A man who was shot during Saturday's "No Kings" protest in downtown Salt Lake City has died, police said Sunday.
The latest: The Salt Lake City Police Department on Sunday said the victim, 39-year-old Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, a Utah resident, appeared to be "an innocent bystander who was not the intended target of the gunfire."
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) said Sunday that a member of the National Guard and an FBI agent escorted him into Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's press conference last week before he was forcibly removed.
The big picture: Administration officials and allies claim Padilla interrupted the briefing to manufacture a scene. Democrats, whose fears of arrest at the hands of the administration have soared, say the senior senator from California was doing his job by questioning the secretary.
President Trump has not called Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz more than 24 hours after a prominent Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband were killed in what officials have described as a "politically motivated assassination."
The big picture: Saturday's fatal shooting of Minnesota House Democratic Leader Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark Hortman has exacerbated bipartisan security concerns among elected officials amid a volatile political landscape.
Several lawmakers on Sunday stressed that if Iran attacks U.S. targets following Israel's massive strike, the country should defend itself.
The big picture: In the hours around Israel's attack, which Iran responded to with major retaliatory strikes, the Trump administration distanced itself from the Israeli operation, with the president confirming he knew the attack was coming but stressing the U.S. military wasn't involved.
President Trump has called on Iran and Israel "to make a deal" that ends the war between the two countries.
Why it matters: The Trump administration has so far distanced itself from Israel's operation and argued that it would be illegitimate for Iran to retaliate by striking U.S. targets.
For months, Trump administration officials have been adamant about targeting all the millions of immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally, regardless of their work or taxpaying status.
But now Trump is making a huge exception: those working at hotels, farms, meatpacking plants and restaurants.
Why it matters: He's bowing to pressure from businesses that have been warning of economic devastation — and is opening the door for potentially millions of workers who are here illegally to stay after all.
A group of pro-Israel members of Congress is urging President Trump to ensure "zero enrichment, zero pathway to a nuclear weapon" in negotiations with Iran, Axios has learned.
Why it matters: The lawmakers — including a Republican, Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) — said Israel's strikes against Iranian nuclear sites and other military targets has created a "renewed sense of urgency" on the issue.
A long-simmering fight over congressional security roared back to the surface this weekend following a pair of shootings against Minnesota state legislators at their homes that left two dead and two others hospitalized.
Why it matters: The shootings have deeply unnerved members of Congress, who feel that any one of them could be the subject of an unanticipated attack — particularly at home in their districts and while in transit.
Millions of protesters across the U.S. took to the streets in demonstrations against the Trump administration on Saturday, in stark counter-programming to the president's Washington, D.C., military parade that evening.
Why it matters: "No Kings" protest organizers said the widespread movement marked the biggest single-day anti-President Trump protest during his second administration.
President Trump hosted Saturday the country's largest military parade in decades in Washington D.C., marking 250 years of the U.S. Army — a date that coincided with his 79th birthday.
The big picture: The parade was being held as millions took part in anti-Trump demonstrations across the U.S., per "No Kings" protest organizers.
The Texas Department of Public Safety arrested a person in connection with threats against state lawmakers that saw the state capitol briefly evacuated on Saturday, the DPS said.
The big picture: The threats against the lawmakers whom officials said planned to attend Austin's anti-Trump "No Kings" protest came hours after after two Democratic Minnesota legislators and their spouses were shot in what police described as "targeted attacks."
Police in Virginia arrested a 21-year-old man they allege "intentionally" drove an SUV through a crowd at an anti-Trump "No Kings" protest on Saturday.
The big picture: The suspect "intentionally accelerated his vehicle into the dispersing crowd, striking at least one person with his vehicle" during the demonstration in Culpeper, per a statement from local police.
Law enforcement officials say they are searching for a 57-year-old Minnesota man in connection with Saturday's fatal shooting of a prominent Minnesota state lawmaker.
The latest: Vance Luther Boelter has been identified as a suspect in the early morning attack that killed House Democratic Leader Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, at their suburban Twin Cities home, and the FBI said it is offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to his arrest and conviction.
Democratic state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, who were shot at their nearby residence shortly before the attack on the Hortmans, remained hospitalized earlier in the day.