đŸ”” Klaus Schwab OUT

Good evening. It’s Friday, April 4.

 

Klaus Schwab’s days as chairman are numbered at the World Economic Forum, the technocratic globalist organization he founded in 1971 that hosts an annual conference of supposed elites in Davos, Switzerland.

Schwab told the WEF’s board of trustees and staff in a letter on Tuesday seen by the Financial Times that he was beginning a year-long process of stepping down, having already stepped down as the organization’s executive chairman last May.

The shake-up in Davos comes between the American-led unrealization of Schwab’s proposed “great reset” of capitalism and in the wake of a probe into allegations of discrimination at the WEF.

A federal judge ordered the Trump administration Friday to bring an alleged migrant gang member back to the US after an “administrative error” resulted in his deportation to El Salvador’s notorious maximum security prison.

Greenbelt US District Judge Paula Xinis, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, gave the Trump administration until Monday to facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

Abrego Garcia, 29, was apprehended by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Maryland last month and subsequently deported to El Salvador’s hellish Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT).

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is leading Chuck Schumer by double digits in a new head-to-head poll of the 2028 New York primary.

The survey by the liberal firm Data for Progress, first shared with POLITICO, found that 55 percent of Democratic likely voters said they supported or leaned toward supporting Rep. Ocasio-Cortez, while 36 percent backed or leaned toward backing Sen. Schumer. Nine percent were undecided.

The poll is the latest sign that Schumer’s standing among the Democratic base has taken a hit since he voted to advance a GOP funding bill last month that avoided a government shutdown.

The Supreme Court lifted a lower court order on Friday that blocked the Trump administration from cutting millions of dollars in grants for teacher trainings as part of the president’s efforts to terminate taxpayer-funded diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

In a 5-4 decision, with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the three liberal justices, the high court ruled that the Department of Education does not need to reinstate more than $65 million in grants that it terminated from a larger $600 million teacher preparation program as litigation plays out.

The unsigned majority opinion argued that it would be unlikely that the Trump administration would be able to recover the funds if it eventually wins its case in court, and that the eight states, led by California, suing the government would not suffer permanent harm without the money.

Senate Commerce Chair Ted Cruz is warning about major risks for the American economy and its automotive industry thanks to President Donald Trump’s trade war, saying it could result in the biggest tax hike in a “long, long time.”

“I’m seeing a lot of Republican cheerleaders reflexively defending what the White House is doing,” Cruz said on his podcast Friday, but cautioned the administration’s latest actions could “hurt jobs and hurt America.”

Cruz added he is “not a fan” of tariffs.

The U.S. economy continued to add jobs in March and the pace of job gains picked up at a faster pace than a month ago despite economic uncertainty.

The Labor Department on Friday announced that employers added 228,000 jobs in March, above the estimate of LSEG economists, who anticipated 135,000 jobs gained.

The unemployment rate was 4.2%, slightly higher than a month ago and above economists’ expectations. The number of jobs added in the prior two months were both revised, with job creation in January revised down by 14,000 from a gain of 125,000 to 111,000; while February was revised down by 34,000 from a gain of 151,000 to 117,000.

Sean Combs, the entertainment mogul who’s been in custody since his September arrest for charges including sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy, faces two new counts as part of a superseding indictment filed in federal court on Thursday.

The new charges expand the timeline of Combs’ alleged crimes and could potentially result in a longer prison sentence.

The first new count alleges that Combs engaged in sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion between 2021 and 2024. The second alleges that within that same time period, Combs also transported multiple individuals — including an unnamed victim — “on multiple occasions with the intent that they engage in prostitution.”

Vancouver police are investigating after a pregnant woman was badly hurt by a big rock that smashed through her Tesla windshield on Sunday.

The Vancouver Police Department (VPD) says the woman was a passenger travelling north in a grey Tesla on Nanaimo Street near East 27th Avenue around 8:45 p.m. when a two-pound rock flew through the windshield, struck her, and landed inside the vehicle.

Sgt. Steve Addison says the injured woman came within a few inches of dying. She suffered a “serious, but non-life-threatening injury, and is recovering.”

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