good morning!🙋🏼♀️I’m Nicole Forelt, I would like to have some espresso with iced hochata oat milk shaking.
Take a quick look at Tuesday’s news:
Will President Trump’s tax bill help all Americans?
President Donald Trump’s tax bill won approval from major Congressional committees over the weekend. He argues that it will cut taxes for all Americans. It is true that certain Americans will see the profits of their post-tax income if the bill is passed, but analysis from nonpartisan organizations suggests that top earners are the ones who get the most from these tax cuts. A rise in prices from tariffs only exacerbates the problem of low-income households.
Supreme Court tells Trump to make Venezuelan immigrants in immigrants in a protected status for now
In an unsigned order, the Supreme Court said the Trump administration could move to strip more than 300,000 Venezuelan immigrants of temporary protected positions.
background: In March, US District Judge Edward Chen in Northern California blocked the administration from abruptly terminating a program that allowed Venezuelan immigrant populations to temporarily live and work in the United States due to their country’s living conditions. The lower court said the government could not identify any real harm in maintaining the program while immigrants were challenging its end.
- But now the lower court order has been lifted. Immigration advocates say many people could be deported before the case is fully filed.
- Why it matters to Americans: The immigration lawyer described the order as “the greatest single action to strip the non-citizen group of immigrant status in modern history.”
- What does this mean for Trump’s strategy: The judges stepped out and blocked Trump’s most offensive policy scope. The open question is how –or — presidential policies can be blocked if the Supreme Court limits or abolishes court orders nationwide.
More news you need to know now
What’s the weather today? Check out your local forecast here.
After a fatal weekend, the storm continues in the Midwest and South
Another round of bad weather is possible in Kentucky between Tuesday afternoon and evening hours, and communities affected by the tornado a few days ago could face a stronger storm. The forecast comes as a tornado and a wave of severe storms that killed at least 28 people and injured dozens more as the storm passed through multiple states over the weekend. As of Monday morning, more than 80 tornadoes had been confirmed, according to Accuweather. Regions in Kentucky, Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, Illinois and Virginia have reported some of the worst damage. The storm left a mark of destruction, including defeating flat houses and power lines in the wake of catastrophic storms and tornadoes.
American women are trying to inherit trillions
Many young adults have fixed their hopes for a wealthy generation exchange, a massive transfer of wealth, which can pass $84 trillion from older Americans to children and other beneficiaries. But first, trillions of dollars transfer from one spouse to another within the same generation. Most often, from dying husband to surviving wife. Between 2024 and 2048, an estimated $54 trillion will be handed over from one spouse to another, not from a child or grandchild. If you are lending a bank to inheritance, you may have to wait.
Today’s speaker
Counting a few seconds with the Current Lead Trial
As the case entered the fifth week of witness testimony, the prosecutors took digital forensics experts to lay out a timeline where Karen could be held responsible for the death and the death of her police officer boyfriend. It relied on clock data from Read’s vehicle and John O’Keefe’s phone, as well as a time frame of about 10 seconds. The timeline suggests that Lexus in the lead may have hit O’Keefe during the backup. However, Reid’s lawyers argue that she was framed for death in an elaborate plot considered by Massachusetts police officers.
Today’s Photo: Radioactive Falls and Heat Foul
In the third quarter of Chicago’s 93-58 win on Saturday, Angel Reese and Kate Rinklark were caught up in a short battle after committing a terrible one foul on Reese, who Clark was trying to rebound. According to Indystar, part of the USA Today Network, Foul is not involved in a new WNBA investigation into Reese’s claims that fans made racially insensitive comments to her during the game.
Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer for USA Today and sign up for your email here. Want to send a note to Nicole? Please email her at nollert@usatoday.com.

