Friday, February 6, 2026

US politics live with Shrai Popat Donald Trump prompts fury after posting racist video about Barack and Michelle Obama – US politics live

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2026/feb/06/trump-barack-obama-michelle-truth-social-epstein-latest-news-updates 

Donald Trump prompts fury after posting racist video about Barack and Michelle Obama – US politics live

The US president posted a racist video on Truth Social that included disproven allegations about ballot-counting

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Fri 6 Feb 2026 08.58 EST
Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Barack Obama, and Michelle Obama attended the funeral service of former President George H W Bush in 2018.
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Trump posts racist video depicting Obamas as monkeys

Hello and welcome to today’s live coverage.

Donald Trump went on a massive social media spree overnight that included posting on Truth Social an election conspiracy video that ended with a clip depicting former president Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as monkeys.

The racist depiction of the Obamas – the first Black president and first lady in American history – appears at the end of a one-minute video perpetuating the false and disproven claims that ballot-counting company Dominion Voting Systems helped steal the 2020 presidential election from Trump. The company in 2023 settled for $787.5m with Fox News in a landmark defamation lawsuit.

For two seconds, the video shows the smiling faces of the Obamas superimposed on monkeys bobbing to The Lion Sleeps Tonight.

As of Friday morning, the video has been liked more than 2,500 times and reposted more than 1,100 times, as prominent Democrats decried the post.

“Disgusting behavior by the President. Every single Republican must denounce this. Now,” said the press office of California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, a longtime Trump critic and potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate.

“This is overt racism. Full stop. There’s no ‘misinterpretation’ and no excuse. This is who he is, who he’s always been, and why he should never be anywhere near power again,” political strategist Adam Parkhomenko posted on X.

The video was just one of more than 60 posts the president made on Truth Social over the course of three hours. In addition to repeating lies about the 2020 presidential election, Trump posted the Trump Accounts Super Bowl ad and calls to add his face to Mount Rushmore.

More to come.

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'Please stop the fake outrage': White House attempts to brush off racist video reposted by Trump

My colleague Richard Luscombe notes that the White House has tried to brush off the outrage caused by Donald Trump reposting a racist video that depicts Barack and Michelle Obama as apes.

In a statement sent to the Guardian, Karoline Leavitt, linked to a post on X last October by a separate rightwing account, which features a 55-second video from which the Obama clip appears to have been taken. It begins with the Obamas depicted as apes, later shows Biden’s head superimposed on a monkey body and other prominent Democrats depicted as other animals, while Trump is shown as a male lion.

“This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from the Lion King. Please stop the fake outrage and report on something today that actually matters to the American public,” Leavitt said.

Angela Giuffrida
Angela Giuffrida

Hundreds of people are protesting in Milan against the presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents at the Winter Olympics.

Carrying banners reading “ICE out” and “Fuck ICE” those criticising the presence of US federal immigration agents are mostly students, gathered in Piazzale Leonardo da Vinci, in front of a building of the Politecnico University in the eastern part of the city.

More protests are planned on Friday afternoon and again on Saturday involving a variety of activists groups, including pro-Palestinian, environmental campaigners and students fighting for affordable housing.

A reminder that vice-president JD Vance and secretary of state, Marco Rubio, are in Milan for the for the games. Vance is due to meet the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, later today.

The US state department said last week that several federal agencies, including ICE, will be at the Olympics to help protect visiting Americans.

Donald Trump will begin his day in Washington. At 3pm ET he’ll sign executive orders in the Oval Office. That’s currently not open to the press, but we’ll let you know if that changes.

Later, the president will travel to Palm Beach, Florida, where he’ll meet with the president of Honduras on Saturday. Trump will then attend a Super Bowl watch party on Sunday before travelling back to the White House.

Updated at 

My colleague Taz Ali is covering the latest out of Oman, where talks are ongoing between Iranian and US officials in Muscat, Oman, which are thought to be focused on Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Oman’s foreign minister, Sayyid Badr Albusaidi, who is mediating the talks, held separate meetings with Iran’s top diplomat, Abbas Aragchi, and US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

In a statement, the Omani foreign ministry said the meetings so far have focused on preparing the conditions for “resuming diplomatic and technical negotiations”.

Taz notes that Tehran is deeply worried that Trump may still carry out his threat of striking Iran, not least because of the not-so-subtle comments made by the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, on Thursday.

“While these negotiations are taking place, I would remind the Iranian regime that the president has many options at his disposal, aside from diplomacy, as the commander-in-chief of the most powerful military in the history of the world,” she told reporters.

A military escalation is not completely beyond the realms of possibility and could serve Donald Trump’s interests, according to experts, who also note the US mobilisation of a large military force in the region, or an “armada”, as the president called it.

Updated at 

Shannon Watts, gun violence prevention activist and founder of Moms Demand Action, did not mince words in her response to Donald Trump and his racist video depicting Barack Obama and Michelle Obama as monkeys.

“Every Democrat who votes for the agenda and nominees of this racist, bigoted, misogynistic piece of shit who’s destroying our country is voting for this, too,” Watts posted on X.

Melanie D’Arrigo, the executive director of the Campaign for New York Health,” said: “This doesn’t need a lot of explaining – Donald Trump is a racist pushing a white supremacist agenda. That’s obvious to everyone paying attention.”

Social media influencer and political commentator Harry Sisson said that the “racist and disgusting” video was “beneath the office of the presidency, like everything that he does”.

“Every American must condemn this,” he posted on X.

Updated at 

‘It’s been brutal’: Cubans caught in crosshairs of Trump’s deportation push

Ruaridh Nicoll
Ruaridh Nicoll

When Rosaly Estévez “self-deported” from Miami to Havana last November, US immigration officers bid farewell by removing her ankle monitor. The 32-year-old had been told she was about to be detained, so she left with her three-year-old son, Dylan, a US citizen.

Heidy Sánchez, 43, wasn’t given a choice. She was forcibly removed from Florida last April but, worrying about Cuba’s failing healthcare system, she left her two-year-old daughter, Kaylin, behind with her American husband, Carlos.

“My little girl was still breastfeeding,” she said. “Waiting to get on the plane, my breasts were swollen, and I kept saying, ‘Kaylin must be hungry.’” Sánchez had struggled for years to conceive and Kaylin is her only child.

Neither woman has a criminal record, but both have been caught up in the US government’s push to deport Cuban immigrants. Now they each live in small towns south of the Cuban capital of Havana, passing their days talking to lawyers and family in the US.

“It’s been brutal,” said Estévez. “Imagine Dylan hugging his phone every night when he sees his dad. I wouldn’t wish this on any mother.”

As the US government heaps pressure on Cuba, cutting off access to its oil shipments, Donald Trump has framed the campaign as an effort to make the island safe for Cuban Americans.

“A lot of people that live in our country are treated very badly by Cuba,” Trump said recently. “They all voted for me, and we want them to be treated well. We’d like to be able to have them go back to a home in their country, where they haven’t seen their family, their country for many, many decades.”

The condemnation on Donald Trump and the racist video he posted on Truth Social depicting Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle Obama, as monkeys continues to trickle in Friday morning.

Ben Rhodes, who served as deputy national security adviser under Obama, called Trump “a stain on our history”.

“Let it haunt Trump and his racist followers that future Americans will embrace the Obamas as beloved figures while studying him as a stain on our history,” Rhodes said on X.

George Conway, the ex-husband of Trump’s 2016 campaign manager Kellyanne Conway, reminded his followers that he had been calling Trump out over racism since 2019 and linked to an op ed he wrote for the Washington Post titled: Trump Is a Racist President.

The post was still up almost eight hours later, alongside another post of a video that accused the Democratic party of being anti-Black. Continuing on his social media spree in which he posted more than 60 times over the course of three hours, the president has once again begun posting to Truth Social about an hour ago.

Updated at 

Trump posts racist video depicting Obamas as monkeys

Hello and welcome to today’s live coverage.

Donald Trump went on a massive social media spree overnight that included posting on Truth Social an election conspiracy video that ended with a clip depicting former president Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as monkeys.

The racist depiction of the Obamas – the first Black president and first lady in American history – appears at the end of a one-minute video perpetuating the false and disproven claims that ballot-counting company Dominion Voting Systems helped steal the 2020 presidential election from Trump. The company in 2023 settled for $787.5m with Fox News in a landmark defamation lawsuit.

For two seconds, the video shows the smiling faces of the Obamas superimposed on monkeys bobbing to The Lion Sleeps Tonight.

As of Friday morning, the video has been liked more than 2,500 times and reposted more than 1,100 times, as prominent Democrats decried the post.

“Disgusting behavior by the President. Every single Republican must denounce this. Now,” said the press office of California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, a longtime Trump critic and potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate.

“This is overt racism. Full stop. There’s no ‘misinterpretation’ and no excuse. This is who he is, who he’s always been, and why he should never be anywhere near power again,” political strategist Adam Parkhomenko posted on X.

The video was just one of more than 60 posts the president made on Truth Social over the course of three hours. In addition to repeating lies about the 2020 presidential election, Trump posted the Trump Accounts Super Bowl ad and calls to add his face to Mount Rushmore.

More to come.

Updated at 

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Trump vs. The NFL: A Beef That Predates The Bad Bunny Halftime Show | The Daily Show

Trump vs. The NFL: A Beef That Predates The Bad Bunny Halftime Show | The Daily Show

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Feb 6, 2026 #DailyShow #SuperBowlLIX #Trump
Desi Lydic unpacks Trump’s long-term beef with the NFL over reduced violence, racist name reversals, halftime performers, and the pageantry of the kickoff. After rejecting Trump’s advances to buy the Buffalo Bills, a 2014 conversation with Stephen A. Smith begs the difficult question: Is the NFL responsible for Trump’s presidency? #DailyShow #SuperBowlLIX #Trump #NFL Subscribe to The Daily Show:    / @thedailyshow  

 

Frustrations from judge, prosecutor in Minnesota boil over amid Trump's ICE surge: "Not above the law"

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/frustrations-from-judge-prosecutor-minnesota-boil-over-amid-trump-ice-surge/ 

 

Frustrations from judge, prosecutor in Minnesota boil over amid Trump's ICE surge: "Not above the law"

Washington — A federal court hearing in Minneapolis on Tuesday provided an extraordinary window into the volume of immigration-related cases overwhelming federal prosecutors in Minnesota amid the Trump administration's surge of immigration agents to the Twin Cities, and the frustrations of exasperated judges who have said their orders are repeatedly ignored.

The hearing before U.S. District Judge Jerry Blackwell was over cases brought by five different immigrants who were arrested in Minnesota and had subsequently challenged their detentions. Blackwell had ordered each of the men to be released from immigration custody, but then had to repeatedly seek information from the government about their locations and statuses.

The proceeding gained widespread attention when the federal prosecutor, Julie Le, invited Blackwell to hold her in contempt of court "so that I can have a full 24 hours sleep."

"What do you want me to do? The system sucks. This job sucks. And I am trying every breath that I have so that I can get you what you need," Le said, according to a transcript of the hearing.

Le was subsequently removed from her detail with the Justice Department, according to a source familiar with the matter. She told Blackwell she began working with the Justice Department in January after volunteering to move from her post as an Immigration and Customs Enforcement lawyer to assist with the influx of cases in Minnesota stemming from the Trump administration's enhanced immigration operations, dubbed Operation Metro Surge. The person said Le was removed from the detail after her comments Tuesday.

"They are overwhelmed and they need help, so I, I have to say, stupidly enough to volunteer," she told the judge of her decision to help the U.S. Attorney's Office in Minnesota with the habeas claims it received. The office has been hit with a wave of resignations in recent weeks.

Le added that she had sought to resign from her Justice Department position, but no replacement had been found. She said she intended to remain on assignment until one was identified.

"If they don't, then by all mean (sic), I'm going to walk out," Le told Blackwell. "...I am here just trying to make sure that the agency understand how important it is to comply with all the court orders, which they have not done in the past or currently."

Le added that she is "not White" and said her family is "at risk as any other people that might get picked up too."

Asked by the judge whether she was brought into her new role with "no proper orientation or training," Le said she was.

"We have no guidance or direction on what we need to do," Le said, adding that the Justice Department will "just throw you in the well and then here we go."

Blackwell, meanwhile, expressed his own frustrations with what he said was a lack of compliance by the government with his orders. 

"A court order is not advisory and it is not conditional," he said. "It is not something that any agency can treat as optional while it decides how or whether to comply with the court order."

Blackwell told Justice Department lawyers that in some instances, he had to issue multiple orders asking for information about the status of detainees who were arrested and then ordered to be released from custody.

"Volume, that is, the volume of cases and matters, is not a justification for diluting constitutional rights and it never can be. It heightens the need for care," Blackwell said during the hearing. "Having what you feel are too many detainees, too many cases, too many deadlines, and not enough infrastructure to keep up with it all, is not a defense to continued detention. If anything, it ought to be a warning sign."

The Justice Department, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and ICE "are not above the law," Blackwell said.

"What we really want is simply compliance, because on the other side of this is somebody who should not have been arrested in some instances in the first place who is being hauled in jail or put in shackles for days, if not a week-plus, after they've been ordered released," he said. "That's my concern is for upholding the rule of law and the constitutional rights of all concerned."

He pressed Le on whether she was making her frustrations known to the Justice Department, DHS and ICE, and Le responded that she sends emails with "big, bold font" in an effort to get their attention.

Still, Blackwell remained critical of the lack of expediency in freeing the men from detention.

"I wholeheartedly embrace the notion of a unitary executive, as in DHS, ICE, the DOJ, all a part of the Executive Branch," the judge said, referencing a legal theory that is embraced by the conservative legal movement. "And if there's a problem in the restaurant, I don't intend to go in the kitchen to try to figure out who makes the bread. And all of it is part of the Executive Branch."

Before stepping back to her seat, Le said she was doing her best and working toward "fixing a system, a broken system." But, she added, "I don't have a magic button to do it. I don't have the power or the voice to do it. I only can do it within the ability and the capacity that I have."

Kira Kelly, an attorney for two of the immigrants, then stood up and called the situation "unprecedented." She said government attorneys "don't have the power to get their clients under control."

"An email with bold font is not going to change the widespread, systemic pattern of disregard for court orders and honestly for basic human rights in this situation," Kelly said.

DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told CBS News in a statement that Le was a probationary attorney, and called her conduct "unprofessional and unbecoming of an ICE attorney in abandoning her obligation to act with commitment, dedication, and zeal to the interests of the United States Government."

Blackwell is not the first judge in Minnesota to express frustrations with the Trump administration and its response to orders in immigration cases. Judge Patrick Schiltz, the chief judge on the U.S. district court in Minnesota, lambasted ICE last week for violating what he said was 96 court orders issued in 74 cases.

"ICE is not a law unto itself. ICE has every right to challenge the orders of this Court, but, like any litigant, ICE must follow those orders unless and until they are overturned or vacated," Schiltz wrote in a four-page decision.

In a recent court filing, U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen said that more than 427 habeas cases were filed in Minnesota alone, and that his office "has been forced to shift its already limited resources from other pressing and important priorities." 

"The burden of this flood of new lawsuits not only falls on the Government, but also on the District Court," Rosen said, adding that the civil division in his office that typically handles these cases was only at 50% filled.

Minneapolis now has daily deportation flights. One man has been documenting them

 https://www.npr.org/2026/02/06/nx-s1-5701432/minneapolis-ice-air-deportation-flights

Minneapolis now has daily deportation flights. One man has been documenting them

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge.

Jaida Grey Eagle for NPR

MINNEAPOLIS – Nick Benson stands tucked out of the cold inside an elevator terminal at the Minneapolis-St. Paul international, looking out a window at the tarmac. Commercial airplanes dart by, but one chartered flight sits parked away from the gates, a set of stairs pulled up to its open door.

Dressed in a plaid button up, the 41-year-old leans into a digital camera on a tripod, with a long telephoto lens pointed toward that plane, and slowly counts.

"So that's one for today so far," he says quietly. "And there's number two at the top of the steps."

Benson is counting people, as they hobble out of a mini bus, up the steps and onto the plane.

These immigration detainees, their hands and feet shackled, are being flown out of Minnesota, caught up in President Trump's sweeping federal immigration campaign that started in Minneapolis back in December. The administration has touted it as the largest operation ever.

Federally chartered deportation flights on ICE Air, as the Department of Homeland Security calls it, aren't new. They were happening under the Biden administration as well. But in Trump's second term, their frequency and scope has essentially doubled, according to ICE Flight Monitor, an advocacy initiative that keeps watch. The flights have also become increasingly harder to track, and information or data about the passengers is difficult to get. That's where observers like Benson have stepped in.

Today's plane will head to Texas.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Jaida Grey Eagle

"It's just happening in the background," says Benson, motioning to the rest of the airport. "Here you could be sitting in the Delta lounge eating your cheese and crackers, and you wouldn't have even noticed that that was anything unusual going on out the window."

Benson is a professional airplane enthusiast. He runs an app to let other enthusiasts know where to see unusual planes coming and going from airports.

But in recent months, he's started tracking these ICE flights in and out of Minneapolis, counting the people loaded on as they are forced to leave the state.

"The count is what is important to me, because there's no other source of quantitative data with respect to what's actually going on," he says.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Jaida Grey Eagle

The federal government could be a source, but the Trump administration has been opaque about data in its immigration enforcement operations.

NPR requested the number of people detained and flown out of Minnesota in recent months from the Department of Homeland Security. Instead, DHS responded saying that 3,500 arrests had been made during the operation, without offering specifics, and did not say where those people were sent.

"President Trump and Secretary (Kristi) Noem are putting the American people first by removing illegal aliens who pose a threat to our communities," DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement.

The lack of transparency is one of the reasons Benson, along with others in the Minneapolis-based activist group MN50501, has started keeping detailed spreadsheets of every flight he can – 42 in January alone.

"This was just one of the best ways that I could be a helper, and I'm glad that I'm here to be able to do it," he says.

Benson has a wife and three kids. He works full-time running his app. But he often drops everything with just one or two hours notice, to get to this spot and observe.

The final count for today is 19 people. Other days, it's been more than 100.

The airplane door is closed, the steps are pulled away, and eventually Benson watches as the flight takes off.

"Another sobering moment in a never-ending chain of sobering moments here," he says, looking out the window.

Benson estimates that 2,339 people were flown out of Minnesota like this in January, when flights began happening daily, sometimes twice a day.

"That is extremely valuable. That is not something we can track," says Savi Arvey, who oversees ICE Flight Monitor, an initiative by Human Rights First, an advocacy group that has been logging these kinds of flights by DHS for several years, across the country and the world.

Arvey's team has a good handle on tracking the flights themselves, but they don't have any visibility to who is actually on board the aircraft – which is where observers on the ground, like Benson, come in.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Jaida Grey Eagle

"Knowing that someone is there, counting the number of people and observing what is going on as people are boarded onto those flights is really essential," Arvey says.

Many immigration lawyers and advocates have noted that detainees are often whisked to the airport quickly, sometimes 24 to 48 hours after being detained, especially here in Minneapolis – something made possible with daily flights.

"What worries us the most is that people are being put on these flights without due process," says Arvey. "Without the chance, oftentimes, to have their asylum claim heard before an immigration judge. People are being put on these flights to be deported, who had their temporary protected status revoked."

Trump administration officials have been open about plans to increase operations of ICE Air to facilitate the mass deportations promised on the campaign trail. In December, DHS inked a contract to buy six 737s, to start its own fleet according to the Washington Post.

Back at his home, Benson pours over his spreadsheets, which details each flight: the time, date, tail number, airline. And, of course, the number of passengers.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Nick Benson tracks deportation flights departing daily from Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport in Minneapolis on Feb. 3, 2026, amid Operation Metro Surge, the largest immigration enforcement operation in U.S. history.

Jaida Grey Eagle

He says sometimes the weight of what he's witnessing each day catches up with him.

"These people, when they're hobbling up the steps in chains, a lot of them are pausing for a moment at the top of the steps, and they're taking a look around, and I can't even imagine what they're thinking," he says.

But, Benson says he's going to keep doing it.

"I think it's the most important work that I'm ever going to get an opportunity to do," he says, starting to tear up a bit. "But I really wish I didn't have to."

And then he looks at his watch. Another flight is coming in soon.

Nick Benson grabs his tripod and his camera, and heads out the door to count.