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Ex-Trump adviser John Bolton expected to plead guilty in classified information case – US politics live
Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog. John Bolton , former national security adviser to Donald Trump , is expected to plead guilty on Friday to charges that he unlawfully retained sensitive national security information. The agreement with federal prosecutors includes a $2.25m fine, according to sources familiar with the deal. Bolton is expected to plead guilty to one count of retaining classified information, which is specifically related to diary entries about his work during Trump’s first term. The former adviser, who is now a prominent critic of Trump, was accused of transmitting some of these materials to two relatives. The trial is scheduled to take place in Greenbelt, Maryland, on Friday – and a possible sentence could range from no jail time to five years. In October, Bolton pleaded not guilty to charges of mishandling classified information when he worked in the Trump White House. “This was a very difficult decision for him,” the source close to Bolton said to NBC, in relation to his expected guilty plea. “Most importantly, he is doing what leaders do and taking responsibility. “He understands that if he went to trial what that would mean, which essentially would be the disclosure of many, many more classified documents that he would need to reveal to defend himself. And given the Ukraine and the Middle East, he didn’t want to do that.” Elsewhere, the supreme court conservative majority passed two new rulings on Thursday that allowed the Trump administration to strip certain immigration protection and fundamentally reshape the asylum system in the United States. This means that the court has allowed the administration to move forward with policies that could remove more than 1 million people from the US, and could also possibly prevent others from entering. View image in fullscreen People rally to protect TPS status holders outside the supreme court in April. Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images Dozens of groups, advocates and members of Congress called the court’s decisions “disastrous” and “cruel” , while the Trump administration, Republican lawmakers and anti-immigrant groups celebrated the rulings. In case after case, the court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has green-lighted Donald Trump ’s policies targeting both legal and illegal immigration with few exceptions, while its three liberal justices have objected to most of his actions. This will mostly impact Haitian and Syrian immigrants, with hundreds of thousands expected to be stripped of their Temporary Protected Status. “The Trump administration has turned the immigration system into a deportation machine,” said Elora Mukherjee , director of the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School in New York. “In most cases, the supreme court has been a rubber stamp for Trump’s mass deportation agenda,” Mukherjee added. View image in fullscreen The US supreme court. Photograph: Rahmat Gul/AP Here’s what else is happening: The supreme court also