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May 1 Afternoon Brief

In Washington

President Trump’s Qatari-built Air Force One is still very much a luxury jet, just now with a $400 million overhaul and more top-secret communications gear. Most of the plush interior is staying put, including the leather seats, couches, and faux bookcases, with only a few changes for presidential use. The seals change, the furniture mostly doesn’t, because apparently even statecraft likes a tasteful waiting room.

Trump also signed an executive order expanding sanctions on the Cuban government, broadening the target list to include agents, officials, supporters, and people tied to the security apparatus. The administration says it is increasing pressure on Havana as Cuba’s humanitarian crisis deepens.

On Iran, Trump said negotiations are still going nowhere and that he canceled a planned April 25 trip by envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. He told Congress separately that the ceasefire means he does not need authorization for war, setting up the usual fight over who gets to decide when a conflict really ends, and who gets to start the next one.

In global security

Rebel groups in Mali, including JNIM and Tuareg separatists, are stepping up attacks on the military government. Reports say checkpoints have appeared near the capital and a northern town has been seized, which is not the sort of map update anyone wants to wake up to.

In tech and defense

Elon Musk’s xAI and the Trump Justice Department are trying to block Colorado’s new AI law before it takes effect on June 30. The measure would bar bias in high-risk AI systems used in hiring, health care, and other settings, while the challengers argue it is unconstitutional and amounts to forced ideological regulation.

Separately, the Defense Department has reached agreements with seven tech companies to bring their AI tools onto classified military systems. The Pentagon wants faster adoption, which is one way to describe putting machines closer to the machinery of war.

In the U.S.

Thousands took part in May Day Strong protests across the country, with organizers urging a day of no school, no work, and no shopping. In Manhattan, Sunrise Movement protesters chained themselves to the front of the New York Stock Exchange and blocked exits before police arrested them.

Consumer alert

Afrin is being recalled because its packaging does not meet federal standards meant to protect children. The product itself is not the issue, but the packaging creates a poisoning risk, which is a deeply unhelpful design choice for something sold over the counter.

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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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