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RFK’s Autism Study Raises Red Flags

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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and his Liberal Party came out on top in their country’s federal election Monday, though it’s too early to say whether the Liberals will win an outright majority in Parliament or will have to form a coalition. Officials planned to resume vote tallying later this morning. The victory—which included unseating Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre—represents a remarkable turnaround for Canada’s Liberal Party. Then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced in January he was stepping down amid low approval ratings and intraparty tension. Carney, a former head of the Bank of England, became prime minister on March 14. He has been a vocal critic of President Donald Trump’s trade war, announcing last month that, “The old relationship we had with the United States, based on deepening integration of our economies and tight security and military co-operations, is over.” 
  • President Donald Trump on Monday issued three executive orders, one of which directs Attorney General Pam Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to “publish a list of States and local jurisdictions obstructing federal immigration law enforcement,” which it refers to as “sanctuary jurisdictions.” “Sanctuary jurisdictions that do not comply with federal law may lose federal funding,” a White House fact sheet states. The second executive order enhances local police department capabilities to “relentlessly pursue criminals,” and includes extending legal liability protection for police officers, while also increasing their training resources, pay, and benefits. Meanwhile, the third stipulates that licensed commercial drivers be “properly qualified and proficient in English
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday ordered a three-day ceasefire suspending “all military actions” in his country’s invasion of Ukraine between May 8 and May 11, and urged Ukraine to follow suit. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha responded later that day to reiterate Ukraine’s support for a ceasefire lasting at least 30 days. “If Russia truly wants peace, it must cease fire immediately,” he wrote on X. “Why wait until May 8th?” The Kremlin said the three-day pause commemorates “Victory Day,” the Russian holiday on May 9 celebrating the date Nazi Germany forces surrendered in 1945. The Kremlin’s announcement came four days after Trump criticized a Russian airstrike on Kyiv, telling Putin on social media to “STOP!”
  • Putin and North Korea both confirmed for the first time Monday that North Korean forces were aiding Russia in its invasion of Ukraine. Earlier in the day, North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un announced the construction of a monument honoring North Korean soldiers killed in the Russia-Ukraine war, North Korean-state media reported. Shortly after, Putin thanked North Korean soldiers for their “heroism” in fighting alongside Russian forces against Ukraine in a message posted on the Kremlin’s website. Intelligence reports from U.S., Ukrainian, and South Korean officials indicated that about 12,000 North Korean troops in fall 2024 were deployed to Kursk—the western region of Russia that Ukraine targeted in its August 2024 counteroffensive—to aid ailing Russian forces. Russia’s top military leader on Saturday said the country’s forces achieved the “complete liberation” of Kursk, which Ukraine’s military denied was true. 
  • The Houthis, an Iran-backed, Yemen-based terrorist organization, said on Monday that a U.S. airstrike in Saada—a city in northwestern Yemen under Houthi control—struck a migrant detention facility, killing at least 68 African migrants and injuring dozens of others. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said it was “aware of the claims of civilian casualties,” and conducting a damage assessment to investigate the Houthis’ reports, the New York Times and Washington Post reported. One day earlier, CENTCOM said it had struck more than 800 Houthi targets since March 15, when the U.S. military launched “Operation Rough Rider” to weaken the Houthis and prevent their continued assaults on commercial ships in the Middle East. “These operations have been executed using detailed and comprehensive intelligence ensuring lethal effects against the Houthis while minimizing risk to civilians,” a CENTCOM press release on Sunday night stated. 
  • Meanwhile, the Trump administration announced new sanctions on three shipping companies and their owners for delivering oil and gas to the Ras Isa port in Houthi-controlled Yemen. Two companies were registered in the Marshall Islands, a small country in Oceania, and used a single ship each—flagged under Panama and San Marino banners, respectively—to complete the fuel delivery. The third sanctioned company—registered in the East African nation of Mauritius—similarly used a Panama-flagged ship for its fuel delivery that, since February 2023, had also illegally exported Russian oil, per the Treasury Department. 
  • Hundreds of employees at the Justice Department (DOJ)’s civil rights division have departed the agency in recent weeks, including about half of the 380 total lawyers the office employed in January, several news outlets reported on Monday. Moreover, according to the Guardian, the office’s voting bureau was directed to “dismiss all active cases” and its senior managers were reassigned to a DOJ office handling employee complaints. On Friday, seven Democratic senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee requested that the DOJ notify them of all personnel changes in the agency’s civil rights office since Trump’s inauguration three months ago. 

Autism Research Advocates Question RFK’s Motives

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a swearing in ceremony for Dr. Mehmet Oz as the Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator in the Oval Office at the White House on April 18, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a swearing in ceremony for Dr. Mehmet Oz as the Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator in the Oval Office at the White House on April 18, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

For years, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has believed that childhood vaccines cause autism, and he’ been sharing such claims with everyone who would listen—from readers of Rolling Stone to strangers he encountered on hiking trails.

Now Kennedy is using his platform as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to launch a project studying the cause of autism, and the way he’s going about it has prompted concern from vaccine researchers, autistic people, and their families, and privacy advocates.

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