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WEDNESDAY: Homeland Security Hearing on Trump’s Mass Deportations and ICE & CBP Attacks on U.S. Citizens - House Homeland Democrats (.gov)

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NEW: WEDNESDAY: Homeland Security Hearing on Trump’s Mass Deportations and ICE & CBP Attacks on U.S. Citizens - House Homeland Democrats (.gov)

A busy Washington week puts immigration enforcement, the economy, and institutional oversight in the same political frame....

Key points:

• House Homeland Democrats say a Wednesday hearing will address Trump’s mass deportations and ICE & CBP attacks on U.S. citizens.
• Trump says his energy secretary is “totally wrong” about gas prices not dropping to $3 until next year.
• NBC News reports...

Why it matters:

- Immigration enforcement and alleged citizen impacts are poised to become a headline test of Trump’s governance, with Congress set to air claims publicly.
- Economic confidence is being contested in real time—through both polling and Trump’s direct...

Sources include:

• https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi8wFBVV95cUxQeFN1MzA2dFd5ckpyZk9BcUx5dlJLcHNPSi1ZaU9TYmdhbkVRRUlKcm50d1B1QnRmRWRvTzgzZVdqZDlCT3NnZ2RYZ0ZVYmdUZXFUbDJZQkZVZlpKT3A5b2lkckFHeUNQVWNUNEg1VExOYnJESjdfQ0dIVWdNX2ljWk1pZ3NzLXZsVm1qdmxWcTBSQXc3MU4tcl...

Full briefing:
https://trumpbriefing.com/article/wednesday-homeland-security-hearing-on-trump-s-mass-deportations-and-ice-cbp-attacks-on-u-s-citizens-house-homeland-democrats-gov-1776704445963

4/20/2026, 5:00:46 PM

Quick Take

A busy Washington week puts immigration enforcement, the economy, and institutional oversight in the same political frame. House Homeland Democrats are previewing a Wednesday hearing focused on Trump’s mass deportations and alleged ICE and CBP attacks on U.S. citizens, while Trump publicly disputes his energy secretary’s timeline for gas prices returning to $3. Separate storylines add to the broader pressure: NBC News reports Trump’s approval at a second-term low amid souring views on the economy and the Iran war, and The Atlantic spotlights questions around the FBI director’s visibility. Meanwhile, a judge has dismissed Trump’s $10B lawsuit tied to The Wall Street Journal’s Epstein reporting, even as Trump is set to attend the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.


Related topics
Trump Legal DevelopmentsU.S.–Iran Relations

Key points

Why it matters

- Immigration enforcement and alleged citizen impacts are poised to become a headline test of Trump’s governance, with Congress set to air claims publicly. - Economic confidence is being contested in real time—through both polling and Trump’s direct challenge to his administration’s gas-price messaging. - A cluster of media, legal, and law-enforcement oversight storylines adds to questions about transparency and accountability, even as the White House keeps up high-profile public rituals.

What to watch

Briefing

Washington’s agenda is compressing several of Trump’s most politically sensitive fronts into the same week: immigration enforcement, economic expectations, and institutional oversight.

On immigration, House Homeland Democrats are pointing to a Wednesday hearing centered on Trump’s mass deportations and alleged ICE and CBP attacks on U.S. citizens. The framing suggests Democrats intend to put citizen-facing consequences at the center of the debate.

On the economy, Trump is publicly challenging his own administration’s messaging. The Hill reports he said the energy secretary is “totally wrong” about gas prices not dropping to $3 until next year, keeping price expectations—and accountability for them—squarely in the political spotlight.

That fight over perceptions lands alongside softer but consequential signals in public opinion. NBC News reports a poll finding Trump’s approval rating at a second-term low as Americans sour on the economy and the Iran war.

Institutional questions are also circulating. The Atlantic’s “The FBI Director Is MIA” headline indicates a separate line of scrutiny about visibility and leadership at the top of federal law enforcement, though the scope and specifics beyond the headline remain unclear from the RSS item alone.

Legal and reputational fallout related to Epstein reporting continues to surface in parallel. NPR reports a judge dismissed Trump’s $10B lawsuit over The Wall Street Journal’s Epstein reporting, while The Times highlights an interview with Paolo Zampolli touching on Melania, Epstein, and being Trump’s envoy.

Against that backdrop, The New York Times reports Trump will attend the White House Correspondents’ Dinner—an event that can function as both a reset and a stress test, depending on whether the week’s controversies dominate the conversation before and after the room clears.

Sources

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