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El Salvador’s Strongman Forges Closer Ties with Trump

Happy Tuesday! It appears that Bay Area techies are trying to find love by leaving notes in the seats of self-driving taxis. We sense the next Netflix rom-com in the making. 

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele said Monday that he would not return Kilmar Abrego Garcia—an immigrant who was deported to an El Salvador prison due to an “administrative error” last month—to the United States. “How can I return him to the United States? Like if I smuggle him into the United States?” Bukele said during an Oval Office visit, claiming that he had “no power” to return Garcia, who is a Salvadoran national. The Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling requiring the U.S. government to “facilitate” Abrego Garcia’s return last week, but the Trump administration has argued the decision over whether to expatriate the detainee lies with El Salvador. 
  • Cody Balmer, the Pennsylvania man facing charges connected to an arson attack at Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s residence, is being treated at a hospital for an unrelated medical event, according to police. While the motives for the attack remain unclear, court documents have shown that Balmer told police he planned on beating Shapiro with a hammer after breaking into the mansion. His mother told reporters Monday that Balmer had bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, but was not taking his medication. Politicians of both parties condemned the attack, with Republican Sen. Dave McCormick of Pennsylvania calling it an “assault on democracy.”
  • Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified Monday in an antitrust trial, the first held under President Donald Trump’s Federal Trade Commission, in which government lawyers accused Meta of establishing a monopoly over social media. By acquiring the social media platforms Whatsapp and Instagram while they were still start-ups, Meta established a monopoly over the market for social networking, FTC lawyers said. In defense of his company, Zuckerberg testified that the social media market was larger than the government’s definition of demand for services that connect friends and family. Zuckerberg also argued that Meta, which owns Facebook, faced competition from companies like TikTok. 
  • Harvard University said Monday that it would refuse to comply with a list of Trump administration demands that it make significant reforms to its governance and operations. An administration task force charged with investigating allegations of antisemitism across dozens of American universities made extensive demands of Harvard, including ending all diversity and inclusion programs, submitting to external audits of a range of departments, and refusing admission to international students “hostile to American values.” The Trump administration threatened to pull roughly $9 billion in federal grants and funding if these conditions were not met. Following Harvard’s statement on Monday, the White House announced plans to freeze more than $2 billion in multi-year grants to the Ivy League university.
  • In a Sunday post on Truth Social, President Trump wrote that he had a “hope” that the Federal Communications Commission would block the merger of CBS parent Paramount Global with Skydance Media, after he was apparently angered by an episode of CBS’ 60 Minutes, which included reports on Ukraine and Greenland, that aired over the weekend. “Hopefully, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), as headed by its Highly Respected Chairman, Brendan Carr, will impose the maximum fines and punishment,” wrote Trump, after recounting his unrelated and ongoing suit against CBS and 60 Minutes

‘You Have to Imprison Some’

U.S. President Donald Trump  meets with President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador in the Oval Office of the White House April 14, 2025.  (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
U.S. President Donald Trump meets with President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador in the Oval Office of the White House April 14, 2025. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Speaking from the Oval Office on Monday, Nayib Bukele—El Salvador’s 43-year-old president and the architect of its mass incarceration scheme—offered words of advice to his American counterpart. “Sometimes they say that we imprisoned thousands. I like to say that we actually liberated millions,” he said of his country’s crackdown on gang violence. “Mr. President, you have 350 million people to liberate. But to liberate 350 million people, you have to imprison some.” 

And Bukele appears more than willing to help Donald Trump in the process. The Salvadoran president, the first Latin American leader to receive an invitation to the Oval Office during Trump’s second term, found himself at the center of America’s immigration debate after opening his sprawling prison system to deportees from the United States. But Bukele is an ally of both opportunity and ideology. Since taking office in 2019, the young president has attracted the praise of Trump’s inner orbit for successfully ridding his country of rampant gang violence. 

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