the subpoena he signed for the medical records of Anastasio Hernández Rojas.
“The subpoena was information gathering” that was common practice when an individual dies in CBP custody, as was the case with Hernández Rojas, Scott said.
“And did you do anything in the investigation of that case to interfere with the investigation of that case?” Crapo asked.
“Absolutely not,” Scott replied.
The United Parcel Service (UPS) is expected to cut about 20,000 jobs in 2025 as a part of a larger plan to reduce costs and increase profit, citing “changes in the global trade policy and new or increased tariffs”.
UPS announced the layoffs on Tuesday in its first quarter earnings report. The company also said it would be closing 73 leased and owned buildings by the end of June of this year.
“The actions we are taking to reconfigure our network and reduce cost across our business could not be timelier,” Carol Tomé, UPS chief executive officer said in a statement.
“The macro environment may be uncertain, but with our actions, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS.”
The report also said that UPS anticipated “lower volumes” from the company’s largest customer, Amazon.
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Donald Trump is continuing to push for even stricter immigration policies in his first cabinet meeting after celebrating 100 days in office.
“We have to get the criminals out of this country,” Trump said. “That’s the basis on which we won this election.”
His comments come at a time when the president’s approval rating has flipped amid ongoing and frequent cases of people in the US being detained by Ice, as well as controversial deportations.