Friday, February 6, 2026

White House doubles down on Tulsi Gabbard’s presence at FBI raid of election center – as it happened

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Summary

We’re wrapping up our live coverage of US politics for the day. Here are the latest developments:

  • The US military said it conducted a kinetic strike on a suspected drug vessel in the Eastern Pacific on Thursday, killing two people.

  • Senator Elissa Slotkin of Michigan said she will not sit down for an interview with Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, and US attorney Jeanine Pirro regarding a video that she and other Democrats made urging troops to refuse illegal orders. “I’m not going to legitimize their actions,” she said.

  • Donald Trump reportedly wants to see New York’s Penn Station and Dulles airport in Washington renamed in his honor. The president is said to have told Senator Chuck Schumer that he would release billions of dollars in federal funding set aside for a New York infrastructure project if the minority leader agreed to back the renaming, according to reports from Punchbowl and CNN.

  • Trump introduced TrumpRX.gov, which the White House says aims to help Americans get discounted prescription drugs. Under the new initiative, sixteen of the world’s largest drug manufacturers agreed to cut prices for Americans in exchange for exemptions from US tariffs.

  • Governor Tina Kotek and more than 30 Oregon mayors have demanded the Trump administration halt all federal immigration enforcement actions in the state until recent “use-of-force” incidents are thoroughly investigated. “The actions of your officers are not making our communities safer,” the letter states.

  • Gavin Newsom, California’s governor, said his office has been assured there will be no immigration enforcement operations at the Super Bowl.

Key events

The US military said it conducted a kinetic strike on a suspected drug vessel in the Eastern Pacific on Thursday, killing two people.

“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” the US military said in a statement. No American military forces were harmed, according to the US Southern Command.

The latest strike comes nearly two weeks after the US killed two people in another strike on a vessel in the eastern Pacific. Since September, the US military has conducted more than 30 strikes against boats that American officials allege were involved in drug smuggling, killing more than 100 people.

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