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Dem border rep brags about voting against Laken Riley Act

Rep. Gabe Vasquez, D-N.M., touted his vote against the Laken Riley Act and bashed President Donald Trump’s administration at an April event, saying deporting Kilmar Abrego Garcia, along with other illegal immigrants, is «testing and stretching the fabric of our democracy to a place we have never seen before.»
In his speech, Vasquez claimed some said it would take «courage» to vote against the Laken Riley Act, to which the Democratic congressman exclaimed, «I did. I voted against [the bill],» leading the audience to cheer. «Because due process is a fundamental part of who we are as Americans,» he continued.
The Laken Riley Act, which was signed into law by Trump on Jan. 29, was introduced after an illegal immigrant brutally murdered 22-year-old nursing student Laken Riley while she was jogging in Athens, Georgia, in February 2024. The law established that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) must detain illegal migrants if they are arrested or charged with a violent crime.
CHANCE OF LAKEN RILEY’S ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT KILLER DOING TIME IN EL SALVADOR PRISON ADDRESSED BY LAWMAKERS
Just a month after the Laken Riley Act was signed into law, Secretary Kristi Noem and DHS announced a «627% increase in monthly arrests compared to just 33,000 at-large arrests under Biden for ALL of last year.»
New Mexico Rep. Gabe Vasquez spoke with constituents at an April 16 event, explaining why he voted against the Laken Riley Act.
Texas Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales, whose district contains the longest stretch of U.S. land neighboring Mexico, defended the bipartisan bill in a statement to Fox News Digital Friday.
Gonzales explained that border security is «a real and lasting issue as a result of four years of inaction under President Biden. That’s why Americans voted for safer communities and to restore law and order and President Trump is delivering on that promise with legislation like the Laken Riley Act and much more that is coming down the pike.»
Vasquez went on to bash the Trump administration for deporting illegal migrants, including Abrego Garcia, claiming U.S. citizens aren’t safe from being removed from the country if the Trump administration gets «their way.»
«Time and time again, out-of-touch Democrat Gabe Vasquez chooses to prioritize criminal illegal aliens over the well-being of hardworking New Mexicans,» National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) spokesman Zach Bannon told Fox News Digital. «He’s completely abandoned common sense, pandering to the radical left while betraying the very people who will vote him out of office next year.»
DEMS RIDICULED FOR GOING ‘ALL IN’ ON SUSPECTED MS-13 GANG MEMBER KILMAR ABREGO GARCIA

Rep. Gabe Vasquez attends a news conference outside the U.S. Capitol on Nov. 15, 2024. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
Abrego Garcia, who has been the focus of Democratic talking points criticizing Trump’s immigration policies, was one of many illegal immigrants who were deported to the El Salvadorian «Terrorism Confinement Center» (CECOT) in March.
It was most recently revealed that the 29-year-old illegal migrant and suspected member of the violent MS-13 gang was pulled over while driving an SUV that belonged to another illegal immigrant who confessed to human smuggling in 2020.
While the Trump administration has maintained their position on Abrego Garcia’s gang ties and history of violence, a federal judge and even the U.S. Supreme Court have ordered the Department of Justice (DOJ) to facilitate his return. Abrego Garcia had been living in Maryland with his family prior to being sent to El Salvador, on the grounds that his removal to the country was unjustified.
TOP TRUMP OFFICIALS FILE CHARGES AGAINST ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT AFTER FOX NEWS EXPOSES EARLY RELEASE PLANS

Jose Ibarra, left, was found guilty on 10 counts in the death of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley, right. (Hyosub Shin/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP, Pool)
Some Republicans have pushed back at the decision to double down on Abrego Garcia’s stay in El Salvador, including Louisiana Sen. John Kennedy, who said in an interview with NBC’s «Meet the Press» that Abrego Garcia’s deportation was a «screw up.»
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis gave the DOJ a week’s extension to provide explanation, documentation and testimony defending the decision to deport Abrego Garcia.
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Fox News Digital reached out to Vasquez’s office for comment.
Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News Digital covering breaking news. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston
Immigration,Border security,New Mexico,House Of Representatives
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Quién es Mark Carney, el economista que asumirá la defensa de Canadá ante Trump

Mark Carney, el brillante economista que este lunes ganó las elecciones generales de Canadá, ha lidiado con retos como la crisis financiera de 2008 o el Brexit en el Reino Unido, pero ahora se enfrenta a su desafío más trascendental: plantar cara a Donald Trump y garantizar el futuro de Canadá.
Su victoria este lunes en las elecciones legislativas canadienses, cocinada en apenas cinco meses, ha sido un logro que pasará a los libros de historia.
Cuando en diciembre, el Partido Liberal se rebeló contra su líder y primer ministro del país, Justin Trudeau, el apellido Carney era casi desconocido para muchos, nacido en una de las esquinas menos conocidas del país, los remotos Territorios del Noroeste, y criado en la dura y lejana ciudad de Edmonton.
Las encuestas daban por seguro que el líder del opositor Partido Conservador, Pierre Poilievre, se convertiría en el próximo jefe del Gobierno de Canadá.

Pese a esos vaticinios, Carney presentó su candidatura para liderar el Partido Liberal y reemplazar a Trudeau.
El ex gobernador del Banco de Canadá (2008-2013) y del Banco de Inglaterra (2013-2020) ganó, se convirtió de forma automática en primer ministro de Canadá sin haber sido nunca diputado y convocó elecciones anticipadas.
En pocas semanas, y gracias a las amenazas de Trump de anexionarse Canadá y sus agresivas políticas arancelarias, Carney sobrepasó a Poilievre, que llevaba casi tres años preparándose para derrotar a los liberales, y convirtió una derrota casi segura en la cuarta victoria electoral consecutiva del Partido Liberal.
En la madrugada de este martes, en un discurso ante sus seguidores tras confirmarse su victoria, Carney lanzó un mensaje de unidad, optimismo pero también combativo ante lo que espera al país.
“Humildad es también reconocer que una de las responsabilidades de gobierno es preparar para lo peor, no esperar lo mejor. Como he estado advirtiendo desde hace meses, Estados Unidos quiere nuestra tierra, nuestros recursos, nuestra agua, nuestro país. No son amenazas vacías. El presidente Trump está intentando rompernos para que EEUU nos posea”, dijo.

Su primer reto es sentarse ahora con Trump y negociar “entre dos naciones soberanas” la nueva relación económica y en materia de seguridad que los dos países tendrán en el futuro.
El 27 de marzo, tras semanas de ataques de Trump, Carney dio un golpe sobre la mesa: “La vieja relación que teníamos con Estados Unidos basada en la profundización de la integración de nuestras economías, seguridad y cooperación militar se ha acabado. No está claro qué será lo siguiente que haga EEUU, pero lo que está claro es que los canadienses podemos controlar nuestro destino”, sentenció Carney.
Palabras que otorgaron a Carney el respeto casi inmediato de muchos de sus conciudadanos que con una angustia existencial nunca experimentada en generaciones, buscaban un líder capaz de navegar el caos de la segunda llegada de Trump.
Una muestra es el escritor y académico Stephen Henighan que resumió el sentir de muchos en una columna en el periódico The Globe and Mail y en la que afirmó que Carney “ha mostrado confianza en la existencia de Canadá”.

“Ha tranquilizado a los canadienses asegurando que sobreviviremos a los impulsos depredadores de Donald Trump… Muchos canadienses se han sorprendido de que un banquero moderado pudiera articular posturas nacionalistas con una autoconfianza tan discreta”, explicó el profesor de Estudios Españoles e Hispánicos en la Universidad de Guelph.
Trump es el más importante pero no el único reto al que se enfrenta este economista, un católico practicante -aunque no le gusta alardear de ello- de 60 años, casado y con cuatro hijos.
Carney tiene también que dar respuesta al profundo descontento de la población canadiense con muchas de las políticas de su antecesor y que han provocado un fuerte aumento del coste de la vida que amenaza la prosperidad de muchas familias, una vivienda inasequible para millones y una inmigración astronómica.
Le toca además respaldar con hechos la imagen de unificador que se ha ganado en las últimas semanas y detener las tendencias centrífugas de Alberta, en el oeste, y Quebec, en el este, y que pueden amenazar el concepto mismo de Canadá.
Todo esto sin tiempo para aprender a ser un político. Pero Carney asegura que está listo.

“Sé cómo gestionar una crisis y estoy listo para liderar”, declaró este mismo lunes palabras que complementa su esposa, la también economista Diana Fox Carney: “Creo que afrontar retos es una de las características que definen a Mark. Su actitud serena y tranquila bajo presión lo hace especialmente adecuado para este momento”.
(EFE)
North America,Government / Politics,OTTAWA
INTERNACIONAL
How Donald Trump tried to court the Atlantic – and why the liberal magazine landed an interview

Hell hath frozen over: At the White House the other day, Donald Trump «was launching a charm offensive, directed mainly at Goldberg,» as in Jeffrey Goldberg, the Atlantic’s editor-in-chief. «There was none of the name-calling or hostility he regularly levels at our magazine.»
That’s according to Atlantic reporters Ashley Parker and Michael Scherer, who wrote the magazine’s cover story, which was posted yesterday.
For all the insights gleaned from the interview, nothing is more fascinating than how it came about.
They called the president on his cell phone. (Wha? Who do I have to court to get that? The reporters ain’t saying.)
Trump says he did the initial phone interview to see if the liberal magazine could be fair.
PRESIDENT TRUMP TELLS THE ATLANTIC HE RUNS THE COUNTRY ‘AND THE WORLD’
So I’m here to pronounce that the entire, seemingly endless piece is fair. The president hasn’t taken a shot at it on Truth Social, at least so far.
He has, however, ripped new polls from the «Failing New York Times» and «ABC/Washington Post» as «FAKE POLLS FROM FAKE NEWS ORGANIZATIONS,» saying they should be «investigated for ELECTION FRAUD, and add in the Fox News Pollster while you’re at it.» His lowest approval rating, in the Post-ABC survey, was 39 percent.
Meanwhile, we may now look back on Trump’s 2024 victory as inevitable, but after Jan. 6 it was anything but. On the cell call, «The president seemed exhilarated by everything he had managed to do in the first two months of his second term.»
President Trump recently gave an interview to The Atlantic. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
And then came the transaction: «As ever, Trump was on the hunt for a deal. If he liked the story we wrote, he said, he might even speak with us again.»
Goldberg describes the session: «What I found in this particular meeting was a Trump who was low-key, attentive, and eager to convince us that he is good at his job and good for the country. It isn’t easy to escape the tractor beam of his charisma, but somehow we managed, and we asked him what needed to be asked.
«But squaring Trump the Charmer with the Orcish Trump we more frequently see is difficult…Trump posted on the social-media platform he owns that Ashley is a ‘Radical Left Lunatic’ (she is not) and that Michael ‘has never written a fair story about me, only negative, and virtually always LIES’ (also false). It is our task at the Atlantic not to be bullied by these sorts of attacks.»
STATE OF WAR: HOW TRUMP IS FIGHTING A 9-FRONT BATTLE
The most interesting Trump sound bite is his comparison of the two terms:
«The first time, I had two things to do—run the country and survive; I had all these crooked guys. And the second time, I run the country and the world.»
Parker and Scherer did many other interviews, such as with Steve Bannon. «Our reality is that we won,» and he cited the conspiracy theory that the FBI had incited the crowd on Jan. 6. The reporters said that was simply untrue.
«Now, here’s the interesting thing,» Bannon said. «Who’s won that argument? I think we have…
«This time it’s ‘Hey, f**k you, Greenland’s ours…When you’ve come back from such long odds, you clearly feel, ‘I can do anything.’ »
What about the four criminal investigations, including the conviction on the weakest one – Alvin Bragg’s hush money case? Trump says his numbers kept going up.
INTERVIEWING DONALD TRUMP: A LAST-MINUTE BLITZ AND NEW CLOSING MESSAGE
«Shockingly, yes,» Trump said. «Normally, it would knock you out. You wouldn’t even live for the next day. You know, you’d announce your resignation, and you’d go back and ‘fight for your name,’ like everybody says—you know, ‘fight for your name, go back to your family.’ …Yeah, it made me stronger, made me a lot stronger.»
He also said in the phone interview: «I got indicted five different times by five different scumbags, and they’re all looking for jobs now, so it’s one of those things. Who would have thought, right? It’s been pretty amazing.»
After the 2016 election, Trump told oil executives at Mar-a-Lago:
If I’m not president, you’re f***ed. Look at your profit-and-loss statements. You realize what would have happened to you if she was president? What’s wrong with you?») She was Kamala Harris, of course.

Referring to the criminal cases against him – including the charges brought forth by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Trump said «it made [him] stronger.» (Fulton County Sheriff’s Office via AP / Trump-Vance Transition Team)
One turning point: When he went to East Palestine, Ohio after the derailment of a train carrying toxic chemicals, while Joe Biden didn’t do squat.
On the Kennedy Center: «I didn’t really get to go the first time, because I was always getting impeached or some bulls**t, and I could never enjoy a show.» So he fired the Democrats and made himself chairman.
All right, enough quotes. Wait, one more that captures the tone of the piece:
«I got 38 percent of the male Black vote. Nobody knew that was possible. That’s a lot. I got 56 percent of Hispanics. How about that one? Every county along the Texas border is Hispanic. I won every one of them.» Though every single number he cited was wrong, the general thrust of his observation was correct.»
The reporters chronicled how things have gone south for the president, especially on tariffs and the economy, and how he pressured Hill Republicans into backing his nominees with primary threats.
SUBSCRIBE TO HOWIE’S MEDIA BUZZMETER PODCAST, A RIFF ON THE DAY’S HOTTEST STORIES
After the March phone interview, the reporters tried Trump’s cellphone again. Just got voice mail. But at 1:38 am, he tried them back. No message.
Trump believes he can win over even his worst enemies. In 2015 or 2016, I watched him make a beeline in the New York green room for Karl Rove, who was very rough on him. At worst, he thinks, he can neutralize the person. Or soften him or her up for the next time. He enjoys the challenge.
The mainstream media almost uniformly can’t stand Donald Trump. He does invite some of his own negative headlines, while providing unprecedented access, but much of the press is back in Resistance mode.
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Still, the Atlantic’s original pitch is undeniable, that he’s «The Most Consequential President of the 21st Century.»
Media Buzz,Donald Trump,Media
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Islamofobia en Francia: matan de 40 puñaladas a un joven en una mezquita
