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New Trump EO Would Punish States for Combating Climate Change

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at “protecting” American energy from “state overreach.” The move, some energy experts say, is a legally dubious federal overstep designed to undermine the rights of states and local authorities to combat climate change.

The order claims “many States have enacted, or are in the process of enacting, burdensome and ideologically motivated ‘climate change’ or energy policies that threaten American energy dominance and our economic and national security.”

It specifically points to Blue-state policies like Vermont’s Superfund rules, which require fossil fuel companies to pay for damage to the climate, and California’s cap-and-trade program as examples of efforts to “dictate national energy policy.” In Section 2 of the order, Trump directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to identify state laws or policies “burdening” access to “domestic energy resources that “are or may be…unconstitutional, preempted by Federal law, or otherwise unenforceable.”

What might some of those state laws be? According to the executive order, that could include any effort to address “climate change,” support “environmental justice,” or reduce “greenhouse gas” emissions, among others.

That’s not the end of it. The order also directs the attorney general to “expeditiously” take action to “stop the enforcement of State laws and continuation of civil actions” determined to be illegal.

It’s unclear whether this will stand up in court. Michael Gerrard, the faculty director of Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, told E&E News that the executive order is “toothless” and that Trump “has no authority on his own to nullify state laws.” Journalist David Roberts, who runs the clean energy newsletter Volts called the order on Bluesky, “wildly, unambiguously unconstitutional” and “dictator shit.”

Others on social media noted the president’s contradiction of traditionally conservative values. As climate reporter and Drilled podcast host Amy Westervelt put it on Bluesky, “States rights! But only when the states agree with us[.]”Climate scientist and Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) contributing author Zeke Hausfather posted, “So much for federalism…” And Tulane environmental studies professor Joshua Basseches wrote, “Federal overreach has historically been a crusade of the Right, but these times are wild and different.”

This new White House executive order says that the US Attorney General is going to prevent states from implementing democratically passed laws regarding climate change and clean energy. It scarcely needs stating at this point that this is wildly, unambiguously unconstitutional. Dictator shit.

David Roberts (@volts.wtf) 2025-04-09T05:42:55.516Z

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Trump’s “Pincer Attack” on Journalism Is Working. But There’s Hope.

David Folkenflik occupies a unique role at NPR: He’s a journalist who writes about journalism. And that includes the very organization where he works, which is once again being threatened by conservatives in Washington.

The second Trump administration has aggressively gone after the media in its first few months. It’s kicked news organizations out of the Pentagon. It’s barred other newsrooms from access to the White House. And Trump supporters in Congress have targeted federal funding for public media.

In late March, the heads of NPR and PBS testified on Capitol Hill to defend public broadcasting from Republicans accusing them of political bias. Meanwhile, some major news organizations seem to be capitulating and bending to the will of the Trump administration.

Folkenflik, who’s been covering media for two decades for NPR, says journalism across the country is facing a two-pronged attack from both commercial and political forces.

“You’re seeing sort of discrete and specific and seemingly almost comedic attacks. You don’t say ‘Gulf of America’? Get to the back of the line,” Folkenflik says. “I think it’s actually part of a larger effort to control the flow of information.”

On this week’s episode of More To The Story, Folkenflik talks to host Al Letson about this unprecedented moment for journalists, why more media outlets seem to be bowing to pressure from the Trump administration, and how journalism can begin to win back public trust.

Find More To The Story on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Pandora, or your favorite podcast app.

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Mother Jones

Solar Has Been the World’s Fastest Growing Power Source for 20 Years Running

This story was originally published b_y the Guardian a_nd is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

The world used clean power sources to meet more than 40 percent of its electricity demand last year for the first time since the 1940s, figures show.

A report by the energy thinktank Ember said the milestone was powered by a boom in solar power capacity, which has doubled in the last three years. The report found that solar farms had been the world’s fastest-growing source of energy for the last 20 consecutive years.

Phil MacDonald, Ember’s managing director, said: “Solar power has become the engine of the global energy transition. Paired with battery storage, solar is set to be an unstoppable force. As the fastest-growing and largest source of new electricity, it is critical in meeting the world’s ever-increasing demand for electricity.”

Overall, solar power remains a relatively small part of the global energy system. It made up almost 7 percent of the world’s electricity last year, according to Ember, while wind power made up just over 8 percent of the global power system.

The fast-growing technologies remain dwarfed by hydro power, which has remained relatively steady in recent years, and made up 14 percent of the world’s electricity in 2024.

Hydro power is one of the modern world’s oldest renewable energy technologies, and made up a large proportion of global electricity in the 1940s—when the power system was about 50 times smaller than it is today.

The continuing growth of solar means clean power—including nuclear and bioenergy—is on track to expand faster than the world’s overall electricity demand, according to Ember. This should mean fossil fuels beginning to be squeezed out of the global power system.

Ember had previously predicted that 2023 would be the year in which emissions from electricity reached a peak, after a plateau in the first half of the year.

Climate experts hoped then that emissions would begin to fall, but a series of heatwaves across the globe ignited a surge in demand for electricity to power air conditioning and refrigeration systems, which caused fuel electricity to grow by 1.4 percent that year.

The report, which accounted for 93 percent of the global electricity market across 88 countries, found that the surge in demand pushed emissions from the global power sector up by 1.6 percent to an all-time high last year.

MacDonald said heatwaves were unlikely to ignite a similar demand surge in the year ahead—but the increasing use of electricity to power artificial intelligence, data centers, electric vehicles, and heat pumps was expected to play a bigger role in the world’s appetite for electricity.

Combined, these technologies accounted for a 0.7 percent increase in global electricity demand in 2024, double what they contributed five years ago, the report found. “The world is watching how technologies like AI and EVs will drive electricity demand,” MacDonald said. “It’s clear that booming solar and wind are comfortably set to deliver, and those expecting fossil fuel generation to keep rising will be disappointed.”

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Why Elite Colleges Aren’t Pushing Back on Trump, and Why Silence Is Dangerous

America is witnessing an unprecedented series of attacks on higher education that commenced well before Donald Trump was re-elected, amid the contentious protests that followed Hamas’ attacks on Israel and Israel’s ruthless (and ongoing) retaliation on Gaza and its inhabitants.

But Trump, as president, has taken matters much further. Claiming antisemitism, his administration is revoking student visas and arresting students who have engaged in nonviolent protests or expressed opinions on social media or in innocuous op-eds. The government’s pauses, reviews, and cancellations of grants and contracts at top universities—including new funding freezes totaling $1 billion for Cornell and $790 million for Northwestern—are creating havoc. And its attempt to cap federal funding for the indirect costs of medical research, though tied up in court, could prove devastating to research universities, some of which have already fired staff, imposed hiring freezes, and slashed or postponed graduate programs in response. Now Republicans are considering a tenfold tax increase on endowment investment income for certain universities to help pay for up to $4.5 trillion in tax cuts.

All told, these actions amount to the most profound crisis US colleges and universities have ever faced, with likely ripple effects on regional economies and employment, public health, and medicine. Indeed, they have thrown the future of America’s leadership in science and innovation into question.

Yet, instead of speaking out forcefully and cracking open their endowments to cover any shortfalls, most top schools have hunkered down, and even, in Columbia’s case, cut a deal with the administration. Only a few university presidents, including Princeton’s Chris Eisgruber and Wesleyan’s Michael Roth, have had the courage to stick their necks out.

To better understand why, I reached out to Charlie Eaton, a sociologist at the University of California, Merced, who studies the “financialization” of higher ed, and who argued, in a recent New York Times op-ed, that elite institutions can absolutely afford to fight—and should.

Trying to walk too fine a tightrope between the schools’ needs and the interests of wealthy donors, after all, is a high-risk endeavor. In Eaton’s view, “pretending that these attacks aren’t political and not making a political strategy to push back is a fatal error.”

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Few college presidents have spoken out publicly about these attacks. It’s baffling to me that our top colleges—and law firms, for that matter—aren’t fighting en masse to protect the interests of their students and faculty. What do you make of the reluctance?

By their nature elite universities are conservative—as in cautious—institutions, and I don’t think that equips them well to deal with a full frontal assault like this. Also, elite universities are tied to other elites, especially from the world of finance, who themselves are somewhere between the lines with Trump, and have some sympathy for the Trumpist attacks on diversity and inclusion as university values. So that’s part of what we’ve seen that’s frozen these institutions in their tracks—why they are reacting like deer in the headlights.

Right. Former Harvard president Lawrence Summers just had an op-ed in the New York Times in which he decries colleges’ emphasis on identity politics as opposed to academic excellence, in hiring and so forth.

I think that’s the same Summers op-ed where he says [to Harvard]: Don’t be intimidated, spend the endowment—which is pretty different than what we’ve seen from Columbia and a lot of the other elite schools. Summers has played a different role for a long time than your conventional university president. He was the secretary of the Treasury. He’s highly political and has been engaged in politics, and this is a political struggle. Universities like to pretend to not be political—and there are plenty of ways they shouldn’t be, in order to foster free speech and open debate. But pretending that these attacks aren’t political and not making a political strategy to push back is a fatal error.

Wasn’t it this sort of waffling that got them into trouble in the first place amid the Gaza protests? Everybody wanted administrators to issue statements, and they didn’t really know what to do. They’d already spoken up on other things, in support of Ukraine or whatever. And now it looks like they’re stuck back in this mode of indecision.

Yeah. You know, the primary job of an elite university president is to raise money from donors, and if you’re spending a lot of your day talking to your wealthiest alumni—who may have donated to Trump or may feel sympathetic with Trump’s critiques of diversity at the university—it’s hard for folks who spend their day in those social circles to imagine pushing back.

That gets at my next question. Your research examines the relationships between what you call “financialization” and inequalities in higher education. Can you explain how your work applies to the current situation?

Yeah. So, my book, Bankers in the Ivory Tower, shows a radical increase in the proportion of elite university board members coming from finance, particularly private equity and hedge funds. If you go back to the ’80s, private equity and hedge funds didn’t really exist. Investment bankers were prominent on university boards but it’s nothing like today. And these are folks who have some official reach in university policy, and who are the primary fund-raisers—a main job of board members is both to donate a lot and to raise money from other donors.

We saw the activation of these ties around the Gaza war protests, with a subset of wealthy donors saying they wanted to suspend donations to the university until protests were suppressed. It’s not hard to imagine that board elites from Wall Street who were always uncomfortable with elite universities embracing diversity and inclusion see an opportunity to push back, and Trump has opened the space for it to be okay to oppose this.

And of course, their complaints often involved perceived antisemitism at Harvard and so forth, with rich alums like Bill Ackman chiming in. It does seem, in any case, that college presidents are under extraordinary pressure to align themselves with the interests of trustees and top donors.

You often don’t quite see how a system works and the preferences of different actors, their roles in the system, until the system is threatened by disruption. I don’t think anybody was terribly attuned to the dispositions of the financiers on university boards 5 or 10 years ago because, outside of a crisis, donors weren’t engaging to pressure the university to be one thing or another. Since the Gaza war and allegations of antisemitism, and now even more so with the Trump attacks, the preferences and dispositions of these donors may become more visible.

A lot of them must be aghast to see colleges they care about taking such a hit.

Yeah. A proactive, offensive university strategy would be to say no to Trump, to try to weather the storm by tapping the endowment and by turning to alumni of all wealth levels, to say, “Help defend your alma mater. Now is the time that we need you.”

You wrote that top colleges can afford a fight. I think we have 16 schools now with endowments over $10 billion, yet many are cutting deals, and in some cases graduate programs. Why would any private foundation, let alone an educational one, hoard money in the face of such a crisis?

I have to give Larry Summers credit for saying endowments are not to be admired; they are there to be spent in a crisis. And I acknowledge President Obama for saying the same. But universities have become attached to steadily growing their endowment as a status object. And that course of action is at this moment potentially fatal for the university as we know it.

We think of endowments as one giant pot of money, but really they consist of thousands of individual gifts, most earmarked for specific purposes.

To an extent. Even the Columbia endowment, which is smaller than Harvard and Princeton and Yale—it’s $15 billion. By my recollection, several billion is entirely unrestricted. The University of California, which has a smaller endowment, especially relative to its size, has billions in unrestricted funds. You know, another implication here is that universities should be seeking to raise more unrestricted endowment funds. But as Summers says, as a former Harvard president: Believe me when I say you can spend the endowment, even restricted funds in it.

I don’t quite know how that works. I assumed these are legal contracts.

No, it’s true. The law that governs this allows for, in a crisis, you can act in extraordinary ways. Now universities should not undertake this haphazardly. One of the things that endowments are dedicated to is financial aid for low-income students. Most of the very elite colleges have become debt free. So, I’m not saying they should dig into that funding to protect other things. The point is, endowments are huge resources. They have been used to weather past crises, including the 2008 financial crisis and the early months of Covid. And they must be again to defend the university.

The University of California, at the beginning of Covid, liquidated $1.8 billion of its Blue and Gold endowment—an additional 8 percent. That’s more than doubling the (normal) expenditure, which is less than Columbia would have to do to weather the $400 million in cuts. There are a lot of different financial mechanics a university can use to tap its endowment.

Do you think elite universities, either financially or in terms of hewing to liberal orthodoxies, have gone too far in ways that make them susceptible to these right-wing attacks?

The culture side is not my area of expertise. But one thing I can say is that you really can’t divide the financial practices and the exclusiveness of elite universities from their culture. If you go back to the 1970s, Princeton had a pretty big endowment, but it only spent about $10,000 per student from the endowment each year, after adjusting for inflation. Today, Princeton spends $180,000 per student on operations because the endowment has grown so much, and the public is right when they see the Ivy League as more inaccessible than ever. Princeton has only increased its enrollment by a fraction, even as it’s gotten wealthier by more than tenfold. Our problem is that, in the public imagination and political discourse, college is [schools like Princeton and] Harvard, even though in reality, college in the US is—

Penn State?

Right, or Michigan State—a regional public university or commuter college. Seventy percent of bachelor’s degrees are awarded by public universities, but the persistent exclusiveness of the Ivy League has put a target on the back of all universities, because all universities are imagined to be like them. So [the problem is] actually not too much diversity and inclusiveness; it’s the disingenuousness of discourses of diversity and inclusion at elite schools while they enroll only a tiny fraction of students, overwhelmingly from the very wealthy. If you need a citation, look at the Harvard economist Raj Chetty.

Another thing is, universities are mostly thought of as colleges, but they also do research that leads to technological innovation and lifesaving medicines. They run hospitals. But those things are still done in a culture of elite superiority, rather than conceived of as immensely valuable services in the public interest.

And related to their failure to expand in the face of rising demand, their wealth has exploded on the public’s dime, given all the tax-free growth of their endowments. Which brings us to the proposed tax increase...

One other stat I’ll throw at you is that, up until recent years—and it may still be the case—UC Berkeley, not the most equitable and accessible of public universities, enrolled more low-income Pell Grant recipients than the entire Ivy League combined! That’s because Berkeley grew its enrollment a lot over the last 50 years to make space for more students, including students from lower and middle-class backgrounds.

And that doesn’t mean worse students. Just kids who grew up with less.

Yeah, the thought experiment of: What if Princeton enrolled twice as many students and only spent $90,000 a year per student from the endowment? I think it would still be an extraordinary university.

Okay, so Republicans want to raise the tax on endowment investment income from 1.4 percent to 14 percent or more for colleges with high endowment to student ratios. I’ve been critical of the way private foundations hoard public wealth, and so maybe they should be taxed more. But how do you think such a tax will affect the educational missions of elite institutions?

I mean, it’s a sham! These institutions will figure out ways around it no matter what Trump does. I favor taxes on the wealthiest endowments if they fail to use their resources to provide a sufficient public good, either by enrolling more students or by doing other important things in the public interest. But this is about punishing schools for perceived inclusiveness.

Democrats and elite universities have left themselves vulnerable to these tax proposals, which will be used opportunistically to fund tax cuts for billionaires. We leave the door open by not developing a progressive policy that incentivizes endowments to be used in the public interest. But that is not what this proposal is—nor what it will ever be.

If you really cared about public good, you’d impose the tax on all private foundations, not just elite universities.

Yeah. And it’s telling what they actually use the revenue for. The 2017 endowment tax [the current 1.4 percent income tax was imposed by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act] was to help offset the Trump tax cut for wealthy people. That is what this will be, but it’s also to punish these institutions.

As I think I said in my op-ed, universities are some of the first institutions that autocrats attack, and that’s because they provide space for free debate and free speech that can challenge and criticize the autocrat. So it’s not a coincidence that Trump is going after universities, perhaps more aggressively than any other institution in American society.

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There’s One Thing Elon Musk Might Be Right About

Elon Musk is not always wrong. Musk’s prediction back in February that “some of the things that I say will be incorrect” was certainly right, if understated. And on Tuesday, the billionaire, like a broken clock, may have hit the target again when he attacked Peter Navarro—the Trump trade adviser and key architect of the president’s thus-far disastrous tariffs—as “truly a moron” and “dumber than a sack of bricks.”

To be sure, Navarro, who likes to be called “Dr. Navarro,” has PhD in economics from Harvard. He has a powerful position advising the president, as he did in Trump’s first term. And he possesses an apparent surfeit of self-confidence. But Navarro has done a some really dumb shit, creating notable datapoints supporting Musk’s thesis.

Got Himself Thrown in Prison for Contempt

Navarro spent four months in prison last year for contempt of Congress, an experience he has attempted capitalize on by claiming to be a victim of the same deep-state “lawfare” that supposedly beset Trump. “I went to prison so you won’t have to,” Navarro proclaimed at the Republican National Convention last year, shortly after leaving lockup.

In fact, Navarro went to prison because he not only refused comply with a subpoena from House January 6 committee, but also refused to show up or meaningfully respond to the committee.

Here’s what I wrote after Navarro’s super short trial:

Courts have long recognized that presidents can sometimes assert executive privilege to deny Congress information on confidential advice from executive branch advisers. But the power is limited. Presidents have to actually invoke privilege. Subjects of congressional subpoenas, even if they have a real privilege claim, have to engage with lawmakers and specify what they can and can’t share.

That’s where Navarro screwed up. In an emailed response to a committee lawyer who informed him of a subpoena seeking information related to his actions in the lead up to January 6, Navarro wrote “executive privilege” without explaining further. He later claimed Trump had privately told him to invoke privilege, but he never documented that instruction and didn’t show up for a scheduled deposition or bother to say if he had information the subpoena sought.

Prosecutors argued in court that Navarro’s decision to largely ignore the request broke the law. If he wanted to argue executive privilege, he needed to assert it in response to specific questions and explain if he had documents he was not providing due to privilege.

“You are not a victim,” US District Court Judge Amit Mehta told Navarro while sentencing him. “You are not the object of a political prosecution.”

“These are circumstances of your own making,” the judge added.

Helped Trump Lie About the 2020 Election

Navarro emerged in late 2020 as key enabler of Trump’s false claims that he was the rightful winner of that year’s election. Navarro produced an eponymous report claiming, not persuasively, that voter fraud cost Trump the race. Navarro also helped devise, according to a book he published, a plan called the “Green Bay Sweep” that sought to use objections to the congressional certification of electoral votes as a way to stop Joe Biden from taking office. (One problem with Navarro’s attempt to claim “executive privilege” to the January 6 committee was that, by then, he’d already hawked a book on the topic.)

Worked For a Fraudster

Before he went to prison, Navarroheld the title of “international ambassador” for the so-called New Federal State of China, an outfit founded in 2020 by Stave Bannon and Guo Wengui, a onetime Chinese billionaire real estate tycoon who became a MAGA-boosting media mogul after fleeing to the United States in 2015.

The New Federal State of China claimed to be a government-in-waiting prepared to take over China after what, Guo argued, was the inevitable fall of the Chinese Communist Party. But in a trial last year, federal prosecutors argued the group was part of massive con by Guo, a scheme in which Guo won support from Chinese emigres and persuaded them to invest in businesses he launched, including a crypto venture Guo claimed would become China’s official currency. The NFSC did not have employees and did little beyond hold occasional events. But Navarro, along with Bannon, helped give the organization legitimacy and the appearance of ties to Trump. Guo who was convicted of nine felonies, including racketeering conspiracy and securities fraud. Navarro was not accused of any crimes related to his work for Guo.

Navarro has refused to comment on his work for the group, which appears to have involved showing up at events held by Guo and doing interviews with a Chinese-language news outfit Guo launched. It’s not clear if Navarro was paid.

Quoted a Made-Up Identity In Books

Navarro reportedly got a job in Trump’s first term after Jared Kushner searched Amazon for a person who has aggressively pushed for a confrontational trade policy with China. In five of Navarro’s books, the New York Times reported in 2019, Navarro quoted a source called Ron Vara—an anagram of Navarro’s name—who offered statements that supported Navarro’s arguments. Vara, the Times reported, is “apparently a figment of Mr. Navarro’s imagination”—a mini-scandal that Musk gleefully invoked Tuesday.

By any definition whatsoever, Tesla is the most vertically integrated auto manufacturer in America with the highest percentage of US content.

Navarro should ask the fake expert he invented, Ron Vara.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 8, 2025

Navarro, as my colleague Stephanie Mencimer has written, “has blamed every problem in America, including abortion, on trade issues and the death of manufacturing, which he sees as China’s responsibility.” And he has pushed ultra protectionist arguments that contradict basic economic theory, but which now prevail in the White House.

Navarro has told Trump what he what he wants to hear on trade, enabling the incoherent tariffs that even many hardcore Trump backers won’t defend. Even Elon Musk knows that is really dumb.

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SCOTUS Allows Trump to Send Venezuelans to a Salvadoran Mega-Prison

In a Monday evening ruling, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to resume the removals of Venezuelan migrants accused of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang under the unprecedented use of the wartime Alien Enemies Act. The decision, lifting a district court’s temporary restraining order halting the removals, was 5-4, with Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining the Democratic appointees in dissent.

The ruling is a significant win for the Trump administration. Still, it did set limits on President Donald Trump’s plans for mass, summary deportations—each detainee must be afforded a chance to challenge their removal under the Act in court.

The justices did not address the underlying question in the case: whether Trump can use the Alien Enemies Act, a law intended to be invoked during times of war, to claim a non-state actor like Tren de Aragua is perpetrating an “invasion” of the United States. Instead, the decision focused on a procedural question of how and where the plaintiffs should have brought their case. The majority ruled that “legal challenges to an individual’s removal under the Alien Enemies Act must be brought in habeas petitions in the district where they are detained.”

But this is no mere technicality: How and where the question is asked in court will have massive implications—and not just for Venezuelan nationals who must defend themselves from inside detention, possibly without lawyers. While the justices required meaningful opportunities to challenge removal in court through a habeas corpus petition, there is no certainty that the government will provide that opportunity, nor that there will be any way to remedy the situation if anyone (including a US citizen) is whisked away without first getting their day in court. As Georgetown Law’s Stephen Vladeck wrote, in forcing plaintiffs to fight their removal through individual habeas petitions, “the Court is effectively bringing a pea-shooter to a gunfight.”

Still, “to the extent the Government removes even one individual without affording him notice and a meaningful opportunity to file and pursue habeas relief,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor warned in her dissent, “it does so in direct contravention of an edict by the United States Supreme Court.”

“The President of the United States has invoked a centuries-old wartime statute to whisk people away to a notoriously brutal, foreign-run prison.”

The majority’s decision raises the likelihood that individuals will be deprived of their rights and removed. The decision brought to a halt class-wide relief under the Administrative Procedure Act, without any deliberation about whether that was an appropriate decision, and requires detainees to challenge their removal in the jurisdiction where they are detained. That discussion will likely be in the most conservative courts in the country—because the administration can transfer anyone to the Southern District of Texas before informing them of their impending removal.

The court green-lit Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act despite implicitly acknowledging that it may as well have been illegally applied up to this point to the Venezuelans sent to El Salvador without due process. Moreover, it did so without considering that the administration had sought to dodge judicial compliance in its zeal to deport hundreds of Venezuelans in what had all the traits of a public relations gimmick. This willingness to give the Trump administration the benefit of the doubt despite the history of this case is a sign that a majority of the justices either agree with Trump’s actions or are willfully blind to the danger they pose to the rule of law. “The President of the United States has invoked a centuries-old wartime statute to whisk people away to a notoriously brutal, foreign-run prison,” Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote in her dissent. “For lovers of liberty, this should be quite concerning.” For the majority, however, concern seemed lacking.

The decision prompted strong dissents from both Sotomayor and Jackson, who warned of irreparable harm to those wrongfully removed, while chiding the court for using its so-called “shadow docket” to make consequential decisions outside the regular judicial process—no lower court decisions, no full briefing, no oral arguments, no reasoned opinion. Just an edict a few paragraphs long with enormous consequences.

Sotomayor scolded the Trump administration for whooshing off hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador “in a shroud of secrecy” on March 15, as well as for taking the position that there’s nothing they can do to bring the men back from a notorious Salvadoran prison. She raised the question of what happens if someone is sent to the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, by mistake, or if the courts later decide that the president didn’t have the authority to use the Alien Enemies Act in this way. Indeed, the Supreme Court allowed removals under a regime more prone to error without first deciding what happens to someone who is unlawfully removed.

“The Government’s resistance to facilitating the return of individuals erroneously removed to CECOT,” Sotomayor wrote, “only amplifies the specter that, even if this Court someday declares the President’s Proclamation unlawful, scores of individual lives may be irretrievably lost.” Sotomayor continued: “The implication of the Government’s position is that not only noncitizens but also United States citizens could be taken off the streets, forced onto planes, and confined to foreign prisons with no opportunity for redress if judicial review is denied unlawfully before removal. History is no stranger to such lawless regimes, but this Nation’s system of laws is designed to prevent, not enable, their rise.”

In a sign of how seriously wrong Jackson believes this decision to be, she compared it to Korematsu, the disgraced ruling upholding the confinement of Japanese Americans during World War II. “Make no mistake,” she wrote, “we are just as wrong now as we have been in the past, with similarly devastating consequences.”

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Why Is Trump’s New Jersey US Attorney Headlining a Far-Right Conference?

On Friday, March 28, Alina Habba, President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, was sworn into office as the interim US attorney for New Jersey. As the state’s top federal prosecutor, she will oversee the work of 170 lawyers responsible for everything from prosecuting terrorism, public corruption, and gang activities to defending federal agencies in court. The high-profile post was once held by such luminaries as US Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R).

So it came as a bit of a surprise three days later when I received this text: “Join Eric Trump & Alina Habba Sept 25-26” for promoter Clay Clark’s “Make American Business Great Again” conference in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Clicking the accompanying link, I learned that, for $250, conference attendees will hear inspirational words from Habba and other minor MAGA celebs and learn how to grow their business through search engine optimization, branding, sales training, and more!

A screenshot of a promotional text message bearing the words, in part, "Join Tebow At Clary Clark's June 5-6 Business Conf! + Join Eric Trump & Alina Habba Sept 25-26 Learn More"

It’s an unusual event for a US attorney, even an interim one, to participate in. But then again, Habba isn’t your typical federal prosecutor. Indeed, she has no prosecutorial experience of any kind. One of her most famous cases led a federal judge in Florida to sanction her and Trump for nearly $1 million in 2023 for filing a frivolous lawsuit against Hillary Clinton. “No reasonable lawyer would have filed it,” US District Judge Donald Middlebrooks wrote of the suit in his order for sanctions. “Intended for a political purpose, none of the counts of the amended complaint stated a cognizable legal claim.”

While she may not have a typical prosecutor’s résumé, Habba has loads of experience headlining Clark’s conferences.

This will be epic. Making your business great by getting tips from successful businesses people. Tickets are limited Get yours today.
With @TheClayClark @EricTrump @AlinaHabba @AmandaGrace_AOG pic.twitter.com/uGbsUFHN1v

— Dr. Stella Immanuel MD (@stella_immanuel) April 1, 2025

Clark is a former DJ and failed Tulsa mayoral candidate turned conspiracy theorist who rose to conservative prominence fighting mask mandates during the pandemic. “Make American Business Great Again” is a spin-off of the far-right Christian nationalist ReAwaken America tour that he created in 2021 with Trump’s disgraced former national security adviser Michael Flynn. For three years, the pair barnstormed across the country doing events that featured a mash-up of MAGA luminaries, anti-vaxxers, election deniers, “prophets,” and QAnon devotees.

The last ReAwaken America event took place in North Carolina in October shortly before the election. Habba was there along with a rogue’s gallery of MAGA stars who’d once been prosecuted by the very Justice Department she is now part of. There was Simone Gold, the anti-vax doctor who served nearly 60 days in prison after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge related to the January 6 riot at the US Capitol. International underwear model John Strand, who’d joined the mob inside the Capitol alongside Gold, took the stage only a few months after serving a year in prison on a felony conviction related to the riot. (Strand and Gold were among the 1,500 or so January 6 rioters Trump pardoned after taking office.)

Former (and current) Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro appeared, fresh off a four-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress after refusing to comply with a January 6 committee subpoena. And let’s not forget Trump confidant Roger Stone. Just before Stone headed to prison on a 40-month sentence for lying to Congress, witness tampering, and obstruction charges related to the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, Trump commuted his sentence and later granted him a full pardon.

Trump’s election seemed to have dampened the demand for more ReAwaken events, especially now that regulars like Habba are in the administration. (FBI Director Kash Patel used to peddle his children’s books about Donald the King in the tour’s exhibit halls.) But Clark has continued to host periodic conferences focused on business development.

The September event will include some veterans of the ReAwaken tour. Not only will it feature Habba and the president’s son Eric, but attendees will be treated to talks from Stella Immanuel, a Texas doctor and pastor who rocketed to fame during the pandemic and became one of the nation’s leading prescribers of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, which she promoted as cures for Covid despite evidence that the drugs don’t work for it. Immanuel also believes that sex with “tormenting spirits” is responsible for gynecological problems. Rounding out the lineup will be Amanda Grace, a self-proclaimed prophet who warned attendees at a 2023 ReAwaken conference about the proliferation of technologically advanced “mermaids and water people” spreading perversion across the United States.

A Federalist Society meeting this is not.

Generally, Justice Department officials shy away from political appearances. “It harms public confidence in the rule of law for a United States attorney to be a prominent speaker at a conference with a partisan political or ideological focus,” says New York University law school ethics professor Stephen Gillers. “To avoid that, we have traditionally relied on good judgment and self-restraint.”

Good judgment and self-restraint, though, seem to be in short supply in the Trump administration thus far. Habba isn’t the only interim US attorney who seems to be blurring the boundaries between political activity and government service. Last month, acting US Attorney for the District of Columbia Ed Martin headlined a Florida fundraiser for Phyllis Schlafly Eagles, a conservative group he ran before joining the administration. The event was attended by January 6 defendants, including former members of the Oath Keepers militia who are still appealing their seditious conspiracy convictions in cases overseen by his office.

Over the weekend, the Nevada Independent reported that interim US Attorney for Nevada Sigal Chattah had called in to a state Republican Party meeting, potentially in violation of Justice Department rules that prohibit political appointees from participating in political activities or holding party positions. Chattah has been a national committeewoman for the Republican National Committee, and the meeting agenda indicated that she was scheduled to give a report. As of Monday, she was still listed on the RNC website as holding the party post.

Habba was tapped for the US attorney post in spite of her regular appearances at Clark’s events, or her fondness for Flynn, the ReAwaken tour’s animating force. Flynn pleaded guilty twice to lying to federal investigators about his conversations with Russia’s ambassador to the US during the 2016 presidential campaign. Trump pardoned him in November 2020. Last year, he premiered an eponymous documentary about his legal ordeal. When it was released, Habba tweeted: “Thrilled to congratulate my friend and one of the all-time greatest patriots General Michael Flynn on his new movie sharing his incredibly important story.”

Like the conferences he emceed, Flynn has been a prominent promoter of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which holds that Democrats and Satan-worshipping elites are running a secret global child sex ring, one they believe Trump will vanquish. The ReAwaken America tour frequently featured Q-related figures, such as the editor of George magazine. Originally created by the late John F. Kennedy Jr., George has been revived by QAnon believers who think Kennedy is still alive and is going to help Trump fight the pedophile cabal. (The magazine recently featured Habba’s fellow conference headliner Amanda Grace in a long Q&A.)

Habba, too, has appeared on QAnon-adjacent podcasts and suggested that many of the court cases brought against President Trump were the work of Satan. “There’s God’s plan and then there’s the demonic plan,” Habba explained to Grace in January 2024 when she appeared on the online prophet’s YouTube show. “We need to fight these people that are obviously coordinated and are trying to have a crusade of election interference.”

Obsessed with pedophile rings, QAnon adherents have turned human trafficking into their cause célèbre. Flynn himself now heads a nonprofit group that purports to fight child trafficking. Perhaps it’s no surprise then, that one of Habba’s first acts as New Jersey’s interim US attorney was to create a task force to combat human trafficking. “There will be zero tolerance for human trafficking in New Jersey,” she tweeted on April 1. “One of my first orders of buisiness [sic] was creating a Human Trafficking Task Force and appointing an incredibly talented and passionate Assistant US Attorney to lead it.”

The New Jersey US attorney’s office did not respond to questions about whether Habba still intends to attend the conference in September, nor did Clay Clark. As interim US attorney, she is allowed to stay in her post for only 120 days unless Trump formally nominates her for the job and the Senate confirms her. Should that not work out, her tenure could end just in time for her to hit the circuit in September.

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Trump’s Bureau of Land Management Pick Is a Pit Bull for the Fossil Fuel Industry

This story was originally published by Public Domain, a Substack publication to which you can subscribe here.

When rancher Ammon Bundy and his armed posse stormed into Oregon’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in January 2016 in a failed attempt to seize public land for themselves, Kathleen Sgamma, then the vice president of the Western Energy Alliance, issued a brief condemnation. She described the militants as “serious lawbreakers.” Sgamma reserved the bulk of her ire, though, not for the armed men in Oregon, many of whom were inspired in part by a fringe Mormon theology, but for the US government itself.

In a 2016 blog post that appears to have been deleted, she went on a lengthy diatribe against the land management policies of the United States that,in her view, led to the Bundy takeover. Among her chief complaints: “The situation arises from too much federal ownership of land in the West,” she wrote. “Whereas in the East and Mid-West lands were transferred as private property to individuals for farms, by the time the West was settled the government retained a vast amount of land.”

Sgamma, who thinks there is too much federal public land, is now President Trump’s choice to lead the federal government’s largest land management agency. Trump nominated her in mid-February to be the next director of the Bureau of Land Management, an agency that oversees more than 246 million acres on behalf of all Americans. In addition to enforcing bedrock environmental laws like the National Environmental Policy Act, the BLM director oversees oil and gas drilling on federal land. The agency is also responsible for the conservation of iconic western species, including the greater sage grouse. In all of these realms, and others too, Sgamma will have to contend with a thicket of conflicts of interest.

Sgamma is best known as a passionate activist on behalf of oil and gas corporations. She is a long-time leader and current president of the Western Energy Alliance (WEA), a litigious trade group that represents drillers and other fossil fuel companies that operate on federal land. In that role, she has served as industry muscle, so to speak, attacking in court, in the media, and in the halls of power any policy, rule or regulation that hinders the oil industry’s ability to profit on public lands. Her organization’s methods have sometimes sparked controversy.

In Project 2025’s manifesto, Sgamma and others accuse Joe Biden of waging a “war on fossil fuels” and bemoan the amount of land and minerals under federal ownership.

In 2014, for instance, a secret recording of the WEA’s annual meeting revealed that the trade group had invited the Washington, DC, public relations operative Richard Berman to speak to its members. Berman was there to solicit money to fund a PR campaign called Big Green Radicals that would target environmentalists opposed to the oil industry.

During his speech, Berman told the audience they should think of their fight against environmental organizations as “an endless war.” He told them that they could either “win ugly or lose pretty.” He assured the assembled oil industry operatives that if they funded his campaign he could protect their anonymity while going on the offensive against environmentalists, using emotions like “fear” and “anger” to try to turn public opinion against green groups.

In the end, Berman’s Big Green Radicals campaign did just that. Among other things, it put out a report titled “From Russia with Love” that portrayed American environmental groups as the puppets of shadowy Russian interests. Republicans in Congress quickly latched onto the report despite its thin sourcing, recycling many of its claims to argue that groups like the League of Conservation Voters and the Sierra Club are the “useful idiots” of Russia.

The Western Energy Alliance used similar tactics to undermine greater sage grouse conservation in the American West. When the Obama administration was considering listing the greater sage grouse under the Endangered Species Act due to the species’s precipitous population decline, WEA launched a PR campaign, running ads that disparaged grouse advocates and scientists. The Obama administration ultimately declined to list the species under the ESA, instead opting to have the BLM and Forest Service issue land-use regulations that could help prop up the species. Though those regulations have not stopped the continued loss of grouse habitat across the West, they are likely to be further weakened under the new Trump administration.

WEA frequently turns to the courts to prevent new rules, regulations or fees that could inconvenience public land oil drillers. In May of last year, for instance, the group and its industry allies sued the Bureau of Land Management after the Biden administration raised royalty rates on public land drillers, from 12.5 percent to 16.7 percent.

If she is confirmed, Sgamma’s appointment will likely raise thorny questions about conflicts of interest. She will have substantial influence over sage grouse policy, royalty rate policy, public lands oil leasing, and many other issues that have been at the center of her work for the fossil fuel industry. Will she sign an ethics pledge that recuses her from these and similar policy matters? Will she be too conflicted to function?

Sgamma’s appointment to the helm of BLM also complicates Trump’s attempts to distance himself from Project 2025, the sweeping policy blueprint that MAGA operatives compiled to guide Trump in a second term. Sgamma co-authored a section of the manifesto’s chapter on the Interior Department, in which she and others accuse Biden of waging a “war on fossil fuels” and bemoan the amount of land and minerals under federal ownership.

The Project 2025 chapter that Sgamma contributed to was authored by William Perry Pendley, who served as acting director of BLM during Trump’s first term and has a long record of advocating for federal lands to be transferred to states or sold to private interests. It stops short of calling for the outright pawning off of federal lands. Instead, Pendley casts the federal government as a bad landlord and argues that a Republican president should “draw on the enormous expertise of state agency personnel” and “look for opportunities to broaden state-federal and tribal-federal cooperative agreements.”

When it comes to how federal lands are managed, Project 2025 contains a comprehensive fossil fuel industry wish list written by Sgamma and two other industry allies. The manifesto calls for opening vast swaths of the federal estate to increased drilling, rolling back already-protected landscapes, expediting permitting, slashing the royalties that oil and gas companies pay to drill on federal lands, and weakening regulations that might complicate increased development. If confirmed as BLM director, Sgamma would play a pivotal role in carrying out Trump’s pro-fossil fuel energy vision to the direct benefit of her trade group’s members.

As she prepares to lead the BLM, does Sgamma still believe there is too much federal land? Is she a partisan of the so-called land transfer movement, a movement led by Utah politicians who would like to divest the American public of their ownership stake in millions of acres of federal land? Will she seek to sell off BLM land? Given her record, how will she avoid conflicts of interest as she oversees the government’s vast onshore oil and gas leasing program? Will she manage public lands for multiple use, including conservation and recreation, or will extractive industries be her sole priority?

Sgamma did not respond to these and other questions, nor did the WEA make her available for an interview. Berman’s organization did not respond to a request for comment.

Sgamma’s confirmation hearing is scheduled for Thursday, April 10 before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

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Republicans Are Stealing a North Carolina Judicial Race. They Won’t Stop There.

On April 1, Republicans and Elon Musk decisively lost their bid to buy the Wisconsin Supreme Court. But three days later the GOP came closer than ever to overturning the election of a Democratic justice to the North Carolina Supreme Court.

On April 4, two Republican judges on the North Carolina state court of appeals issued an extraordinary ruling tossing out more than 60,000 votes challenged by Republican candidate Jefferson Griffin, who trails Democratic justice Allison Riggs by 734 votes in the last uncalled race of the November 2024 elections. Two recounts affirmed Riggs’ victory, but instead of accepting that outcome, Griffin and his allies on the bench have followed Donald Trump’s 2020 Big Lie playbook to build support for invalidating the election. The key difference is, this time, Republicans could actually succeedin changing the rules for an election that has already occurred to flip the result. It’s January 6 without the insurrection, or if the Supreme Court had ruled in favor of Trump’s bogus election challenge.

The decision to overturn the election, if upheld, will have ramifications far beyond North Carolina. It will give Republicans a playbook for how to overturn future ones, institutionalizing election denial within the party at a time when democracy is under threat in so many escalating ways.

“This does not just affect North Carolina,” Riggs told Democratic lawyer Marc Elias. “This is like dropping a match in a really dry forest. And if we let this kind of anti-democratic effort take hold, we will not be able to contain it. So this is a fight for the very soul of democracy.”

Like Trump, who sought to overturn the votes of large urban centers in key swing states in 2020, Griffin has cherrypicked the type of ballots he wants thrown out.

He’s specifically challenged the eligibility of 60,000 voters with incomplete voter registration records, such as a missing driver’s license or Social Security number. But those registrations were incomplete only because that information was not required at the time or did not appear in state databases because of clerical errors. All of those voters showed identification when voting in 2024. And all of them voted by mail or during early voting, a group that is disproportionately nonwhite, young, and less likely to be registered Republicans. His list of challenged ballots included example after example of lawful voters—including Riggs’ own parents.

“The scale of this should be deeply troubling to anyone who has any respect for the rule of law,” Riggs told me after the election. “With 60,000 people, it is everyone’s friend, it’s everyone’s family member, it’s everyone’s neighbor. There’s no one who doesn’t know someone on that list.”

“If we let this kind of anti-democratic effort take hold, we will not be able to contain it. So this is a fight for the very soul of democracy.”

The second group of ballots Griffin challenged—and the court ruled should be thrown out—came from voters who lived overseas, including members of the military. Even though Griffin voted that way twice as a member of the Army National Guard, he said those ballots should not count because they did not show strict forms of photo ID when submitting their votes, even though the State Board of Elections specifically exempted overseas voters from the state’s new voter ID law, which went into effect for the 2024 cycle. The election board unanimously rejected Griffin’s effort to invalidate those ballots during a hearing in December.

Griffin contested the votes of overseas voters only in four heavily Democratic counties where Riggs won an average of 65.5 percent of votes. It was akin to Trump asking the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 2020 to throw out 221,000 ballots only in the counties encompassing Milwaukee and Madison, which the court rejected. “This calculated challenge to voters in just four Democratic-leaning counties would pose a clear equal protection problem under the US Constitution,” Riggs wrote in a legal brief.

The last group of ballots Griffin challenged, and the court invalidated, came from 267 North Carolina residents who have never lived in the state but whose parents were eligible North Carolina voters, such as military members or religious missioners, before leaving the United States.

The Republican judges on the court of appeals voted to reject these 60,000-plus votes because “the inclusion of even one unlawful ballot in a vote total dilutes the lawful votes and ‘effectively ‘disenfranchises’ lawful voters,” they wrote.

But perhaps the most galling part of Griffin’s challenge is that he hasn’t uncovered a single instance of an ineligible voter casting a ballot. He just doesn’t like the voting methods they used, where they voted from, or who they may have voted for.

“Every single voter challenged by Petitioner in this appeal, both here and abroad, cast their absentee, early, or overseas ballot by following every instruction they were given to do so,” Democratic Judge Toby Hampson wrote in a fiery dissent. “Their ballots were accepted. Their ballots were counted. The results were canvassed. None of these challenged voters was given any reason to believe their vote would not be counted on election day or included in the final tallies.”

He said the court’s ruling would set a dangerous precedent. “Changing the rules by which these lawful voters took part in our electoral process after the election to discard their otherwise valid votes in an attempt to alter the outcome of only one race among many on the ballot is directly counter to law, equity, and the Constitution,” Hampson added.

Riggs appealed the decision to the North Carolina Supreme Court, which has a 5–1 Republican majority with her recusal. It issued a temporary stay on Monday, but is likely to ultimately affirm the court of appeals given its hard-right leanings.

Election law experts believe the federal courts could step in, given how Griffin is seeking to change the rules of the election after the fact and challenge only certain types of ballots. “The court’s decision appears to violate the well-established federal due process principles that govern the resolution of state (and federal) election disputes,” wrote Richard Pildes, a professor of constitutional law at New York University Law School. Ben Ginsberg, who represented the Bush-Cheney campaign during the 2000 Florida recount, said that the state appellate court “has gone where no court has gone before.” Riggs, herself a longtime voting rights lawyer, said on Friday that she believed “this fight ends in federal court.”

The appellate court gave voters with incomplete registrations or those who did submit photo ID from overseas 15 days to affirm their eligibility before instructing the state election board to toss their votes and readjust the count, which Griffin believes will result in his victory. Hampson called that step “a fiction that does not disguise the act of mass disenfranchisement the majority’s decision represents.”

Confirming the eligibility of 60,000 otherwise lawful voters in a two-week period five months after the election will be a massive hurdle for Democrats and pro-democracy groups. “There can be no doubt that tens of thousands of voters—through no fault of their own—will be unable to cure their registrations or ballots in time,” Riggs’ campaign said in a legal filing.

“The judges went rogue and just created this cure process,” added Melissa Price Kromm, executive director of the pro-democracy group North Carolina For The People Action. “It’s a logistical nightmare to track down 60,000 people to get them to correct something they shouldn’t have to correct. Their votes count for all the other races but not for this race. It’s an incredibly desperate attempt to rewrite the rules for just this race.”

Unlike the courts that rejected Trump’s effort to overturn the election on more than 60 occasions in 2020, Republican judges in North Carolina have bent over backward to help Griffin.

The chief judge of the appeals court, Chris Dillon, chose the panel of judges that heard Griffin’s appeal. Chief Justice Brian Newby, who Griffin has called a “good friend and mentor,” appointed Dillon as the top judge last year, breaking with precedent to oust sitting Republican judge Donna Stroud, who was deemed too liberal by hard-right Republicans. Fellow Republican judges, including Griffin and North Carolina Supreme Court Justice Phil Berger Jr., donated to a primary campaign against Stroud. One judge who ruled in favor of Griffin, Fred Gore, ran a “joint campaign” with him in 2020 where they shared the same platform. (The other Republican judge who sided with Griffin, John Tyson, was charged with misdemeanor assault in 2021 for reportedly almost striking Black Lives Matter protesters with his car.)

As the case winds its way through the courts, the effort to overturn the election has been gathering momentum, like a slow-moving train crash that no one is willing to stop.

“The North Carolina Republican Party is one step closer to stealing an election in broad daylight,” said state House Minority Leader Robert Reives said on Friday.

Democracy isn’t dying in darkness this time. Republicans are nullifying it in plain sight—and using this as a road map for 2026 and beyond.

“I absolutely believe it’s a test case,” said Price Kromm. “It’s a test case for whether an election can be overturned after the election with different rules. If this is allowed to go through, it creates a blueprint for how future losing candidates can subvert the will of the voters by litigating through partisan courts.”

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A Whistleblower Says Trump Sent the US Marshals to Try to “Intimidate” Her

A whistleblower who testified in Congress today is accusing the Trump administration of trying to “intimidate” her with help from the US Marshals Service, the law enforcement agency of the federal judiciary.

Liz Oyer, the former US pardon attorney who was fired last month, says Justice Department leaders dispatched two special deputy marshals to her house on Friday night—days before she was scheduled to speak with lawmakers about her concerns with the firing of career employees and what she describes as “corruption” at the department. “You appear to be using the Department’s security resources to intimidate a former employee who is engaged in statutorily protected whistleblower conduct,” Oyer’s attorney Michael Bromwich, a former Department of Justice inspector general, wrote in a letter to Justice Department leadership on Monday. He said dispatching special deputy marshals to Oyer’s home was “both unprecedented and completely inappropriate.”

“You appear to be using the Department’s security resources to intimidate a former employee.”

As I reported earlier today, this is not the first time US marshals have acted in strange ways since President Donald Trump came to office. In a deep-dive, I looked at how the law enforcement agency has been recruited recently to help Elon Musk, Trump’s right-hand man. Since January, the US Marshals Service has deputized members of Musk’s private security detail, helped his Department of Government Efficiency get inside a federal agency it was trying to dismantle, and even prodded federal judges to move more quickly on Jan. 6 cases.

For more on Oyers’ testimony, check out some of today’s news coverage. And if you’re confused about the Marshals Service and its recent activity—or if you’re curious to hear experts explain why we should care about it—head to my explainer. As one former DOJ official told me, “the risk to people’s civil rights is enormous.”

Oyer: Perhaps the most personally upsetting part of the story is the lengths to which the leadership of the department has gone to prevent me from testifying here today. On Friday night, I learned that the Deputy Attorney General’s office had directed the department’s Security… pic.twitter.com/Ah3wx9HD37

— Acyn (@Acyn) April 7, 2025

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While Fallen Soldiers Returned Home, Trump Hit the Golf Course

President Trump’s absence at the dignified transfer of four US servicemen who died during a training exercise in Lithuania is being noticed. While thousands gathered in Lithuania—including the Lithuanian president—to send the soldiers off, our commander in chief was busy (as he has been for over a quarter of his second presidency) playing in his Saudi-backed golf tournament at Mar-a-Lago.

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This is not the first time that Trump has missed a dignified transfer—he only attended four out of 96 during his first term, per an investigation by HuffPost. Presidents are not required to be at the transfers and generally only attend a handful each term. (These four were met on US soil by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and several Democratic senators.)

However, there is a particular ire since Trump is missing the transfer for such a trivial reason. Chris (who asked us not to use his last name) is an Air Force veteran who spoke to my colleague Peter Berger at a Hands Off rally in San Francisco on Saturday, calling Trump’s choice “the ultimate lack of respect to our military.” He held a sign that said “4 US Soldiers bodies returned home, where is their Commander in Chief? In Florida—Golfing.”

He also decried the administration’s cuts to the Veterans Affairs. “[Trump] really needs to look at what he is doing to the VA because after these military service members leave the military, it’s our duty as a nation to take care of them.”

The Trump Administration has announced plans to cut 80,000 employees from the VA. It has already announced the end of a program that saved the homes of 17,000 military veterans facing foreclosures and ended specific healthcare for trans and intersex veterans.

I spoke to T Dianne Smith, a Navy vet, at a protest in Eugene, Oregon. As a retiree, Trump’s tariffs and proposed changes to Social Security and Medicaid threaten her entire income.

She felt most compelled to come not because of the effects on her, but because it was her duty. “When you enter the military, you take an oath to defend the Constitution and to obey the orders of the president, but the Constitution comes first,” she explained. “If someone gives you an unlawful order, you are required by law to not follow that order and to follow your conscience.”

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Elon Musk Says Saturday’s Protesters Were Paid “Puppets.” That’s Not What I Saw.

Massive crowds of Americans took to the streets this weekend. In large cities and small towns, online, and even around the world, people voiced their discontent with President Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s takeover of the federal government.

My colleagues and I were there to report on the action.

To Musk and other Trump allies, though, the mass mobilization was evidence of something else: paid dissent.

Both Musk and former New York City mayor and (since-disbarred) Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, for example, think they found smoking guns when they shared videos of protesters who struggled to articulate their thoughts about Trump.

“ANTI-TRUMP & ANTI-MUSK PROTESTERS EXPOSED!” Giuliani wrote on X, alongside a video interview with a protester in DC. “Woke-Left protesters UNABLE to explain why President Trump is a Facist, pulls out a paper handout he was given with talking points AND still can’t explain himself!” In reality, the protester simply appeared uninterested in being on-camera, saying, “I am not really into interviews,” before adding Trump “does everything he wants without following laws.”

Meanwhile, the protester’s friend seemed more comfortable engaging, accurately telling the interviewer—who appears to be someone by the name of Ted Goodman, an intern for the right-wing Daily Caller website—Trump is “trying to control the media,” and that his policies are tanking American tourism. At that point, the interviewer quickly replies, “I don’t want to get into a tourism debate,” and then pans back to the protester who appears uncomfortable on-camera.

Musk chimed in on the same video: “The problem is the puppetmasters, not the puppets, as the latter have no idea why they are even there,” he wrote. “He had to read the paper he was given to understand the sign he was holding,” Musk wrote over a video of a protester explaining what his sign—which said “End the kakistocracy”—meant. Musk also shared several posts from the Wall Street Apes account on X, which has more than 929,000 followers, and right-wing influencer Mario Nawfal, who has more than two million followers, alleging—without evidence—that the protesters were paid.

Conspiracy theorist and journalist cosplayer Laura Loomer also alleged that “the radical left is BUSSING IN PROTESTERS FROM AROUND THE COUNTRY TO CAUSE CHAOS IN WASHINGTON DC” who she claimed were “pro-Hamas,”an apparent reference to the fact that some were holding Palestinian flags and wearing keffiyehs.

Characterizations of Saturday’s protesters as bumbling and lacking any conviction could not be further from what I saw in my hometown of Marshfield, Massachusetts. With a population of about 25,000, organizers say about 500 people turned out to protest, a notable size for a town that’s more red than the reliably blue state.

The dozen or so people I spoke to they all clearly explained their concerns about how Trump and Musk’s chaos would affect their daily lives and those of other Americans. Jim Carson told me he was worried about how he would live if Musk cut Social Security. Christine, a protester who declined to provide her last name, said she was worried Trump’s tariffs would jack up the costs of gloves and masks she uses for her work in the medical field. Others were disturbed by the administration’s attacks on scientific and medical research; mass firings at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS); and the dismantling of USAID. One protester said she had historically been a conservative Independent before registering as a Democrat on Friday.

"I came because I don't want them to take away the Social Security," #HandsOff rally-goer Jim Carson told our reporter @JulianneMcShane. "That's stealing it—we all paid already!"

Julianne returned to her small hometown of Marshfield (pop. 25,000) which votes more red than… pic.twitter.com/KPr4uX5yjw

— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 5, 2025

To the extent that they were “bussed in,” as Loomer claimed, some drove over from the nearby towns of Pembroke, Norwell, and Cohasset, because those towns lacked organized protests of their own. They came out because they felt that they had no other choice; as Carson told me, “I was happy until Trump and Musk came along, and now, we gotta stand up and fight.”

Similarly, my colleagues spoke to protesters of all ages who knew exactly why they were spending their Saturday protesting Trump and Musk. Take Grant, the 15-year-old who my colleague Michael Mechanic talked to at the Princeton, New Jersey protest. He told Mechanic he came out because of “Everything: Doge destroying the government, cutting international aid to everyone, tariffs that help nobody, getting rid of all the DEI programs.”

Wow. Grant, a 15-year-old protester at a "Hands Off" rally in Princeton, New Jersey, just eloquently (and modestly) dismantled Team Trump. pic.twitter.com/R7m0cswaS9

— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 5, 2025

“I’ve never done this before—if you can believe that!” rallygoer Pam Eberle told my colleague Laura Morel in St. Petersburg, Florida. “I’ll be 71 this year—that’s how important this is to me,” she said, adding she was most concerned about “the dehumanization of people” under Trump.

"I've never done this before—if you can believe that!" rallygoer Pam Eberle told reporter @lauracmorel in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida, on Saturday. "I'll be 71 this year. That's how important this is to me." Watch Laura's video dispatch: pic.twitter.com/1KONIahcTx

— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 5, 2025

Disabled protesters who attended virtual events, as my colleague Julia Métraux reported, were worried about how the administration’s attacks on Medicaid, Social Security, and disability education services could affect them. Protesters in New York City told my colleagues they were terrified of Trump’s deportation of immigrants and detaining of student protesters without due process.

"I thought when Bush was president that that would be the height of insanity. But I was so wrong."

Longtime New Yorker Daniel Wapner, 57, turned out to the massive anti-Trump rally in Bryant Park.@joshsanburn talked to him and others about the terror of deportation w/o due… pic.twitter.com/QAH1A5YCjn

— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 5, 2025

Notably, some of Trump’s typically most vocal mouthpieces—White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, Communications Director Steven Cheung, Vice President JD Vance, and Donald Trump Jr.—all appeared to be silent on social media about Saturday’s protests. But as my colleague Tim Murphy wrote in a must-read piece about what the protests mean, Trump and his allies ignore or dismiss them at their own peril; they are proof that the mass opposition is everywhere, and that he does not, in fact, have a “mandate” for any of this:

Ultimately the big story is not what the signs said, but the deep groundswell of anger and unrest that brought so many people in so many places out into the streets and other public spaces of their communities. The message is: crowd large. A lot of politicians and administrators and business leaders, in bowing to Trump, have drawn confidence and comfort from the perceived vibe shift. Events like this puncture that delusion. They are an unavoidable illustration of outrage. Trump may have gotten a lot undone in the last three months, but the opposition never went away, and it may finally be emboldened.

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Mother Jones

Elon Musk Is Taking Aim at Trump’s Top Tariff Guy

Elon Musk has a new target—and it’s not trans people.

This time, he appears to be going after Peter Navarro, counselor to President Donald Trump, who reportedly played a key role in advocating for the tariffs that Trump introduced this week—and that economists say will kick off a trade war.

On Saturday, Musk responded to a clip of Navarro defending the tariffs on CNN, posted by someone on X by the name of Insurrectionist Barbie: “A PhD in Econ from Harvard is a bad thing, not a good thing,” Musk wrote. Navarro holds a PhD from Harvard.

In another post, responding to someone who claimed that Navarro is “100 percent correct” in his defense of the tariffs, Musk wrote: “He ain’t built shit.” Musk also offered responded toa graphic with a quote attributed to economist Thomas Sowell: “In every disaster throughout American history, there always seems to be a man from Harvard in the middle of it.” Musk replied simply: “Yup.”

Later on Saturday, Musk made some of his first public commentson Trump’s tarrifs while speaking at an event in Italy. He wants a “zero-tariff system” between the US and Europe to create “a free trade zone,” Bloomberg reported. “Both Europe and the United States should move, ideally, in my view, to a zero-tariff situation,” Musk reportedly told Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini.

Trump’s newly-launched tariff policy willgive him a new way to dole out reward and punishment, as my colleague Pema Levy wrote recently. It’s no surprise that Musk is not a fan of tariffs, given the extensive business his companies do in countries around the world. But these are the first public indications that the unelected billionaire is not, in fact, in lock step with Trump on every issue, despite the White House’s claims to the contrary.

After a Politico report this week that claimed that Trump told his inner circle Musk will be stepping away from his role in the government soon, in part because some Trump allies reportedly see him as a political liability for Trump, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called the story “garbage,” and Musk called it “fake news.” On Thursday, Trump defended Musk, telling reporters, “I want Elon to stay as long as possible”—but that was two days before Musk publicly attacked his top tariff guy.

Spokespeople for the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Musk’s posts.

Navarro served on Trump’s 2016 campaign and in the White House during his first term, running the Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy. Last year, he served four months in prison for contempt of Congress after refusing to comply with a subpoena from the House January 6 committee. As my colleague Dan Friedman reported, he was released just in time to attend the Republican National Convention, where he told the crowd: “I went to prison so you won’t have to.”

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Mother Jones

The Dubious Legal Theory Republicans Are Using to Kill Climate Progress

This story was originally published b_y Slate a_nd is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Republicans are undoing years of climate progress under the second Trump administration using an unlikely progressive tool: antitrust law.

Their antitrust strategy, which may pose the next great threat to climate organizing in the United States, is to sue companies that work together on green initiatives, alleging they are colluding in violation of the antitrust laws. While untested in courts, Republicans are increasingly pushing this novel theory to prosecute organizations that join green coalitions, and they have already succeeded in fracturing many of the world’s leading climate alliances.

The Republican antitrust offensive has “had a very real chilling effect on the financial sector” and is “almost certain to have a detrimental effect on achieving climate goals in the US,” said Hana Heineken, an attorney for ClientEarth, a legal nonprofit that advocates for climate accountability.

The main US antitrust statute, the Sherman Act, prohibits competitors from agreeing with one another to fix prices, limit output, or otherwise restrict competition. Republicans assert that agreements among businesses to promote environmental goals, known as Environmental, Social, and Governance goals, or ESG, violate the Sherman Act because they reflect a “collusive effort to restrict the supply of coal, oil, and gas,” as five Republican Senators wrote in a letter to US law firms in 2022.

After years of fending off progressive climate legislation, Republicans are now on the offensive, using a barrage of antitrust lawsuits and investigations to try to break up the private-sector coalitions that emerged amid the political gridlock.

“There is no theory of antitrust law that prevents private investors from working together to capture the risks associated with climate change.”

In 2022 and 2023, the Republican-led House Judiciary Committee and 19 red states launched sprawling investigations into the world’s preeminent ESG programs, including Climate Action 110+, the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, and the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative, through which many of the world’s largest financial institutions pledged to pursue net-zero goals. In a June 2024 report, Republicans on the committee claimed these net-zero pacts constituted a “climate cartel” engaged in “apparent violations of longstanding US antitrust law.”

Antitrust lawsuits quickly followed after Donald Trump won the November 2024 presidential election.

Two weeks after the election, the state of Nebraska sued four major truck manufactures who agreed to follow a California law requiring them to phase out combustion engines, claiming the “Clean Truck Partnership” constituted an “industry-wide conspiracy.”

The following week, 11 Republican-led states sued the world’s three largest institutional investors—BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street—alleging they illegally conspired through ESG pacts to reduce coal production among companies whose stock they jointly own.

Most recently, in December 2024, the House Judiciary Committee claimed that financial institutions colluded to replace ExxonMobil board members who refused to endorse certain climate goals. The committee then issued a new set of demands to over 60 financial institutions, ramping up its ongoing investigation.

The Republican antitrust offensive has transformed the ESG landscape, dismantling many of the world’s top industry initiatives even before courts have had a chance to weigh the antitrust claims being asserted.

In January 2025, the six largest US banks each left the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, once hailed as “the most promising private sector–led initiative to date,” in what was deemed a response to Republican legal scrutiny. Also this January, the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative suspended its operations after several top members withdrew, citing legal concerns. More than 70 organizations also have withdrawn from Climate Action 100+ during the course of the GOP-led antitrust investigations.

The leader of the Republican investigation, Rep. Jim Jordan, took credit for these departures, calling them a “huge win” for his probe and urging all US businesses to “abandon the climate cartel.”

The rapid dissolution of ESG pacts in the face of Republican legal pressure has raised concerns that years of private climate organizing may come undone under the threat of antitrust litigation, irrespective of its legal merits.

The Republican antitrust threats “certainly have set back climate finance campaigns in the US” and have “had a major impact” on the net-zero landscape, said Patrick McCully, a senior analyst for Reclaim Finance, a nongovernmental organization that advocates for a more sustainable banking sector. He said the threat of antitrust lawsuits has “frightened numerous banks, investors, and insurers” who “don’t want to deal with the hassle and potential brand damage” of litigation.

Democrats, in response, have claimed that Republicans are weaponizing the antitrust laws they normally disfavor for political ends. “There is no theory of antitrust law that prevents private investors from working together to capture the risks associated with climate change,” wrote Rep. Jerry Nadler in a June 2024 rebuttal report, which claimed Republicans were bullying companies into abandoning ESG using a “sham” antitrust theory borrowed from a conservative think tank.

“These companies are trying to do the right thing, but they don’t have much financial incentive to fight back against baseless attacks.”

The antitrust theory being asserted—that climate pacts constitute anticompetitive collusion—has sparked fierce debate among antitrust experts, who disagree about whether shared commitments to climate goals violate the antitrust laws.

“The claim that joint ESG initiatives are ‘climate cartels’ is a legally unfounded weaponization of the antitrust laws,” said Nicole Veno, an antitrust litigator and co-author of a forthcoming article, “Climate and Antitrust,” in the Georgetown Environmental Law Review. Veno argues that climate agreements generally do not violate the antitrust laws because they do not limit output of a consumer product, fix prices, or comprise an illegal group boycott—the three main antitrust theories Republican have put forward.

Doug Peterson, the former Nebraska attorney general who helped spearhead the GOP’s antitrust strategy, believes the Republican antitrust scrutiny is well founded. “When businesses coordinate and collectively commit to impacting market factors under the guise of ESG, those agreements can restrain trade and harm consumers,” Peterson said in an email. “As antitrust enforcers, state AGs are appropriately addressing this behavior.”

Fueling this debate is the lack of clear antitrust guidance from US courts and antitrust agencies. While the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice have clarified that there is no ESG exemption to the antitrust laws, they have not addressed the extent to which pacts to achieve net-zero emissions, or follow state climate laws, may pose antitrust risks.

This is in sharp contrast to Europe, where competition authorities have put forth detailed guidelines on sustainability agreements, including a “soft safe harbor” that permits green energy pacts under certain conditions.

Denise Hearn, a senior fellow at the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment who has criticized the GOP’s antitrust push, says it is now up to courts to adjudicate these claims on a case-by-case basis: “Antitrust law is fact-specific, and the accusations over the course of two years have been vague and wide-reaching, lumping a huge diversity of financial institutions (banks, insurers, asset owners, index funds) and nonprofit groups together under one banner.”

How courts ultimately resolve these disputes could shape the future of US climate organizing. If successful, the Texas-led lawsuit could effectively end joint climate initiatives among financial institutions, which would pose “an existential threat to ESG,” as Carrie Campbell Severino, the president of the conservative Judicial Crisis Network, predicted in National Review.

And even if the current lawsuits fail, many expect that climate organizing will continue to shift away from corporate ESG and toward state-level regulatory policy as Republican legal pressure on ESG mounts.

That appears likely. The Judiciary Committee has said it will continue its antitrust investigations, and Project 2025, the conservative plan that positioned itself as a blueprint for the second Trump administration, has called on the FTC to set up a special antitrust task force to investigate ESG.

Meanwhile, the ESG landscape continues to unravel. In March, another wave of large companies, including Deloitte, Lloyd’s, and JP Morgan’s asset management arm, withdrew from major net-zero alliances, and Wells Fargo formally dropped its net-zero goals.

There is little precedent for how swiftly Republicans have undermined ESG with antitrust threats. While antitrust lawsuits have disrupted industries before, industrywide change typically comes after years of litigation and court orders, not at the outset of a case, particularly one based on tenuous legal theories.

Veno attributes ESG’s downfall to the lack of financial incentives to defend it. “These companies are trying to do the right thing, but they don’t have much financial incentive to fight back against baseless attacks on ESG agreements, which rarely come with short-term financial upside.”

As the Trump administration begins its broader push to roll back environmental protections, Republicans have already scored a major victory by decimating the private-sector coalitions that were once seen as a backstop for deregulatory efforts—in large part due to a novel antitrust theory that has yet to be upheld in court.

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Mother Jones

You Can Stop Asking Where the Mass Opposition Is. It’s Everywhere.

It is a cliche to begin a story about a rally with a quote from a funny sign, but one small piece of floppy brown cardboard floating down 40th Street in Manhattan on Saturday seemed to capture the mood of this weekend’s “Hands Off” protests against President Donald Trump: “Where do I start?”

You could meet a dozen people and hear at least a dozen different existential threats. Hands off Social Security. Hands off public health grants. Hands off student visas. Hands off women. Hands off trans people. Hands off our tax dollars. Hands off Greenland. Hands off books. Hands off 401ks. Hands off immigrants. Hands off Mahmoud Khalil. Hands off grocery prices. Hands off unions. I even talked to a woman clutching a sign that said “Hands off Libby”—the popular e-reader for public library systems which is now in jeopardy thanks to massive cuts to the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services.

Trump’s second administration is “radically more radical,” protestors said. “Night and day.”

This barrage of grievances offered a snapshot of the new Trump administration’s multi-front war on modernity. But it also got at something essential about the current anti-Trump movement. People weren’t taking action just to protest what the president and his movement represented, but because of visceral fear—real fear—of what he had already done, and that once impossible things were now very much possible. People had lived through a Trump administration before. They were taking to the streets now, in part, because they had not lived through this.

That Saturday’s protests happened at all is notable. After Trump’s inauguration was not met with massive demonstrations, as it had been in 2017, a New York Times story declared the “Resistance” era over. But in recent weeks, as universities, law firms, big businesses, and most of the United States Congress have rolled over, rank-and-file Trump opponents have begun to make their anger heard. Hundreds of people began showing up at Tesla dealerships. Tens of thousands of people flocked to see Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. And this weekend, people flocked to rallies in all 50 states, in small towns and at massive demonstrations like the one I attended in New York, where tens of thousands of people packed Fifth Avenue for blocks, as part of a furious new popular front. You can stop asking where the mass opposition is now—it’s here.

“I’m a centrist in terms of politics in general,” Linda Brown of New York told me as she waited for the line to move. “But batshit crazy is batshit crazy.”

I spent a lot of time at anti-Trump demonstrations eight years ago, and the aesthetics now are, in a lot of ways, pretty similar to what they were back then. Saturday’s rallies were organized, in part, by Indivisible, the ur-Resistance group of the first Trump administration that grew from a Google Doc into a nationwide network. Cardboard signs displayed straight-from-social media nicknames (Cheeto, Muskrat, etc.) and droll complaints (“I’ve seen better cabinets at Ikea”). Attendees leaned white and boomer. I even saw a few pussy hats.

But if the crowd was similar, marchers I spoke with were responding to a threat they considered considerably more dangerous than the first time around. Trump 1.0 was chaotic and mean and ultimately quite destructive, but it was also—in hindsight—a shell of what it could have been. The administration was filled with a lot of weird guys with short attention spans. “Infrastructure week” became a punchline because it never really happened. But this time around, protestors were stunned by the speed of Trump and Musk’s demolition.

“They have fucked everything up in how many days, in how many months?” said Jewels Nation, a musician escaping the rain under a stretch of sidewalk scaffolding. “January, February, March—in three months, they have fucked us completely.” She was “terrified” about applying for Social Security, but her fears went deeper than just retirement savings; like other attendees, she believed that the United States had already become a “fascist state.”

The difference between then and now was “night and day,” said James Davis, president of the Professional Staff Congress, a union representing City University of New York faculty and staff. “It’s like he’s engineering a cultural revolution from the MAGA right, and now he’s working with no dissent whatsoever and expecting absolute fidelity and loyalty from everyone around him.” With one third of CUNY students being foreign born, and faculty dependent on visas and federal grants, the new administration was striking “at the heart of what we do,” he said.

The administration’s actions were affecting people who came out to the demonstration in tangible ways. Jill Pittman, a union collective-bargaining specialist from New Jersey who was marching alongside her young son, complained that Trump had gutted the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, which gets involved in labor disputes.

“I think they’re down to 12 people,” she said. “I use them every day—or used to use them every day.” What Trump was doing was severe enough that she was fearful for “the day that they make all labor unions illegal.”

Trump’s new administration was “radically more radical,” said Laurie Russell. “They’re so much more organized and focused with every single issue that is dear to our hearts, and eradicating everything.” In the first term, she said, “it was just sort of chaos and short-term difficulties.”

“Before we just hated him, we hated everything he stood for. And of course he was doing stuff,” explained Paul Demers. “But this is much broader.”

Trump’s attacks on universities, Deemers said, were a sign that the country was slipping into a Viktor Orban-style autocracy. “This is really more about democracy itself.”

This was just one protest in one place—albeit one very large protest in one very big place. Perhaps the vibes were different in Marshfield, Mass. or Salt Lake City or Bolivia, N.C. (Hopefully the weather was.) Ultimately the big story is not what the signs said, but the deep groundswell of anger and unrest that brought so many people in so many places out into the streets and other public spaces of their communities. The message is: crowd large. A lot of politicians and administrators and business leaders, in bowing to Trump, have drawn confidence and comfort from the perceived vibe shift. Events like this puncture that delusion. They are an unavoidable illustration of outrage. Trump may have gotten a lot undone in the last three months, but the opposition never went away, and it may finally be emboldened.

On Saturday, it showed that it is everywhere.

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Mother Jones

This 15-Year-Old Just Scorched Team Trump in a Frankly Amazing Interview

On Saturday, thousands of people all across the globe took to the streets to protest President Donald Trump’s administration. Out of the dozens of great people our reporters spoke to, one young interviewee stood out.

Senior Editor Michael Mechanic bumped into Grant, a 15-year-old student, while covering the feisty “Hands Off” protest in Princeton, New Jersey. Grant, who attended with his father and sister, eloquently (and modestly) broke down how Trump’s administration is tearing the country apart.

As one Bluesky commenter put it, “His parents deserve some respect. What an intelligent and caring kid.”

"Do you want a good government or a country that's in ruins?"This interview was too good not to share in its entirety. So meet Grant, a 15-year-old student from Princeton, New Jersey, who spoke to our reporter at the #HandsOff rally there.He has some thoughts.

Mother Jones (@motherjones.com) 2025-04-05T21:48:25.218Z

Why are you here?

Everything. Doge destroying the government, cutting international aid to everyone, tariffs that help nobody, getting rid of all the DEI programs.

How old are you?

Fifteen.

Fifteen?

Yeah, I just turned 15.

And you feel like you’re politically engaged?

Not much, but more than I want to be. I just feel like it’s not ‘do you want right wing or left wing?’ It’s ‘do you want a good government or a or a country that’s in ruins?’ It’s not about your ideals anymore.

It’s about. Do you care about yourself? Do you care about the government? Do you care about people?

Is there anything that this government is doing that particularly gets under your skin?

I think firing all of the government workers because the government can’t do its job. And I bet some of those government workers aren’t coming back, so it’d be it’d be really hard to rebuild the government.

Do you think this is something that will affect your family directly?

No, but it will affect lots of people and it will be harder to do things in the future. I’m personally more worried about the country as a whole than my family, and I’m lucky to be in that position. Lots of people are worried about themselves.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

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Mother Jones

My Trump-Loving Massachusetts Hometown Just Showed The Hell Up

Massachusetts may be a reliably blue state, but my hometown of Marshfield is not.

In 2016, then-Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton decisively won the state in her face-off against President Donald Trump, earning nearly 61 percent of the vote. But in Marshfield—a suburb of 25,000 people, located about 30 miles south of Boston, where I spent my childhood before moving to New York City about a decade ago—the race went almost exactly down the middle.

Clinton won 47.5 percent of the town, and Trump won about 47 percent. Marshfield has followed a similar pattern since then, with the town’s inhabitants voting for Trump at a higher proportion than Massachusetts voters overall.

While Trump’s popularity in Marshfield dippedslightly in 2020, he regained his 2016 levels of support in 2024, when 47 percent of the town voted for him and 51 percent supported Vice President Kamala Harris.

Nonetheless, a massive crowd turned out in Marshfield on Saturday to protest Trump’s second term and Elon Musk‘s takeover of the federal government. It was one of the thousands of such protests happening in big cities and small towns across the country. The energy of the opposition to Trump was apparent as I drove downtown, into the heart of the protest, past the town hall and a strip mall with pizza and burger joints. Cheering locals lined the street in front of a Dollar Tree and CVS Pharmacy, holding signs and American flags as passing cars honked.

"I came because I don't want them to take away the Social Security," #HandsOff rally-goer Jim Carson told our reporter @JulianneMcShane. "That's stealing it—we all paid already!"

Julianne returned to her small hometown of Marshfield (pop. 25,000) which votes more red than… pic.twitter.com/KPr4uX5yjw

— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 5, 2025

Amongst the locals I talked to, the scale of the support—especially in a town like Marshfield—was indicative of the growing opposition to Trump and Musk. “I’m so heartened, because it’s just so upsetting how many people are hurting,” Patty Drogue, a resident of the nearby town of Norwell, told me.

For Drogue, the hurt is personal. A retired federal worker, she worked for more than 20 years with Head Start programs, which support low-income children. Project 2025 recommends eliminating and alleges the program is “fraught with scandal and abuse” and offers “little or no long-term academic value for children”—despite ample research that shows otherwise. The future of Head Start is even more uncertain after Tuesday’s mass layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which houses the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), the office that administers the program. As a result of cutting Head Start, Drogue said, “there’s going to be a lot of kids and families going hungry; there’s going to be a lot of people that don’t make it through high school and can’t earn a living.”

“The Head Start programs in the New England region now have no one to go to help them get the money that was promised to them. There’s no one there—they just fired everybody,” she added. The Boston Head Start office is one of five that will be closed following Tuesday’s layoffs, according to the National Head Start Association.

More from Patty & Sue on why they came out today:

[image or embed]

— Julianne McShane (@juliannemcshane.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 3:41 PM

Indeed, theimpactof the chaos Trump and Musk are unleashing across the federal government was what drove several protesters out into the rain, they told me.

Drogue’s friend, Sue Fitzgerald, said her daughter will soon graduate college with a biomedical engineering degree. She’s concerned about RFK Jr.’s dismantling of HHS, which has also included cuts to some of the offices that work on reproductive health and disability issues, as my colleagues and I have reported. “We need to save healthcare, but also scientific research,” said Fitzgerald, who lives in the bordering (and slightly redder) town of Pembroke.

Peter Brown, who said he is a retired OB-GYN and lives in Norwell, is most worried about the attacks on the health system, including RFK’s boosting of anti-vaccination viewpoints; slashing of National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for critical research; undermining of efforts to support maternal health; and gutting of the FDA, among others. “I’m horrified that our country used to lead the world in research, and now it’s decimated,” Brown said.

Peter Brown, a retired OBGYN from the nearby town of Norwell, on why he came out:

[image or embed]

— Julianne McShane (@juliannemcshane.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 4:41 PM

Protesters said they are also disturbed by Trump and Musk’s dismantling of USAID, the agency that provided foreign humanitarian aid and would have helped the recovery effort following the recent devastating earthquake in Myanmar, as I recently reported. “I’m a humanitarian,” Fitzgerald said. “That’s more important to me than money.” Gutting USAID, in her view, was “terrible.”

“Government is not a business—it is here to work for and with the people,” added Christine, a protester from Marshfield who declined to provide her last name. “We’ve taken away any good that America has done.” She works in the medical field and, like many American consumers, expects Trump’s tariffs will affect her wallet.

“The cost of my supplies will definitely go up because gloves and masks are made in China,” Christine said. “I tried to prepare for it, but I don’t think I even ordered enough in advance.”

Another economic concern for protesters: cuts to their safety nets. “I don’t want them to take away the Social Security that we already paid—that’s stealing,” said Jim Carson, who said he retired after nearly 50 years working in the newspaper business. Trump, Carson added, “promised he wouldn’t touch it—but he’s going to let Musk cut it, so he can say, ‘it wasn’t me.'”

Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, spearheaded the firing of about 7,000 workers at the Social Security Administration, and Musk has repeatedly spread disinformation about the program, including calling it a “Ponzi scheme.”

Jim Carson’s worried about Social Security being cut. “I was happy until Trump and Musk came along,” he says, “and now, we gotta stand up and fight.”

[image or embed]

— Julianne McShane (@juliannemcshane.bsky.social) April 5, 2025 at 5:57 PM

Several protesters said they want members of Congress to be as fired up in opposition to Trump’s agenda as they are. “I would like our Republican senators to show up and do their job and remember that they were put in that place by us—not Donald Trump,” said Terri, a Marshfield resident who declined to gave her last name. Terri described herself as a “lifelong independent” who has historically leaned conservative, but Trump and Musk’s antics led her to register as a Democrat on Friday, she said. “It’s disturbing how much we are not taking care of our people and how much we’re going to lose if we don’t stop this.”

Christine, the protester who worked in the medical field, and Terri’s friend, said she wishes Republican members of Congressvoted against Trump’s unqualified cabinet members. But she’s finding hope in how some Democrat members are openly resisting: “Look at what Cory Booker just did; look at what Bernie Sanders and AOC are doing,” she said.

“Where are the Republicans? Where’s the outrage” asked Erin Herman, a resident of the nearby town of Cohasset, who works in sales. “Right now we just have to hold him to basic standards—that’s really what we’re asking for. Follow the Constitution, follow the law, and quit trouncing on our rights.”

The crowd cheered at honking cars even as the rain got heavier and the air got colder; by about 2:30 p.m. EST, they dispersed. Deborah Cornwall, one of the protest’s organizers, saw the success of the event as a sign of a shift. “Marshfield has been very red,” she told me, “but attendees today may be changing that in coming elections.”

The protesters I spoke towere pushed out into the dreary afternoon because, like Carson, the retired newspaper worker worried about cuts to Social Security, they felt they had no choice. “I was happy until Trump and Musk came along,” he said, “and now, we gotta stand up and fight.”

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Mother Jones

For Some Disabled Protestors, “Hands Off” Went Virtual

At a Hands Off rally for people with Long Covid, Amanda Finley was filled with emotions. She talked about how devastated she was to lose people who had suffered from the condition and died due to a lack of support, and talked about how she, an Internal Revenue Service employee, had just gotten Reduction in Forces notices sent to her office. But she still chooses to have hope.

Amid a day of protests against the destruction unleashed by President Donald Trump, Finley likened the task ahead to a time when her hometown had been struck by a tornado. “We quickly realized there’s no such thing as rebuilding, it’s just building a new reality,” she said. “That’s exactly what we have to do now: build lives in a new reality.”

“There’s no such thing as rebuilding, it’s just building a new reality.”

Finley, who lives in Kansas City, Missouri, did not share her experience while standing in a crowd along sign-waving demonstrators. Instead, she was speaking at a virtual event she had begun organizing just three days ago—one of three online Hands Off protests put on to serve disabled and chronically ill people who find it more accessible to protest from home—if not from their beds. The Zoom calls provided a space for disabled people to come together, sit in solidarity, and discuss how cuts to and attacks on Medicaid, Social Security, disability education services, DEI, scientific research, and more impact them. The events drew such interest that two also set-up YouTube livestreams to accommodate demand.

In-person protests—with their noise, limited seating, and unmasked crowds—can be inaccessible to disabled people. While some may grimace at using Zoom for social activities, for many chronically ill and disabled people, having the platform continue to be available is a relief.

Marie Follayttar, a longtime organizer in Maine who is disabled by Long Covid and cancer, talked on the Long Covid call about how the Hands Off protests were taking place on the 48th anniversary of the start of what became known as the Section 504 sit-ins, a landmark series of protests urging enforcement of a federal law advancing disability rights. Follayttar noted that Section 504 is at risk today from a lawsuit from 17 Republican Attorneys General.

“There may come a time where we will have to take similar action and find ways to mobilize to make sure that we are seen,” Follayttar said. “We know we have to teach everyone how to include us.”

“I am haunted by the language of our new OMB director [Russell Vought], who said, ‘We need to go after the mandatory programs,'” Follayttar added, referring to Medicaid and social security.

At another Zoom Hands Off event hosted by disability-focused nonprofits 10 Minutes A Day and DIYabled,DIYabled founder Priya Ray argued that when organizing for change, it’s crucial to recognize that disabled people have different needs.

“We learn from each other how we accommodate other disabled people,” Ray said, in comments that were interpreted into American Sign Language and transcribed with live captioning. “Accommodating as many disabled people as we can is very important, because that makes the movement of disability much stronger.”

Dupree Edwards, a disability advocate, encouraged people on the video conference to contact their members of Congress, no matter their party. “Call your representatives and tell them…how your rights are being taken away,” Edwards said, “and we want to protect Medicaid and Social Security.” (On Friday, Senate Republicans passed a budget resolution that, according to the Medicare Rights Center, “sets the stage for significant” cuts that could imperil Medicaid, Medicare, SNAP, and the Affordable Care Act.)

In light of the dismantling of Department of Education, Edwards cautioned that access to education for disabled people is under attack.

“We’re going to go back into institutions, back into segregation, back to where people with disabilities weren’t even welcome in the classroom,” she cautioned, explaining how programs and funding that can help disabled students go to school are being stripped away.

To highlight the stakes, Edwards got personal, explaining how those supports “made me into the person that I am today.”

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Mother Jones

Anti-Trump Protesters All Over the World Are Flooding the Streets

As protesters gathered in hundreds of cities and towns across America on Saturday, “Hands Off” rallies also kicked off in capitals around the world—including London, Paris, Brussels, and beyond—in a display of anger and solidarity.

These protests were scheduled long before President Donald Trump announced a series of devastating tariffs on international trading partners that cratered stock markets and triggered a global trade war that is likely to raise the prices of everything from coffee to cars. Many protesters pointed to the financial devastation his policies were inflicting on citizens, but the president’s other actions since he took office also inspired people to make posters and take to the streets.

Our reporters have been out in the field, but we’ve gathered a sampling of these actions from around the world.

Starting in New York City, Washington Bureau Chief David Corn reports a huge crowd.

Gigantic crowd in NYC for the #HandsOff march against Trump, Musk, and MAGA. So many people that the participants can barely move along. Signs decrying Trump and Co. on many fronts: immigration, science, Social Security, reproductive rights, tariffs, autocracy, kleptocracy & the price of eggs.

David Corn (@davidcorn.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T17:48:07.870Z

In Raleigh, North Carolina, a battleground state that he won, citizens showed up at the state capitol.

Thousands of North Carolina citizens are in Raleigh today telling the administration to keep their #handsoff our rights and freedoms.

Ted Spencer, MPA (@tedspencer.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T16:14:58.043Z

Meanwhile, thousands have gathered at the Parkman Bandstand in Boston.

Hands Off Protest in the Boston Common

Dylan Lion (@lionshue.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T15:36:45.270Z

We’re also seeing a similarly impressive turnout in Chicago.

Protest just getting started here in Chicago.

Maria in Chicago (@maria-in-chicago.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T17:02:48.553Z

But it’s not just people in major cities who are out protesting. My colleague, Julianne McShane, reports from her hometown in Marshfield, Massachusetts.

I just rolled up to the #HandsOff protest in my hometown of Marshfield, MA – a small coastal town about 30 miles south of Boston that’s a bit redder than MA overall. Huge crowds, content incoming for @motherjones.com

Julianne McShane (@juliannemcshane.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T17:19:09.286Z

Mother Jones editor Clint Hendler reports to us live from New Haven, Connecticut.

A bit cloudy, but still feels like a huge turnout here on the New Haven, Connecticut town green.

Clint Hendler (@clinthendler.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T16:33:57.509Z

Thousands in Minneapolis and Philadelphia have shown up.

Absolutely incredible turn out at MN State Capitol! #HandsOff

Erin Maye Quade (@erinmayequade.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T17:53:48.855Z

https://twitter.com/pennslinger/status/1908546355678560596

And, of course, people have come out in droves at our nation’s capital.

Enormous turnout for the flagship Hands Off rally in DC. Tons of people packing into the National Mall this afternoon against Trump and Musk.

Alejandro Alvarez (@alvarezreports.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T17:48:33.237Z

Earlier today in Europe, protests took place in Paris, London, and Brussels.

Checking in from Paris

Felon×34 (@felon34.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T15:35:29.120Z

https://twitter.com/demsabroadbe/status/1908534882269012245

HAPPENING NOW: The worldwide "Hands Off!" rallies are already underway at Trafalgar Square in London 👇🏻

Marco Foster (@marcofoster.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T14:31:38.529Z

We will be covering this story as it develops.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

The Extraordinary Reason Why Scientists Are Collecting Sea Turtle Tears

This story was originally published b_y Vox.com a_nd is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Each year, in late spring and early summer, female sea turtles will crawl out of the ocean under moonlight to lay their eggs in the sand, often returning to the same beach on which they were born many years earlier.

Sometimes when the turtles emerge to nest, researchers like Julianna Martin are watching patiently from the shadows.

For her doctoral research, Martin, a PhD student at the University of Central Florida, has been analyzing sea turtle tears. Yes, the tears of sea turtles. So on several summer nights in 2023 and 2024, she’d stake out beaches and wait for the turtles to start laying eggs. At that point, the reptiles enter a sort of “trance,” she said, allowing scientists like her to collect samples, including tears.

Martin told me she would army crawl up to the turtles on the sand and dab around their eyes with a foam swab, soaking up the goopy tears they exude. Sea turtles regularly shed tears as a way to expel excess salt from their bodies. (As far as we know, they are not sad.)

A woman wearing a pink hat swabs a turtle's face.

Martin swabs a green sea turtle on a boat in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon. Her research was carried out in accordance with UCF Marine Turtle Research Group permits MTP-231 and NMFS 26268.Julianna Martin

Martin would then take those tears back to her lab for analysis.

This odd work serves a purpose. Martin is examining sea turtle tears to see if they contain a specific kind of bacteria. Such a discovery, she said, could help unlock one of biology’s biggest and most awe-inspiring mysteries: how animals navigate using Earth’s invisible magnetic field.

After baby turtles hatch, they dig their way out of the sand and crawl into the ocean, where they embark on an epic journey that can take them thousands of miles across the open sea. Loggerheads that hatch in Florida, for example, swim across the Atlantic and reach islands off the coast of Portugal, before eventually returning to Florida’s beaches as adults to nest.

Remarkably, the turtles typically return to the same region of Florida or even to the same beach. “These young turtles can guide themselves along that 10,000-mile migratory path despite never having been in the ocean before and despite traveling on their own,” said Kenneth Lohmann, a biologist at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies sea turtle navigation.

Researchers like Lohmann have learned that sea turtles, like many other species, seem to navigate using Earth’s magnetic field. That’s the subtle magnetic force—generated by the planet’s molten metal core—that surrounds Earth, not unlike the force around a bar magnet. The intensity and direction of the field vary across Earth’s surface, making it useful for navigation. Plus, the magnetic field is present even when other spatial cues, like light, are not.

What remains a mystery, however, is how animals sense these magnetic forces. Decades of research have failed to turn up a mechanism for so-called magnetoreception or any kind of specialized organ that can sense magnetic force. As Martin’s adviser Robert Fitak has written, it’s like knowing an animal can respond to something visual but not finding any eyes.

“It’s the last sense we effectively know nothing about,” sensory biologist Eric Warrant has said about magnetoreception. “The solution of this problem I would say is the greatest holy grail in sensory biology.”

Scientists have proposed a number of theories for how this might work. And all of them are totally bonkers.

The prevailing theory is rooted in quantum mechanics, and it is extremely complicated. The theory posits that when certain light-sensitive molecules known as cryptochromes absorb light, they produce something called radical pairs—two separate molecules each with one unpaired electron. Those two unpaired electrons are quantumly entangled, which essentially means that their spin states are interdependent: They either point in the same direction or opposite directions, and they ping-pong between the two.

A series of bacteria under a microscope in black and white.

Magnetotactic bacteria under a microscope. The black arrows point to chains of structures that contain tiny magnetic particles.NPJ Biofilms and Microbiomes

This theory suggests that Earth’s magnetic field influences the spin states of those radical pairs, and that, in turn, affects the outcome of chemical reactions in the body of animals. Those chemical reactions—which animals can theoretically interpret, as they might, for example, smells or visuals—encode information about Earth’s magnetic field. (If you want to dive deeper, I suggest watching this lecture or reading this paper.)

Another theory suggests that animals have bits of magnetic material in their bodies, such as the mineral magnetite. According to this theory, those magnetic bits are influenced by Earth’s magnetic field—just like a compass—and animals can sense those influences to figure out where they’re going.

Martin and Fitak’s research is exploring this latter theory, but with an important twist. They suspect that sea turtles and other animals might rely on magnetite to sense Earth’s magnetic field but may not produce the magnetite themselves. Instead, they suggest, sea turtles may have a symbiotic relationship with magnetite-producing bacteria—literally living compasses—that sense the magnetic field and somehow communicate information back to the turtle.

This isn’t an outrageous idea. Magnetic bacteria—more technically, magnetotactic bacteria—is real, and quite common in aquatic environments around the world. Plus, there’s evidence that magnetotactic bacteria help another microscopic organism, known as a protist, navigate. The question is, could they help turtles navigate, too?

Magnetotactic bacteria are extremely cool. These microscopic organisms have what are essentially built-in compass needles, said Caroline Monteil, a microbial ecologist at the French research institute CEA. The needles comprise chains of magnetic particles produced by the microbes, which you can see under a microscope (shown in images below). Remarkably, those needles align the bacteria with Earth’s magnetic field lines, just like a real compass needle does. As the bacteria roam about, they move in line with the direction of the planet’s magnetic force.

Magnetic sensing is useful for the bacteria, said Fitak, an assistant professor at UCF. Magnetotactic bacteria need specific levels of oxygen to survive, and those levels tend to vary with depth. Deeper levels of sediment in a stream, for example, might have less oxygen. In most of the world, the direction of the magnetic field is at least somewhat perpendicular to Earth’s surface—meaning, up and down—allowing the bacteria to move vertically through their environment to find the optimal habitat, as if they’re on a fixed track.

In at least one case, magnetic bacteria team up with other organisms to help them find their way. A remarkable study published in 2019 found that microscopic organisms in the Mediterranean Sea called protists were able to sense magnetic forces because their bodies were covered in magnetic bacteria. When the authors put the north pole of a bar magnet next to a water droplet full of protists, they swam toward it. When they flipped the magnet, the protists swam away. (Different magnetic microbes are attracted to either north or south poles, often depending on where on Earth they live.)

You can actually see this in the video below.

It’s not clear how the magnetic bacteria are actually guiding the protist, said Monteil, the study’s lead author.

Now, returning to the turtles: The theory that Fitak and Martin are exploring is that sea turtles, like protists, might also have magnetotactic bacteria—those living compasses—in their bodies, and somehow be able to read them. Some microbes in the microbiome aid in digestion. Others provide directions. Maybe.

One idea, Martin says, is that the bacteria could aggregate near nerves in the turtles that provide information about their position in space. Some of those nerves are near the tear ducts, she said—which is ultimately why she was army crawling on the beach to collect turtle tears. The goal, she said, is to figure out if those tears contain magnetotactic bacteria. That would be one indication that these animals might be using bacteria for navigation.

“We’re not entirely sure how magnetotactic bacteria could be facilitating a magnetic sense, but that seemed like a good place to start,” Martin said.

While her research is still underway, Martin has yet to find evidence of magnetotactic bacteria in the tears of the 30 or so turtles she’s analyzed so far. That’s disappointing, she said, but it doesn’t rule out the possibility that these bacteria exist somewhere in the body of a turtle and help them navigate.

“There are so many other ideas about ways that magnetotactic bacteria could provide information to an organism about Earth’s magnetic field,” she said. “There’s a variety of other locations and other taxa that might be better for studying this theory.”

Other scientists who study animal navigation are skeptical.

It’s unlikely that symbiosis with magnetotactic bacteria is what enables sea turtle navigation, said Monteil. Part of the problem is that there’s no known mechanism through which the bacteria would communicate with the turtle. It’s also not clear what magnetotactic bacteria would get out of this relationship, if it is indeed symbiotic—could sea turtles provide the conditions bacteria need to survive? Maybe. Maybe not.

What’s more, Monteil said, is that magnetotactic bacteria are widespread in the environment, so even if Martin did find them in sea turtle tears, it would do little to prove the theory. Just because magnetic bacteria are present doesn’t mean they’re helping the animal navigate.

But then again, other theories are still entirely unproven, too—and some of them are a lot weirder. “I don’t think it is impossible,” Monteil said of sea turtles and other organisms using magnetic bacteria to navigate. “Nothing is impossible. Life is amazing and has found ways to do things that we couldn’t imagine centuries before.”

“We don’t know until we know.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

ICE Is Reportedly Violating Detained Tufts Student’s Right to Medical Care

In the ten days since Tufts University PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk was detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, her lawyers say their client has had three asthma attacks. During that time, according to three Democratic Senators and Öztürk’s lawyers, ICE has not provided the detained student her inhaler, or other medication required by law. (ICE did not return a request for comment.)

Like other students detained on suspicion of involvement in pro-Palestine activity, Öztürk has not been charged with, or accused of any crime. Instead, Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin claimed Öztürk—who is a Fulbright scholar originally from Turkey—”engaged in activities in support of Hamas.” This, according to Öztürk’s friends and lawyers, strains credibility. Her lawyers say Öztürk is likely being targeted based on an op-ed she co-wrote a year ago, encouraging Tufts University to divest from Israel.

Öztürk, who studies child psychology, was moved by ICE agents from Massachusetts to Vermont and then to Louisiana, her attorneys report. For nearly 24 hours, her legal team was unable to contact or locate her. En route to Louisiana, she suffered her first of three asthma attacks. Hearings in Öztürk’s case began yesterday, with her lawyers describing the way she was transported across several state lines as “venue shopping” by the government and “an act of either furtiveness or bad faith.” They also revealed that in the days since being moved to a detention center in Louisiana, Öztürk has suffered two more asthma attacks.

Unmanaged asthma can have severe acute outcomes, the most extreme being respiratory failure resulting in death, as well as long-term effects, such as permanently altering a person’s airways. The way to avoid these devastating effects is simple: people with asthma need to have access to their medication, like inhalers, to manage this chronic health condition.

ICE claims to follow Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, which would require Öztürk to have the same access to medical care as everyone else. Denying Öztürk her medication could potentially impede her disability civil rights (failures to provide ICE detainees access to care have been the subject of complaints under Section 504 in the past).

In an amended lawsuit filed on April 2, Öztürk’s lawyers said that due to her not having access to her medications, “each day Ms. Öztürk remains in detention puts her life at risk.” Due to the crowding in ICE detention facilities, Öztürk is arguably also at increased risk of catching COVID-19, which could exacerbate her existing respiratory problems.

Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.)—whose district includes the Somerville street where Öztürk was abducted—posted on social media Thursday night that ICE’s reported failure to provide Öztürk with her medication is “a violation of her fundamental right to medical care.”

“This is cruelty, it is neglect, and it is a damning moral and legal failure,” Pressley wrote.

In a statement with Massachusetts Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, Pressley demanded that DHS “immediately provide Rümeysa with access to the health care that she needs,” provide compelling evidence as to why she was detained in the first place, and absent that evidence, release her and restore her visa.

“Every minute she remains in custody is another minute her health and rights are at risk,” the legislators said.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

What Happens to the Venezuelans Sent to a Salvadoran Mega-Prison Now?

What happens to the Venezuelans sent to El Salvador now? In March, President Donald Trump invoked the wartime Alien Enemies Act—last used during World War II—to detain and remove alleged members of the gang Tren de Aragua without due process. The administration sent 238 men to a mega-prison in El Salvador as part of a million-dollar deal with El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele. The move was in defiance of a court order blocking the deportations and instructing planes to be turned around.

As we reported, the evidence to support the accusations against many of these men was flimsy. Mother Jones spoke with the relatives, friends, and lawyers of 10 Venezuelans sent to El Salvador who say their loved ones have been unjustly targeted simply because of benign tattoos (like an autism awareness ribbon). More details about cases have since emerged and mistakes have become apparent. Last week, the Trump administration acknowledged it had wrongfully deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland father who had been granted protection from deportation from a US immigration judge, due to “an administrative error.”

But, even in light of the many problems with these removals, it is not clear what will happen to those sent to El Salvador. Lawyers for the federal government have said in legal filings that the courts lack jurisdiction to bring men like Abrego Garcia back to the United States.

“The claim that they can’t bring somebody back doesn’t make any sense to me,” says Deborah Fleischaker, a former career official—who spent 14 years at the Department of Homeland Security, including investigating complaints with the Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties—and political appointee during the Biden administration, serving as acting chief of staff and assistant director for policy at US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Mother Jones spoke with Fleischaker about why the Trump administration should be able to bring Venezuelans back from El Salvador and the flawed criteria ICE used to identify alleged Tren de Arangua gang members.

This conversation has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

There have been several reports, including from Mother Jones, showing that many of the men sent to El Salvador without due process appear to have been targeted because of their tattoos and despite the fact they had no known criminal history. What has caught your attention about all this?

There’s a lot that’s caught my attention. The surprise invocation of the Alien Enemies Act, which has only been used three times previously in times of actual war. The seeming willingness to violate a court order to turn these folks around, which is really troubling and portends real constitutional challenges down the line, potentially. Then there is the lack of due process and ability for folks to challenge being placed under the Alien Enemies Act and considered to be members of Tren de Aragua. The fact that we are removing people—not just to be removed, but to be jailed indefinitely without charge—is also really problematic.

“If El Salvador is detaining these people on our behalf, we should be able to ask for them back. It really is not a matter of El Salvador being able to do whatever it wants when it’s doing something on our behalf. I’m not understanding the claim that they can’t get these folks back.”

There’s both the piece of using the Alien Enemies Act to move them to a notoriously brutal prison in El Salvador. Then there’s the actual factual questions about whether, even if one would argue the use of the Alien Enemies Act is appropriate, which I don’t think it is, whether they are actually getting the people who they say are supposed to be eligible for [removal].

In several cases, the Venezuelans hadn’t actually been ordered deported by an immigration judge. How unusual is it for ICE to remove people who don’t have a final order of removal?

As far as I understand, it’s unprecedented. Title 42, for example, allowed the US government to expel people during the Covid-19 pandemic. But that order was a little bit different and it was CBP [Customs and Border Protection] doing the expulsions, not ICE. I’m aware of no corollary for ICE to be removing people without final orders of removal, that is, who are not considered to be removable under any normal immigration process.

There’s usually two ways you can go through the immigration process. There’s what are called 240 proceedings, which is the standard way that one goes before an immigration judge who hears your claims and the government’s and makes the decision. Or you could go through expedited removal, where if you don’t claim a fear of return, you could get a final removal order very quickly. Those are all under the legal process that’s been set out for immigration proceedings and provide for some due process protections for the people going through those proceedings. The Alien Enemies Act doesn’t.

An ICE official said in court filings that the men were vetted through a rigorous process and the agency didn’t just rely on tattoos or social media posts. What is your sense of how ICE picked these men and determined them to be members of Tren de Aragua?

There’s been reporting now on the checklist they’re using to identify people they believe are Tren de Aragua gang members. The checklist appears to be quite flimsy on its face. It doesn’t appear to be designed to do a careful vetting. It appears to be designed to make sure that they have a steady stream of people that they could claim are Tren de Aragua members and therefore eligible for [removal under] the Alien Enemies Act. That’s not what factual determination of specific gang members is supposed to be. It’s not supposed to be a pathway in search of an end.

Mistakes and errors are always a risk in any bureaucratic system. That’s always a possibility. But the risk is so enormous under the way they’ve set this up. I cannot see how it’s worth it, even if you thought it was legal.

The Trump administration recently admitted to knowingly having deported someone who had received protection from deportation from an immigration judges based on fear of persecution by gangs in El Salvador. The government has said there’s nothing they can do about it. What do you make of that assertion?

As a really fundamental matter, the United States is paying the El Salvador government to detain these people. That to me, indicates that there’s some sort of contractual relationship between the US [government] and El Salvador. If they are detaining these people on our behalf, we should be able to ask for them back. It really is not a matter of El Salvador being able to do whatever it wants when it’s doing something on our behalf. I’m not understanding the claim that they can’t get these folks back.

There’s some sort of memorandum of agreement in place between El Salvador and the United States. Either there are terms for the return of individuals, or the United States really dropped the ball in negotiating this agreement because it’s totally foreseeable that they might want somebody back at some point.

What process dos ICE have in place to locate and bring back people who were wrongfully deported?

Most of the time you know that someone is wrongfully deported because they are probably represented and they have somebody points out that, for example, they had legal protections and they shouldn’t have been removed. Most people aren’t being removed to prison in a foreign country, so it’s not usually difficult to bring them back. You put them on a plane and you bring them back. It’s not challenging. But I would also say that it doesn’t seem like it should be challenging here. The administration just brought another plane load of people to El Salvador. That plane returned to the United States. I am not clear why they could not request that certain people be released back into the US custody and brought back to the United States at that point.

In many of the cases we’ve looked at, the men sent to El Salvador had upcoming court hearings in US immigration courts. What happens when they don’t appear in court?

I honestly don’t know. I think that’s a question for ICE or the DOJ. I assume they’ll be [ruled] in absentia because they’ve been spirited away to a prison in El Salvador and they can’t make their court hearings. Those sorts of cases could be reopened upon request, but we don’t know what’s going to happen to them.

In a functioning immigration system, there is a role for enforcement, detention, and removal. Those things don’t have to be in conflict with human and civil rights. Unfortunately, we now appear to be in an administration that has put them directly in conflict, and that’s not good for the health of the immigration system. That’s not good for the country.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Inside the “Vital” Office for Reproductive Health Gutted By Mass HHS Firings

One of the casualties of Tuesday’s massive purge of workers from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is an office dedicated to promoting healthy pregnancies. Most of the more than 100 employees at the Division of Reproductive Health lost their jobs this week, including some who conduct work mandated by federal law, according to seven former staffers who provided Mother Jones with the most complete public overview of its inner workings to date.

“How does cutting this program support the administration’s position? I don’t understand at all.”

The move runs afoul of President Donald Trump’s and members of his administration’s pledge to prioritize healthy pregnancies and family planning. The mass purge came less than a week after Trump, at a Women’s History Month event at the White House, promised to be “the fertilization president.” And in January, at the anti-abortion March for Life, Trump said he would “work to offer a loving hand to new mothers and young families” and “protect women and vulnerable children.”

Experts and former staff say the latest firings will halt the IVF and family planning work Trump campaigned on.

The CDC’s reproductive health division functioned as “a key source of support for maternal and child health programs nationwide,” Elizabeth Kielb, director of maternal and infant health at March of Dimes, a nonprofit organization focused on maternal and infant health, said in a post on LinkedIn. “Cuts to this division risk disrupting prenatal care, contraception access, and efforts to reduce maternal and infant mortality.”

Kielb added: “Additionally, state and local health departments will now face added burdens without the federal backing they’ve relied on for decades. The ability to monitor, research, and improve reproductive health outcomes is at risk.”

Some of the former officials told Mother Jones they hope their firings will be reversed after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. admitted Thursday to ABC News that some HHS firings were mistakes. Spokespeople for HHS and the White House did not respond to questions from Mother Jones by Friday morning for this story. The division had an estimated $99 million budget as of fiscal year 2023, according to an internal document.

Employees of the division who received reduction in force (RIF) notices included the approximately 40-person women’s health and fertility branch, which included a team working on assisted reproductive technology (ART). Trump campaigned on expanding access to in vitro fertilization (IVF), the most common type of ART. In February, he signed an executive order demanding “a list of policy recommendations on protecting IVF access and aggressively reducing out-of-pocket and health plan costs for IVF treatment.” But**,** by eliminating the six-person ART team at the reproductive health division, Trump is stopping the very work he promised to promote.

The ART team collected data from assisted reproductive technology clinics on their pregnancy success rates, as mandated by Congress in 1992, and maintained a nationwide database of clinics. The team also produced an online tool people could use to estimate their success of IVF and was in the middle of researching how to make treatments cheaper through state-mandated insurance, according to a former team member. “I don’t know if anyone else [in the federal government] that has the expertise that our team does,” the former staffer said. “How does cutting this program support the administration’s position? I don’t understand at all.”

Barbara Collura, president and CEO of RESOLVE: The National Infertility Association, said in a statement that as a result of the firings, “there will be no experts on infertility who will be able to inform public policy, brief members of Congress, publish articles and reports, and advance public awareness on the causes and treatments for infertility.” Micah Hill, president of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, which worked with the CDC team, called their work “vital to the field of reproductive medicine.”

“Dismantling PRAMS will make America less healthy, not more.”

The women’s health and fertility branch also included a team that collected national data about maternal and infant health outcomes through the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring Program (PRAMS). The massive, nearly 40-year-old annual survey collects anonymized information about peoples’ health and access to doctors before, during, and after their pregnancies, which state officials and health care providers then use to improve health outcomes. Researchers also use it to investigate promising interventions. As of 2020, the survey data represented more than 80 percent of births, with all but three states participating, HHS said.

Two members of the PRAMS team, which former staffers said consisted of about 15 people, told _Mother Jones_getting RIF notices and being fired came as a shock. “Our team is basically considered the gold standard for survey data collection,” Isaac Michael, a mathematical statistician on the team, said.

Michael says that while support for PRAMS should be bipartisan, it should also be a particular priority for the Trump administration, given that Vice President JD Vance and Trump’s sidekick, Elon Musk, have said they want to encourage more Americans to have more kids.

“This data will directly help their agenda,” Michael said. “If Republicans are interested in decreasing the infant and maternal mortality rates and increasing fertility rates, we have those variables. You can’t make any solid decisions without the data, and we’re the ones with the data.” Without the state-level data, another former PRAMS team member added, federal officials “won’t know where the funding for necessary resources have to go, and that will put women and infants at risk.”

Last month, a group of congresspeople wrote to CDC Acting Director Susan Monarez—now the new nominee tapped to replace Dave Weldon, whose nomination was withdrawn—raising their concerns of the potential loss of PRAMS under the reorganization of HHS, noting its “increasing importance as the US is experiencing a maternal health crisis.” But it’s unclear if Monarez ever responded to that letter, and spokespeople for the senator’s offices did not respond to questions from Mother Jones on Thursday night.

Laura Lindberg, a professor at the Rutgers School of Public Health, has used the PRAMS data in her own research on unintended pregnancy and in her classes as a teaching tool. “Abruptly shutting down PRAMS jeopardizes women and infants health at a time when maternal mortality rates in the US have been rising and access to maternity care is increasingly difficult,” Lindberg told me. “Dismantling PRAMS will make America less healthy, not more.”

The approximately ten-person fertility epidemiology studies team was also eliminated from the women’s health and fertility branch, according to an official. That team wrote the CDC’s contraception guidance for healthcare providers and conducted the annual abortion surveillance report, which collects voluntary data about legal abortions (and which, despite the cuts Trump is imposing, Project 2025 advocates for expanding).

A former official familiar with the team’s work said it was especially critical in light of mounting threats to contraception and increasing abortion restrictions nationwide. “We need guidance like this so that clinicians across the country can help women to make the best decisions for themselves—especially at a time when the ability to make those decisions is being threatened,” the official said.

Everyone in the reproductive health division’s field support branch was also fired, which included an approximately eight-person team that worked on providing guidance on the needs of pregnant and postpartum people and infants in emergencies, such as COVID-19, Zika, and Ebola, all of which posed particular risks for pregnant women.

That team’s work was mandated by Congress, which has repeatedly reauthorized a law first passed in 2006 requiring that HHS take pregnant women and other vulnerable populations into account when planning emergency responses.

“Pregnant, postpartum, lactating women have very special needs in emergencies,” the former official told me. “If they’re pregnant, they need to have continued access to prenatal care; if they’re postpartum or lactating, they potentially need assistance with feeding their infants or postpartum care.”The former official believes the firings of the emergency response team were “an unintended casualty,” adding, “I don’t think they realized it when they cut the entire branch.”

The field support branch also had a team of about a dozen senior CDC epidemiologists who deployed to state health departments to improve reproductive health, youth mental health, and healthcare access for parents and infants, in part by training more junior staffers in those fields. Prior participants helped establish state Maternal Mortality Review Committees, collected state-level data about COVID-19 in pregnant people, and worked to increase the enrollment of families on food stamps, according to an internal document describing the program.

“Many state and local health departments are understaffed and overworked, so they do not have the capacity to take on more focused research on topics like reproductive health, maternal health, and infant and child health,” a former scientist in the division said. “Cutting the entire branch will cause maternal and child health in those states and territories to worsen.”

The CDC only pays for 20 percent of the program, and states are responsible for paying for the rest—so it’s unclear why the program was targeted for termination.

The only team of the reproductive health division that remains is maternal and infant health branch, which works on tracking and preventing maternal and infant mortality. According to HHS, a new, so-called “Administration for a Healthy America” agency will take over maternal and child health issues. The fired staffers said they were glad that team will remain, given the maternal mortality crisis in the US, which ranks the highest among all wealthy nations and is worsening in light of expanding abortion bans. But, even so, the fate of that team remains unclear. “There’s a lot of unknowns, even for the programs that have survived,” one of the former officials said.

Michael, the statistician who was on the PRAMS team, knows one thing for sure: This was not what he signed up for when he voted for Trump. “I agree with a lot of the Trump administration,” he said. “But I think our team fell through the cracks, and I’ve got to advocate for it, because it’s important.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

South Carolina Attacked Planned Parenthood. Will SCOTUS Let Patients Fight Back?

Perhaps what was most significant in the debate at the US Supreme Court Wednesday morning, during oral arguments in Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic—a major case over whether a state can unilaterally cut off Planned Parenthood’s access to Medicaid funding—is what wasn’t said.

Nobody in the courtroom argued that the doctors and nurses at Planned Parenthood weren’t medically qualified to care for patients. Nobody said that they did a bad job at prescribing birth control, treating sexually transmitted infections, or screening for cervical and breast cancer. Nobody argued that there was a medical reason to exclude Planned Parenthood from Medicaid reimbursements for the extensive non-abortion services it provides.(Medicaid already doesn’t cover abortion, except in the rarest of cases.)

In fact, everyone seemed to agree that in 2018, when South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, a Republican, suddenly declared that the state would no longer consider Planned Parenthood South Atlantic a “qualified provider” for Medicaid purposes, it had nothing to do with medicine and everything to do with politics. “The payment of taxpayer funds to abortion clinics, for any purpose, results in the subsidy of abortion and the denial of the right to life,” McMaster reasoned in his executive order, as he effectively cut access to birth control and basic health screenings for his state’s poorest residents in an attempt to financially punish Planned Parenthood.

Congress amended the federal Medicaid law in 1967 to ensure that patients would have the “free choice” to see any “qualified” provider who takes Medicaid. The whole point of that provision was to stop states from artificially restricting patients’ options.So, in response to McMaster’s order, Planned Parenthood South Atlantic and one of its Medicaid patients, Julie Edwards, sued the state, arguing that it had violated patients’ right to choose their provider.

“There aren’t that many things that are more important than being able to choose your doctor, the person that you see when you’re at your most vulnerable, facing some of the most significant challenges to your life and your health,” Nicole Saharsky, attorney for Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, argued before the justices on Wednesday. “Congress said a long time ago, this is something we want to protect.”

In opposing the case, the state of South Carolina has argued that Edwards didn’t have a right to sue in federal court. The lower courtssided with Edwards and Planned Parenthood—as have most federal circuit courts that have considered similar cases. So South Carolina appealed, all the way up to the Supreme Court.

Now, the justices will weigh whether patients can sue to enforce the “free choice of provider” provision when a state violates it. If the answer is yes, then patients will continue to have the power to fight back in the courts against governors like McMasters. But if not, states will have broader latitude to decide to which doctors Medicaid recipients can go.

Since Medicaid was passed decades ago, the Supreme Court has taken many cases concerning an individual’s right to sue in order to enforce different parts of the law. Justice Brett Kavanaugh referred to this history as a “45-year odyssey” during Wednesday’s oral argument. But just two years ago, the court reaffirmed the framework it’s told courts to use when deciding if an individual can sue. “Did you need a hit over the head?” Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked the lawyer for South Carolina.

“It’s clear that attacks on sexual and reproductive health care are only escalating because some people want to impose their own beliefs on everyone else.”

But this time around, the case arriving at the court involves Planned Parenthood—and it’sat a moment when reproductive healthcare providers have never been more vulnerable to government targeting. Their abortion services are no longer shielded by Roe v. Wade. They’re facing just-announced cuts of tens of millions of dollars in federal family planning grants, plus impending massive cuts to Medicaid. Opportunistic prosecutors are filing criminal charges against alleged abortion providers. Add to this Trump’s sweeping pardon of anti-abortion extremists, some of whom have a history of attacking clinics and patients.

The financial stakes for Planned Parenthood and other providers of controversial healthcare loomed over the oral arguments on Wednesday.Medicaid is considered the country’s largest single**–**payer for family planning services, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation—and Planned Parenthood is the largest provider of those services.Half of Planned Parenthood patients are on Medicaid, Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said on a podcast Wednesday. If the justices side with South Carolina, it could lead more states to wipe out Planned Parenthood’s Medicaid funding.

Family planning can include contraception, physical exams, pregnancy testing and counseling, and STI screening and treatment. When those services are provided at specialized reproductive health care clinics, research has found that patients get access to a wider range of contraceptive methods. At Planned Parenthood, those options typically include an extended supply of birth control pills and, often, same-day IUD insertion, the Guttmacher Institute reports. As I’ve previously written,when states attack Planned Parenthood’s Medicaid funding, it has a devastating effect on access to birth control for their residents:

Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, and Texas all tried to impose similar restrictions, according to Jane Perkins, litigation director for the National Health Law Program. Texas was one of the few to succeed, [and] the attacks on Planned Parenthood there forced many reproductive health clinics to close, cut hours, charge patients new fees, or ration IUDs and birth control implants. Ultimately, they could only serve half as many patients. The teen birth rate rose an estimated 3.4 percent.

On top of all that, patients receiving reproductive healthcare want to be able to choose a doctor who makes them feel comfortable. Yet in a Supreme Court brief, South Carolina suggested that Medicaid patients who lost access to care at Planned Parenthood could just go to the “crisis pregnancy centers” promoted by the anti-abortion group Heartbeat International—the vast majority of which offer no birth control options.

John Bursch, thebowtie-wearing lawyer from the powerful religious-right legal nonprofit Alliance Defending Freedom—who is representing the state of South Carolina in the case, in a highly unusual arrangement—argued repeatedly that the free-choice-of-provider provision doesn’t technically give patients an individual right. “An obligation is not enough,” Bursch contended. “Telling a state that it has an obligation to do something, or that it must provide something, isn’t the same as saying you have the ability to sue them in federal court.” A federal law should only be considered to create a “right” if it uses words like “right,” “entitlement,” or “privilege”—”or their functional equivalent,” Bursch argued.

“The state has an obligation to ensure that a person—I don’t even know how to say this without saying ‘right’—has a right to choose their doctor,” Justice Elena Kagan objected. “That’s what this provision is. It’s impossible to even say the thing without using the word ‘right.'”

“The state has an obligation to ensure that a person—I don’t even know how to say this without saying ‘right’—has a right to choose their doctor.”

But if the conservative-majority court agrees with Bursch and rules that Medicaid patients don’t have the right to challenge McMaster’s decision, who does have the power to fight back? There appear to be no real options. Bursch suggested that doctors deemed “unqualified” could file an administrative appeal—but Planned Parenthood South Atlantic already tried that, only to be told by the state that it was “futile” given McMaster’s order, according to their brief.

Former Texas Solicitor General Kyle Hawkins, who is representing the Trump administration, which sides with South Carolina, suggested during oral arguments that the federal government could theoretically withhold funding to force a state to follow the free-choice-of-provider provision. But that’s never happened before, and it’s extremely unlikely to happen ever, Sotomayor pointed out. “It does seem awfully odd to think that that is a remedy at all because what you would be doing would be depriving thousands of other Medicaid recipients of coverage,” Sotomayor said. “Is there much sense in that?”

The implications of the case potentially can extend beyond Planned Parenthood. Both South Carolina and the Trump administration want states to be able to cut as much funding as possible for doctors who provide the kind of care they object to: abortion, for example, but also birth control and gender-affirming care for transgender people. If states really thought nobody could stop them from cutting providers out of Medicaid, Kagan said, “We would have every state deciding their various policy justifications. It could be people who do provide abortions, people who don’t provide abortions. People who do provide contraception, people who don’t provide contraception. People who do do gender transition treatment, people who don’t.”

“That does not seem like what this statute is all about, is allowing states to do that and then giving individuals no ability to come back and say, ‘That’s wrong,'” Kagan concluded.

We’ll know by the end of June if the rest of the court agrees andif Medicaid patients have the right to fight back in federal court when governors like McMaster exclude a provider for political objections. “It’s clear that attacks on sexual and reproductive health care are only escalating because some people want to impose their own beliefs on everyone else,” McGill Johnson said in a statement before oral argument. “You should have the freedom to decide what’s best for you.”

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City Projects That Improve Biking and Walking Are on Trump’s Latest Hit List

This story was originally published b_y Grist a_nd is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

The Department of Transportation has ordered a review of federal funding for bike lanes and plans to target recent projects that “improve the condition for environmental justice communities or actively reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

The move, outlined in a department memo obtained by Grist, is part of the Trump administration’s broader goal of steering federal infrastructure spending toward fossil fuels. The restriction of federal funding comes as health experts warn that pedestrian deaths have surged.

DOT officials did not respond to requests for comment.

The undated memo, reportedly sent March 11 to DOT offices, ordered an immediate freeze on all grants made after January 2021, invoking a series of executive orders aimed at dismantling federal diversity and climate initiatives. It instructs agency employees to identify projects that provide “funding to advance climate, equity, and other priorities counter to the Administration’s executive orders.”

It specifically targets any funds for projects “whose primary purpose is bicycle infrastructure,” one of many steps President Donald Trump has taken to boost the fossil fuel industry.

It also calls for flagging projects that might prioritize benefits to disadvantaged communities or reduce emissions. This likely includes hundreds of grants awarded through Safe Streets and Roads for All, a $5 billion initiative created by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. The goal of these efforts is to help communities address roadway safety concerns, said John Tallmadge, the executive director of Bike Durham, a nonprofit group in Durham, North Carolina. The group is supporting a series of infrastructure improvements in Durham that were counting on funding from the agency’s BUILD grants, also expected to be impacted.

“Why are we pulling back grants where local governments choose what they want to do?”

The Durham project would add sidewalks, crosswalks, and bus stops to the city’s busiest transit corridor, which is used by thousands of people each day. “Numerous locations along this corridor have had pedestrian fatalities,” Tallmadge said.

These safety concerns were highlighted in a recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which found Americans were 50 percent more likely to die walking in 2022 than in 2013. Its author, Rebecca Naumann, said infrastructure that prioritizes safety over speed—like the improvements Durham hopes to build—are proven solutions that protect everyone.

She notes such designs have helped other high-income countries like Austria, Canada, and the UK, reduce traffic deaths in recent decades. The opposite is true of the United States, which as of 2022, saw more pedestrian deaths than any of the 27 other countries Naumann studied.

One DOT project manager, who requested anonymity to avoid professional retaliation, told Grist the memo and executive orders will make it “terribly difficult to use federal transportation dollars where it’s needed most.” That’s bad news for more than bike lanes: Sustainable transportation not only makes communities safer, it lowers travel costs; improves access to important services like medical care, schools, and work; and helps mitigate climate change. “It’s frustrating to see these solutions stall when so many communities urgently need them,” he said. As Tallmadge noted, delays and revisions to federal grants will increase the cost of any project—the opposite of government efficiency.

Other funding likely to be caught up in these restrictions include projects within the Active Transportation Infrastructure Investment Program, which supports multimodal travel; the BUILD program, which is designed to meet local or multi-jurisdictional needs; and the Reconnecting Communities Pilot Program, which helps communities harmed by past transportation decisions. Grants recently awarded under these initiatives range from $22 million for electric buses in Rhode Island to $157 million for green spaces that connect Atlanta neighborhoods currently divided by highways.

“The restriction of funding for projects like the Atlanta BeltLine and its RAISE Grant is an assault on disadvantaged communities,” said US Representative Nikema Williams, the Democrat who represents a wide swath of Atlanta. “These projects improve equity and mobility while spurring economic development.”

The DOT memo follows recommendations outlined in the conservative Project 2025 policy agenda that has shaped much of the Trump administration’s work. It broadly argued that the federal government should not fund local transportation projects. Instead, it suggests “user fees” and enabling “private companies to charge for transportation” through ventures like toll roads, removing air pollution regulations, restricting electric vehicle infrastructure, and eliminating federal funding for bicycle lanes, ferries, and other transportation.

Yet the move to restrict programs like BUILD, which rely on community input, clashes with Project 2025’s emphasis on local decision-making, said Caron Whitaker, the deputy executive director of the League of American Bicyclists. The Atlanta BeltLine project, for example, was supported by private and public entities at almost every level of government in Georgia. “Why are we pulling back grants where local governments choose what they want to do?” Whitaker asked. “If safety is a federal issue, then local fatalities matter,” she added. “If the economy is a federal issue, then local economies matter.”

The League, which is circulating a petition protesting the DOT’s review, recently led meetings with congressional aides to discuss the importance of funding active transportation projects. One former DOT employee who spoke to Grist said the scale of Safe Streets and Roads for All means there will be widespread impacts. “Safety is a bipartisan issue. You see Republican and Democratic representatives and senators touting the announcement whenever they’re awarded,” he said. “I think people just think, ‘Oh, this probably just hurts the coasts and the big cities,’ but there’s definitely rural areas that were trying to improve safety.”

It takes a lot of work for communities to get a federal grant, he said, often alongside finding matching funds. Whitaker agreed. “It puts local governments in a tough position,” she said. Because the Safe Streets program funding was congressionally allocated, explicitly including “bicyclists,” Duffy’s move to cut programs “whose primary purpose is bicycling” may not even be legal. Last week, a coalition of nonprofits and cities sued to reverse the federal freeze on grants, including the March DOT memo. “Since our nation’s founding, the Constitution has made it clear,” wrote the Southern Environmental Law Center, which is litigating the case, that “Congress controls federal spending—not the president.”

These efforts may limit transportation research nationwide. The DOT funds research and technical assistance projects through the National Cooperative Highway Research Program, or NCHRP, which is also subject to review. “If the policy memo is applied broadly to NCHRP, there could be a significant loss in current and future funding,” said Jennifer Dill, director of the Transportation Research and Education Center. “Without more research about countermeasures and solutions to fatalities, it will be hard to reverse that trend.” She worries Duffy’s recent actions will limit states’ ability to effectively use federal money for local priorities.

At headquarters, morale among many of those remaining at the DOT is at new lows. At first, the DOT project manager who spoke to Grist hoped to come up with ways to rephrase grants to avoid triggering words like “equity” and “climate.” But the new restrictions have escalated into an unprecedented level of scrutiny, with the political appointees reviewing every contract.

“It’s gone beyond just switching words to get through the censor,” he said. “It’s not only making people afraid to carry on with good work that was underway, but has a chilling effect on everything we do going forward.”

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Eric Adams Isn’t Corrupt?

After all the public groveling and taxpayer-funded trips to Mar-a-Lago, New York City Mayor Eric Adams appears to have successfully prostrated himself to freedom. A federal judge on Wednesday permanently dismissed the wide-ranging corruption chargesbrought against him.

“We can never allow this to happen to another innocent American,” Adams said shortly after the dismissal was announced, holding a copy of FBI director Kash Patel’s Government Gangsters. “I’m going to encourage every New Yorker to read it,” he added, referring to the conspiracy-addled book.

The remarks, though brief, succinctly captured the presence of a public figure historically incapable of remorse, something of a feat in an era of Trumpian shamelessness. Because one would think that the recipient of such enormous good luck—I mean, what else can we call this outcome?—against the backdrop of egregious levels of government corruption, would force some modesty out of a person even as brazen as Adams. But as the allegations against Adams fully demonstrated, acting in ill-advised ways is simply how he operates.

As my colleague Anna Merlan wrote, the alleged crimes that got him in trouble with the feds in the first place, which ranged from bribery to wire fraud, were grim. But they were also unquestionably comical, carried out with the clowning of a bad slapstick comedy. There was the alleged insistence on putting everything in writing; accepting piles of cash with zero regard for discretion; requiring Turkish Air for travel (the first stop is always Istanbul).

At first blush, the scandal seemed to instantly decimate Adams’ political future. His favorability among New York City residents plummeted and potential jail time was a genuine possibility. But two months after the charges were unsealed, Adams received the ultimate good fortune in PresidentDonald Trump’s victory, kicking off months of ingratiating behavior by Adams. This extended into policy: the selling out of New York City’s long-held status as a sanctuary city and greenlighting Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s return to Rikers. Adams also refused to condemn the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia student who was detained last month over his pro-Palestinian views despite holding a green card.

All the fawning has now landed Adams not just one, but two clear victories: the end of the federal investigation into his alleged corruption, and, perhaps more importantly, protection from the administration should it seek to refile.

In other words, Adams got away with it—handsomely. But in promoting the book of a conspiratorial MAGA head on Wednesday, Adams appeared to signal that he remained willing to go out of his way to boost MAGA’s agenda, even if now technically scot-free.

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New Lawsuit Challenges the Trump Administration’s Devastating Research Cancellations

In 2024, Brittany Charlton achieved what she now calls “one of [her] main career aspirations”: the launch of a research center at Harvard University’s medical school focused on LGBTQ health.

Opening the LGBTQ Health Center of Excellence hadbeen a goalfor Charlton, an associate professor of epidemiology at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, ever since she first stepped onto the Cambridge, Massachusetts campus as a graduate student more than a decade ago. Those aspirations, according to Charlton, required a herculean, years-long campaign to convince the school that such an effort would be worth it.“It took so much advocacy to be able to help the university, and the general public, understand that LGBTQ health and health inequities are a legitimate field of inquiry, that it’s worthwhile, and that it’s fundable,” she told me by phone on Wednesday.

But within the past two months, all that work has been undone. After President Donald Trump’s executive orders seeking to purge diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and transgender people from public life, Charlton was one of the many researchers whose National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants were abruptly canceled. Theorders, which she says affected approximately $6 million worth of her grants, forced her to abandon five projects, including one on how anti-LGBTQ legislation such as “Don’t Say Gay” laws, affect the mental health of young people who identified as LGBTQ,and another on the reproductive health of LGBTQ women. The lost funds have also forced Charlton to close the LGBTQ Health Center of Excellence at Harvard, which relied almost entirely on NIH funding—a reality she calls “devastating.”

But Charlton and other researchers are nowfighting back as plaintiffs in a new lawsuit, filed in Massachusetts federal court on Wednesday, alleging that NIH’s sweeping cancellations of billions of dollars worth of research and training grants focused on diversifying science were politically motivated and illegal. The complaint—which names the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. as defendants, along with the NIH’snewly sworn-in Director Jay Bhattacharya—allegedthat the cancellations of these grants violate multiple federal laws that regulate agencies’ actions and mandate that the NIH fund research addressing health disparities.

One of those laws isthe Administrative Procedure Act, which says that agencies cannot act arbitrarily or capriciously. The plaintiffs allege the HHS and NIH violated that law by terminating grants with no valid explanation. Indeed, many of the cancellations—which affected hundreds of projects focused on trans people and race and DEI, according to a public database maintained by some researchers—seem to be a product of a fishing expedition aimed at carrying out Trump’s orders to purge the government of DEI and recognition of trans people. Two of Charlton’s grant termination letters from the NIH, for example, state that “this award no longer effectuates agency priorities”—but do not state what the agency’s new priorities actually are. (Kennedy has claimed the HHS will tackle chronic diseases, safer foods and water, and environmental toxins, but staffers have said that the department has already long prioritized those issues—and they don’t know how they’ll continue to with the agency losing nearly 25 percent its workforce, including through Tuesday’s massive purge.)

The termination notices Charlton received appear to say the quiet part out loud about why the grants are actually being pulled. One of them—focused on LGBTQ women’s reproductive health—seems to reflect Trump’s attacks on DEI: “Research programs based primarily on artificial and non-scientific categories, including amorphous equity objectives, are antithetical to the scientific inquiry, do nothing to expand our knowledge of living systems, provide low returns on investment, and ultimately do not enhance health, lengthen life, or reduce illness. Worse, so-called DEI studies are often used to support unlawful discrimination on the basis of race and other protected characteristics, which harms the health of Americans.” The other termination notice—focused on LGBTQ young people—takes more direct aim at trans people: “Research programs based on gender identity are often unscientific, have little identifiable return on investment, and do nothing to enhance the health of many Americans. Many such studies ignore, rather than seriously examine, biological realities.”

The complaint also alleges the grant cancellations violate the NIH’s own Grants Policy Statement, which says grants can be pulled “if a recipient has failed to comply with the terms and conditions of the award.” It charges that, in targeting research affecting health disparities affecting minority populations and grants aimed at supporting diversifying the scientific workforce, the NIH also usurped the mandate that Congress gave the NIH decades ago to do exactly that. “To exclude from consideration in human medicine the health outcome disparities between one ethnicity or the other, or one sexual orientation or the other, is to strike at the heart of the scientific enterprise,” said Dr. Peter G. Lurie, president of the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest, who is also a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

The complaint also contains the accounts of several early-career researchers who lost funding and other research fellowships dedicated to supporting people from underrepresented backgrounds to pursue careers in science—another one-time priority the NIH is now dismantling.

The case is being argued by lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Protect Democracy Project, and the Center for Science in the Public Interest. Charlton and the other plaintiffs—including researchers at the University of Michigan, University of New Mexico, and the American Public Health Association, which represents more than 20,000 public health professionals—are asking the court to declare the grant cancellations unconstitutional, forcing the NIH to restore terminated awards, and prevent the agency from canceling. more awards in the future. Spokespeople for HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit from Mother Jones.

Some of the court challenges to Trump’s power trip since returning to office have, indeed, helped stop or reverse some of the most sweeping changes he has tried to enact, such as his attempts to overturn birthright citizenship and fire thousands of probationary federal workers. Charlton is hopeful that this one, too, could also make a difference. “I think we have to trust the courts to uphold the rule of law,” she said. “They’re necessary to safeguard open inquiry and scientific progress.”

But in the meantime, with her LGBTQ Health Center at Harvard shuttering and projects being abandoned, Charlton says she expects LGBTQ people will directly suffer the consequences. The termination of these grants,” she said, “absolutely poses a threat to LGBTQ communities.”

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Trump Is Ramping Up His Lawfare Against Kids at the Border

Last Friday, the Trump administration canceled a contract that funded legal representation for about 26,000 unaccompanied minors who had crossed into the United States. In a memo sent by the Interior Department, dozens of non-profits were told to cease their legal representation work under the contract with the Department of Health and Human Services(HHS), and that they would no longer be receiving the more than $200 million they were relying on to continue providing lawyers to minors for the next year. This move came a little over a month after the administration issued a “stop-work order” on February 18 for these same services before quickly rescinding it amid backlash. It also comes as the administration ramps up its efforts to target unaccompanied youth for deportations.

Gerson, who askedthat his last name be withheld, is one of tens of thousands of minors who had to navigate this complex immigration system. He fled gang violence in El Salvador when he was 16 years old, making the almost month-long journey and arriving at a port of entry in California in 2017.

Gerson was shocked when Border Patrol agents put him in handcuffs: “I remember being a 16-year-old, about to cross the border, the port of entry, and as I made my way through, it seemed like there was something wrong with my papers, and right away I was handcuffed.” He remembers immigration officials initially being suspicious of his age, despite providing evidence. “I was asked if I was part of a gang, I was asked to show them the tattoos, if I had any.” (To this day, he says, he has none.)

“You’ll see massive layoffs, closures of nonprofits, closures of programs… we’re talking a complete systematic collapse.”

He describes cramped conditions in a detention center with people who had also made grueling journeys, and says it was difficult to communicate with immigration officials because he didn’t speak English at the time: “I didn’t even know how to let the officers know that I had a headache or I had [the] flu. I was sleeping right next to a toilet.” After a day in the detention facility, Gerson was moved to a shelter for unaccompanied minors in Southern California.

Shortly after arriving at the shelter, Gerson was part of a group of minors who participated in a “know your rights” presentation put on by that nonprofit legal aid organization. The organization provided him with information about the types of relief he could pursue, including retaining an attorney to handle his case. That basic training is still available to unaccompanied minors, but the direct legal representation Gerson received afterwards is no longer going to be funded by the government—meaning it won’t be available to nearly as many minors.

Gerson describes his time as a teenager in the shelter as extremely stressful: “It was a terrible time. It’s a time [of] a lot of uncertainties.” He says he had a hard time sleeping and began to lose hope, especially after seeing a roommate get transferred to an adult facility after turning 18. After weeks in the shelter, Gerson says, he considered giving up and just accepting deportation—but the same legal support that the president has now gutted for tens of thousands of others helped him keep going.

He says his successful asylum application and subsequent permanent residency would have been far less likely without the support of one of the immigration nonprofits affected by the government’s attack on those services.

Michael Lukens is the executive director of the Amica Center for Immigrant Rights, one of the nonprofits that was part of the contract cut by the government last Friday. He says that while non-profits will still try their best to support unaccompanied minors with the small amount of funding they get from donations, it won’t be nearly enough to fill in the gap. “You’ll see massive layoffs, closures of nonprofits, closures of programs,” Lukens says, “so we’re talking a complete systematic collapse.”

As reported on Friday by NBC News, many organizations across the country have already been forced to start the process of laying people off. Several filed a lawsuit last week against the Department of Health and Human Services to restore the funding.

In the lawsuit, the organizations argue that the bipartisan William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 mandates that if HHS has “funding they can spend to provide counsel for unaccompanied children, they must spend that funding to provide such counsel.” They also point to the HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement’s Foundational Rule issued in 2024 that says, “ORR shall fund legal service providers to provide direct immigration legal representation for certain unaccompanied children, subject to ORR’s discretion and available appropriations.”A judge in California granted the non-profits a temporary restraining order on April 1,which should restore the funding for legal representation for unaccompanied minors until at least April 16th—if the government complies—while the case makes its way through the court.

A spokesperson for the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services, told City Limits that the Office of Refugee Resettlement “continues to meet the legal obligations” established by the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act. When I reached out to HHS to ask about the lawsuit, they told me they do not comment on ongoing litigation.

“Expecting children to face this system alone…strips them of due process and their fundamental human rights.”

Emily Kyle, supervising attorney at the Central American Resource Center of Los Angeles, said in a statement that cutting off legal services for children constitutes “a cruel and unacceptable violation of basic due process that goes against our nation’s core values.” Anna Gallagher, executive director of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, echoed the same sentiments in another statement, calling the cuts “a cruel and unjust decision that puts the lives of vulnerable children at risk,” and adding, “Many of these children have fled violence, trafficking, and persecution, only to face an immigration system that is complex and unforgiving. Expecting children to face this system alone, if they cannot afford private counsel, strips them of due process and their fundamental human rights.”

After a month and a half in the shelter, Gerson moved in with familyand continued fighting his asylum case with the support of the nonprofit organization. About two years later, he was granted asylum and eventually received a green card. He describes the administration’s recent actions against minors—ones going through exactly what he went through in 2017—as heartbreaking. “Targeting children that can’t even understand what’s going on in the outside world, it’s a disgrace…[they are] cutting their wings, cutting their possibilities to get relief.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

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Elon Musk Can’t Take the Heat

Elon Musk has a simple diagnosis of what’s ailing America: It’s being destroyed by empathy. In a long interview with Joe Rogan, in numerous tweets, and possibly even in his sleep, Musk has argued that “empathy” is a “suicidal” trait that is a driving force behind civilizational extinction. It is time, he believes, for “the West” to get tough and make hard choices—to bar its doors to immigrants of a certain type and endure “temporary hardship” so that government can be transformed and “the woke mind virus will die.”

As the de facto head of the Department of Governmental Efficiency, Musk has deployed this brand of tactical callousness to maximal effect. He has boasted about throwing the United States Agency for International Development into a “woodchipper” and stumbled around the stage at CPAC with a chainsaw. He has presided over the dismantling of the administrative state and the harassment and mass-termination of federal workers—all while flaunting his lack of concern for the lives he has upended. Fired government employees, he announced last Thursday, with the laughing/crying emoji that’s become his calling card, will now have to “get a real job.”

Suggesting that George Soros and the founder of LinkedIn should be arrested after an old lady shouted at a car is one of the softest moments in recent American history. This is not the gesture of a man who is impervious to protests. It is the response of an oligarch who is being driven visibly insane by them.

This kind of depravity is a prerequisite for Musk’s new line of work. Dancing on the graves of lifesaving programs for kids is not something you can easily do with a conscience. But there is one set of feelings Musk is uniquely attuned to: his own. On Friday, the same day foreign service officers around the world received notices from a DOGE flunky alerting them that they would soon be out of a job, Musk—sans sunglasses—sat down with Fox News’ Brett Baier to ask for a little sympathy.

“I mean, you have Tim Walz, who is a huge jerk, running on stage with the Tesla stock price, where the stock price has gone in half—and he is overjoyed,” he said. “What an evil thing to do. What a creep, what a jerk. Like, who derives joy from that?”

I want to state this as clearly as I can: Nearly choking up on national TV as you lament your falling stock price is weak shit. And it gets to the core of how Musk operates. In a particularly get-over-yourselves moment in January, Axios described Musk and Trump’s governing style as “masculine maximalism,” embodied by “tough-guy language, macho actions…and often unmoved by emotionalism, empathy or restraint.” But back on Earth, the Tesla boss can be better understood in schoolyard terms. He can dish it but he can’t take it. Far from a projection of strength, Musk’s boastful and threatening public comments show a thin-skinned man who behaves erratically in the face of adversity—a snowflake, to use the preferred nomenclature, who melts down when he begins to feel the heat.

And he is definitely melting down. Just look at some of his other responses to the growing anti-Tesla protests, which have coincided with a sharp decline in vehicle deliveries. On Friday, in the same interview in which he complained about his stock price, Musk promised Baier that the government would attempt to rein in the protests of his car company by “going after” Tesla critics.

“What’s happening it seems to me is they’re being fed propaganda by the far left, and they believe it,” he said. “It’s really unfortunate. The real problem is not—are not the people, it’s not the crazy guy that firebombs the Tesla dealership, it’s the people pushing the propaganda that caused that guy to do it. Those are the real villains here. And we’re gonna go after them. And the president’s made it clear: We’re gonna go after them. The ones providing the money, the ones pushing the lies and propaganda, we’re going after them.”

It’s not really clear what lies are being pushed about Tesla. He does own it, right? But Musk has not responded with the vaunted “masculine maximalism.” He is just sort of waving his arms hysterically, like an emperor beckoning for the guards because his chicken is overdone, while pushing a theory that Democratic mega-donors including Reid Hoffman and George Soros are secretly responsible for funding “the organizations attacking me.” (Hoffman, the more outspoken of the two, has denied funding protestors, and told Musk on Twitter that he would “rather make shit up about me than fix your problems.”) A few days later, after the verified X account “Tesla King” posted a video from a protest in which a woman waved a middle finger at a Cybertruck driver outside a Tesla dealership, Musk shared the footage with a call to action.

“It is time to arrest those funding the attacks,” he wrote, conflating arson at Tesla dealerships with the constitutional right to flip the bird. “Arresting their puppets and paid foot-soldiers won’t stop the violence.”

This is a bit authoritarian, yes, but just as importantly it is pathetic. Suggesting that George Soros and the founder of LinkedIn should be arrested after an old lady shouted at a car is one of the softest moments in recent American history. This is not the gesture of a man who is impervious to protests. It is the response of an oligarch who is being driven visibly insane by them.

For Democrats, Musk’s spiraling is an asset. He is both deeply unpopular and out of control; his response to opposition is to descend deeper into the paranoia that got him there. In Wisconsin, he responded to accusations that he was attempting to buy a state supreme court race by offering seven-figure checks to voters; accusing Soros of planting protestors at his events; and rambling on stage about ending the Federal Reserve. The race, he promised last week, in words that have never before been uttered about a state supreme court race, would “affect the entire destiny of humanity.” Musk made the election a referendum on himself, turnout surged, and the Democrat won in a landslide.

To some extent Musk has always been like this—impetuously lashing out under pressure. He declared that X users who shared the published names of DOGE employees had “committed a crime.” People who publish critical stories find themselves suspended from his platform. He told advertisers who were abandoning X to “go fuck yourself.” He called a British man as “pedo guy” after upstaging Musk during the 2018 Thai cave rescue.

Musk cannot take the heat. He has not just the taste and sensibilities of a boy, but the temperament of one. He throws a fit out when things don’t go his way. He wilts. This is someone who can be beat. In another context you might call this terminal inability to take a punch a “glass jaw.” The term “keyboard warrior” comes to mind. But I can think of another word for something that’s so ostentatious and in-your-face except for when it needs to be—a symbol of decadence and insecurity and deregulation that boasts bulletproof toughness, but which breaks into pieces at the first sign of stress.

Elon’s not unstoppable, Wisconsin voters showed on Tuesday. When the rubber hits the road, he’s nothing but a Cybertruck.

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Mother Jones

She Launched “The Daily Show.” Now She’s Fighting Red State Abortion Bans.

For abortion rights advocate Lizz Winstead, her work has never felt more urgent. But her path to advocacy was a curvy one. She started out as a comedian, first as a stand-up and eventually as the co-creator of The Daily Show, which redefined television by deftly combining comedy and politics.

“I kept getting increasingly unnerved and also frustrated that I was just shelling people with information, even though it was funny, and not giving them a way to fight back,” Winstead says.

Today, Winstead produces the Feminist Buzzkills podcast and is founder of Abortion Access Front. Again, she’s weaving together politics and comedy to educate people about abortion laws and provide resources on independent abortion providers. But this time, she’s also giving them the tools to fight.

“I wanted to combine the effectiveness of using humor to expose hypocrisy and bad actors and then combine that with a call to action,” Winstead says.

Find More To The Story on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Pandora, or your favorite podcast app.

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