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Education Department's major cuts to its staff. And, a proposed Ukraine peace deal

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Education Department's major cuts to its staff. And, a proposed Ukraine peace deal

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The U.S. Department of Education last night said it would cut nearly 50% of its workforce. Impacted staff will be placed on administrative leave beginning March 21. Over 1,300 positions will be cut and roughly another 600 employees accepted voluntary resignations or retired over the last two months.

A man walks past the U.S. Department of Education building in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 7.

Gent Shkullaku/ZUMA Press Wire via Alamy


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  • 🎧 The union for many Education Department workers shared with NPR the list of employees who are expected to be laid off, which shows wide-ranging cuts, NPR’s Jonaki Mehta tells Up First. Sheria Smith, an attorney for the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, says there are concerns from staffers being laid off about the impact these cuts will have on the American public. The Institute of Education Sciences is one of the Education Department offices that are protected by law, but a termination email for an employee of one of its sub-branches states their entire unit is “being abolished.” It’s not clear yet if that’s legal.

The House voted 217 to 213 yesterday to approve a short-term spending bill that would fund the government until the end of September. Funding for the federal government expires at midnight Friday, leaving the Senate with less than 72 hours to pass a stopgap spending bill.

  • 🎧 Republicans control the Senate with 53 seats and they will need 60 votes to overcome a filibuster, NPR’s Claudia Grisales says. Seven or more Democrats will need to vote yes to make this happen. A big sticking point for Democrats in the House was that they wanted language that put limits on President Trump’s ability to make spending decisions. Democrats don’t want to be seen as responsible for causing a government shutdown and on the other hand want to put up a fight against Trump and his agenda.

Ukrainian and American delegations announced an agreement on a 30-day ceasefire proposal last night after nine hours of talks in Saudi Arabia. The agreement comes less than two weeks after a string of harsh words between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the White House’s Oval Office. Now, the pressure is on Russia to accept the American-Ukrainian deal. The U.S. delegation will next meet with Russia.

  • 🎧 NPR’s Eleanor Beardsley says the monthlong ceasefire would provide Ukraine with space and calm to begin negotiations toward larger-scale peace talks. The deal would include the cessation of shooting and attacks on the Black Sea, the front line and in Ukraine’s cities. The Trump administration announced it would resume sharing intelligence and delivery of military supplies, which were temporarily paused.

Deep dive

Emergency vehicles are parked outside the Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wis., following a shooting on Dec. 16, 2024.

Emergency vehicles are parked outside the Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wis., following a shooting on Dec. 16, 2024.

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The recent shootings at high schools in Madison, Wis., and Nashville, Tenn., exemplify what some researchers are calling “nonideological” terrorism. These attacks seem to stem from various antisocial, decentralized online networks that inspire young people to commit violent acts. This identified pattern challenges the traditional categories used by law enforcement and researchers to understand radicalization pathways, such as radical Islamist terrorism and white nationalist terrorism.

  • ➡️ Cody Zoschak, a senior manager at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, says his team has found that a growing number of school shooting plots are linked to the True Crime Community. TCC is a shared-interest group of people who obsess over mass killings, which have developed on social media platforms.
  • ➡️ There is also a subculture, Saints Culture, which portrays mass killers as almost superhuman figures, and high-casualty attacks are framed as the ultimate legacy worth emulating.
  • ➡️ The reach of violent ideological movements has widened to women. Zoschak says girls tend to find their way to TCC through online eating disorder communities.
  • ➡️ Boys often find TCC through gore forums, where they have been desensitized to violence through videos of torture, injury and death.

Here’s more on the new radicalization pattern experts are warning about.

If you or someone you know may be considering suicide or is in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

Picture show

2nd place winner - “This photograph was captured during my trip to Blitar, East Java Indonesia. I was travelling to a small village named Kampung Nusantara. That day when I was walking around the village, I met Mbok Sutinah, 82 years, a grandma who's been selling watermelon since 1987 after her husband passed away to support her family.”

2nd place winner – “This photograph was captured during my trip to Blitar, East Java Indonesia. I was travelling to a small village named Kampung Nusantara. That day when I was walking around the village, I met Mbok Sutinah, 82 years, a grandma who’s been selling watermelon since 1987 after her husband passed away to support her family.”

Hardijanto Budiman


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Hardijanto Budiman

The photography exhibition “Iconic Women: From Everyday Life to Global Heroes” opened Saturday at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. The exhibition features the winners of the Center’s 11th annual “Shining a Light” photo contest, which aims to highlight the issue of gender equality. This year’s exhibit focuses on “iconic women,” showcasing photographs that illustrate how women of various ages worldwide have inspired, contributed to, empowered, and uplifted their communities, families, and the lives of others. Here are some portraits from the exhibition.

3 things to know before you go

Salvage crews work on recovering wreckage near the site in the Potomac River of a mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and a Black Hawk helicopter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025, in Arlington, Va.

Salvage crews work on recovering wreckage near the site in the Potomac River of a mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and a Black Hawk helicopter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025, in Arlington, Va.

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  1. NTSB chairwoman Jennifer Homendy stated that there is a “serious safety issue” in the airspace around Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. This follows the release of a preliminary report on the Jan. 29 midair collision between an Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet that killed 67 people.
  2. Southwest Airlines announced yesterday that it will begin charging certain passengers to check their first two bags on flights. It has not been specified how much it will cost to check the bags.
  3. Leadership for the British soccer team Manchester United announced plans for a new stadium. The new venue would be the biggest in the U.K.

This newsletter was edited by Yvonne Dennis.

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U.S. to Withdraw From Group Investigating Responsibility for Ukraine Invasion

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U.S. to Withdraw From Group Investigating Responsibility for Ukraine Invasion

The Justice Department has quietly informed European officials that the United States is withdrawing from a multinational group created to investigate leaders responsible for the invasion of Ukraine, including President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, according to people familiar with the situation.

The decision to withdraw from the International Center for the Prosecution of the Crime of Aggression against Ukraine, which the Biden administration joined in 2023, is the latest indication of the Trump administration’s move away from President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s commitment to holding Mr. Putin personally accountable for crimes committed against Ukrainians.

The group was created to hold the leadership of Russia, along with its allies in Belarus, North Korea and Iran, accountable for a category of crimes — defined as aggression under international law and treaties that violates another country’s sovereignty and is not initiated in self-defense.

The decision, the people familiar with the situation said, is expected to be announced on Monday in an email to the staff and membership of the group’s parent organization, the European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation, better known as Eurojust.

The United States was the only country outside Europe to cooperate with the group, sending a senior Justice Department prosecutor to The Hague to work with investigators from Ukraine, the Baltic States and Romania.

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A department spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday night.

The Trump administration is also reducing work done by the department’s War Crimes Accountability Team, created in 2022 by the attorney general at the time, Merrick B. Garland, and staffed by experienced prosecutors. It was intended to coordinate Justice Department efforts to hold Russians accountable who are responsible for atrocities committed in the aftermath of the full invasion three years ago.

“There is no hiding place for war criminals,” Mr. Garland said in announcing the organization of the unit.

The department, he added, “will pursue every avenue of accountability for those who commit war crimes and other atrocities in Ukraine.”

During the Biden administration, the team, known as WarCAT, focused on an important supporting role: providing Ukraine’s overburdened prosecutors and law enforcement with logistical help, training and direct assistance in bringing charges of war crimes committed by Russians to Ukraine’s courts.

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The team did bring one significant case. In December 2023, U.S. prosecutors used a war crimes statute for the first time since it was enacted nearly three decades ago to charge four Russian soldiers in absentia with torturing an American who was living in the Kherson region of Ukraine.

In recent comments, President Trump has moved closer to Mr. Putin while clashing with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky — going so far as to falsely suggest that Ukraine played a role in provoking Russia’s brutal and illegal military incursion.

“You should have never started it,” Mr. Trump said in February, referring to Ukraine’s leaders. “You could have made a deal.” He followed up in a post on social media, calling Mr. Zelensky a “Dictator without Elections” and saying he had “done a terrible job” in office.

The Trump administration gave no reason for withdrawing from the investigative group other than the same explanation for other personnel and policy moves: the need to redeploy resources, according to the people familiar with the situation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the moves publicly.

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Young Americans lose trust in the state

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Young Americans lose trust in the state

Young Americans’ confidence in the apparatus of government has dropped dramatically to one of the lowest levels in any prosperous country, a Financial Times analysis of Gallup data shows. 

The Gallup polls, conducted by surveying 70,000 people globally over the course of 2023 and 2024, found that less than a third of under-30s in the US trust the government. The proportion of US young people who said they lack freedom to choose what to do with their lives also hit a record high at 31 per cent in 2024 — a level worse than all other rich economies, bar Greece and Italy. 

“[For younger people in the US] the future seems kind of bleak,” said Julie Ray, managing editor at Gallup. 

While the Gallup poll does not cover the direct repercussions of US President Donald Trump’s second term, experts believe that rising political polarisation is likely to lead to a sharp drop in trust in future surveys. 

Connor Brennan, a 25-year-old financial economics PhD student at the University of Chicago, and disillusioned Republican, said he trusted the “big figures” in politics “a little less” now than in the past. 

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“Friends, families these days are more and more torn apart by politics and seeing that (politics) taken as almost entertainment,” Brennan said. “It should be boring . . . it really has become more and more like, you watch the latest episode of the sitcom.”

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The proportion of young people in the US reporting no confidence in the judicial system also hit a record high in 2024, while more than a third of under-30s also do not trust the police. 

“I would not say I trust the government — a lot of things that have changed quite recently that call the government’s ability to be honest with the American people into question,” said Daniel Quezada, a 22-year-old substitute teacher in Arkansas, adding that he also had a “profound, profound sense of scepticism” regarding the police after being peacefully involved in protests in 2020. 

Elsewhere in the world, young people in Greece and Italy are among the most dissatisfied with public services and confidence in institutions. Nordic economies, such as Finland, Denmark and Norway, tend to be the best performers.

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Some 61 per cent of young people in the US also reported having recently experienced stress, the third-highest proportion among advanced economies after Greece and Canada. 

Daniel Quezada
Daniel Quezada: ‘A lot of things that have changed quite recently that call the government’s ability to be honest with the American people into question’ © Daniel Quezada

US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show US emergency department visits for self-harm reached 384 people per 100,000 population among those aged 10 to 29 in 2022, up from 260 a decade earlier and four times the rate for those aged 30 and over.

The collapse in young people’s happiness in the US and elsewhere has been pinned on factors ranging from political polarisation, stagnating quality of life to difficulties in getting on the property ladder.

Haifang Huang, an economics professor at the University of Alberta, referred to “a laundry list” of factors, including labour-market challenges after the 2008-09 global financial crisis, the high cost of housing and rising inequality among the young exacerbated by inheritance and parental supports. “It is hard to evaluate their relative contributions.”

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Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt in his book, The Anxious Generation, blames the mental health crisis in all main Anglosphere countries on the mass adoption of smartphones, along with the advent of social media and addictive online gaming.

John Helliwell, a founding editor of Gallup’s World Happiness Report, said that the trends in the data supported the view that the decline in trust and wellbeing among young people “has something to do with the kind of stories being told on social media”. 

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Political polarisation, meanwhile, had also resulted in a “situation where there’s no agreed set of common information”. 

“If there’s nobody who you believe, then of course, your trust is going to be low in everybody,” Helliwell said. “That’s been increasingly happening in the US, because people are denying each other’s facts and living in their own media isolation.”

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While young Americans are relatively upbeat about their economic prospects — a reflection of their higher-than-average earnings and low unemployment rate — some are becoming gloomy about growth too.  

“The economy isn’t doing great — there were a lot of issues with relatively high inflation and high cost of living, massive wealth inequality, concerns with employment that were iterated by both sides in the election leading up to this year,” said Misha Newbold, a 20-year-old student at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore who grew up in Kansas. 

Newbold added that he disagreed with cuts to federal agencies undertaken by technology billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (Doge). “I think cutting employment opportunities, shrinking a lot of the government agencies that make this country run . . . is actually counter-productive to the employment concerns.”

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Brennan, meanwhile, said he was increasingly concerned about the US’s fiscal position, with the national debt set to balloon over the coming decade. 

He also thinks an economic crisis borne of Trump’s policies would not be viewed by the president’s supporters as being down to mistakes made by the White House.

“That’s what worries me the most — that, even if we are confronted with issues that should cause us to have some sort of come to Jesus moment, I don’t think we’ll come to Jesus.”

Data visualisation by Valentina Romei and Alan Smith in London

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Residents survey the aftermath of deadly weekend storms across the southern U.S.

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Residents survey the aftermath of deadly weekend storms across the southern U.S.

Destruction from a severe storm is seen on Saturday, March 15, 2025, in Wayne County, Mo.

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Residents in large swaths of the southern U.S. on Sunday took stock of the devastation left in the wake of tornadoes, strong winds and dust storms over the weekend.

The severe weather left at least 37 people dead, and destroyed scores of homes.

This bout of storms was forecast to clear the East Coast by Sunday night, according to the National Weather Service.

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In Missouri, where 12 people died, first responders and road crews worked to clear debris, restore power to homes, and distribute recovery supplies.

Gov. Mike Kehoe’s office said Sunday that hundreds of homes, schools and businesses were destroyed of severely damaged, with some burned from wildfires aggravated by high winds.

“The scale of devastation across our state is staggering,” Gov. Kehoe said. “While we grieve the lives of those lost, we are also focused on action.”

In Butler County, a man was killed after a tornado ripped through his home. Coroner Jim Akers told the AP that the twister left his home “unrecognizable” with “just a debris field.”

Hurricane force winds in Oklahoma, fueled deadly wildfires and dust storms. Residents there spent Saturday surveying fire damage, after more than 170,000 acres burned.

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By Sunday afternoon, an early assessment from local officials identified more than 400 homes damaged statewide. Four people died and 142 others were injured due to the fires and winds, officials said.

Cheryl Rabet of Stillwater lost her home in the blazes, as well as two RVs she rented out, reported KOSU’s Lionel Ramos.

“We didn’t have a chance to grab anything,” she said, including their 16-year-old cat Momo. “We grabbed one of our cats and that was about it.”

The Red Cross and other relief efforts have been providing food and other resources for shelters across parts of Oklahoma and other affected regions.

Brady Moore, Stillwater city manager, warned that it may still be unsafe for residents to return to neighborhoods in the path of destruction, while crews work to repair downed powerlines and shut off water and gas lines.

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Damage assessments in the majority of Alabama counties continued on Sunday, said Gov. Kay Ivey. Three people died in the state, she said.

In Troy, Ala., where a tornado flipped an 18-wheeler truck, about 200 people took shelter at a recreation center, reported local CBS station WAKA News.

“Right as the last people got in, the storm passed over, blowing out windows in cars in the parking lot, and tearing off part of the gymnasium roof,” said Dan Smith, the director of the city’s parks and recreation department. “Our sports complex, including the baseball and softball park, also suffered major damage. But we’re very fortunate—it could’ve been a lot worse.”

There were no injuries.

In Texas on Sunday, fire crews were battling a 9,500-acres blaze in Fredericksburg, in central Texas. The grass fire was more than half contained as of Sunday evening, according to the Texas A&M Forest Service.

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Across the state, more than 42,000 acres were burning from 36 fires on Sunday night, the service said.

The threat of fires was expected to continue into the week, with a red flag warning – signaling a high risk of wildfire conditions — was expected to be reinstated for South Central Texas on Monday, as Texas Public Radio reported.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Sunday that the state was granted federal assistance to help fight the fires.

“Texas is working around the clock to provide all necessary resources to local officials fighting wildfires in Gray and Gillespie counties,” he said.

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