Trump backs Hegesth as administration denies it is suffering ‘dysfunction’

US president Donald Trump has said he backs beleaguered defense secretary Pete Hegseth as the row over his use of the Signal messaging deepended, amid a series of chaotic missteps from the administration with grave consequences.

A legal battle with Harvard University appears to have been triggered by a letter sent to the university from the administration prematurely, people have been wrongfully deported, and the IRS has run through a succession of leaders in record time.

Trump said criticism of Hegseth was “fake news” and the actions of disgruntled ex-employees, and that pursuing the issue was a “waste of time”. Hegseth has been accused of sharing military details in two different Signal chat groups.

Harrison Fields, a spokesperson for the White House, denied the administration was dysfunctional, saying “You can’t have this many results with high levels of dysfunction”. He did not specify which results the administration was proud of.

A government professor at Georgetown University told the New York Times that it had been reasonable to expect that a Trump administration “more disciplined this time around”. A lack of senior officials and advisers in position around Trump, many of whom have been replaced by campaigning loyalists, compared to his first term, is being blamed in some quarters for the chaotic performance.

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Dow Jones index on course for worst April since 1932 amid tariff trade war

The Dow Jones index closed down 971 points last night, dropping 2.4% while the Nasdaq declined 2.5% as investors continue to be spooked by the Trump administration’s tariff-driven trade policies.

On Monday, Donald Trump decried Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell as “Mr Too Late” for not dropping interest rates. Powell has angered Trump by saying that his administration’s tariff policy would most likely lead to higher inflation and slower growth.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the Dow Jones index is on course for “its worst April performance since 1932”, and that the downward trend is because “few [investors] think the administration’s negotiations with trade partners will yield results soon enough to ease the strain.”

It quoted Scott Ladner, chief investment officer at Horizon Investments, saying “It’s impossible to commit capital to an economy that is unstable and unknowable because of policy structure.”

Writing for the Journal, Hannah Erin Lang said “The mood on Wall Street is darkening … Bearishness levels – or expectations that stock prices will fall – among ordinary investors have hovered above 50% for eight consecutive weeks”. That, she reported, is the longest bear majority since records began in 1987.


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