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Members of the Central American migrant caravan rest during the trek across Mexico.
Members of the Central American migrant caravan rest during the trek across Mexico. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Members of the Central American migrant caravan rest during the trek across Mexico. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Friday US briefing: Trump administration halts asylum claims at border

This article is more than 5 years old

Vegas survivors on California shooting … Could Beto’s Texas defeat lead to 2020 triumph? … Mueller focuses on Russian linked to Manafort and Putin

Good morning, I’m Tim Walker with today’s headlines. If you’d like to receive this briefing by email, sign up here.

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Top story: Trump officials claim asylum system is overwhelmed

The Trump administration has announced a block on asylum applications by people crossing the border from Mexico, claiming the US asylum system is “overwhelmed”. The policy was signed by the new acting US attorney general, Matthew Whitaker, and the homeland security secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, previously the face of the administration’s family separation policy. Critics said the move was probably illegal, amid the president’s recent immigration scaremongering in the run-up to the midterms.

  • Migrant caravan. The Honduran migrant caravan has received a generous welcome in some of Mexico’s poorest areas while affluent Mexicans complain, reports David Agren in Mexico City.

  • Uncertain future. Alexandra Villareal hears how immigrant families cope after their fathers and breadwinners are deported.

  • Distress calls. Survivors of a Mediterranean shipwreck in which 76 migrants died claim a US navy ship ignored their cries for help until after their boat had already sunk.

Thousand Oaks: Vegas survivors on California shooting

'He just kept firing': witnesses describe California bar shooting – video

Survivors of last year’s massacre at a Las Vegas country music festival have said the Borderline Bar and Grill felt like a haven until a former US marine opened fire in the California venue on Wednesday night, killing 12 people. The quiet Los Angeles suburb of Thousand Oaks was in shock on Thursday, with residents packing the streets to see the body of the sheriff’s deputy, Ron Helus, transported from hospital, where he died hours after being shot while trying to tackle the gunman.

  • Gun laws. A California law designed to keep firearms out of the hands of at-risk individuals could have prevented this week’s shooting, but it is still rarely used.

  • The victims. Those who died at the Borderline included a security guard, a criminal justice graduate and a navy veteran. Friends and family have shared their stories.

Could Beto’s Texas defeat point the way to 2020 triumph?

The 19 successful female judges in Harris County, Texas. Photograph: HarrisBlackGirlMagic.com

Might the path to a Democratic victory in 2020 run through … Texas? Beto O’Rourke, the charismatic US Senate candidate, failed to unseat Ted Cruz at the midterms, but his inspiring grassroots campaign could provide a template – and perhaps even a candidate – for the presidential race. The midterms also heralded another “Texas miracle” for Democrats in Harris County, where 19 African American women ran for judge under the slogan “Black Girl Magic”. They all won.

Mueller focuses on elusive Russian tied to Manafort and Putin

Thousands marched on Thursday demanding protection for the Mueller investigation. Photograph: Jeenah Moon/Reuters

Robert Mueller’s Russia inquiry is investigating a Russian man thought to have ties to the country’s intelligence services. Konstantin Kilimnik previously worked for Oleg Deripaska, an oligarch close to Vladimir Putin, alongside Trump’s former campaign chair, Paul Manafort. Peter Stone reports at length on this development in the Mueller inquiry.

Crib sheet

Must-reads

MEK leader Maryam Rajavi at a memorial ceremony in Tirana, Albania, last year. Photograph: NurPhoto via Getty Images

The MEK: terrorists, cultists or champions of Iranian democracy?

The members of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran, or MEK (Mujahedin-e Khalq), live in isolated exile at a heavily fortified base in Albania. Once considered a terrorist organisation, they have recently earned the support of the Trump administration organisation for their commitment to overthrowing the Islamic Republic, as Arron Merat reports.

Two pioneering climbers scale new heights

Erin Parisi came out as a woman in 2017 and has since climbed the highest peaks in Africa, Australia and Europe. By 2020, she aims to be the first transgender person to scale the seven summits. Hanifa Yousoufi recently braved frostbite and the Taliban to become the first Afghan woman to reach her country’s highest peak.

Watching your dog die when you can’t afford to help

Bobbi Dempsey’s family has twice suffered the agony of seeing a beloved pet in pain, without the funds to pay for veterinary care. Why, she asks, are there so few options for poorer pet owners?

Opinion

Jeff Bezos wants to build a vast Amazon headquarters in Queens. But New York already contends with an unwanted population of Wall Street finance types, argues Hamilton Nolan. Must it also suffer an influx of wealthy techies?

Forcing us to take in a flood of rich young tech people … is like giving the flu to someone who already has chronic but manageable diabetes. It’s just not fair.

Sport

The bitter Argentinian soccer rivals Boca Juniors and River Plate are to face each other in the Copa Libertadores final for the first time in 58 years. But the threat of violence and disruption is so great that no away fans will be allowed, as Jonathan Wilson reports.

The Dallas Cowboys have fallen short of the playoffs for the seventh time in nine seasons. Oliver Connolly explains how incompetence ruined the reputation of the world’s most valuable sports franchise.

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