That is all for the day of our live policy of the first hundred days of Donald Trump as the US.
Before signing, here is a review of what is happening in 24 hours beyond 24 hours:
Donald Trump welcomed Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ihiba to the White House to talk, with the couple celebrating a joint convention later.
The U. S. president said he would make an announcement on reciprocal costs next week, telling Newshounds that he was “in no hurry” to make his plan to put the U. S. on the Gaza Strip.
After the Ishiba assembly, a White House official announced that Trump had signed an executive order with “gross violations of human rights” in South Africa.
In news:
And if you missed it, you catch up with our Trump one hundred live with correspondents with us Mark Stone and James Matthews here. . .
Judge Carl Nichols in Washington said he would issue the order following a lawsuit by the largest US government workers’ union and an association of foreign service workers.
The administration in a notice sent to the foreign aid agency’s workers yesterday said it will keep 611 essential workers on board at USAID out of a worldwide workforce that totals more than 10,000.
Some 2,200 USAID workers were going to begin their administrative license this afternoon.
The former head of USAID under George W Bush says the Trump administration is hitting international aid as it’s an easy target.
Elon Musk, who leads a government review under the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), in the past said he spoke with Donald Trump, who agreed that the entire company was closed.
“I think they must seem difficult,” Andrew Natsios told Gillian Joseph.
“It is easy to do it because our main recipients are in the coming world, many of them in remote areas.
“They have no political strength in the United States. They don’t vote. Even the media in their own country do not even know what they are.
“Sometimes they are women who suffer from trafficking. They are poor children. These are other people in refugees and displaced fields. “
Senate confirmations are complex for the appointments of Donald Trump’s office.
All of the company’s positions require a majority vote of the senators to pass.
Republicans have a current 53-seat majority in the Senate, meaning Trump’s nominees can only afford to lose three Republican senators, assuming all 50 Democrats are uniformly opposed.
So far, a handful of applicants have effectively finished this process, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
Hegseth needed JD Vance to vote opposite to the links to see him, after the accusations of the upper alcohol intake and the competitive habit towards women were shown to the former Fox News host.
One of the most controversial selections is Russell Vought, who has been confirmed to lead the office of management and budget, a role he held during Trump’s first term.
He was closely involved with Project 2025, a conservative blueprint for Trump’s second term that the president tried to distance himself from during the campaign.
In other places, Chris Wright of the oil and fuel industry, a type without political experience, showed as secretary of power.
He faced a complaint at his confirmation hearing for challenging the links between climate replacement and the most common wildfires, being concerned about “media threshing. “
Former New York congressman Lee Zeldin has also been confirmed as environmental protection agency administrator.
He told Vermont Bernie Sanders his confirmation audience that he believes in the risk of replacing the weather and that the United States will have to “urgently deal with those problems. “
But Zeldin seemed to make a complete 180 on this subject an interview with Breitbart this week, wondering the legitimacy of the existing climate science and saying the world’s deadlines, supposedly, “they came and left. “
Trump’s best friend Pam Bondi has proven herself to be Attorney General. She insisted that she would that the Justice Department would remain independent of the White House. During his hearing, he did not say that Trump had lost the 2020 election.
Heat Millionaire’s elective fund manager, Scott Bessent, showed as secretary of the Treasury, where he will have influenced U. S. tax collections and fiscal policy.
A firm backer of Trump’s tariffs, Bessent has pushed back against the idea that the president’s policies would be inflationary.
Scott Turner, a former NFL player, showed himself as housing secretary. He controlled the first term of the Opportunity Revitalization and House Revitalization Council in white.
South Dakota governor Kristi Noem has been confirmed as homeland security secretary.
Noem is a firm supporter for Trump’s hard-line immigration agenda. She made headlines last year when she released a book containing an account of her killing her hunting dog, as well as a false claim that she once met Kim Jong Un.
Doug Burgum has also been confirmed as interior secretary, while Doug Collins has been confirmed as veterans affairs secretary.
Members of Congress were prevented from a U. S. Department of Education construction site in Washington today.
It comes amid rumours that US President Donald Trump may shut the department entirely.
The crews scratched the signaling that showed “the American firm for development” of the construction of Ronald Reagan in Washington, where the company’s headquarters before.
Follow Donald Trump’s resolution for radically to the company after signing a decree to freeze foreign aid during a 90 -day effectiveness last month.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, shared before and after images of the building on X.
The post’s caption, “disgraced through what was,” is a reference to Kamala Harris, who has continually used prayer in her election crusade and laughed at it.
Donald Trump has just uploaded to Air Force One in his A Mar-A-Lago for a busy weekend.
The president of the United States returns to his home in Palm Beach, nicknamed the “White Winter House”, for the time since he assumed the position.
Tonight, he’ll host a private dinner alongside some Republican senators and their spouses.
On Sunday, he will play to New Orleans for Super Bowl LIX.
Donald Trump has signed a decree to combat “serious violations of human rights” in South Africa, said a White House official.
The US president has said in the past that he will reduce all investment in South Africa and said that “terrible things” go there.
He said last Sunday: “They’re taking away land, they’re confiscating land, and actually they’re doing things that are perhaps far worse than that.”
Trump to refer to a new law in South Africa that provides the powers of the government in safe cases of land over the component of people.
South Africa is the American commercial spouse in Africa.
The news conference between Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is now over, so we’re moving back to our regular news coverage…
Previously, we listen to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who spoke with the president of the Mike Johnson room.
He said the alliance between Israel and the United States “has never been stronger” and said it “moved deeply” through the welcome it won in Washington this week.
Look at his suburban comments.
Shigeru Ishiba is what Donald Trump has been since he arrived at the White House.
The Japanese prime minister says he watched Trump for “many years on TV” and that assembly was “quite exciting. “
“On TV, he’s scary and has a very strong personality,” he says with a laugh in the room.
“But when I met him, in fact, he’s very honest and very tough and strong-willed for America and the world as a whole. “