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The Guardian Today US
Headlines
New figures shed light on US abortion travel as Trump cuts tracking research
Abortion  
New figures shed light on US abortion travel as Trump cuts tracking research
Guttmacher report finds 155,000 people crossed state lines for procedure – double number who did so before Roe’s fall
Ukraine war live  
Zelenskyy says Russia has intensified shelling despite ‘Easter truce’
US immigration  
US supreme court orders temporary halt to deportations of Venezuelan men
Space  
Nasa’s oldest astronaut celebrates 70th birthday with return to Earth
Pope Francis  
Pope makes brief appearance at Easter Sunday mass in St Peter’s Square
Trump presidency
‘I just ask God that he’s OK’: family of Venezuelan musician sent to El Salvador prison agonizes over his fate
US immigration  
‘I just ask God that he’s OK’: family of Venezuelan musician sent to El Salvador prison agonizes over his fate
Arturo Suárez Trejo was caught up in Trump’s immigration crackdown in North Carolina and sent to a notorious Salvadorian prison
Health  
Outrage as Trump’s coal expansion coupled with health cuts: ‘There won’t be anyone to work in the mines’
California  
The California political veteran angling for governor: ‘This is a break-glass moment’
Trump news at a glance  
Mass anti-Trump protests sweep nation; supreme court issues midnight order
 

Betsy Reed

Editor, Guardian US

Person Image

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask whether you could support the Guardian’s journalism as we face the unprecedented challenges of covering the second Trump administration.

As Trump himself observed: “The first term, everybody was fighting me. In this term, everybody wants to be my friend.”

He’s not entirely wrong. All around us, media organizations have begun to capitulate. First, two news outlets pulled election endorsements at the behest of their billionaire owners. Next, prominent reporters bent the knee at Mar-a-Lago. And then a major network – ABC News – rolled over in response to Trump’s legal challenges and agreed to a $16m million settlement in his favor.

The Guardian is clear: we have no interest in being Donald Trump’s – or any politician’s – friend. Our allegiance as independent journalists is not to those in power but to the public.

How are we able to stand firm in the face of intimidation and threats? As journalists say: follow the money. The Guardian has neither a self-interested billionaire owner nor profit-seeking corporate henchmen pressuring us to appease the rich and powerful. We are funded by our readers and owned by the Scott Trust – whose only financial obligation is to preserve our journalistic mission in perpetuity.

With the new administration boasting about its desire to punish journalists, and Trump and his allies already pursuing lawsuits against newspapers whose stories they don’t like, it has never been more urgent, or more perilous, to pursue fair, accurate reporting. Can you support the Guardian today?

We value whatever you can spare, but a recurring contribution makes the most impact, enabling greater investment in our most crucial, fearless journalism. As our thanks to you, we can offer you some great benefits. We’ve made it very quick to set up, so we hope you’ll consider it.

However you choose to support us: thank you for helping protect the free press. Whatever happens in the coming months and years, you can rely on the Guardian never to bow down to power, nor back down from truth.

 
In focus
Anti-Trump protesters in the US might look to the Czech Republic: ‘We are an example’
Czech Republic  
Anti-Trump protesters in the US might look to the Czech Republic: ‘We are an example’
Massive, sustained protests led to the 2021 downfall of billionaire oligarch Andrej Babiš, dubbed ‘the Czech Trump’
Analysis  
Melting glaciers will harm us all. Yet still we watch, unmoved
Tariffs  
Another crisis, another IMF summit: but unlike 2008, the delegates are disunited
Spotlight
The America I loved is gone
Stephen Marche  
The America I loved is gone
It was a nation of dreams, built for the screen. Then it shattered
Science  
‘It blew us away’: how an asteroid may have delivered the vital ingredients for life on Earth
Catholicism  
Who is Carlo Acutis, the computer prodigy who died at 15 and is to be first millennial saint?
Ask Philippa  
Can my marriage recover from my sex addiction?
Books  
The North Road by Rob Cowen review – the poetry and pain of Britain’s backbone
Religion  
Could I become a Christian in a year?
Opinion
The Nobel is just the start: 16 imagined victories for Donald Trump
The Nobel is just the start: 16 imagined victories for Donald Trump
Trump’s political bullying of Harvard will do nothing to foster diversity of thought
Sports
Soccer  
Reserved Slot can savour Liverpool's success as title beckons
Reserved Slot can savour Liverpool's success as title beckons
College sports  
Oklahoma edge Jordan Chiles’ UCLA for seventh NCAA gymnastics crown
Culture
Puzzles  
Piece of the action: entering the British Puzzle Championship
Piece of the action: entering the British Puzzle Championship
Television  
‘When medieval times return, I’ll be ready’: Bella Ramsey on friendship, fashion and The Last of Us
In case you missed it
The most high-profile cases in Trump’s immigration crackdown
Denied, detained, deported  
The most high-profile cases in Trump’s immigration crackdown
These are some of the people ensnared by the administration’s unprecedented measures to target people it believes oppose its agenda
Technology  
Microsoft faces growing unrest over role in Israel’s war on Gaza: ‘Close to a tipping point’
New York  
Self-identifying ‘hot girls’ are mobilizing to elect a progressive as New York City mayor
Donald Trump  
Giorgia Meloni whispers soothing words to Trump on ‘western nationalism’
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com
 

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