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  • Lawsuits targeting DOGE are meant to stop Trump’s agenda, experts say

    Lawsuits targeting DOGE are meant to stop Trump’s agenda, experts say

    With countless legal challenges to the Trump administration’s federal spending actions, legal experts say plaintiffs in these suits are attempting to block President Donald Trump’s agenda as the courts navigate conceivably new territory. 

    “I think this is a continuation of the warfare that we’ve seen over the past four-plus years during the Biden administration,” Zack Smith, Senior Legal Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, told Fox News Digital. 

    The only difference now is that the instigators of the lawfare are outside of government, and they’re trying to use different advocacy groups, different interest groups to try to throw up obstructions to Donald Trump’s actions.”

    LAWSUIT TRACKER: NEW RESISTANCE BATTLING TRUMP’S SECOND TERM THROUGH ONSLAUGHT OF LAWSUITS TAKING AIM AT EOS

    The Trump administration so far has become the target of more than 90 lawsuits since the start of the president’s second term, many of which are challenging the president’s directives. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    The Trump administration so far has become the target of more than 90 lawsuits since the start of the president’s second term, many of which are challenging the president’s directives. 

    Plaintiffs ranging from blue state attorneys general to advocacy and interest groups are specifically challenging Trump’s federal spending actions, including the administration’s attempt to halt federal funding to various programs and the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) efforts to slash excess government spending.

    Smith said he suspects these plaintiffs are attempting to “slow down” the Trump administration’s progress and agenda via these lawsuits “even if they know or suspect their lawsuits will ultimately not be successful.”

    UC Berkeley Law Professor John Yoo told Fox News Digital that the plaintiffs in the spending cases are showing “political weakness” by seeking judicial recourse rather than going to Congress.

    “I think that what you’re seeing is political weakness, because, if they had popular support, they should go to Congress,” Yoo said. “That’s the branch for which the Founders expected to be responsible in containing or reacting to any expansion of presidential power that went too far.”

    JUDGE BLOCKS DOGE FROM ACCESSING EDUCATION DEPARTMENT RECORDS

    Despite the public outcry from conservatives that judges blocking Trump’s federal spending actions are “activist judges,” Yoo said the judges are “confused.”

    “There’s a lot of confusion going on in the lower courts,” he said. “I think they misunderstand their proper role.”

    Smith said that in the cases at hand, many judges are “interposing their own views of what [are] appropriate actions for the executive branch of government,” saying this is “not the proper role of a judge.” 

    Split images show anti-DOGE protesters

    Plaintiffs ranging from blue state attorneys general to advocacy and interest groups are specifically challenging Trump’s federal spending actions. (Leigh Green for Fox News Digital)

    “And yet you see some of these judges who are issuing these TROs, they’re being very aggressive, and they’re impeding on core executive branch functions when it really should be the president and his advisers who get to make important decisions,” Smith said. 

    Smith added he hopes the Supreme Court is “taking a skeptical eye towards some of these actions by these judges.”

    Both Smith and Yoo said they expect these challenges to eventually make their way up to the Supreme Court, with Smith saying the high court “is going to have to confront some questions that it’s been trying to skirt for several years now.”

    JUDGE ORDERS TRUMP OFFICIALS TO SIT FOR DEPOSITIONS IN LAWSUIT OVER DOGE ACCESS TO FEDERAL DATABASES

    “This has to go to the Supreme Court because you’re seeing confusion in the lower courts about what is the proper procedural way to challenge spending freezes,” Yoo said. 

    On Wednesday, Chief Justice John Roberts paused a federal judge’s order that required the Trump administration to pay around $2 billion in foreign aid funds to contractors by midnight. Smith called the move by Roberts “actually pretty stunning.”

    Roberts and Sotomayor wait for Biden State of the Union address

    Chief Justice John Roberts on Wednesday paused a federal judge’s order that required the Trump administration to pay around $2 billion in foreign aid funds to contractors by midnight. (Shawn Thew-Pool/Getty Images)

    “And I think a reasonable interpretation of that would be that the justices, particularly the Chief Justice, is kind of sending a shot across the bow to some of these judges that, ‘Look, if you keep this up, we’re going to step in and intervene,’” Smith said. 

    Yoo said he expects the Trump administration to ultimately prevail on many of the suits launched against him, saying that “he’s really, in many ways, following the decisions of the Roberts Court itself about how far executive power goes.”

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    “Now, just because Trump won an election doesn’t mean he gets to do whatever he wants — he has to achieve his mandate through constitutional processes, which I think he’s doing,” Yoo said. 

    “He’s litigating, he’s appearing at the Supreme Court, so he’s not ignoring the courts. He’s doing what you should do if you’re the president and you have the responsibility to execute the law,” Yoo continued. 

    Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz contributed to this report. 

  • Researchers reveals why they believe Mars is red

    Researchers reveals why they believe Mars is red

    Mars’ distinctive red color comes from the mineral ferrihydrite, which only forms in the presence of cool water, a new study claims. 

    Ferrihydrite also forms at a lower temperature than other minerals that make up the aptly-named red planet’s surface, like hematite, which had previously been considered the main reason for its rouge hue.

    “This suggests that Mars may have had an environment capable of sustaining liquid water before it transitioned from a wet to a dry environment billions of years ago,” NASA said in a news release this week. 

    NASA partially funded the study. 

    GRIFF JENKINS: ‘THE RACE TO MARS IS ON’

    Mars’ distinctive red color comes from the mineral ferrihydrite, which only forms in the presence of cool water, a new study claims.  (AFP via Getty Images)

    Researchers in the study, published in Nature Communications this week, analyzed data from several Mars missions, including several Mars’ rovers, and the findings were compared to lab experiments “where the team tested how light interacts with ferrihydrite particles and other minerals under simulated Martian conditions,” NASA said.

    “The fundamental question of why Mars is red has been considered for hundreds if not for thousands of years,” the study’s lead author Adam Valantinas said in a statement. 

    Valantinas is a postdoctoral fellow at Brown University who began the study as a Ph.D. student at Switzerland’s University of Bern. 

    He continued, “From our analysis, we believe ferrihydrite is everywhere in the dust and also probably in the rock formations, as well. We’re not the first to consider ferrihydrite as the reason for why Mars is red, but we can now better test this using observational data and novel laboratory methods to essentially make a Martian dust in the lab.”

    The surface of Mars

    In this handout released by NASA, a Mars landscape is seen in a photo taken by the panoramic camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit in 2003.  (NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Cornell University via Getty Images)

    NASA’S MARTIAN HELICOPTER PROMISES UNPRECEDENTED VIEWS OF THE RED PLANET

    Senior author of the study, Jack Mustard, called the study a “door-opening opportunity.” 

    “It gives us a better chance to apply principles of mineral formation and conditions to tap back in time,” Mustard, a professor at Brown University, said. “What’s even more important, though, is the return of the samples from Mars that are being collected right now by the Perseverance rover. When we get those back, we can actually check and see if this is right.”

    The research shows that Mars likely had a cool but wet and potentially habitable climate in its ancient past.

    Mars’ atmosphere is too cold and then to support life now, but billions of years ago the planet had an abundance of water, NASA said, which is also evidenced in the ferrihydrite found in its dust. 

    lab sample of simulated Mars dust

    Lab sample of simulated Mars dust.  (NASA/Adam Valantinas)

    “These new findings point to a potentially habitable past for Mars and highlight the value of coordinated research between NASA and its international partners when exploring fundamental questions about our solar system and the future of space exploration,” Geronimo Villanueva, Associate Director for Strategic Science of the Solar System Exploration Division at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, and co-author of the study, said. 

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    Valantinas said what the researchers “want to understand is the ancient Martian climate, the chemical processes on Mars — not only ancient — but also present.”

    He continued, “Then there’s the habitability question: Was there ever life? To understand that, you need to understand the conditions that were present during the time of this mineral’s formation. What we know from this study is the evidence points to ferrihydrite forming and for that to happen there must have been conditions where oxygen from air or other sources and water can react with iron. Those conditions were very different from today’s dry, cold environment. As Martian winds spread this dust everywhere, it created the planet’s iconic red appearance.”

  • 76ers star shutdown: Joel Embiid sidelined for rest of NBA season

    76ers star shutdown: Joel Embiid sidelined for rest of NBA season

    Joel Embiid’s stellar 2022-23 season, which culminated with the Philadelphia 76ers center receiving NBA MVP honors, seems like a distant memory. The 7-footer’s pro basketball career has been hampered by injuries, with knee issues contributing to his latest setback.

    On Friday, the Sixers announced the seven-time NBA All-Star would be forced to watch games from the sideline for the rest of the season due to a left knee injury. He underwent a procedure to address the knee problems last February, but never seemed to return to form. Emiid and the Sixers tried to manage the pain and swelling in the knee this season prior to shutting him down.

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    Philadelphia 76ers’ Joel Embiid walks off the court after the 76ers lost an Emirates NBA Cup basketball game against the New York Knicks, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024, in Philadelphia.  (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

    The 76ers said the decision to shut down Embiid through the stretch of the 2024-25 campaign was made once it was determined he was “medically unable to play.”

    “The Philadelphia 76ers and Joel Embiid have been consulting with top specialists regarding ongoing issues with his left knee. After further evaluation, it has been determined that he is medically unable to play and will miss the remainder of the season to focus on treatment and rehabilitation,” the team said in a statement.

    2024-25 NBA CHAMPIONSHIP ODDS: THUNDER FAVORED, CELTICS CLOSING IN

    “We are working with medical experts to determine the exact treatment plan and will update media when we have more information. The team and specialists will continue working with Joel to ensure the best path forward for his long-term health and performance.”

    Joel Embiid scratches his neck

    Philadelphia 76ers’ Joel Embiid watches from the bench during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Indiana Pacers, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024, in Indianapolis.  (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

    Counting the 164 games he missed his first two seasons after he was the third overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft and what’s left of this season, Embiid will have played in 452 of 883 76ers’ games by the end of this season — missing nearly 50% of the regular season.

    The 76ers are 8-11 with Embiid this season, and 12-27 without him.

    Embiid has been hobbled by injuries all season, and served a three-game suspension for shoving a member of the media. He’s averaged 23.8 points — he averaged at least 30 and won two scoring titles the last three seasons — and scored only 29 points combined in his last two games.

    Embiid acknowledged earlier this month he may have to undergo another surgery on the left knee.

    Joel Embiid free throw

    Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers shoots a free throw during the game against the San Antonio Spurs on January 22, 2024 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images))

    “I think the straightforward answer is that when you’ve got something that’s inconsistent, at some point, you’ve got to do something about it,” Embiid said. “We don’t know what it is. We’re looking into every option.”

    He played just 39 games last season due to a torn meniscus in his left knee. Embiid did win a gold medal with the U.S. Olympic team last year at the Paris Games.

    He has played only 58 regular-season games and seven play-in tournament and playoff games since he earned league MVP honors.

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    Embiid signed a $193 million contract extension ahead of the season and has banked nearly $266 million in career earnings. 

    Philadelphia entered this season as one of the favorites to contend for an NBA title, but the team is in the midst of a nine-game losing streak. The Sixers entered Friday in the 12th spot in the Eastern Conference standings.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Mercedes-Benz CEO signals more potential US investment

    Mercedes-Benz CEO signals more potential US investment

    The CEO of Mercedes-Benz on Thursday signaled the company plans to invest more in the U.S. in the coming years and also discussed how tariffs could impact the automaker’s business.

    Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Källenius said on a call with reporters after the company announced its quarterly earnings results that it has “been operating in the United States for more than 120 years” and has “invested tens of billions of dollars into the United States.” 

    “We have two large operations on the passenger car side, one in Alabama and one in South Carolina,” Källenius said. “Directly, we employ more than 11,000 people in the United States. If you would count in all the suppliers and the ones that kind of are dependent on those final assembly jobs, the usual calculation is roughly 1-to-10, so another 100,000 jobs are associated with those plants. Our dealer partners, strong private investors around the country, employ 28,000 people and then again, they have a residual effect. “

    “The several hundred thousand jobs, tax revenue, etc. is the Mercedes-Benz footprint in the U.S.,” he explained. “What’s the point I am making? The point is we’re also an American company. Yes, we have our headquarters in Germany and our European origins, but we feel American.”

    TRUMP SAYS HE WILL INTRODUCE 25% TARIFFS ON AUTOS, PHARMACEUTICALS AND CHIPS

    Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Källenius said the company is opening to increasing its investments in the U.S. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Källenius noted that Mercedes-Benz has research and development activities in Silicon Valley as well as a presence in Michigan. He also indicated that the company plans to increase its investment in the U.S. to expand that footprint going forward. 

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    MBGYY MERCEDES-BENZ GROUP AG 15.5863 -0.26 -1.66%

    “What’s the road ahead? We are prepared to continue to invest billions and we want to grow our footprint in the United States. We are committed,” he said. “A little known fact — we are one of the major industrial exporters out of the United States. Two-thirds of the vehicles that we make in our Tuscaloosa plant actually go out into the world, a significant part of them obviously to Europe.”

    STARBUCKS, MERCEDES TEAM UP IN EV CHARGING NETWORK EXPANSION

    Mercedes-Benz-logo

    Källenius said Mercedes-Benz is mindful of how policy changes could impact its cash flows and, in turn, its investment opportunities. (AFP / Getty Images)

    Given Mercedes-Benz’s global presence, Källenius said that changes in tariffs or other aspects of trade policy could impact its investment decisions over the long-term. President Donald Trump signaled Wednesday that he is planning to impose 25% tariffs on imported automobiles.

    “So shifts in trade policy in either direction, of course, is very important to us,” Källenius explained. “When we make investment decisions about new models, as you rightly point out, you cannot move a plant over the weekend from one continent to another. Those are longer-term commitments, it takes two to three, maybe even four years to make those types of adjustments. And our supply network literally includes all five continents of the world, so it’s very, very sophisticated. It is more than a supply chain, I would call it more of a supply network.”

    FORD CEO SAYS TARIFFS COULD ‘BLOW A HOLE’ IN US AUTO INDUSTRY

    A Mercedes-Benz dealership in Canada

    Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Källenius said that zeroing out auto tariffs between the U.S. and European Union would spur investment. (Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Källenius also said that “trade policy can affect our business model” and that while policymakers will ultimately determine what comes of trade negotiations, a reciprocal move to lower tariffs or even no tariffs between the U.S. and the European Union (EU) would spur investment.

    “In the case of the EU, actually the tariff is larger going into the EU than into the United States at the moment, and somebody mentioned why not take it down to zero-zero and make the playing field level and maybe spur growth, which would encourage companies like us to invest even more,” he explained. “If they come up with solutions like that, that would, of course, be fantastic.”

    “I’m not going to speculate on what the result will be of the negotiation. All I can say is Mercedes-Benz is committed to the United States,” he added.

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    “We have to produce positive cash flows to fuel our investments. And financial strength equals innovation strength, equals return to the shareholder,” Källenius said. “We’re very mindful of things that could negatively influence our business model and reduce our cash flow. So if we’re operating in an environment as a strong member of the U.S. industrial family, we hope that will be taken into account, and there is nothing stopping us from upping the ante and investment more in the United States.”

  • Israel’s UN ambassador condemns Hamas’ ‘evil and depraved’ display of hostage coffins

    Israel’s UN ambassador condemns Hamas’ ‘evil and depraved’ display of hostage coffins

    The bodies of Kfir Bibas, Ariel Bibas and Oded Lifshitz were returned to Israel more than 500 days after they were taken hostage, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has confirmed. Hamas, though, was not finished disrespecting and using the hostages.

    Instead of sending the body of Shiri Bibas in the coffin bearing her name and photo, Hamas handed Israel an unidentified body. The IDF said the DNA of the body in the coffin does not match any other known hostage.

    In a display of brutality, coffins containing the remains of the three murdered Israeli hostages were put on display in a ceremony that has been nearly universally condemned.

    In a ceremony that has been nearly universally condemned, Hamas set out four coffins on a stage in front of a grotesque caricature of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on a banner that read in English, “The war criminal Netanyahu & his Nazi army killed them with missiles from Zionist warplanes.”

    On the coffins were photos of the deceased with their names and the words “arrest date” and the date of the Oct. 7 attacks.

    L-R: Shiri Bibas, Kfir Bibas, Ariel Bibas, and Oded Lifshitz. (Hostages Family Forum via AP)

    HAMAS HANDS OVER BODIES OF 4 SLAIN ISRAELIS, INCLUDING SHIRI BIBAS AND HER TWO YOUNG BOYS

    “Under international law, any handover of the remains of [the] deceased must comply with the prohibition of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, ensuring respect for the dignity of the deceased and their families,” the United Nations Geneva tweeted, attributing the quote to High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk.

    Türk’s condemnation of the Hamas ceremony, however, rang hollow for many who pointed out the U.N.’s reluctance to condemn the terror organization by name.

    “Hamas parading four coffins onstage to music is evil and depraved,” Israeli UN Ambassador Danny Danon said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

    “For 16 months, Israel has been fighting a deranged terrorist organization that places no value on human life, especially if it is Israeli or Jewish— all while international institutions like the UN refrained from condemning Hamas and formally demanding the immediate return of our hostages.”

    United Nations Assembly

    Israeli Permanent Member to the United Nations Danny Danon speaks during a session of the Security Council at the New York City headquarters. (Israel United Nations mission)

    DANNY DANON REACTS TO ISRAELI HOSTAGES BEING RELEASED IN POOR HEALTH: ‘ELIMINATING HAMAS IS THE ONLY SOLUTION’

    On Oct. 7, 2023, Türk put out a statement that appeared to equate Hamas’ attacks with Israel’s response, saying he was “shocked and appalled” by the violent attacks and condemning Israel’s response.

    Director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust and President and Human Rights Voice Anne Bayefsky accused Türk of being “one of the leading drivers of Palestinian terrorism and global antisemitism in the world today.”

    “He [Türk] personifies the use and abuse of ‘human rights’ as a front to perpetrate evil. He has blood on his hands,” Bayefsky told Fox News Digital. “Volker Türk – the UN’s top human rights official – is a human rights fraud who has more concern for Jews after death than saving Jewish lives from Palestinian savagery before they’ve perished.”

    Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

    United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk holds a press conference in Damascus, Syria Jan. 15, 2025.  (REUTERS/Yamam Al Shaar)

    ‘NO SANE COUNTRY WOULD STAND FOR THIS’: LAWMAKERS LAUNCH EFFORT TO WITHDRAW US FROM UN

    United Nations watchdog organization UN Watch called for Türk’s resignation in its December 2024 report showing that the human rights commissioner condemned the U.S. more than China, North Korea, Cuba, Saudi Arabia and Qatar combined. The organization also accused Türk of focusing on the Jewish state.

    “Türk was obsessed with condemning Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East, making 58 condemnations during the past two years, with 49 on the Hamas-Israel war. To put this in perspective, over the same two years, the Maduro regime in Venezuela was criticized only 4 times,” the report reads.

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    After the Oct. 7 attacks, Shiri Bibas and her sons, Kfir and Ariel, became symbols of Hamas’ brutality. The image of a terrified mother holding her 4-year-old and 9-month-old quickly spread around the world. Yarden Bibas, Shiri’s husband and the father of Kfir and Ariel, was taken captive separately and was ultimately released from Gaza on Feb. 1.

    In addition to the bodies of the Bibas boys and Lifshitz, Israel is preparing to receive six living hostages on Saturday as part of its ongoing ceasefire deal with Hamas.

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights but did not receive a response in time for publication.