President Donald Trumppaid tribute to fallen service members during aMemorial Day ceremonyat Arlington National Cemetery in an address that honored the "great, great warriors" yet also briefly veered into politics as he boasted of a nation he's "fixing after a long and hard four years." Though the holiday is one U.S. presidents typically treat with pure solemnity, Trump began it with a Memorial Day social media post that attacked his predecessor and calledfederal judges who've blockedhis deportation initiatives "monsters who want our country to go to hell." Here's the latest: Trump's Tuesday schedule, according to the White House The president has no public events schedule for Tuesday, according to the White House. Amid Trump-Harvard dispute, Hong Kong seeks to enroll international students Hong Kong's leader John Lee said Tuesday the city would welcome any students who've been discriminated against by the U.S. policy, days after the Trump administrationrevoked Harvard University'sability to enroll international students. Last Friday, a U.S. federal judge blocked the U.S. government from cutting off Harvard'senrollment of foreign students, an action the Ivy League school decried as unconstitutional retaliation for defying the White House's political demands. Lee said in a weekly press briefing that the government and eight of the city's universities will do their best to assist any students who suffered from "discriminatory and unfair treatment" in finding a way to study in Hong Kong. He said if necessary, he would consider raising the enrollment quotas for non-local students in these universities. Trump targeted Democrats over questionable online fundraising. His campaign has similar issues When Trump directed his attorney general last month to investigate online fundraising, he cited concerns that foreigners and fraudsters were using elaborate "schemes" and "dummy accounts" to funnel illegal contributions to politicians and causes. Instead of calling for an expansive probe, however, the president identified just one potential target: ActBlue,the Democrats' online fundraising juggernaut,which has acknowledged receiving over 200 potentially illicit contributions last year from foreign internet addresses. Trump's announcement contained a glaring omission — his political committees also received scores of potentially problematic contributions. An Associated Press review of donations to Trump over the past five years found 1,600 contributions from donors who live abroad, have close ties to foreign interests or failed to disclose basic information, often making it difficult, if not impossible, to identify them and verify the legality of their donations. Among those was $5,000 linked to a derelict building, and $5,000 from a Chinese businessman who listed a La Quinta Inn as his address. Another sizable donation — $1 million — was made by the wife of an African oil and mining magnate. ▶ Read moreabout the AP's findings Here's what a Texas oil executive from DOGE is doing inside the Interior Department A Texas oil executive fromElon Musk'sgovernment efficiency teamhas been given sweeping powers to overhaul the federal department that manages vast tracts of resource-rich public lands, but he hasn't divested his energy investments or filed an ethics commitment to break ties with companies that pose a conflict of interest, records show. Interior SecretaryDoug Burgumrecently directed Tyler Hassen, who lacks Senate confirmation and has no public administration experience, to reorganize the Interior Department, which oversees some 70,000 employees in 11 agencies including the National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Geological Survey and the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Before joining DOGE, Hassen spent nearly two decades as an executive at Basin Holdings, an enterprise involved in the manufacture, sale and servicing of oil rigs worldwide. A financial disclosure report obtained by AP shows Hassen made millions annually from these companies, owned by John Fitzgibbons — an industry giant who is well-connected in Russia. ▶ Read moreabout Hassen Major headlines from the weekend Catching up on the news from the holiday weekend? Here are some of the headlines Trump honors fallen soldiers on Memorial Day, while attacking Biden and judges Trump paid tribute to fallen service members during aMemorial Day ceremonyat Arlington National Cemetery on Monday, in an address that honored the "great, great warriors" yet also briefly veered into politics as he boasted of a nation he is "fixing after a long and hard four years." Though the holiday is one that U.S. presidents typically treat with pure solemnity, Trump began it with an all-caps Memorial Day social media post that attacked his predecessor and calledfederal judges who have blockedhis deportation initiatives "monsters who want our country to go to hell." Yet at Arlington National Cemetery, where more than 400,000 have been laid to rest, Trump commemorated the sacrifice of U.S. service members and singled out several Gold Star families to tell the stories of their fallen relatives. ▶ Read moreabout Trump's Memorial Day speech
The Latest: Trump pays tribute to fallen soldiers in service at Arlington National Cemetery