February 21, 2025: Donald Trump presidency news | CNN Politics

February 21, 2025: Donald Trump presidency news

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Haberman on what could shorten Elon Musk’s long haul with Trump
01:01 - Source: CNN

What we covered here:

• Pentagon purge: In an unprecedented purge of the military’s senior leadership, President Donald Trump tonight fired the top US general while his defense secretary dismissed the chief of the US Navy and others. Separately, the Pentagon said it plans to fire 5-8% of the military’s approximately 950,000 civilian employees.

• Big court rulings: The Supreme Court dashed Trump’s plan to immediately fire the head of an independent agency that investigates whistleblower claims. In other rulings, a federal judge allowed the administration to move forward with its dismantling of USAID, while another judge temporarily blocked the administration from carrying out certain DEI directives.

• Media lawsuit: The Associated Press is suing three administration officials in federal court for banning AP reporters from some of the president’s events.

• Trump again slams Zelensky: Trump continued to rail against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a radio interview — though he admitted Russia attacked Ukraine.

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DOGE access to sensitive Treasury data remains blocked after dueling court rulings

The Department of Government Efficiency’s access to sensitive Treasury data remains blocked after split rulings today from federal judges in Virginia and New York.

US District Judge Rossie D. Alston of Virginia declined to block DOGE’s access to sensitive data at Treasury Department and the Office of Personnel Management as a judge in a separate case in New York ordered that a hold she had placed on DOGE access to sensitive Treasury data systems would continue.

While the Virginia ruling was a win for the Trump administration, the Treasury Department will still have to abide by US District Judge Jeannette Anne Vargas’s order in the New York case halting it from giving affiliates of DOGE access to its systems containing sensitive data.

Alston, however, rejected the request in his court for intervention because, he wrote Friday, the “Plaintiffs’ fears of future harm are much too speculative and would require the Court to make several leaps in reasoning in order to warrant injunctive relief.”

At a hearing Friday morning, Alston also addressed the direction most courts have gone in denying emergency orders in cases challenging the DOGE’s team efforts to seize the keys of closely guarded data systems at various agencies.

Recording reveals new details on controversial DOGE employee

Less than three years before Elon Musk tapped him to take part in a sweeping overhaul of the US government, Edward Coristine, then 17, was the subject of a heated dispute between two executives at the Arizona-based cybersecurity firm where he was an intern.

At issue was whether to allow Coristine to keep his job even though he was suspected of leaking proprietary information to a competitor.

“You’re willing to risk our entire network to a 17-year-old?” one frustrated executive asked the company’s CEO in 2022. “Are you for real right now?”

In a recording of the call, reviewed by CNN, Marshal Webb, the CEO of Path Network, a company that offers services to protect businesses from cyberattacks, defended his decision.

He said he wanted to allow Coristine to continue with his internship, in part, because he didn’t want to make him “an enemy” or have him “running amok” with information he was suspected of taking. Webb allowed him to stay with the proviso that the young employee “not be exposed to anything that’s really sensitive.”

That was then.

Today, the 19-year-old, once known by the online moniker “Big Balls,” is part of Musk’s controversial effort to remake the federal government. He is a “senior advisor” with access to various departments, including Homeland Security, FEMA and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

The details of Coristine’s role with the government are not clear. But his young age and relative lack of experience have raised concerns about his overall suitability for such potentially sensitive work.

Read more about the recording here.

Bannon offers guarded praise for Musk and DOGE after tech billionaire's CPAC appearance

Steve Bannon, the former Donald Trump White House aide and conservative media founder, offered guarded praise for Elon Musk following his appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference this weekend, despite the history of friction between the two, saying that Musk is “probably, on the oligarch side, the least offensive, as far as that goes.”

Asked about his recent criticism of Musk, Bannon denied that he was changing his tune, characterizing the relationship as an “alliance of convenience.”

Bannon praised the work being done by Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency in the new Trump administration while saying he retained his skepticism toward Musk.

“I thought Elon’s answers were fine, right?” Bannon said when asked to react to Musk’s appearance at CPAC on Thursday. “I don’t agree with Elon on everything, but the one thing I do think is very powerful is DOGE are like, it’s like a shock to the system, right?”

Bannon has directed more critical rhetoric at Musk lately, clashing with the DOGE leader over policy, some relating to immigration. Earlier this week, Bannon criticized Musk and other tech billionaires in the president and questioned their support of the MAGA movement.

Watch Bannon’s interview with CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan.

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'Not just Elon': Bannon responds to his issue with 'oligarchs'
04:00 - Source: CNN

Trump says rare earth mineral agreement with Kyiv is “pretty close.” Here’s the latest Ukraine news

President Donald Trump claimed Friday that the US and Ukraine are “pretty close” to agreeing on a rare earth mineral deal. A US official backed up Trump’s claim, saying that a deal is “nearly done.”

Earlier, President Volodymyr Zelensky had said that he hopes for a “fair” agreement with the US.

The Ukrainian president had previously rejected a draft agreement that he said was demanding Kyiv “give away” 50% of Ukraine’s rare minerals while offering no security guarantees in exchange.

Talks between the two sides have been intensive and ongoing, sources say, but have made progress over the past 24 hours. It wasn’t clear when or if an announcement would come, or what the parameters of the deal would be.

Here’s what else you should know:

US special envoy to Ukraine in Kyiv:

  • The special envoy Keith Kellogg met with Ukraine’s senior leadership, including Zelensky, in Kyiv.
  • During his visit, Kellogg called Zelensky “the embattled and courageous leader of a nation at war” — a sharp contrast from Trump’s rhetoric. He also met with wounded soldiers and visited a key location of Ukraine’s fight against the Russian invasion, according to a pool reporter from the New York Post who traveled with Kellogg while he was in the country.

Trump’s comments on Zelensky and the war:

  • Trump said in a Fox News Radio interview that Zelensky has “no cards” and is not “important to be at meetings,” as he warned that Russian President Vladimir Putin could take all of Ukraine “if he wanted.”
  • The president repeatedly ignored questions about Russia being to blame for the war in Ukraine before eventually admitting, “Russia attacked,” and then going on to fault the Biden administration and Zelensky.
  • The Kremlin appears to be surprised by how quickly Trump has made concessions to his Russian counterpart even before beginning negations to end Moscow’s war in Ukraine, a former Russian deputy minister told CNN.
  • Trump also said French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer “haven’t done anything” to end the war in Ukraine. Macron will meet with Trump on Monday and Starmer will follow on Thursday, as CNN has reported.
  • The president is expected to meet with Polish President Andrzej Duda tomorrow, according to an administration official. On Friday, Duda shared on X that Zelensky called him and they “had a candid conversation on the heels of the recent meetings” with Kellogg.

Trump fires top US general

President Donald Trump fired the top US general on Friday night in a move that had been expected for weeks.

In an announcement on his Truth Social platform, Trump called Joint Chiefs Chairman Charles Q. Brown a “fine gentleman” and an “outstanding leader,” while hinting at more firings to come.

Hegseth called Brown by phone on Friday and told him of the decision to remove him as the military’s top general, according to a US defense official.

Brown’s firing had been anticipated for weeks, with rumors about the impending dismissal circulating around the Pentagon. But speculation about the termination of Brown and others became more serious when a formal list was recently shared with some Republican lawmakers.

Minutes after Trump’s posting, Hegseth released a statement in which he fired Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the chief of the Navy and the first woman to serve on the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

In his 2024 book titled “The War on Warriors: Behind the Betrayal of the Men Who Keep Us Free,” Hegseth called Franchetti a “DEI hire.”

After Brown’s ouster, a prominent retired four-star general expressed serious dismay over the move, given the top military adviser has traditionally remained in place as administrations change. The general told CNN the move was “sadly political and tragic for our nation.”

Read more details here about the firings at the Pentagon.

This post was updated with more details on the firings and a reaction from a retired general.

Judge temporarily blocks administration from carrying out certain Trump anti-DEI directives

A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from carrying out certain directives of the president to crack down on diversity, equity, and inclusion — or DEI — programs.

US District Judge Adam Abelson said that the government could neither freeze or cancel “equity-related” contracts nor require recipients of grants to certify that their programs do not promote DEI.

The government is also not allowed to bring any False Claims Act enforcement action, under the judge’s preliminary injunction order.

Trump set to meet with Poland's president tomorrow after Ukraine tensions boil over

President Donald Trump is expected to meet with Polish President Andrzej Duda at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Saturday, according to a Trump administration official.

Trump will address the conservative gathering in Oxon Hill, Maryland, tomorrow afternoon.

Earlier Friday, Duda shared on X that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called him and they “had a candid conversation on the heels of the recent meetings” with Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy on the Ukraine conflict.

Remember: Long-simmering tensions between Zelensky and Trump boiled over this week as US officials met with Russia about a potential deal to end its war in Ukraine, spurring fears in Kyiv and across Europe that Trump would ice out Zelensky and European leaders in seeking to resolve the conflict.

Trump falsely called the Ukrainian president a “dictator without elections” and echoed Russian justifications for the war, while Zelensky said Trump was living in a “web of disinformation.”

While Kellogg struck a conciliatory tone about Zelensky on Friday, Trump continued to rail against the Ukrainian leader in a radio interview.

Patel’s first plans as FBI director is to move more employees out of Washington, DC

FBI Director Kash Patel told employees Friday that he plans to move more agency jobs from the Washington, DC, region to field offices around the country and an FBI facility in Alabama, as part of a broader strategy to move resources away from the bureau’s headquarters, according to an email obtained by CNN.

The email, sent shortly after he was sworn in as director, echoed themes that Patel has focused on as part of his criticism of the FBI.

Patel began his first day on the job at FBI headquarters, leading the morning meeting with senior FBI leaders he helped install before his confirmation. In his evening email, Patel said that he told FBI leadership he will “reduce the footprint of the National Capital Region,” by moving more employees to regional field offices and to the FBI’s Redstone Arsenal campus in Huntsville, Alabama.

The FBI has about 1,300 employees at its Huntsville facility and has moved some operations there as part of a strategy that began in 2016 to reduce its Washington footprint.

Patel previously threatened that if he took over the FBI, he would shut down its headquarters and turn it into a museum. During his confirmation hearing this month, Patel was confronted with those comments and told Democratic Sen. Chris Coons that he meant the FBI needed to move more agents and its investigative focus into the interior of the country to protect Americans.

New York City sues federal government after clawback of FEMA funds

New York City is taking legal action against the Trump administration after it clawed back $80 million out of the city’s bank accounts that were supposed to help pay for migrant services last week, filing a lawsuit Friday.

The lawsuit, filed in the Southern District of New York alleges the Federal Emergency Management Agency illegally seized the money without notice or due process motivated by political opposition to FEMA’s Shelter and Services Program. The money was appropriated by Congress and granted to multiple localities dealing with the influx of migrants.

The lawsuit seeks to have the funds returned to the city.

The federal clawback followed a threat by Elon Musk to revoke funds issued by FEMA.

The funds were appropriated by Congress during the previous administration to help the city pay for migrant hotels and other services.

The $80 million dollar claw back ignited political backlash across city lawmakers who say Adams is beholden to the Trump administration after the Department of Justice issued a directive ordering corruption charges against the mayor to be dropped.

Trump takes measures aimed at curbing Chinese investments that could interfere with US national security

President Donald Trump signed a memo Friday directing the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) to block Chinese investments in areas pertaining to national security, such as artificial intelligence.

The memo also seeks to fast-track foreign investment in US projects but prohibit US companies from making investments that further the causes of the Chinese government. It did not spell out exactly how it would accomplish that.

The executive action comes after Chinese hackers breached CFIUS’ database in December, which was part of a broader incursion into the Treasury Department’s unclassified system, CNN reported.

The Biden administration took similar actions with rules that were finalized last year, which restricted US investments in Chinese industries in an effort to protect national security.

Judge extends block on DOGE access to sensitive Treasury data, but declines to take more sweeping steps

A New York federal judge on Friday extended her earlier block on Department of Government Efficiency representatives’ access to sensitive data at the Treasury Department.

However, US District Judge Jeannette Anne Vargas declined to take more sweeping steps requested by the Democratic-led states that brought the lawsuit in her court to curtail DOGE activity at the department.

Vargas’ new order is a preliminary injunction, which, unlike the temporary restraining order she previously handed down, is subject to appeal. That sets up the possibility for the issue of DOGE’s access to closely guarded government data systems to travel up to higher courts, including the Supreme Court.

The judge said she’d consider modifying the current order once the Treasury showed DOGE employees were given proper training and vetting for accessing the data system. She is giving the government until March 24 to file a submission laying out the steps it has taken.

AP sues Trump administration officials after being blocked from White House briefings

President Donald Trump takes questions from reporters during a briefing in the White House

The Associated Press (AP) is suing three Trump administration officials in federal court for banning AP reporters from some of President Donald Trump’s events, the Oval Office and Air Force One.

The AP alleges the ban violates the First Amendment as well as the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment.

The suit names three defendants: Trump White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, and Deputy Chief of Staff Taylor Budowich.

The AP is seeking an emergency hearing and a court order to declare the ban unconstitutional and require them to rescind it.

Some background: Earlier this month, the AP, one of the world’s largest news outlets, was singled out by the White House for continuing to use the phrase “Gulf of Mexico” even though Trump renamed the body of water “Gulf of America.”

Other countries do not recognize the new name, and the AP is a global news outlet with customers all around the world, so its stories — and influential stylebook — are still referring to the “Gulf of Mexico” while also acknowledging Trump’s decree.

The ban was first implemented on February 11. Top AP editors immediately described it as a First Amendment violation but tried to resolve the dispute behind the scenes before resorting to legal action.

What’s in AP’s legal filing: The White House has ordered its journalists “to use certain words in its coverage or else face an indefinite denial of access,” the AP’s lawyers wrote in the complaint. “The press and all people in the United States have the right to choose their own words and not be retaliated against by the government.”

Leavitt responds: Leavitt sidestepped questions about the conflict at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, saying she had just learned of the suit on her drive over for an on-stage interview.

“We’ll see them in court,” the press secretary said, acknowledging she’d been personally named in the complaint.

CNN’s David Wright contributed to this report.

This post has been updated with Leavitt’s comments at CPAC.

Trump is exploring a new tariff aimed at digital services taxes

President Donald Trump signed a new memo directing the Office of the US Trade Representative to investigate a reciprocal response to countries that have digital services taxes, or DSTs.

DSTs tax the gross revenue that online firms collect from offering services to users. A country with a DST would be able to tax all the revenue large companies that operate online collect — even if the business is unprofitable. That can include what they collect from selling data, advertising as well as payments they receive for subscriptions, software and other kinds of online services users pay for.

American firms, namely Big Tech companies such as Meta, Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft, are disproportionately affected by DSTs, according to a report published last year by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

“What they’re doing to us in other countries is terrible,” Trump said Friday before signing the memo. He declined to share how high reciprocal tariffs on countries with DSTs could go.

The United States does not have a DST. They are most prominent across several European countries as well as India, where DST rates are among the highest worldwide.

Trump claims US is "pretty close" on rare earth mineral deal with Ukraine

President Donald Trump on Friday claimed the US and Ukraine and “pretty close” to agreeing on a rare earth mineral deal.

People familiar with the matter also said US officials believe they are nearing an agreement with Ukraine on a deal to secure rights to the country’s rare earth minerals.

Talks between the two sides have been intensive and ongoing, the people said, but have made progress over the past 24 hours. It wasn’t clear when or if an announcement would come, or what the parameters of the deal would be.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Friday that he hopes for a “fair” minerals agreement with the US. He had previously rejected a draft agreement that he said was demanding Kyiv “give away” 50% of Ukraine’s rare minerals while offering no security guarantees in exchange.

“We’re going to sign a deal to get security, because we have to do that. We’re spending our treasure. They’re spending their blood. They are — and they’re very brave, and you know, in every way you can imagine — but we are spending our treasure on some country that’s very, very far away, and it’s OK, but we have to be treated the same as Europe is being treated,” Trump also said.

Trump dismissed reports that he is traveling to Moscow on May 9 and again didn’t answer a question about whether he considers Russian President Vladimir Putin a dictator, a label he’s applied to Zelensky.

Supreme Court rules government watchdog may remain in the job for now after being fired by Trump

The Supreme Court on Friday stopped President Donald Trump’s plan to immediately fire the head of an independent agency that investigates whistleblower claims, allowing Hampton Dellinger to remain in the job through at least the middle of next week.

By declining to back Trump’s emergency appeal, the conservative court nominally sided with Dellinger. President Joe Biden appointed Dellinger in 2024 to lead the Office of Special Counsel for a five-year term.

Trump White House officials fired Dellinger in a brief email days after the president took office.

In an unsigned order, the court said it would hold the case on pause until February 26, when a temporary order handed down by a lower is set to expire.

Trump administration launches Title IX investigations into Maine Department of Education

The Department of Education’s civil rights division said it is launching Title IX investigations into Maine’s Department of Education related to claims it is violating President Donald Trump’s executive order banning transgender women from competing in women’s sports.

The announcement comes after a tense exchange between Maine Democratic Gov. Janet Mills and President Donald Trump earlier Friday. Trump threatened to strip Maine of its federal funding if the state refuses to comply with his order, prompting the governor to respond: “See you in court.”

Trump’s executive order argues that under Title IX, “educational institutions receiving Federal funds cannot deny women an equal opportunity to participate in sports.”

Trump says he is weighing changes at US Postal Service as shakeup rattles federal agencies. Here's the latest

US Postal Service trucks are parked at a post office in Glendale, California.

President Donald Trump said today he’s considering changes to the US Postal Service, which has been an independent organization for more than 50 years.

It’s a move that could be a first step toward privatization that could upend how Americans get critical deliveries including online purchases, prescription drugs, checks and vote-by-mail ballots. Current law requires the USPS to deliver to all addresses, even rural ones that are too costly for a private business to serve profitably. Even many online purchases handled by private companies such as United Parcel Service depend upon the the Postal Service to handle the “last mile” of delivery to homes.

The USPS now potentially joins other federal agencies going through a massive reorganization under the Trump administration.

Trump has already moved to fire other members of governing federal agencies, such as the National Labor Relations Board and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, leaving those agencies without the minimum number of members needed to act to provide protections to members of the public.

Here’s what else happened today:

  • SCOTUS ruling: The Supreme Court dashed Trump’s plan to immediately fire the head of an independent agency that investigates whistleblower claims, allowing Hampton Dellinger to remain in the job through at least the middle of next week.
  • USAID: A federal judge, appointed by Trump during his first term, is allowing the administration to move forward with its dismantling of the US Agency for International Development (USAID). The decision is likely to be appealed.
  • NIH: A federal judge again blocked the Trump administration’s drastic cuts in medical research funding that many scientists say will endanger patients and delay new lifesaving studies. The judge had issued a temporary restraining order earlier this month blocking the cuts. National Institutes of Health, the main funder of biomedical research, awarded about $35 billion in grants to research groups last year in direct and indirect costs.
  • DOGE’s possible conflict of interest: Three House Democrats are raising “deep alarm” over the Department of Government Efficiency’s interactions with NASA and potential conflicts of interest in a new letter. Elon Musk’s involvement with DOGE has sparked a number of conflict of interest concerns, particularly at NASA, as the space agency holds “proprietary data from NASA contractors, some of whom compete directly with SpaceX,” the lawmakers wrote in their letter.
  • ICE: Acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Caleb Vitello is being removed from his role at the agency amid frustration over a slowdown in arrests in the interior of the US, according to multiple sources. Despite denying publicly that he’s unhappy with the levels of deportations, Trump, who selected Vitello to fill the post, has complained privately about it to his top immigration aides, according to several people familiar with the matter.
  • CDC rally: Dozens of current and former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention staff attended a rally Friday at the Georgia State Capitol. They described the situation at their workplace as chaotic and scary. Many were holding signs with messages like “CDC Saves Lives” and “CDC Makes America Great.”

This post was updated with details on the Supreme Court ruling.

Pentagon announces plan to fire 5-8% of civilian workforce

The Pentagon announced Friday that it anticipates ultimately firing 5 to 8% of the military’s approximately 950,000 civilian employees, with an initial tranche of 5,400 probationary workers who don’t have “mission-critical” roles expected to be terminated next week.

While that is a small percentage of the 55,000 probationary employees who were at risk of being fired en masse, the eventual cuts could amount to a significant reduction in the civilian workforce.

That would mean eventually 47,000 to 76,000 people in total could be let go.

Earlier on Friday, CNN reported the Defense Department had temporarily paused a plan to carry out mass firings of civilian probationary employees until Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and the Pentagon’s Office of General Counsel can carry out a more thorough review of the impacts such firings could have on US military readiness, according to two defense officials familiar with the matter.

Selnick said the first 5,400 employees could be fired early next week, and more could be terminated “as we conduct a further analysis of our personnel needs, complying as always with all applicable laws.”

“As the Secretary made clear, it is simply not in the public interest to retain individuals whose contributions are not mission-critical,” he added. “Taxpayers deserve to have us take a thorough look at our workforce top-to-bottom to see where we can eliminate redundancies.”

The pause on firing a broader swathe of civilian employees all at once came after CNN reported on Wednesday that the mass terminations, which could affect over 50,000 civilian employees across the Pentagon, could run afoul of Title 10 section 129a of the US code.

Following that report, Pentagon lawyers began reviewing the legality of the planned terminations more closely, the officials said.

Kash Patel says he is "living the American dream" after being sworn in as FBI director

Kash Patel arrives to testify during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on January 30, in Washington, DC.

Kash Patel said he is “living the American dream” after being sworn in today as FBI director by Attorney General Pam Bondi.

He said President Donald Trump’s faith in him to lead the FBI is the “greatest honor that I’ll ever have in my life.”

Turning to the task ahead of him, Patel said there “will be accountability within the FBI and outside of the FBI and we will do it through rigorous Constitutional oversight starting this weekend.”

Turmoil in the bureau: Earlier this month, the fate of thousands of FBI officials was in the balance as the Justice Department demanded they fill out a questionnaire about any involvement in investigating the January 6, 2021, US Capitol riot, a move employees believe is meant to be a precursor to mass firings.

The unusual demand for FBI employees to explain their role in an investigation comes as CNN has reported that Trump’s Justice Department is considering expanding its purge of bureau personnel.

Some background: The Senate voted to confirm Patel on Thursday, installing the conservative firebrand at the head of the nation’s top law enforcement agency. The vote was 51 to 49, with Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski joining with Democrats in voting against his confirmation.

CNN’s Josh Campbell, Danya Gainor, Jim Sciutto and Dan Berman contributed reporting to this post.