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Trump Creates a ‘Strategic Bitcoin Reserve’

Happy Monday! Ahead of the time change this weekend, President Donald Trump described the debate over whether to adopt permanent daylight saving time as a “50-50 issue.” We’re not one for sweeping executive actions, but, with a bill to scrap the time change still languishing in the House, we certainly wouldn’t begrudge an extra hour of sunlight. 

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Canada’s Liberal Party on Sunday elected former central banker Mark Carney to replace Justin Trudeau as the party’s leader and the country’s prime minister. The country’s upcoming elections, which must be held by October 20, have no clear front-runner after the United States’ imposition of tariffs on Canadian goods sparked a backlash among Canadians, boosting the Liberal Party’s polling compared to the Conservatives led by Pierre Poilievre. Carney, who has never held elected office, won 86 percent of the 152,000 ballots cast by party members over the weekend and is expected to be sworn in this week. 
  • Days of clashes between forces affiliated with Syria’s new government and supporters of the ousted dictator Bashar al-Assad in the country’s coastal area left more than 1,300 people dead, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported Saturday. The monitoring group said the figure, which could not be independently verified, included hundreds of civilians amid reports of revenge killings in the heavily Alawite provinces of Latakia and Tartus. Syria’s interim president, Ahmed al-Sharaa—the former head of an al-Qaeda offshoot—vowed on Sunday to punish the perpetrators and called for peace following the country’s deadliest fighting in years. 
  • Russian drones and missiles killed more than 20 people and injured dozens more across Ukraine overnight Friday, according to Ukrainian officials. The major aerial attacks, which targeted residential areas, followed President Donald Trump’s decision last week to halt U.S. intelligence and military aid to the embattled country. Meanwhile on Friday, Trump weighed plans to impose new sanctions and tariffs on Russia in an effort to push it toward a peace deal. “Based on the fact that Russia is absolutely ‘pounding’ Ukraine on the battlefield right now, I am strongly considering large scale Banking Sanctions, Sanctions, and Tariffs on Russia until a Cease Fire and FINAL SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT ON PEACE IS REACHED,” he wrote on Truth Social. On Sunday evening, Trump told reporters the U.S. had “just about” resumed intelligence-sharing capabilities with Ukraine, and that he was optimistic about the prospects of upcoming peace talks being held in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. 
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is planning a large-scale study into the possible links between vaccines and autism, Reuters first reported Friday. The CDC plans “to leave no stone unturned” in investigating rising rates of autism among American children, Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew Nixon said in a statement. Numerous peer-reviewed studies have already ruled out links between autism and vaccines. 
  • Paul Clement, the former solicitor general of the United States, on Friday recommended to federal district court Judge Dale C. Ho that corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams be dropped “with prejudice.” Clement had been brought in by Ho to present an independent argument on the decision when the Department of Justice sought to drop the case earlier this month, sparking turmoil in the DOJ. Dismissal with prejudice would mean that the case against Adams could not be brought again in federal court, removing the chance that federal officials would use the threat of future prosecution against Adams, Clement argued. Judge Ho is not required to accept Clement’s recommendation.
  • The Trump administration announced Friday that it would be canceling $400 million in federal grants to Columbia University, citing the “relentless harassment of Jewish students” on campus. The Department of Justice also released a list of 10 schools—including Columbia, George Washington University, Johns Hopkins University, and Harvard University—where an interagency task force will investigate antisemitism and consider whether “remedial action” is warranted. “These cancellations represent the first round of action and additional cancellations are expected to follow,” a Friday statement from the task force said of the canceled grants to Columbia. 
  • House Republicans on Saturday released a bill aimed at preventing the federal government from shutting down by Friday’s funding deadline. The legislation, which seeks to fund federal agencies until September 30, would cut some non-defense discretionary spending while slightly increasing defense expenditures—a move Democrats have signaled they will oppose. Rep. Thomas Massie, a Republican from  Kentucky, has already said that he will not vote for the bill, making him the one vote House Speaker Mike Johnson can afford to lose if Democrats remain united in opposition. If funding is not extended this week, the federal government is set to shut down beginning at 12:01 a.m. ET Saturday morning.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that U.S. employers added 151,000 jobs in February—up from 125,000 in January but below economists’ expectations. The unemployment rate ticked up slightly from 4 percent to 4.1 percent, while the labor force participation rate remained relatively unchanged at 62.4 percent.

Trump Declares an End to the ‘War on Crypto’ 

President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the The White House Digital Assets Summit at the White House on March 07, 2025. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the The White House Digital Assets Summit at the White House on March 07, 2025. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

As Katy Perry might have said, President Donald Trump can change his mind like a girl changes clothes

“Bitcoin, it just seems like a scam,” Trump declared in 2021. But today, the president has his own meme coin with a $2.1 billion market cap and a cryptocurrency venture called “World Liberty Financial.” And on Friday, he gathered industry leaders for a “crypto summit” at the White House to consider how to deliver on his promise to transform the U.S. into “the crypto capital of the planet.” Cryptocurrencies, digital assets traded on exchanges that can be used in transactions without a centralized authority like a bank, have grown extremely popular—and controversial—in recent years, and Trump is the latest convert.  

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