Trump prepares to tour wildfire damage in Los Angeles after criticising California’s water policy
Trump has erroneously claimed that California could have mitigated the wildfires sooner if it hadn’t been for redirecting water to the Pacific Ocean. The president was referring to the water federally managed by the Central Valley Project.
However, the agency mostly supplies farms and doesn’t carry water to Los Angeles. Meanwhile, The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California says it has ample storage to meet the region’s water needs.
In the first hours of his second term, Trump encouraged federal officials to route more water to the crop-rich Central Valley and densely populated cities in the southern part of the state, even threatening to withhold federal disaster aid unless state leaders change their approach on water.
He has continued to question how California’s water managed. Last year on his Truth Social platform, he criticized the “rerouting of MILLIONS OF GALLONS OF WATER A DAY FROM THE NORTH OUT INTO THE PACIFIC OCEAN, rather than using it, free of charge, for the towns, cities, & farms dotted all throughout California”.
Trump has suggested that state officials “ turn the valve ” to send more water to the city. But state water supplies are not to blame for hydrants running dry and a key reservoir near Pacific Palisades that was not filled
California’s water system is complicated.
Most of the region’s water is in the north, while the bulk of the state’s population is in the drier south. Los Angeles is the second driest city in America and relies on water from elsewhere. As does the dry Central Valley, where most of California’s produce is grown.
Two complex systems of dams and canals move rain and melted snow from the mountainous north to the south. One is managed by the federal government, the Central Valley Project, while the other is operated by the state of California and known as the State Water Project. Both systems channel water through the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, an estuary supporting wildlife, including salmon and the delta smelt.
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power also manages its own aqueducts that draw water from the eastern Sierra Nevada. The Federal government decides how much water is routed to the delta to protect threatened species and how much goes to Central Valley Project users, mostly farms. That project does not supply water to Los Angeles.
However, Trump insists the state lets too much water go to the ocean rather than cities and farms.
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Updated at 07.20 EST
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Donald Trump’s threats to carry out mass arrests in cities that have curtailed cooperation with immigration authorities have spread fear throughout communities, the Guardian’s Maanvi Singh reports:
Chicago’s Lower West Side felt uneasily quiet this week.
Christina Alejandra, a dancer and local business owner in the city’s artsy, majority Mexican American neighborhood, wondered whether it was because of the freezing temperatures, or the impending threat of immigration raids.
The city has been preparing for weeks for a crackdown, after Donald Trump’s new administration made clear that so-called sanctuary cities – communities like Chicago that refuse to hand over immigrants to federal authorities – would be the first targets of its mass-deportation program.
But the fear didn’t really hit Alejandra, who’s 26 and undocumented, until Monday, inauguration day, as Trump began unleashing a barrage of new immigration restrictions. “I’ve never been scared like this before,” she said. The Guardian is not publishing Alejandra’s full name to protect her and her family from immigration enforcement.
Chicago and surrounding areas have seen raids before, including during the first Trump administration. “But this feels different,” Alejandra said. “The way he and his supporters are riled up. There’s a shift happening.”
Such worries have been stirred up in immigrant communities across the US in recent days, amid a flood of new executive orders setting strict limits on who can enter the US, who can stay here and who can call themselves an American, setting off unprecedented waves of panic within the country and at its borders.
Moments after the president was sworn into office, asylum seekers waiting to enter the country learned that their appointments to meet with Customs and Border Protection had been cancelled – and images of devastated and desperate people at the border made a stark diptych with the inaugural ceremonies.
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Republican lawmaker proposes constitutional amendment allowing Trump third term
Republican congressman Andy Ogles has proposed a constitutional amendment that would allow Donald Trump to serve a third term in office.
The Tennessee lawmaker said he was making the proposal because he thinks Trump has done such a great job over the past few days:
President Trump’s decisive leadership stands in stark contrast to the chaos, suffering, and economic decline Americans have endured over the past four years. He has proven himself to be the only figure in modern history capable of reversing our nation’s decay and restoring America to greatness, and he must be given the time necessary to accomplish that goal. To that end, I am proposing an amendment to the Constitution to revise the limitations imposed by the 22nd Amendment on presidential terms. This amendment would allow President Trump to serve three terms, ensuring that we can sustain the bold leadership our nation so desperately needs.
The amendment is written in such a way that the three other living presidents who have served two terms – Bill Clinton, George W Bush and Barack Obama – would not be eligible to run again.
It is very difficult to amend the US constitution, and it remains to be seen if Ogles’s idea is to be taken seriously.
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Donald Trump’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, has announced that “deportation flights have begun,” and shared photos of people lining up to board a military aircraft.
Leavitt’s comment was light on details, but perhaps she means they have begun under Trump administration, as there was plenty of deporting going on during Joe Biden’s just-concluded presidency:
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Updated at 08.57 EST
Senate may vote on confirming Hegseth to lead defense department this evening
The Senate may take a final vote on confirming Pete Hegseth to lead the Pentagon this evening.
Yesterday, the Republican-controlled chamber narrowly voted to begin debate on the former Fox News host’s nomination, which has been dogged by a sexual assault allegation and other reports of poor behavior. Two Republican senators and all Democrats voted against confirming Hegseth, but that wasn’t enough to stop the nomination from proceeding.
A vote on his final confirmation could take place at 9pm ET. Here’s the latest on his nomination:
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Melody Schreiber
US health agency employees are now banned from nearly all travel and certain agencies and programs have been ordered to stop issuing new contracts and grants until further notice.
The limits on travel and spending, announced internally on Wednesday, add to previous indefinite halts on external communications, including publishing new reports or even posting to social media, and on reviewing and approving new medical research, a nearly $50bn industry in the US.
Employees of the 13 agencies overseen by US Health and Human Services (HHS) may only travel to return from assignments or to escape life-threatening situations. That means regular meetings with state and local health officials, training sessions and grant reviews are now on hold.
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Updated at 07.53 EST
70% of Americans do not approve of Musk in government
Many Americans agree that the federal government is beset by inefficiency, corruption and needless bureaucracy, but they are less sure about whether aspiring trillionaire Elon Musk is the right person to tackle it.
An Associated Press-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research poll shows only 30% adults in the USA strongly or somewhat approve of Donald Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (Doge), which Musk leads.
The poll also shows, despite prevailing wisdom on some social media sites, that Americans aren’t particularly worried about “deep state” actors undermining Trump’s Republican agenda. They’re also unmoved about cuts to large numbers of federal jobs and moving federal agencies outside Washington.
Only one-third of US adults have a favourable view of Musk, the world’s richest person. Approximately half of Americans think of Musk and Trump in unfavourable terms. US adults broadly think it’s a bad thing if the president relies on billionaires for advice about government policy, according to the poll.
About 60% of those polled say this would be a “very” or “somewhat” bad thing, while only about one in 10 call it a very or somewhat good thing, three in 10 are neutral.
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Updated at 07.49 EST
The United Nations says the right to seek asylum is “universally recognised” after Trump suspended all refugee admissions and halted the US asylum programme.
“All states are entitled to exercise their jurisdiction along their international borders, (but) they need to do so in line with their human rights obligations,” UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani says, according to AFP news agency.
“The right to seek asylum is a universally recognised human right,” she adds.
On Monday, Trump signed an executive order suspending the Refugee Admissions Program, saying the US “lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities”.
The move blocked 1,600 approved Afghan refugees from moving to the States, while over 3,000 others are waiting in Albania to be resettled.
The UNHCR said yesterday that “refugee resettlement is a life-saving measure”, and they are “ready to continue our work with the new administration to find solutions for refugees”.
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Mariann Edgar Budde
Unity, in this sense, is the threshold requirement for people to live together in a free society, it is the solid rock, as Jesus said, in this case upon which to build a nation. It is not conformity. It is not a victory of one over another. It is not weary politeness nor passivity born of exhaustion. Unity is not partisan.
Rather, unity is a way of being with one another that encompasses and respects differences, that teaches us to hold multiple perspectives and life experiences as valid and worthy of respect; that enables us, in our communities and in the halls of power, to genuinely care for one another even when we disagree. Those across our country who dedicate their lives, or who volunteer, to help others in times of natural disaster, often at great risk to themselves, never ask those they are helping for whom they voted in the past election or what positions they hold on a particular issue. We are at our best when we follow their example…
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German politician suggests Canada joins the EU
Ashifa Kassam
Germany’s former foreign minister has suggested that Canada be invited to join the European Union, giving voice to an unlikely proposition that has quietly circulated since Donald Trump began floating the idea of Canada becoming the US’s 51st state.
Speaking to Germany’s Pioneer Media, Sigmar Gabriel pointed to the shifting geopolitics ushered in by Trump’s second term. “We should invite Canada to become a member of the European Union,” said Gabriel, adding: “They are more European than some European member states anyway.”
Gabriel, who was also Germany’s vice-chancellor from 2013 to 2018, said it was an idea worth pursuing, even if Canada is not geographically located in Europe. “I would give it a try. Canada is an enormously important country. It is, by the way, a strategic Arctic border state … We need to gather allies. That also applies to our free trade agreements.”
His suggestion echoed an opinion column published earlier this year in The Economist and which argued that the union would be beneficial for both as “Canada is vast and blessed with natural resources but relatively few people, while the EU is small, cramped and mineral-poor’.
On Thursday Trump again called on Canada to join the US as he addressed the Davos economic forum in Switzerland by video link: “As you probably know, I say, ‘You can always become a state, and if you’re a state, we won’t have a deficit. We won’t have to tariff you.’”
Canadian officials have repeatedly slammed any such suggestion, with one minister describing it as something out of a “Southpark episode.” Polls carried out in recent weeks on both sides of the border have suggested that the vast majority of Canadians and many Americans disapprove of the idea.
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Updated at 07.22 EST
Moscow rejects president Donald Trump’s suggestion that a settlement in Ukraine can be achieved by falling oil prices
In an address to the annual World Economic Forum on Thursday, Trump said that the OPEC+ alliance of oil exporting countries shares responsibility for the ongoing Ukrainian War due to keeping oil prices too high. Trump said that “if the price came down, the Russia-Ukraine war would end immediately”.
Asked about Trump’s comments, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said: “The conflict doesn’t depend on oil prices,” Peskov said in a conference call with reporters. “The conflict is ongoing because of the threat to Russia’s national security, the threat to Russians living on those territories and the refusal by the Americans and the Europeans to listen to Russia’s security concerns. It’s not linked to oil prices.”
Asked to comment on Trump’s claim that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy is ready for a deal, Peskov said: “Zelenskyy can’t be ready for a deal.” He added: “In order to reach a settlement it’s necessary to conduct talks, and Zelenskyy forbade himself to hold talks by his own decree.”
On Wednesday, Trump threatened Russia with more tariffs, taxes and sanctions if they don’t end the war.
Peskov said that the Kremlin was paying close attention to Trump’s statements, insisting Moscow “remains ready for an equal dialogue, for a mutually respectful dialogue”.
“This dialogue took place between the two presidents during Trump’s first presidency. And we are waiting for signals that we have not received yet,” Peskov said.
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Updated at 07.01 EST
John Crace
Spare a thought for the grifters. Those sad Brits who have spent years toadying up to Donald Trump in the belief they had been admitted into his gilded inner circle. Those men and women who bravely posted selfies on X as they arrived in Washington in the belief they would be attending the inauguration of The Donald.
There was Liz Truss looking like a cheap Paddington Bear in a blue coat and red Maga hat announcing her arrival in DC. Only to go mysteriously silent when she discovered she hadn’t made the cut. Not just to the Rotunda where the main action was being staged but also not to the overspill area in the Capitol where guests could follow proceedings on TV. Presumably Lizzie was left to watch the action on her phone in a McDonald’s somewhere downtown…
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Russia open to nuclear talks
Russia says it is open to negotiating nuclear disarmament, the BBC reports.
The Russian government will work with Washington, but only if the nuclear weapons of the UK and France are on the negotiation table, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.
Peskov’s comments come in the aftermath of US president Donald Trump’s announcement on Thursday that he wanted to work towards reducing nuclear arms.
Trump indicated that Russia and China could possibly support reducing their own nuclear arsenals.
Peskov said: “We are certainly interested in starting the negotiation process as soon as possible.”
But he also added: “In the current situation, all nuclear capacities need to be taken into account. In particular, it’s impossible to hold a conversation without taking into consideration the nuclear capacities of France and the United Kingdom. The current realities make it necessary.”
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Updated at 06.37 EST
Stephen Collins
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