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Watch Taylor Swift’s reaction when Jimmy Fallon mentions she hasn’t toured in 4 years | CNN Business

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Watch Taylor Swift’s reaction when Jimmy Fallon mentions she hasn’t toured in 4 years | CNN Business

Watch Taylor Swift’s response when Jimmy Fallon mentions she hasn’t toured in 4 years

Throughout Taylor Swift’s first late night time interview for the reason that launch of her record-breaking album “Midnights,” the singer-songwriter teases a potential upcoming tour whereas chatting with host Jimmy Fallon.


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Venezuela Says It Will Resume Accepting U.S. Deportation Flights

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Venezuela Says It Will Resume Accepting U.S. Deportation Flights

Venezuela announced Saturday that it had reached an agreement with the Trump administration to resume accepting deportation flights carrying migrants who were in the United States illegally, with the first one landing as soon as Sunday.

Part of Venezuela’s willingness to accept the flights appeared related to the plight of Venezuelan migrants whom the Trump administration recently sent to notorious prisons in El Salvador with little to no due process. In a statement on Saturday, a representative for the Venezuelan government said: “Migration isn’t a crime, and we will not rest until we achieve the return of all of those in need and rescue our brothers kidnapped in El Salvador.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment Saturday, though one of the president’s close allies, Richard Grenell, said earlier this month that the Venezuelans had agreed to accept the flights.

Venezuela’s autocratic leader, Nicolás Maduro, suspended the deportation cooperation after the Trump administration revoked a Biden-era policy that allowed more oil to be produced in Venezuela and exported.

Since the suspension of the flights, Mr. Maduro has come under intense pressure from the Trump administration, which has been pressing various Latin American nations to take in more deportees. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on social media that Venezuela would face new “severe and escalating” sanctions if it refused to accept its repatriated citizens.

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Venezuelans have crossed the U.S.-Mexico border in record numbers in recent years, in response to the economic and social crisis consuming the nation, which Mr. Maduro blames on U.S. sanctions against his regime.

The agreement to resume the deportation flights comes after the Trump administration invoked an obscure wartime authority from 1798 called the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador, whose strongman leader agreed to accept the migrants, putting them in prisons where conditions are so nightmarish that many experts say they constitute human rights abuses.

The use of the wartime authority has emerged as a flashpoint in a broader struggle between federal judges across the country, who have sought to curb many of Mr. Trump’s recent executive actions, and an administration that has come close to openly refusing to comply with judicial orders.

Last week, a federal judge in Washington issued a temporary order blocking the government from deporting any immigrants under the wartime authority, saying he did not believe the law offered grounds for the deportation flights.

The Trump administration had claimed that the Venezuelan migrants who had been sent to El Salvador were all criminal gang members, but the families of some of those men, as well as immigration lawyers, argued that this was not the case for all the deportees sent to El Salvadoran prisons. And the administration provided little detail as to whom the individuals it sent there actually were. There seemed to be little to no due process at play.

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Mr. Trump has appeared captivated by the ability to send people to the prison complexes in El Salvador, threatening on Friday that those caught vandalizing Teslas could be banished there for 20 years.

The president and allies, including Elon Musk, went to war with the judge over his order restricting deportations, calling for the judge’s impeachment. The rapidly escalating spat caused Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. of the Supreme Court to weigh in with a rare statement, admonishing the calls for the judge’s impeachment. This spurred concerns of a constitutional crisis.

The Trump administration has continued to stonewall the judge’s questions about the deportations to El Salvador. “The government is not being terribly cooperative at this point,” said the judge, James E. Boasberg, at a hearing on Friday. “But I will get to the bottom of whether they violated my order and who was responsible.”

Saturday’s agreement could help Mr. Trump accelerate his plans for mass deportations, one of the central promises of his campaign. He has already enlisted military planes, sent people to third countries far from their homes and invoked the wartime law to achieve that goal. Arrests inside the country are up sharply relative to those in the Biden administration, but they are well below the levels Mr. Trump and his immigration advisers want.

The agreement to resume the deportation flights to Venezuela also comes a day after the Trump administration said that it would end a Biden-era program that allowed hundreds of thousands of people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to enter the United States lawfully and work for up to two years.

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Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Annie Correal contributed reporting.

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Turkey detains hundreds of protesters as demonstrations over mayor’s arrest intensify

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Turkey detains hundreds of protesters as demonstrations over mayor’s arrest intensify

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Turkish police have detained more than 300 people during the biggest opposition demonstrations in more than a decade, sparked by the arrest of Istanbul’s popular mayor, the Interior Ministry said on Saturday.

Ekrem İmamoğlu, the main challenger to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the country’s longtime leader, was taken into custody on Wednesday on corruption and terrorism charges.

Police detained 343 people at protests in Istanbul, the capital Ankara and seven other cities, according to a statement by Ali Yerlikaya, the interior minister.

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İmamoğlu denies the charges and his supporters accuse Erdoğan of using the police and judiciary to stymie his political aspirations. The justice minister has denied the investigations are politically motivated and said Turkish courts act independently.

The move against İmamoğlu has thrust the country into political and economic turmoil. It ignited a deep sell-off in Turkish assets that forced the central bank to sell billions of dollars of its reserves to defend the lira as it tries to cool inflation of about 40 per cent.

It has also energised an opposition that has faced a long-running clampdown on free speech and assembly during Erdoğan’s 22 years in power. 

Erdoğan warned the main opposition Republican People’s party, or CHP, that the days of “determining politics with street terrorism are in the past”.

“We will absolutely not allow the CHP and its partisans to disrupt public order with provocations and disturb the peace of our nation,” he said in post on X on Saturday.

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The government has largely stamped out mass political protests since 2013, when hundreds of thousands of people took part in demonstrations, called the Gezi Park protests. The crackdown marked a turning point in Erdoğan’s slide towards authoritarian rule.

Protesters in Istanbul, Ankara and the third-largest city of Izmir are defying a ban on public gatherings after the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) called on them to demonstrate peacefully every evening until İmamoğlu is freed.

The protests have been mostly orderly, but on Friday night riot police used tear gas and rubber bullets outside Istanbul’s city hall to stop some demonstrators who attempted to cross a barricade and threw objects at police, according to news reports. Water cannons were deployed in Ankara and Izmir.  

Istanbul’s governor, an official appointed by Erdoğan, on Saturday banned “people, groups or vehicles likely to participate in illegal protests” from entering or exiting the province. The ban on protests was also extended to March 27.

İmamoğlu was brought to Istanbul’s central courthouse late on Saturday. There, he will appear before a judge who is expected on Sunday to decide whether to release him or remand him to custody. İmamoğlu can only be held for four days without charge under the country’s anti-terrorism statutes.

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He was detained just days before a CHP primary to name its presidential candidate. The party has said it will go ahead with the nationwide vote on Sunday, inviting both its registered members and non-members to cast ballots. İmamoğlu, who has been Istanbul’s mayor since 2019, is the only candidate.

A general election is not scheduled until 2028 but the CHP said that nominating İmamoğlu now could pressure parliament to call a snap vote. İmamoğlu has consistently outperformed Erdoğan in opinion polls, with voters unhappy with the president’s handling of the cost of living crisis.

Erdoğan is precluded from running again by term limits, but his allies have called for the constitution to be amended so that he can stand again and extend his rule into its third decade.

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Trump says Boeing will build the new generation of fighter jets, the F-47

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Trump says Boeing will build the new generation of fighter jets, the F-47

President Trump speaks as an image of an F-47 fighter jet is displayed in the Oval Office in Washington on Friday.

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President Trump has announced that Boeing will build the U.S. Air Force’s next generation of fighter jets.

“They will have unprecedented power,” Trump said on Friday, adding that “America’s enemies will never see [them] coming.”

Trump is the 47th U.S. president and the jet is being called the F-47.

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“The generals picked a title, and it’s a beautiful number,” Trump told reporters from the Oval Office. “Nothing in the world comes even close to it.”

Known as the Next Generation Air Dominance, or NGAD, the F-47 will join a legacy of high-performance jets, though little is known about its exact specifications, appearance or capabilities. Trump teased that the sixth-generation fighter aircraft would be “virtually unseeable” on radar.

Although details on the contract’s cost remain unclear, early estimates suggest development costs will exceed $20 billion, according to The Associated Press, while the final price tag would be in the hundreds of billions, The War Zone reported.

“We’ve given an order for a lot. We can’t tell you the price,” Trump said.

The announcement is a big win for Boeing, which has struggled to recover from a series of public relations crises and operational setbacks. The company’s reputation has taken a hit after 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019, a door plug blowout in 2024, and longstanding problems with its KC-46 refueling tanker program.

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The F-47 will be built at a Boeing manufacturing space in St. Louis, according to St. Louis Public Radio.

Boeing’s stock rose by about 5% on Friday, shortly after Trump’s announcement.

Its largest competitor, Lockheed Martin, saw its shares drop nearly 7%.

Lockheed Martin produces the F-35 jet, which still forms the backbone of the Air Force’s air combat capabilities. But the F-35’s have faced criticism — notably from Trump ally Elon Musk, who has called the F-35 an “expensive & complex jack of all trades, master of none.”

Musk has instead called on the U.S. Department of Defense to invest more in drone technology in lieu of stealth jets.

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Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said the new warplanes would send a strong message about America’s commitment to remaining a global leader in military aviation.

The new fighter jet, he said, “sends a very clear, direct message to our allies that we’re not going anywhere.”

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