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Who Was In Charge?

If Biden was diagnosed earlier during his presidency, then who was really in charge?

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Joe Biden Diagnosed with Cancer

Joe Biden was possibly diagnosed with cancer many years ago. But now they are revealing it.

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Storms And Tornadoes Continue To Ravage Central U.S. After Killing Dozens

The National Weather Service is warning of still more days of dangerous weather conditions across the central U.S. The agency issued the forecast Monday after four days of tornadoes, thunderstorms and heavy rain killed more than two dozen people. Worst hit is Kentucky, where residents around London were trying to clean up three days after the storm arrived near midnight. London's airport is a beehive of activity as people pick up water, food, diapers and other supplies. Forecasters say more tornadoes could center around eastern Oklahoma on Monday and Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee are under the highest risk on Tuesday.

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Mexican Ship Strikes Brooklyn Bridge, Snapping Masts And Killing 2 Crew Members

Many crew members on the Mexican navy tall ship that suffered a deadly collision with the Brooklyn Bridge have flown home from New York, officials said Monday. Seven officers and 172 cadets who were aboard the Cuauhtemoc training vessel arrived early Monday at the port of Veracruz, where Mexico’s naval school is, the Mexican navy said in a post on X. Two cadets remained in New York getting medical treatment. They were in stable condition, the navy said. Two members of the Cuauhtemoc's crew suffered fatal injuries Saturday when the ship's tall masts struck the Brooklyn Bridge's main span after the ship departed a Manhattan dock where it had been open to visitors for several days. Footage of the collision shot by horrified onlookers show the ship moving swiftly backwards and then grinding beneath the 142-year-old bridge as its topmasts snapped off. Multiple cadets in the ship's crew were aloft, standing on the ship's yards when the collision happened. Several were left dangling by safety harnesses as the masts partially collapsed. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board was investigating the cause of the crash, which police said was possibly related to a mechanical problem. The ship was moving quickly under motor power in the opposite of its intended direction when the collision happened. A tugboat that had helped the ship get out of its berth could be seen on video trying to get ahead of the vessel as it headed toward the bridge but couldn't overtake it in time. The safety board planned to hold its first media briefing later Monday. The investigation is likely to take months. The crippled Cuauhtemoc remained at a dock in Manhattan. The Brooklyn Bridge escaped major damage but at least 19 of the ship's 277 sailors needed medical treatment, according to officials. Among those killed was América Yamilet Sánchez, a 20-year-old sailor who had been studying engineering at the Mexican naval academy. Her family has said she died after falling from one of the Cuauhtemoc’s masts. The Cuauhtemoc arrived in New York on May 13 as part of a global goodwill tour. The vessel, which sailed for the first time in 1982, had been docked and welcoming visitors in recent days at the tourist-heavy South Street Seaport. It was next bound for Iceland. The ship's main mast has a height of 160 feet (50 meters), far too high for the span of the Brooklyn Bridge at any tide.

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Trump Administration Urges GOP Lawmakers To Unite Behind Legislation

President Trump is urging all congressional Republicans to support a bill that delivers on his campaign promises. The White House is cranking up the pressure on GOP lawmakers to put aside their differences. However, serious disagreements remain. Fiscal conservatives want deeper spending cuts, moderates want to protect Medicaid coverage. In addition to extending tax cuts, the bill also proposes big spending increases for border security and defense.

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FBI Investigating Explosion At CA Fertility Clinic As Act Of Terrorism

A 25-year-old man believed to be responsible for an explosion that ripped through a Palm Springs, California, fertility clinic left behind “anti-pro-life” writings before carrying out the attack. Investigators are calling the bombing an act of terrorism. The FBI on Sunday identified the man as Guy Edward Bartkus, of nearby Twentynine Palms. Authorities are continuing to piece together the motive and events leading up to Saturday's bombing. Investigators said the blast killed the suspect. The explosion gutted the single-story American Reproductive Centers clinic, damaging the office space but not stored embryos.

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Search Continues For Men Who Escaped From New Orleans Jail

Three days after a 10 men escaped a New Orleans jail by slipping through a hole behind a toilet and scaling a wall, seven of them remain on the run Monday. The FBI on Sunday increased the reward it is offering for information leading to the arrest of the escaped men, raising it from $5,000 to $10,000 per escapee. FBI Special Agent Jonathan Trapp said during a news conference that he believes members of the public may be helping them and, if that's the case, would be arrested on charges of aiding or abetting them. In addition to the FBI reward, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was offering $5,000 and CrimeStoppers announced a $2,000 reward per escapee. The men range in age from 19 to 42 and face a variety of charges including aggravated assault, domestic abuse battery and murder. While three men were quickly caught, a multiagency task force has been assembled to scour the region for the seven remaining fugitives.

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NJ Transit Strike Ends, Service To Resume On Tuesday

New Jersey Transit trains will begin running again on Tuesday after the agency reached a tentative deal on Sunday with striking rail engineers on wage increases, ending a three-day work stoppage that had left tens of thousands of commuters to New York scrambling to find alternative transportation. The statewide rail strike, the first to hit NJ Transit in more than 40 years, had begun just after midnight on Thursday. The third-largest transit system in the U.S., it provides more than 700,000 passenger trips a day on average across its train, light rail and bus lines. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, which represents 450 NJ Transit engineers who drive the agency's commuter trains, initially said its members would return to work on Monday. But NJ Transit said in a statement that train service would not resume until Tuesday to give the agency time to inspect and prepare tracks, rail cars and other infrastructure. NJ Transit will implement its strike contingency plan on Monday, increasing bus service and chartering private buses to ferry passengers from four satellite lots. Officials urged commuters to work from home if possible, noting that the enhanced bus service can still only accommodate a fraction of train riders. Details of the deal were not immediately released. The agreement still requires the approval of a majority of the union's members, who rejected an earlier deal last month. "This is a good result for labor, it's a good result for NJ Transit, it's a good result for our taxpayers and commuters," Governor Phil Murphy said at a news conference to announce the deal. "The only real issue was wages and we were able to reach an agreement that boosts hourly pay beyond the proposal rejected by our members last month and beyond where we were when NJ Transit's managers walked away from the table Thursday evening," Tom Haas, the union's NJ Transit chairman, said in a statement. The two sides had blamed each other for the walkout, after last-minute talks on Thursday broke down without an accord. Murphy and NJ Transit officials had said the agency could not afford to meet the union's pay demands, while the union had said it was simply aiming to bring its members' salaries in line with those of engineers at other commuter systems in the region.

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After Nearly 3 Months Of Israel's Blockade, Aid Trucks Enter Gaza

Israel and the United Nations say the first aid trucks have entered Gaza following nearly three months of Israel’s complete blockade. Five trucks carrying aid including baby food entered the territory of over 2 million Palestinians via the Kerem Shalom crossing on Monday. That’s according to the Israeli defense body in charge of coordinating aid to Gaza. The U.N. called it a “welcome development” but said much more aid is needed to address the humanitarian crisis. Food security experts last week warned of famine. Global experts had warned of famine in Gaza after nearly three months of an Israeli blockade. Israel cut off all food, medicine and other supplies to the territory to pressure Hamas over ceasefire terms.

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Supreme Court Lets Trump End Deportation Protection For Venezuelans

The U.S. Supreme Court let Donald Trump's administration on Monday end temporary protected status that was granted to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans in the United States by his predecessor Joe Biden, as the Republican president moves to ramp up deportations as part of his hardline approach to immigration. The court granted the Justice Department's request to lift a judge's order that had halted Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's decision to terminate deportation protection conferred to Venezuelans under the temporary protected status, or TPS, program, while the administration pursues an appeal in the case. The TPS program is a humanitarian designation under U.S. law for countries stricken by war, natural disaster or other catastrophe, giving recipients living in the United States deportation protection and access to work permits. The designation can be renewed by the U.S. homeland security secretary. The court's brief order was unsigned, as is typical when the justices act on an emergency request. The court, however, left open the door to challenges by migrants if the administration tries to cancel work permits or other TPS-related documents that were issued to expire in October 2026, which is the end of the TPS period extended by Biden. The Department of Homeland Security has said about 348,202 Venezuelans were registered under Biden's 2023 TPS designation. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the sole member of the court to publicly dissent from the decision. The action came in a legal challenge by plaintiffs including some of the TPS recipients and the National TPS Alliance advocacy group, who said Venezuela remains an unsafe country. Trump, who returned to the presidency in January, has pledged to deport record numbers of migrants in the United States illegally and has taken actions to strip certain migrants of temporary legal protections, expanding the pool of possible deportees. The U.S. government under Biden, a Democrat, twice designated Venezuela for TPS, in 2021 and 2023. In January, days before Trump returned to office, the Biden administration announced an extension of the programs to October 2026. Noem, a Trump appointee, rescinded the extension and moved to end the TPS designation for a subset of Venezuelans who benefited from the 2023 designation. But San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge Edward Chen ruled in the challenge to the administration's action that Noem violated a federal law that governs the actions of agencies. Chen also said the revocation of the TPS status appeared to have been predicated on "negative stereotypes" by insinuating the Venezuelan migrants were criminals. "Generalization of criminality to the Venezuelan TPS population as a whole is baseless and smacks of racism predicated on generalized false stereotypes," Chen wrote, adding that Venezuelan TPS holders were more likely to hold bachelor's degrees than American citizens and less likely to commit crimes than the general U.S. population. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on April 18 declined the administration's request to pause the judge's order. Justice Department lawyers in their Supreme Court filing said Chen had "wrested control of the nation's immigration policy" away from the government's executive branch, headed by Trump. "The court's order contravenes fundamental Executive Branch prerogatives and indefinitely delays sensitive policy decisions in an area of immigration policy that Congress recognized must be flexible, fast-paced, and discretionary," they wrote. The plaintiffs told the Supreme Court that granting the administration's request "would strip work authorization from nearly 350,000 people living in the U.S., expose them to deportation to an unsafe country and cost billions in economic losses nationwide." Some Venezuelan migrants who are TPS holders voiced concern on Monday after the court acted. "We're defenseless, vulnerable," said TPS holder Maria Rodriguez, 33, who has lived in Orlando for five years with her husband and two children including a 2-year-old son born in the United States. "We left Venezuela because we couldn't make ends meet there. There was no work. ... We have no family left in Venezuela. It's a true drama." "It doesn't surprise us but it does make us more fearful," said TPS holder Reinaldo Alvarado, 29, who migrated first to Chile before moving to Texas five years ago. "I have TPS and in theory that protects me from deportation. But they are taking everyone here, so my medium-term plan is to go to Spain," Alvarado said. The State Department currently warns against travel to Venezuela "due to the high risk of wrongful detentions, terrorism, kidnapping, the arbitrary enforcement of local laws, crime, civil unrest, poor health infrastructure." The Trump administration in April also terminated TPS for thousands of Afghans and Cameroonians in the United States. Those actions are not part of the current case. In a separate case on Friday, the Supreme Court kept in place its block on Trump's deportations of Venezuelan migrants under a 1798 law called the Alien Enemies Act that historically has been used only in wartime, faulting his administration for seeking to remove them without adequate legal process. The administration has accused the Venezuelans targeted for deportation under that law of being members of Tren de Aragua, a criminal gang that the State Department has designated as a foreign terrorist organization.

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Trump says Russia and Ukraine will 'immediately' start ceasefire negotiations

President Donald Trump is hoping that separate phone calls Monday with Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will make progress toward a ceasefire in the war in Ukraine. See more on Salem News Channel.

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