Trump 2nd term updates: Trump attends the Super Bowl
Trump becomes the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl.
President Donald Trump's second administration continued its swift recasting of the federal government, prompting pushback from Democrats and legal challenges.
The president said Sunday that he will announce tariffs on all imported steel and aluminum on Monday but didn't say when they'll take effect.
Trump, meanwhile, is at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans on Sunday night to take in the Super Bowl. Trump picked the Kansas City Chiefs to beat the Philadelphia Eagles in an interview aired before the game on Fox.
Key headlines:
Judge signs order limiting DOGE access to Treasury data
U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly signed the proposed order Thursday morning, cementing the agreement between the unions and the Department of Justice that largely limits the Treasury Department from sharing sensitive financial data with the Department of Government Efficiency.
Under the terms of the agreement, two people associated with Musk but employed by the Treasury Department -- tech CEO Tom Krause and 25-year-old former SpaceX and X employee Marko Elez -- will continue to have "read only" access to the Treasury Department’s sensitive records.
Read more here
-ABC News’ Peter Charalambous and Soorin Kim
Trump education secretary pick to face confirmation hearing Feb. 13
Linda McMahon, President Donald Trump's pick to become secretary of the Department of Education, will sit for her confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on Thursday, Feb. 13, at 10 a.m.
McMahon was tapped by Trump to run the Department of Education, which he has pledged to shutter. The president is expected to ask McMahon, via executive order, to submit a proposal to diminish the department and call on Congress to pass legislation that would abolish it.
"Linda, I hope you do a great job and put yourself out of a job," Trump said on Tuesday. "I want her to put herself out of a job, Education Department."
– ABC News' Arthur Jones II
Homan says he hopes Congress will increase migrant bed capacity
While speaking to reporters outside the White House, border czar Tom Homan said he was "made aware" this morning of migrants being released due to bed capacity overflow in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers.
"We're looking for as many beds as we can get -- we just gotta hope Congress gives us funding to abide how many beds we need," he said. "We know they’re talking about that today, so hopefully we'll get a budget, we can increase the bed capacity."
However, he said he is "not worried" because "there are many ways to increase the beds -- capacity -- and that's what we're working on today."
"I was told that some were released because of some health concerns that we could not handle within ICE detention," Homan added, saying he has a meeting with ICE leadership later Thursday to find out more.
Homan also said ICE is "doing a great job," but they need to "do more."
First on ABC: Trump meeting with US Steel and FedEx CEOs
Trump is meeting with the leaders of U.S. Steel and FedEx today, according to sources familiar with the matter.
After former President Biden blocked the more than $14 billion deal for Japan’s Nippon Steel to take over U.S. Steel, the two companies filed a lawsuit asking a federal court to reverse Biden’s decision.
FedEx’s operations could be heavily affected by Trump’s tariffs on China, especially the provision that now requires low-value Chinese products to go through customs and tariffs.
– ABC News’ Katherine Faulders, Selina Wang, and Elizabeth Schulze