Most AAPI adults oppose college funding cuts and student deportations, a new poll findsNew Foto - Most AAPI adults oppose college funding cuts and student deportations, a new poll finds

WASHINGTON (AP) — As colleges and universities pull back on diversity practices, a new poll finds that young Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders are overwhelmingly against cutting federal funding for diversity, equity and inclusion programs in higher education and deporting students involved in protest activity on campus. But opposition is lower among older groups — despite the fact that most AAPI adults, regardless of age, place a high value on a college education. The new survey fromAAPI Data and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Researchfound that about 6 in 10 AAPI adults overall "somewhat" or "strongly" oppose cutting federal funding for colleges and universities with DEI programs, and a similar share are "somewhat" or "strongly" opposed to arresting or deporting foreign students involved with campus protests. Younger AAPI adults are largely against these policies: About 9 in 10 AAPI adults under 30 "somewhat" or "strongly" oppose cutting federal funds for colleges and universities with DEI policies, and a similar share are against arresting or deporting students involved with campus protests. Older AAPI adults are more likely to oppose these moves than to favor them, but their opposition is much less overwhelming. About half of AAPI adults ages 60 and older "somewhat" or "strongly" oppose cutting federal funds for DEI in higher education or arresting or deporting students for protest activity, while about 3 in 10 are "somewhat" or "strongly" in favor and about 2 in 10 have a neutral view. Despite these divisions, the survey shows that AAPI adults continue to see a college degree as critical for achieving key milestones. The vast majority, regardless of age, say a college degree is "essential" or "important" for getting a good job that can comfortably support a family. This poll is part ofan ongoing projectexploring the views of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, whose views are usually not highlighted in other surveys because of small sample sizes and lack of linguistic representation. The Trump administration hasthreatened to cut federal fundingover DEI programs, leading many colleges toroll backsupport systems for students of color. The White House already hascut billions of dollarsin federal research grants to colleges it accuses of not doing enough to curb antisemitism, particularly during protests against the Israel-Hamas war. It also has moved to deport foreign students over their involvement with pro-Palestinian demonstrations, including Columbia University studentMahmoud Khalil. Iris Chiou, a 28-year-old Taiwanese American medical student in Madison, Illinois, says she's scared for foreign students who could face deportation. She wonders how longstudents and academics will feel comfortable speaking out. "The fact that you have people disappearing and being deported, being functionally kidnapped, I think that's going to scare people — which it's probably supposed to," said Chiou, who is a Democrat. It will keep people from discussing "what they care about." Some schools haveoverhauled policy on protests after Trump's funding threats.AtColumbia University, there's now a ban on students wearing masks to hide their identities and protesters must show identification when asked. Meanwhile,Harvardhas pushed back on the administration's demands, filing a lawsuit in April to challengecuts to its funding. Rowena Tomaneng, board chair of the Asian Pacific Americans in Higher Education, said thatmany students are feeling vulnerable. "Definitely I think international students are feeling that the United States might not be as a welcoming environment anymore for them to pursue their studies," Tomaneng said. But younger AAPI adults are more worried about the impact on campuses. About 7 in 10 AAPI adults under 30 are "extremely" or "very" concerned about restrictions to free speech on campuses and federal government cuts to university research, compared to about half of AAPI adults ages 60 and older. Tarun Puri, 59, of Clearwater, Florida, supports arresting or deporting international students who participated in campus protests. "You pay so much money to come and study. What is the point of protesting?" said Puri, a registered Republican who was born in India and went to college there. "Because you go to another country you should respect the law and order of the country." If he had a child in college today who was considering taking part in demonstrations, he said he would advise them not to draw attention to themselves and instead "go to the library and study." The difference in attitudes could be explained, at least in part, by older and younger AAPI adults' life experiences. "If you're younger, you're more likely to have gone to college in the U.S.," said Karthick Ramakrishnan, executive director of AAPI Data and researcher at the University of California, Berkeley. "If you're 60 and above, if you went to college, you're more likely to have gone to college in Asia, which is a very different system." ___ Tang reported from Phoenix. ___ The poll of 1,094 U.S. adults who are Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders was conducted April 7-14, 2025, using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based Amplify AAPI Panel, designed to be representative of the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander population. Online and telephone interviews were offered in English, the Chinese dialects of Mandarin and Cantonese, Vietnamese and Korean. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 4.8 percentage points.

Most AAPI adults oppose college funding cuts and student deportations, a new poll finds

Most AAPI adults oppose college funding cuts and student deportations, a new poll finds WASHINGTON (AP) — As colleges and universities pull ...
Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talksNew Foto - Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talks

By Phuong Nguyen and Francesco Guarascio HANOI (Reuters) -The Trump Organization and its local partner will hold a groundbreaking ceremony on Wednesday for a luxury golf resort close to Vietnam's capital Hanoi, according to invitations to the event seen by Reuters. Vietnam's government approved the plan last week and the ceremony will be attended by U.S. President Donald Trump's son Eric Trump, organisers said. The event comes as the Southeast Asian country negotiates with Washington to avoid punitive tariffs. Its developers have said the $1.5 billion project will include when completed in 2027 three 18-hole golf courses and a residential complex, and could be followed by additional multi-billion-dollar investments. Local authorities of the Hung Yen province, where the golf club will be built, have also invited Vietnam's leaders to the event, including the head of the ruling Communist Party To Lam, who was born in the province, according to the invitation. It is unclear whether he will join the event. Vietnam's state news agency said Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh will participate in a groundbreaking event on Wednesday in Hung Yen, without specifying for which project. Apart from the ceremony, Eric Trump is also set to meet Ho Chi Minh City officials on Thursday to explore plans for a possible skyscraper in Vietnam's southern business hub, according to an internal schedule seen by Reuters. "Vietnam has tremendous potential for luxurious hospitality and entertainment," Eric Trump, who is a senior vice president of the Trump Organization, said in October when the president's family business announced a partnership with Vietnamese real estate firm Kinhbac City. "We are incredibly excited to enter this dynamic market." The strategic collaboration, whose terms are not public, "will focus on developing 5-star hotels, championship-style golf courses, and luxurious residential estates and unparalleled amenities in Vietnam," the consortium said in a statement in October. It is unclear how the two partners share costs and revenues, and what conditions have been set for use of the Trump franchise. TRADE PLEDGES Vietnam has made multiple pledges to the White House to avoid 46% "reciprocal" tariffs that would kick off in July after a global pause if no bilateral deal is reached. They include lower tariffs and non-tariff barriers, an intensified fight against trade frauds and counterfeiting, and favourable conditions to Starlink, owned by Trump's close ally Elon Musk, to roll out satellite internet services in the country. Organisers said the project in Hung Yen, a few kilometres south of Hanoi along the Red River, rapidly obtained approvals from local authorities, noting that it was the result of earlier work by Kinhbac City on the plan which preceded the announcement of the partnership with the Trump Organization. Trump handed over the leadership of the organization to his children after he won his first term as U.S. president. The Trump Organization has luxury golf projects, existing or under development, in countries from Indonesia to the Middle East. (Reporting by Francesco Guarascio and Phuong Nguyen; Editing by Saad Sayeed)

Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talks

Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talks By Phuong Nguyen and Francesco Guarascio HANOI (Reuters) -The T...
Elon Musk's pullback from politics comes after his last big investment was a flopNew Foto - Elon Musk's pullback from politics comes after his last big investment was a flop

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin could go down as billionaireElon Musk'slast big spend on a political campaign. Andit was a flop. Musk, the richest person in the world, said Tuesday that hewould be spending lesson political campaigns. The announcement came as Musk isstepping back from his rolein theTrumpadministration, saying he will spend more time focused on his businesses, and just seven weeks after the candidate he backed in Wisconsin's Supreme Court racelost by 10 percentage points. Democrats in the swing state said Musk's comments show that a party-led effort in this spring's election, dubbed "People vs. Musk," succeeded in making Musk and his money "toxic." "The people have won," said Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Ben Wikler. "The biggest funder in Republican politics is taking his toys and going home." Brandon Scholz, a retired longtime Republican strategist in the state, said that at least in Wisconsin, "after that court race he deserves to be labeled as toxic." But that doesn't mean Musk couldn't spend money on races in the state and nationally again, especially if the stakes are high and his money could make a difference, Scholz said. "Does he bring with him a lot of baggage? Possibly," Scholz said. "But over time, maybe not as much." Musk's spending in this year's Wisconsin Supreme Court race helped make it the most expensive court race in U.S. history. And it came just five months after Musk spentat least $250 millionto help President Donald Trump win, reversing losses in Wisconsin and other battleground states four years earlier. Musk was all-in on the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, even making a personal appearance in Green Bay the weekend before the election wearing acheesehead hat— popular with fans of the NFL's Green Bay Packers — and personally handing out checks for $1 million to supporters. It was an extension of Musk's high-profile role in the presidential race, where hecampaigned alongside Trumpand headlined some of his own rallies. "It's a super big deal," he told the roughly 2,000-person crowd in the event center, where hundreds of protesters were rallying against his appearance outside. "I'm not phoning it in. I'm here in person." But his appearance — and money — didn't work. The candidate Musk backed lost Brown County, the home of Green Bay, by 3 percentage points, going on to lose statewide by more than three times that margin. After the defeat, Musk has said little publicly about the race and his involvement in it. His popularity has also plummeted. AnAssociated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs polltaken two weeks after the Wisconsin court election found that just 33% of adults had a favorable view of theTeslaCEO, down from 41% in December. Musk's involvement in the race came at the same time he was thechain-saw-wieldingface of the Trump administration's effort to downsize the federal government. His Department of Government Efficiency, also known as DOGE, has enacted deep cuts to the workforce and spending, in some cases seeking to shutter entire agencies, but it has fallen far short of its goals for reducing federal spending. Democratic U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, of Wisconsin, is one of the most liberal members of Congress and a loud critic of both Trump and Musk. Pocan is skeptical that Musk truly will back away. "I don't believe any of it, first of all," Pocan said. "This just means they realize how toxic Elon Musk is and the work he did through DOGE." Kelda Roys, a Democratic state senator, was also tempered in her excitement over Musk saying he plans to do a "lot less" political spending in the future. "There's a ton of other billionaire bros, I'm sure, willing and happy to step up in his place," Roys said. Musk could also get involved with future races, but in a much more low-profile way, said Scholz, the Republican. "In Wisconsin, he had such a huge, huge, huge profile," Scholz said. "He became the campaign. He became the story." Musk spent at least $3 million on the Wisconsin Supreme Court race himself. Musk-backed groups America PAC and a Rebuilding America's Future spent another $19 million in support of the Republican-backed candidate Brad Schimel. That was part of more than $100 million spent on both sides. America PAC spent at least $6 million on vendors who sent door-to-door canvassers across the state, according to the nonpartisan Wisconsin Democracy Campaign. It was a reprise of what the group did last fall across the seven most competitive presidential battleground states, including Wisconsin, which were carried by Trump. In addition to his political contributions, Musk paid three individual voters $1 million each for signing a petition in an effort togoose turnout. Musk also offered to pay $20 to anyone who signed up on his group's site to knock on doors for Schimel and posted a photo of themselves as proof. His organization promised $100 to every voter who signed the petition against "activist judges" and another $100 for every signer they referred. Musk himself hosted Schimel on his podcast and cast what was at stake in stark terms. "A seemingly small election could determine the fate of Western civilization," Musk said in a social media post on the April 1 election day. "I think it matters for the future of the world." Democrats made the racea referendum on both Musk and Trump's agenda, successfully electing a judge whose victory ensures the Wisconsin Supreme Court will remain under liberal control until at least 2028. Coincidentally, Musk's announcement about spending less on political races came just hours after a liberal judgeannounced her candidacyfor the 2026 Wisconsin Supreme Court race. Wisconsin Appeals Court Judge Chris Taylor is challenging a conservative incumbent justice who sided with Trump in his unsuccessful lawsuit that attempted to overturn his 2020 loss in Wisconsin. The race will be decided in April, months before the midterms in which Democrats hope unease with Trump and Musk will help the party make gains. Taylor appeared to be taking a similar approach to her campaign that the winning Democratic-backed candidate did this year. "My campaign is going to be a campaign about the people of this state," she told The Associated Press, "not about billionaires, not about the most powerful." ___ Associated Press writer Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Elon Musk's pullback from politics comes after his last big investment was a flop

Elon Musk's pullback from politics comes after his last big investment was a flop MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin could go down as billio...
Japan's exports slow in April as Trump's tariffs dent shipments to the U.S.New Foto - Japan's exports slow in April as Trump's tariffs dent shipments to the U.S.

TOKYO (AP) — Japan's exports to the United States, its largest single trading partner, fell nearly 2% in April astariffhikes imposed by PresidentDonald Trumphit home. Globally, exports rose just 2% year-on-year, down from 4% in March, leaving atrade deficitfor the first time in three months. Imports from the United States fell more than 11% in April, while total imports slipped 2.2%. Weakening exports could drag on growth after the economy contracted 0.7% in the last quarter. Japan is askingthe Trump administration to scrap his tariffs on imports from Japan, but so far, the U.S. has not agreed to do so. The Finance Ministry said April's trade deficit totaled 115.8 billion yen ($804 million), compared with 504.7 billion yen a year earlier. The Japanese yen recently has gained against the U.S. dollar, eroding the value of exports in yen terms. The dollar is trading at about 144 yen, down from about 155 yen a year ago. Exports had picked up earlier in the year as businesses rushed to beat tariffs that have gradually taken effect since Trump took office for a second time. While trade with the United States has suffered, exports to other regions such as Southeast Asia have expanded. The U.S. is charging a 25% tariffon imports of autos, a mainstay of Japan's trade with the U.S. and a key driver of growth for the economy. Trump has relaxed some of those tariffs but has kept in place higher tariffs on steel and aluminum. Japan's vehicle exports fell nearly 6% in April from the year before. Economic Revitalization Minister Ryosei Akazawa, Japan's main tariff negotiator, is due to visit the U.S. soon for talks, likely over the weekend, in the third round of those talks. ___ Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama

Japan's exports slow in April as Trump's tariffs dent shipments to the U.S.

Japan's exports slow in April as Trump's tariffs dent shipments to the U.S. TOKYO (AP) — Japan's exports to the United States, i...
California Democratic governor candidate accuses Harris, Becerra of Biden decline cover-upNew Foto - California Democratic governor candidate accuses Harris, Becerra of Biden decline cover-up

California Democratic gubernatorial candidate Antonio Villaraigosa (D) accused former Vice President Kamala Harris and former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra of engaging in a "cover-up" of former President Biden's cognitive decline while in office. In a lengthy statement released Tuesday, Villaraigosa cited revelations in journalists Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's new book "Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again." "At the highest levels of our government, those in power were intentionally complicit or told outright lies in a systematic cover-up to keep Joe Biden's mental decline from the public," said Villaraigosa, a former Los Angeles mayor. Becerra launched a run for governor last month, and Harris is reportedly mulling a run for the position. Villaraigosa said, "Voters deserve to know the truth." "What did Kamala Harris and Xavier Becerra know, when did they know it, and most importantly, why didn't either of them speak out?" the former mayor said. "This cover-up directly led to a second Donald Trump term — and as a result, all Californians are paying the price." The book, published Tuesday, has made news this month after early excerpts revealed new details about the alleged efforts Biden's inner circle took to shield the public from signs of his cognitive decline during his last year in office. The book's release comes after Biden's personal office announced he has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that has spread to his bones. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

California Democratic governor candidate accuses Harris, Becerra of Biden decline cover-up

California Democratic governor candidate accuses Harris, Becerra of Biden decline cover-up California Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ant...

 

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