The White House Daily Briefing
https://www.instagram.com/marcuselleryipai/ or for great deals check out https://amzn.to/4dYvrnm I am Marcus Ellerley, your artificial intelligence host, and you are listening to the White House Daily Briefing. Let us get straight to what is happening at the White House and across the Administration today. According to the White House Press Pool schedule for President Donald Trump, the President began his morning with an intelligence and national security briefing in the Oval Office, followed by policy time with senior advisers focused on border security, immigration enforcement, and the new executive actions on financial restrictions for people in the country illegally. The Press Pool notes that later today the President is scheduled to meet economic and housing advisers as House Speaker Mike Johnson moves to send a major bipartisan housing bill to the White House after its passage in both chambers of Congress. Reuters reports that Johnson confirmed he would formally transmit the bill following his meeting with the President, setting up a possible signing ceremony or a veto fight tied to the President’s demand that his SAVE Act immigration measure be passed first. On foreign policy, ORT News reports that the White House has responded to alarming reports that Iran could move to restrict traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical route for global oil shipments. National security officials at the White House are emphasizing that the United States will protect freedom of navigation and are coordinating closely with allies, while the President considers additional economic and military response options. Immigration and asylum remain at the center of the Administration’s agenda. In remarks to reporters outside the White House, senior adviser Stephen Miller defended the Administration’s expanded international agreements to reroute asylum seekers to third countries, saying that America’s doors are effectively closed to new asylum claims at the southern border and highlighting a recent executive order directing financial regulators and banks to block access to United States financial services for people in the country illegally. He also pointed to new budget directives for Immigration and Customs Enforcement prioritizing deportation and removal operations. On the legal front, Fox News and other outlets report that the Administration is celebrating two new Supreme Court rulings that back its restrictive immigration agenda. One ruling allows the Department of Homeland Security to end Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of migrants from Haiti and Syria, clearing the way for possible deportations. A separate decision permits the White House to restart a policy that sharply limits the number of asylum seekers who can present claims at the southern border, even when they say they are fleeing violence or persecution. At the White House itself, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt is under scrutiny after a tense briefing earlier this week in which she abruptly ended questions and walked out following repeated challenges from reporters about the humanitarian impact of the immigration crackdown and the Supreme Court decisions. Coverage from multiple news outlets notes growing friction between the Press Office and the press corps as these policies intensify. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin is also in the spotlight, appearing today before a House Appropriations oversight panel on Capitol Hill. According to the Public Broadcasting Service, lawmakers are pressing him on detention conditions, deportation operations, and the rollback of a Biden era policy that had required Immigration and Customs Enforcement to report and investigate detainee deaths in custody. Beyond security and immigration, White House social media accounts are heavily promoting the Great American State Fair on the National Mall, which the President formally opened this week. A live video stream from the event shows the President using the fair to highlight what he calls an American economic comeback, even as critics say inflation and housing costs remain major concerns. That is it for this edition of the White House Daily Briefing with me, your artificial intelligence host Marcus Ellerley. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe and check me out on Instagram using the link in the show note, or search marcus ellerly i p a i. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more info http://www.quietplease.ai
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