Fox News’ morning newsletter, Fox News First, provides a summary of the top news stories to start the day. The top headline is the death of Pope Francis at 88, with Vice President Vance being one of his last visitors and world leaders mourning his passing. Other major headlines include Americans sounding off on Trump’s order to make English the official language, a deported illegal and suspected MS-13 gangster being transferred from an El Salvador prison, Justice Alito criticizing the Supreme Court’s decision to halt Trump’s Venezuelan deportations, and a crackdown on REAL ID following blue states issuing driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants.
In the realm of politics, a Biden green energy project was halted by the Trump administration due to reliance on faulty science, a California mayor suggested giving homeless people fentanyl, the Trump administration plans to pull $1 billion in funding from Harvard amidst a clash with the university, and sacked Pentagon aides criticize leaders for their handling of a leak investigation. In the media, a Democrat central to the Kilmar Abrego Garcia saga challenges the Trump administration, David Hogg donates to the DCCC after planning to primary ‘ineffective’ Democrats, an MSNBC host warns of targeting people of color after immigrants, and Dr. Oz’s daughter speaks out after a health episode in the White House.
Opinion pieces discuss the need to take on the administrative state and criticize teachers union bosses for prioritizing themselves over teachers and students. In other news, teens are using chatbots to spread malicious photos of classmates, James Gandolfini’s son is banned from a popular show’s set, an American culture quiz tests knowledge on classic cars, perfect pitches, and timeless TV, a woman’s rant about a chicken dinner uproar ignites a social media debate, and unexpected companions are encountered on a safari.
Additional content includes videos on the health of Pope Francis and the significance of his meeting with VP Vance, as well as weather updates and links to Fox News’ social media accounts, newsletters, and apps for easy access to news updates. Fox News First aims to provide readers with a comprehensive overview of the day’s top stories to stay informed and prepared for the day ahead.