News
Trump Drops In On SCOTUS For Surprise Visit In Monumental Move
President Donald Trump said he plans to be in attendance when the Supreme Court hears arguments Wednesday on his birthright citizenship executive order.
“I’m going,” Trump told reporters Tuesday, before adding a bit more tentatively, “I think so. I do believe.”
The presence of a sitting president at the high court during oral arguments would be a first, according to historians. But Trump has previously flirted with attending oral arguments before reversing course. Last October, he said he planned to attend arguments for his so-called Liberation Day tariffs, but he later backed down. He wound up losing that case, 6-3.
Asked about the president’s plans, a White House spokesperson referred back to his comments to journalists. A Supreme Court spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump repeated his argument that the Constitution’s 14th Amendment was only intended to give citizenship to the children of former slaves and was not intended to apply to virtually anyone born on U.S. soil. The majority of constitutional scholars and legal precedents reject his view.
“Everything having to do with birthright citizenship, it was at the end of the Civil War,” Trump said. “The reason was it had to do with the babies of slaves and the protection of the babies of slaves. It didn’t have to do with the protection of multi-millionaires and billionaires wanting to have their children get an American citizenship.”
On his first day back in office last year, Trump signed an executive order that sought to deny federal benefits such as passports to children born in the U.S. to undocumented immigrants and those on limited-duration visas. He argued that the prospect of automatic U.S. citizenship encourages illegal immigration and so-called birth tourism, where families arrange to have their children while visiting the U.S.
Trump’s order was blocked by a series of judges, who ruled that the 14th Amendment guarantees citizenship to almost everyone born in the U.S., regardless of their parents’ status. The justices are set to hear arguments Wednesday on the Trump administration’s bid to overturn the lower court rulings and let Trump’s order take effect.
Trump’s latest salvos toward the high court come as he has repeatedly hectored the justices on social media, often alternating between calls to back his citizenship order and bitter complaints about his loss in the tariff case.
Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Trump asserted that Republican-appointed justices and judges often vote against the views of the president who picked them while Democratic-appointed jurists “almost without fail” vote in lockstep with their political backers.
Discussing the court’s GOP nominees, Trump said: “Some people would call it stupidity. Some people would call it disloyal. Some people would say they’re right.”
However, earlier Tuesday, the court issued an 8-1 ruling that rejected Colorado’s ban on so-called conversion therapy aimed at LGBTQ people. In that case, two of the court’s liberal appointees voted with all the conservative justices to support the position endorsed by the Trump administration.
Trump said Tuesday that he’s been at the Supreme Court “once before,” but he’s visited at least four times as president. He attended the formal investiture ceremonies for his first two nominees: Justice Neil Gorsuch, in 2017, and Justice Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.
Trump also visited the high court in 2019, following the death of retired Justice John Paul Stevens, and in 2020, during funeral ceremonies for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. He was not on hand for the formal installation of his nominee to replace Ginsburg, Justice Amy Coney Barrett. She was confirmed in 2020, but her ceremonial investiture was delayed for almost a year — into President Joe Biden’s term — due to the pandemic.
Entertainment
Trump, First Lady Walk Into Grand Opening — Floored By Stunning Surprise
President Donald Trump made a high-profile appearance Tuesday night at one of Washington’s most iconic cultural venues, attending the opening performance of the hit musical Chicago at the newly renamed Trump-Kennedy Center. The visit marked one of his final appearances at the institution before it is set to close for a sweeping renovation this July.
According to reporting from Associated Press, Trump arrived at the Washington, DC landmark alongside First Lady Melania Trump, drawing attention from both attendees and media alike. The evening also marked a notable milestone for the couple—it was their first joint appearance at the venue since the January 26 premiere of the documentary Melania, as previously reported by Breitbart News.
Trump has made several appearances at the venue in recent years, including attending the opening night production of Les Misérables last summer. But Tuesday’s event carried added weight, coming at a time of significant transformation and controversy surrounding the institution.
The musical Chicago—set in the roaring 1920s—remains one of Broadway’s most enduring productions. Known for its sharp satire, the show explores how the worlds of show business and media can elevate criminals into celebrities, a theme that continues to resonate with modern audiences. As noted in the AP report, the production’s biting commentary on fame and scandal adds an extra layer of intrigue to its staging in the nation’s capital.
The audience greeted the president and first lady with a standing ovation as they took their seats, underscoring the significance of the moment. The beloved production will continue its limited run at the Opera House through April 5, offering theatergoers one of the final opportunities to experience performances at the venue before its temporary closure.
Looking ahead, the center is scheduled to host another major event: the awarding of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor to comedian Bill Maher on June 28—an occasion Trump could potentially attend as well.
Since returning to office in January 2025, Trump has exerted considerable influence over the institution. As the AP report outlines, the Republican president reshaped its leadership by installing a new, handpicked board of trustees. That board subsequently named him chairman and approved the rebranding of the venue to include his name.
These sweeping changes have not come without backlash. The renaming of the center and the decision to close it for two years triggered a wave of cancellations from prominent performers, musicians, and artistic groups, many of whom voiced opposition to Trump’s involvement in the historically prestigious institution.
The controversy has also spilled into the legal arena. Both the name change and the planned closure are currently the subject of ongoing legal proceedings, leaving the future of the Trump-Kennedy Center uncertain even as it prepares to go dark for renovations.
For now, however, the spotlight remains on the stage—where art, politics, and public attention continue to intersect in dramatic fashion.
News
Trump to Address Nation With Historical News
rewrite this article, make it more engaging, and at least 400 words long. Keep all quotes intact: President Donald Trump will address the nation on Wednesday night to give “an important update” regarding the ongoing war against Iran, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced.
“Tomorrow night at 9PM ET, President Trump will give an Address to the Nation to provide an important update on Iran,” Leavitt wrote in a post on X.
The news of Trump’s address comes as he told CBS News’s Weijia Jiang on Tuesday that the United States’ Operation Epic Fury was “two weeks ahead of schedule.”
In a thread on X, Jiang added that Trump told her “not much” else “has to happen between now and declaring victory”:
Trump says “not much” more has to happen between now and declaring victory, pointing out regime change is a “big factor”:
“We want to clean up some ends… We’ve had total regime change. These are different people than anyone has ever heard of before, and frankly they’ve been more reasonable. So, we’ve had total regime change beyond what anyone thought possible. It’s a big factor.”
While taking questions from reporters on Tuesday after signing an executive order regarding election integrity, Trump predicted that Operation Epic Fury would “come to an end in the next two or three weeks.”
“I think two or three weeks,” Trump said in response to a question from a reporter. “We’ll leave, because there’s no reason for us to do this.”
rewrite this article, make it more engaging, and at least 400 words long. Keep all quotes intact:
News
Volunteers Count 1,200+ Killings by Migrants Amid Silence from Agencies, Media
At least 1,411 people have been killed by illegal migrants, nearly all within the last 25 years, says a grassroots group that opposes mass migration.
The post Volunteers Count 1,200+ Killings by Migrants Amid Silence from Agencies, Media appeared first on Breitbart.
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