their journey more possible. yeah, when title 42 expired, there wasn t this sort of surge that a lot of people anticipated, so it feels like attention shifted from the border. but as this is going on, is there anything the administration is planning to do to prepare and, you know, it doesn t seem there s much in the way of legislative immigration talks on the horizon. not right now. certainly, obviously, not in congress, but the white house is in constant communication with officials in mexico to see what they can do to put off a worse humanitarian crisis than what existed before, and to prevent numbers from reaching what they were before. there has been a significant decline, maybe more than 6,000 people a day decline in who is trying to enter into the u.s. there s a desire to keep those numbers low. president of mexico criticized governor ron desantis for some of his immigration rhetoric in recent days. that happened yesterday. congress may not be doing much on that, but there
landscape analysis of youtube. so what we are looking at with that visualization is at the top anti-immigration content of the last 15 years. and what we found in our landscape analysis is that the majority of the most viral anti-immigration content actually is produced by a handful of organizations. and the reason why that s very important is, i think, there s a pervasive narrative out there that xenophobia and anti immigration rhetoric comes from individuals. it comes from citizens, and it s a populist, grassroots sentiment. and that s not what we saw on the research. what we saw on the research is that actually these messaging campaigns and communications strategies are highly intentional. they are centralized. and they come from were funded institutions. i know hassan it s gonna speak about that kind of network, which we re talking about hundreds of millions of dollars,
breaking news just in. after more than four hours of questioning, under oath, former president trump has just wrapped up his video deposition. this is tied to an alleged assault of protesters outside trump tower in 2015. the lawsuit alleges that trump s then head of security hit one of the protesters who was demonstrating against trump s immigration rhetoric and cnn s kara skinell is covering this. do we know what donald trump said in the deposition? we learned from the plaintiff s lawyer that donald trump sat for this deposition for 4 1/2 hours at trump tower. he said he rose his right hand and swore to tell the truth and the whole truth and here s a sound bite from what the lawyers described how donald trump, what
a 2015 protest against donald trump s immigration rhetoric is forcing the former president to give sworn testimony in the coming hours. a lawsuit accuses trump s former head of security of assaulting protestors outside trump tower. their lawyer wants to determine whether trump is responsible for his employees behavior. reporter: for the first time before leaving office former president donald trump will testify under oath. on monday trump will sit for a videotaped deposition in a case stemming from a 2015 lawsuit. he and his company were sued.