February 6, 2025: Donald Trump presidency news | CNN Politics

February 6, 2025: Donald Trump presidency news

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Real-world impact through the eyes of a federal worker targeted by Trump’s executive order
03:03 - Source: CNN

What we covered here:

Federal worker deadline paused: A judge paused today’s deadline for federal employees to accept the Trump administration’s deferred resignation offer until he receives more briefings on whether it should be blocked. At least 65,000 federal workers have now opted to resign, a White House official told CNN.

• Senate approves OMB chief: The Senate, voting along party lines, confirmed Russ Vought as the director of the Office of Management and Budget after Democrats held the floor overnight in a marathon of speeches to protest his role in Project 2025 and his insistence that the 2020 election was “rigged.”

• USAID lawsuit: A pair of labor groups representing USAID employees sued Trump over his efforts to dismantle the decades-old humanitarian agency. Multiple sources told CNN that fewer than 300 agency employees are expected to be retained while countless others are put on indefinite leave or fired.

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Our live coverage of Donald Trump’s presidency has ended for the day. Follow the latest updates or read through the posts below.

Japanese prime minister arrives in US ahead of Trump meeting

Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba salutes as he arrives at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Thursday.

Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has arrived in the United States ahead of a meeting with US President Donald Trump, where the two are expected to discuss deepening cooperation on defense and the economy.

A proposed merger of US Steel and Japan’s Nippon Steel — blocked last month by Trump’s predecessor Joe Biden, citing national security concerns — could also be on the agenda.

Trump has said he opposes the deal. On Thursday, he met with US Steel CEO David Burritt ahead of meeting Ishiba, according to Reuters.

Nippon Steel reiterated Thursday that the bid is the “best proposal” for US Steel. “I hope that the Ishiba-Trump meeting will convey that to Trump and open the way for a deal,” said Takahiro Mori, Nippon Steel’s vice chairman, according to Reuters.

Friday’s summit makes Ishiba the first Asian leader to meet Trump since the president’s return to office. The highly sought-after visit comes as the president calls for partners to boost defense spending.

Ishiba will likely seek to discuss Japanese investments in the US, as well as the two countries’ security alliance in the Asia-Pacific region, where Japan has been central to Washington’s security strategy.

The US maintains a large military presence in Japan under a 1960 mutual cooperation and security treaty. US Forces Japan, headquartered at Yokota Air Base, consists of about 60,000 military personnel stationed in the country.

Ishiba said he hopes “to build trust with (Trump)” in the meeting.

Thune takes procedural steps to set up votes on Gabbard and RFK Jr. next week, as well as other nominees

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks on the Senate floor on Thursday.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune took steps on the floor to set up confirmation votes next week on Tulsi Gabbard and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., as well as Howard Lutnick, Kelly Loeffler, and Brooke Rollins.

Democrats forced several procedural votes to delay Thune from filing cloture to end debate on all the nominees, a sign of their opposition to Gabbard and Kennedy’s nominations.

At least 65,000 federal workers have opted into Trump’s resignation offer, White House official says

At least 65,000 federal workers have now opted into the deferred resignation program, a White House official told CNN, as a federal judge halted President Donald Trump’s midnight deadline to accept until at least Monday.

CNN reported earlier Thursday that at least 50,000 employees had already accepted the package, which would generally allow them to leave their jobs but be paid through the end of September.

Deported Indian migrants say US officials kept them shackled for 40-hour flight home

A US military plane deporting Indian immigrants lands in Amritsar, India, on Wednesday.

US officials kept around 100 deported Indian migrants in shackles for the entirety of their 40-hour flight home, two of the men on the plane told CNN.

“Our hands were cuffed and ankles tied with chains before we took the flight,” said 23-year-old Akashdeep Singh, who arrived in Punjab on Wednesday along with 103 other deportees.

The flight was the longest in distance since the Trump administration began deploying military aircraft for migrant deportations, according to a US official.

Sukhpal Singh, 35, also said the shackles were kept on for the duration of the flight, including during a refueling stopover on the Pacific island of Guam.

“If we would try to stand because our legs were swelling due to the handcuffs they would yell at us to sit down,” he said.

CNN has reached out to the Pentagon and US Customs and Border Protection for comment.

Last month, the spectacle of Colombian deportees being shackled as they boarded a US deportation flight sparked a bitter row between the two countries, with Colombian President Gustavo Petro initially denying the plane permission to land.

Opposition Indian lawmakers, some wearing shackles, protested the treatment outside India’s parliament on Thursday.

India was “engaging the US government to ensure that the returning deportees are not mistreated in any manner during the flight,” Indian Foreign Secretary Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told parliament.

Trump's shake-up of federal agencies continues, even as judge delays "buyouts." Here's the latest

Rep. Paul Tonko speaks during a demonstration after being blocked from entering the Environmental Protection Agency to meet with Department of Government Efficiencyofficials, on Thursday, in Washington, DC.

President Donald Trump’s shake-up of federal agencies – aimed at slashing spending and getting rid of diversity, equity and inclusion – continued Thursday at full tilt.

However, a federal judge paused the deadline for federal employees to accept the administration’s deferred resignation offer while more proceedings on the program’s legality play out.

The administration sent an email to employees just after 5 p.m. ET informing them of the court-ordered pause and saying that the deadline for the “buyouts” would be extended to Monday. The email did not acknowledge the possibility that the judge might further halt the program at a hearing scheduled for Monday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Senate Republicans are supporting Elon Musk’s growing influence in how Trump is wielding executive power and dramatically slashing federal agencies. They argue it is simply a function of how the administration is addressing the need to cut waste.

Here’s the latest on Trump’s changes:

USAID: The Trump administration is expected to keep fewer than 300 people at the US Agency for International Development, an enormous reduction in the workforce, according to multiple USAID sources. A pair of labor groups representing employees at USAID sued Trump over his efforts to dismantle the decades-old humanitarian agency.

EPA: More than 160 employees in the Environmental Protection Agency’s office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights have been told they are being placed on paid administrative leave as the agency executes the administration’s executive order to wipe out all program offices it deems as tied to diversity, equity and inclusion, CNN has learned from multiple sources.

NIH: The process for awarding new research funds at the National Institutes of Health is still being held up even after guidance this week saying some closed review meetings could proceed, five sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

FEC: Federal Election Commission Chair Ellen Weintraub said she received a letter from Trump removing her from her role.

Energy Department: A 23-year-old former SpaceX intern representative from Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency was granted access to the Energy Department’s IT system Wednesday by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, two people with knowledge of the situation told CNN. Luke Farritor — a 23-year-old former SpaceX intern — was granted access even over objections from members of the department’s general counsel and chief information offices, the sources told CNN.

"I upheld my oath:" FBI agent pens open letter in defense of colleagues facing possible retribution

As thousands of FBI employees brace for possible political retribution from the Trump administration, one special agent penned an anonymous open letter circulating across the bureau in defense of colleagues who took part in the sprawling January 6, 2021, Capitol riot investigation.

CNN has obtained a copy of the letter and confirmed its authenticity.

Federal Election Commission chair says Trump removed her from the role

Ellen Weintraub addresses the audience during the last day of the Web Summit 2021 in Lisbon.

Federal Election Commission Chair Ellen Weintraub said Thursday that she received a letter from President Donald Trump removing her from her role, coming amid the Trump administration’s broader shake-up of the federal government.

The letter, bearing the president’s signature and signed on January 31, reads: “You are hereby removed as a Member of the Federal Election Commission, effective immediately.”

CNN has reached out to the White House for comment.

The FEC regulates fundraising and spending by candidates for federal office and publishes disclosure reports; Weintraub holds one of its six commissioner positions, appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, which have voting power on committee matters. By law, the commission can have no more than three members affiliated with one party.

Commissioners are meant to serve for a single 6-year term, but can effectively remain in their roles absent replacements.

Weintraub, a Democrat, was first appointed to the FEC in 2002 by then-President George Bush, and has served continuously since then. In December, she was elected chair of the commission for 2025.

The Campaign Legal Center, a watchdog group focused on campaign finance, issued a statement Thursday evening condemning Trump’s removal of Weintraub, noting that while the president is “free to nominate multiple new commissioners,” his removal of Weintraub was “contrary to the law.”

Judge slams Trump's attempt to end birthright citizenship

A federal judge slammed President Donald Trump on Thursday as he indefinitely blocked his executive order that seeks to end birthright citizenship, saying Trump is trying to skirt the rule of law to play “policy games” with the Constitution.

Coughenour continued: “The Constitution is not something with which the government can play policy games. If the government wants to change the exceptional American grant of birthright citizenship, it needs to amend the Constitution itself.”

The new nationwide preliminary injunction issued by Coughenour expands a previous short-term block he issued against Trump’s order days after he signed it. A separate federal judge in Maryland also issued a preliminary injunction against Trump’s order on Wednesday.

The bench ruling from the Ronald Reagan appointee amounted to one of the strongest rebukes yet of Trump’s effort on his first day in office to end birthright citizenship. The order signed by Trump was swiftly met with numerous legal challenges from states and private plaintiffs.

The Justice Department said late Thursday it was appealing the order.

The appeal of the preliminary injunction issued in a case brought by Democratic-led states and others will go to the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, a left-leaning appeals court, a move that could eventually land the issue before the US Supreme Court.

A judge issued a similar order Wednesday in a case brought in Maryland, but the department has not yet formally indicated an appeal on that court docket’s docket.

CNN’s Tierney Sneed contributed to this post, which was updated with news of the DOJ’s plans to appeal the order.

Federal agents in South Florida detain undocumented man who spoke about dreams of becoming a legal resident

Dante Lopez speaks with CNN affiliate WPLG.

A day after speaking to CNN about his dream of becoming a legal US resident, an undocumented father was detained by federal agents in South Florida months before his next asylum interview.

Video from CNN affiliate WPLG shows camouflaged agents in tactical gear detaining Dante Lopez Wednesday afternoon at his home in Coral Springs, a suburb of Fort Lauderdale.

A similar scene played out on Monday when several agents visited the home, Lopez told CNN on Tuesday. The agents did not have a warrant at the time, Lopez said, so they left.

Lopez came to the US illegally about 14 years ago, fleeing violence in his native Peru. Since then, he’s become a homeowner, a husband and a father of three children, all born in the US.

“I bought a property, I got my house, I pay my income taxes, no criminal record, and always good citizen,” Lopez told CNN, describing himself as a person who deserved the chance to become a legal resident in the United States.

He added a reference to President Donald Trump’s pardon of those found guilty of the January 6 insurrection on the Capitol.

“The rioters on January 6th, you know, did a lot of damage, a police officer died, and then this administration set them free?” Lopez told CNN on Tuesday. “It’s like, who is the criminal here?”

It is unclear why agents detained Lopez whose last in-person appointment with authorities was in January. His next appointment is set for July, Lopez added.

CNN has reached out to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) about Lopez’s detention.

First on CNN: Labor groups sue to halt Trump administrations dismantling of USAID

A pair of labor groups representing employees at the US Agency for International Development (USAID) sued President Donald Trump on Thursday over his efforts to dismantle the decades-old humanitarian agency, as multiple sources told CNN that fewer than 300 agency employees are expected to be retained while countless others are put on indefinite leave or fired.

The lawsuit also takes aim at the administration’s freeze on almost all foreign assistance – a move that has brought critical humanitarian work around the world to a halt and has led to thousands of contractors being furloughed or laid off.

It is the first lawsuit filed against the rapid succession of moves taken against USAID.

It was filed as a majority of the USAID’s workforce braces to be put on administrative leave Friday night or, in the case of most contractors, terminated. An internal email, described by multiple sources, said that fewer than 300 people would be kept on as essential personnel – an enormous reduction in the workforce.

The suit against Trump, as well as his Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and their agencies, argues that the president is exceeding his authority in violation of the Constitution and federal law.

Attorneys for the labor groups are asking the court to order the administration to reverse actions it took to shutter the agency and “halt any further steps to dissolve the agency” while the litigation continues.

CNN’s Alex Marquardt, Lauren Kent and Sean Lyngaas contributed reporting.

Read more about the lawsuit here.

Senate confirms Russ Vought for OMB director after Democrats protested his nomination

Russell Vought, President-elect Donald Trump's pick to be director of the Office of Management and Budget, arrives for a meeting at the office of Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, in Hart building on Monday, December 16, 2024. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via AP Images)

The Senate has voted to confirm Russ Vought as the director of the Office of Management and Budget, after Senate Democrats held the floor overnight in a marathon of speeches to protest Vought’s nomination.

The vote was 53-47, on party lines.

Vought has drawn Democrats’ ire over his ties to the controversial conservative policy blueprint Project 2025, as well as his claim that the 2020 election was “rigged.”

Democrats have also argued that OMB’s memo freezing federal funding last month — which was eventually rescinded — was a warning sign of how the office will operate with Vought in charge. As OMB director, Vought will be a key player in implementing President Donald Trump’s agenda.

Vought is Trump’s 13th nominee confirmed since he took office on January 20.

Marathon protest: Beginning at 2:17 p.m. ET on Wednesday, after a key procedural vote limiting debate on Vought’s nomination to 30 hours, Democrats organized hours of speeches, holding the floor overnight and all day on Thursday to protest Vought’s nomination. The Senate eventually voted to confirm Vought after the 30 hours expired.

Democrats also gathered on the floor just ahead of the confirmation vote, and as their names were read in the roll call, they each stood up and cast their vote for a group. Democratic Sen. Cory Booker, for example, said his vote against confirming Vought was “for New Jersey first responders.” Each time they spoke, they were reprimanded by the presiding officer, GOP Sen. Ashley Moody, for breaking Senate rules and debating during a vote.

There was some consternation in the chamber when Republican Sen. Eric Schmitt said he was voting for Vought’s confirmation on behalf of taxpayers and was not reprimanded by Moody. In response, Democrats banged their fists on their desks and called for “regular order.”

NIH research funding meetings still canceled despite guidance that some may proceed, sources say

The process for awarding new research funds at the National Institutes of Health is still being held up even after guidance this week saying some closed review meetings could proceed, five sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

The advisory council meeting of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, set for February 4, was canceled, according to its website; with a budget of nearly $4 billion, the institute supports researchers at more than 520 research institutions in the US and internationally.

The National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which boasts funding nearly 100 Nobel Prize-winners in chemistry and medicine, also had an advisory council meeting canceled Thursday, according to two sources who spoke under the condition of anonymity. It was postponed until April.

Advisory council meetings are a key step to awarding new research funding at the NIH, which is the world’s largest public funder of biomedical research, and the meetings are held only every few months.

A guidance document for NIH employees earlier this week said closed advisory council meetings could take place as the US Department of Health and Human Services slowly lifts parts of its blanket pause on communications, but meetings are still getting called off as the agency lacks clarification on how to handle the cancellation of public sessions.

Other meetings, called study sections, which are a crucial earlier step for outside experts to weigh in on grant proposals, were also getting postponed; one that was set to review grants for research on viruses and vaccines had been postponed until April, according to one source.

Energy secretary let 23-year-old DOGE representative access IT systems over objections from general counsel

Chris Wright testifies before a US Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on his nomination to be Secretary of Energy in Washington, DC, on January 15.

A representative from Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was granted access to the Energy Department’s IT system on Wednesday by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, two people with knowledge of the situation told CNN.

DOGE representative Luke Farritor — a 23-year-old former SpaceX intern — was granted access even over objections from members of the department’s general counsel and chief information offices, the sources told CNN. The chief information office houses the department’s IT and cybersecurity operations.

Members of Energy’s general counsel and Outsourced Chief Investment Officer offices “said this is a bad idea” because Farritor hadn’t had a standard background investigation, one of the people told CNN. “He’s not cleared to be in (Department of Energy), on our systems. None of those things have been done.”

Farritor was granted access to basic IT including email and Microsoft 365, one of the sources said.

While the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) is part of the Energy Department, the chief information office only does a small amount of basic IT and cybersecurity work for it. It does not run IT systems for the nuclear agency’s labs controlling the nation’s nuclear stockpile.

There are also plans to install a different SpaceX network security engineer as the Energy Department’s new chief information officer, the people told CNN.

Emails to employees: In addition to the DOGE presence in the building, Energy Department employees — including at the NNSA — have received the so-called buyout emails that federal employees across the country have been receiving.

NNSA being included in the “buyout” wave is significant because of its work regarding the nation’s nuclear stockpile and other critical national security work.

Separately, Energy employees working at the department under a year have received emails that they’ve been deemed to be on probationary status. The messages warn that they could be fired immediately.

These types of emails have gone out to over 1,000 employees at the Environmental Protection Agency, as well.

An Energy Department spokesperson didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

This post has been updated with additional details on Farritor’s access.

EPA places more than 160 environmental justice employees on paid leave

Employees in the Environmental Protection Agency’s office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights have been told they are being placed on paid administrative leave as the agency executes the Trump administration’s executive order to wipe out all program offices it deems as tied to diversity, equity and inclusion, CNN has learned from multiple sources.

More than 160 environmental justice employees at the EPA are impacted nationwide, according to an internal EPA email obtained by CNN and confirmed by employees who were on the agency call and have been affected as well as three union sources.

The acting assistant administrator of the EPA office, Theresa Segovia, said on a recording of the call provided to CNN that employees will receive an email indicating they will be placed on paid administrative leave with full benefits on Thursday.

A federal district judge paused the Trump administration’s so-called “buyout” offer earlier Thursday, and Segovia told the employees now placed on paid leave there was still time for them to take advantage of it.

Trump picks Gadyaces Serralta as US Marshals Service director

President Donald Trump announced he is choosing Gadyaces Serralta as the new director of the United States Marshals Service on Thursday.

Trump touted Serralta’s 34 years of law enforcement experience in a post on Truth Social announcing the move.

Serralta, also known as “Gady,” has served as the US Marshal for the Southern District of Florida since his nomination during Trump’s first term. Before that, he held positions including major in the Miami-Dade Police Department and police chief of Palmetto Bay, Florida, Trump said.

The president said Serralta would work alongside Attorney General Pam Bondi on safety and law enforcement issues.

About the agency: The Marshals Service pursues fugitives across the US, handles federal prisoners, and is tasked with protecting federal judges. It also operates the Witness Protection Program.

US Marshals Service director nominees are subject to Senate confirmation.

Fewer than 300 essential staffers are expected to keep their jobs at USAID, sources say

This 2014 photo shows boxes containing sanitation kits and soap provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) being stored at a UN school before a distribution to Palestinian displaced people on August 15, 2014 in Gaza City.

The Trump administration is expected to keep fewer than 300 people at the US Agency for International Development, drastically reducing the workforces at the agency, according to multiple USAID sources.

The rest of the direct hires will be put on leave as of Friday at midnight.

USAID has about 10,000 personnel around the world, which includes thousands of contractors, many of whom have been furloughed or fired.

Those sources told CNN 294 essential workers are expected to retain access. The rest are being cut off from USAID systems, including email.

Three officials told CNN that only one officer would be left in multiple missions.

Another USAID official said their overseas mission went from having more than 20 foreign service officers to only one.

USAID leadership announced this week that “all USAID direct hire personnel will be placed on administrative leave globally, with the exception of designated personnel responsible for mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programs.”

Defense department morale is at "all-time low" since resignation offer, one civilian employee says

One civilian worker for the Department of Defense said his morale, and that of many of his co-workers, is at an “all-time low” since the Office of Personnel Management sent an email to federal employees offering them a deferred resignation offer.

The worker said he liked his job, and he had not been thinking of leaving before the email arrived, even though he already has more than 20 years. But he said he’s now 50-50 on whether to accept it due to concerns about the future. What gives him pause is doubts the government will actually live up to what is being promised to the workers.

“Honestly, it. I just don’t trust it,” he said. “For anybody who takes it, I highly doubt they’ll get the entirety of it.”

Gay Henson, the secretary treasurer of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, the union that represents the defense employee who spoke to CNN, said she’s very concerned about the expertise that will be lost unnecessarily because of people leaving who would otherwise stay.

HR sends new email to federal workers: "Fork in the Road: Deadline Extended to Monday"

Tonight, workers across the federal government received a message shortly after 5 p.m. ET from the ubiquitous “HR” address advising them of the federal judge’s pause on the midnight deadline to accept the Trump administration’s resignation offer.

CNN reviewed a copy of the email, which was sent under the subject line: “Fork in the Road: Deadline Extended to Monday.”

Remember: The deferred resignation offer was extended to roughly 2 million employees, which would generally allow them to leave their jobs but be paid through the end of September. The Office of Personnel Management warned that those who don’t opt in are at risk of losing their jobs. The administration is planning widespread layoffs soon, two officials have told CNN.

US District Judge George O’Toole, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton who sits in Boston, said in a brief hearing Thursday that he was halting the government from taking steps to implement the plan as he receives more briefings on whether it should be blocked.

The next hearing is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

These are some of the executive actions Trump signed today

President Donald Trump signed a series of executive actions Thursday evening.

Here’s a look at some of those actions:

Fighting against “anti-Christian bias”: Trump signed an executive action that creates a new task force to “eradicate anti-Christian bias,” and halt all forms of anti-Christian targeting and discrimination within the federal government.

Trump previously announced his executive action on anti-Christian bias during remarks earlier Thursday.

“Today, I’m signing an executive order to make our attorney general — who’s a great person, she’s going to be a great attorney general — Pam Bondi, the head of a task force brand new to eradicate anti-Christian bias,” he said, as CNN’s Betsy Klein previously reported.

Reviewing NGO funding: Trump also signed an executive memorandum directing a comprehensive review of the funding allocated to all non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that depend on federal financial support, the White House told CNN.

This action is part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to reassess federal spending.

International Criminal Court sanctions: Trump later signed another executive action Thursday that targets the International Criminal Court.

“The United States will impose tangible and significant consequences on those responsible for the ICC’s transgressions, some of which may include the blocking of property and assets, as well as the suspension of entry into the United States of ICC officials, employees, and agents, as well as their immediate family members, as their entry into our Nation would be detrimental to the interests of the United States,” the action reads.

The action is expected to impose financial and visa sanctions on “individuals and their family members who aid in ICC investigations involving US citizens or our allies,” as CNN previously reported. This move aims to punish the court for issuing arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

This post has been updated with additional details about Trump’s executive actions.