Mother Jones: Posts

Mother Jones

The Supreme Court Is About to Let Religion Ruin Public Education

In modern America, religious education is offered in private schools or in a homeschooling setting. Public education, by contrast, is secular, because the government is not in the business of sponsoring religious indoctrination. But in two cases the Supreme Court heard over roughly the last week, the justicesappear ready to throw out public education as we know it and usher in a new era where tax dollars flow to religious schools and religion can dictate what is taught in public classrooms. When the decisions come down, public education may change forever.

“This is taxpayer-funded, state-sponsored religious indoctrination. You’ve just got to call it what it is.”

On Tuesday, the justices heard arguments in Oklahoma Statewide Charter School Board v. Drummond, a case over whether Oklahoma must fund a religious charter school that carries out religious instruction and hosts religious activities, including mass. Rather than consider this an affront to the separation of church and state, four Republican-appointed justices appeared outraged at the idea that a state would fund a charter school focused on language immersion or the arts but not one focused on religious instruction. Without ever acknowledging that the the First Amendment’s establishment clause (“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion”) prohibits government-sponsored religion, several expressed palpable anger that allowing only secular charter schools was a form of anti-religious discrimination.

“All the religious school is saying is ‘Don’t exclude us on account of our religion,’” Justice Brett Kavanaugh said. “If you go and apply to be a charter school and you’re an environmental studies school, or you’re a science-based school, or you’re a Chinese immersion school, or you’re a English grammar-focused school, you can get in. And then you come in and you say, ‘Oh, we’re a religious school.’ It’s like, ‘Oh, no, can’t do that, that’s too much.’ That’s scary.” He continued: “You can’t treat religious people and religious institutions and religious speech as second-class in the United States… And when you have a program that’s open to all comers except religion… that seems like rank discrimination against religion.”

The case comes out of Oklahoma, where state law mandates public charter schools be secular. Nevertheless, the Catholic archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the diocese of Tulsa soughtto create the country’s first religious charter school. Called St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School, it would be an online school that would infuse Catholic teaching in its curriculum and require students to attend religious programming. The Oklahoma Statewide Virtual School Board granted the charter, but Oklahoma’s Republican attorney general, Gentner Drummond, asked the Oklahoma Supreme Court to order the board to reverse course. “This is not [about] free exercise of religion,” Drummond has said. “This is taxpayer-funded, state-sponsored religious indoctrination. That’s what this is. You’ve just got to call it what it is.”

The Oklahoma Supreme Court agreed that the charter was illegal because Oklahoma law requires public charter schools be secular. So the board and St. Isidore appealed to the US Supreme Court. Justice Amy Coney Barrett recused herself because she is friends with a law professor who advised the school. The result at Wednesday’s oral argument was four GOP-appointees who appeared ready to usher in a new era of religious public schools, and three Democratic-appointees who opposed such a move. Chief Justice John Roberts was the only Republican appointee who did not tip his hand, though his questions showed he was skeptical of the argument against religious charter schools.

The arguments technicallycentered on whether public charter schools are indeed public schools or private entities. If they are public, as Oklahoma law defines them, then the guarantee against the establishment of religion is a stronger argument. But if the schools are actually private, as St. Isidore’s insists—along with the charter board and the Trump administration—then it is harder to argue that private religious entities should not be entitled to the same charter contracts as any other organization. Whether they are public or private, however, the bottom line is that charter schools are taxpayer funded, which means the argument is more broadly over public funding of religious education and whether to integrate religious instruction into state education offerings.

“Once you… approve one religion, not another religion, or this religion, there’s going to be strife.”

Justices Kavanaugh and Samuel Alito were the most vociferous defenders of the Catholic charter school, repeatedly suggesting that the only reason one might deny a religious institution tax funding to run a school is anti-religious bigotry. Alito went so far as to suggest that the Oklahoma constitution’s requirement to provide a secular public education was based on anti-Catholic animus. “This whole position that you’re defending seems to be motivated by hostility toward particular religions,” Alito said to Gregory Garre, a former US solicitor general representing Drummond.

Garre pushed back. “I don’t think that the court could treat any prohibition on funding that’s similar as simply motivated by bigotry,” Garre said. “If you did, then I think, frankly, the establishment clause jurisprudence with respect to public schools would come tumbling down.”

Listening to arguments, it seems possible that’s what Alito and some of his colleagues want. In recent years, the court’s GOP majority has increasingly removed the bricks separating church and state, including in the realm of schools. While the Constitution’s establishment clause used to protect separation, conservative justices seem to have decided that the free exercise clause mandates the state can do nothing to maintain it—freedom of religion is increasingly the freedom to bring religion into every corner of American life, including public education.

Alito also suggested that Drummond was motivated by bias against non-Christian religions because of comments in which he suggested Oklahomans might approve of Christian charters, but not charters by religions that the majority views with suspicion. Garre defended his client as simply stating the political reality of state-sponsored religious instruction: “Once you open up government programs and bring people in to becoming part of the government, and approve one religion, not another religion, or this religion, there’s going to be strife that comes from that,” he said. “It’s, frankly, one of the reasons why we have a religion clause in the Constitution to begin with.”

Kavanuagh pounced on Garre’s suggestion that the government picking and choosing which religions got public charter schools could create “strife.”

“It seems like strife could also come when people who are religious feel like they’re being excluded because they’re religious,” he told Garre. “I think you’re missing a portion of the country when you say strife would not result from that kind of outcome.”

As Kavanuagh’s comment demonstrated, the Republican-appointed justices seemed to feel that in America today, it is religious people who are the victims of discrimination and whose needs are ignored.

The Democratic appointees approached the case very differently. They seemed to squarely see public charter schools as public schools and that Oklahoma had the right to decide that its public schools should be nonreligious. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson analogized the situation to a local government that solicits contracts to paint landscape murals on public buildings. If a religious painter proposed a mural full of religious symbols, Jackson queried, would it be a violation of his religious rights for the government to deny him a contract? “Would that person say ‘You are rejecting me as a painter because of my religion’… when, really, what the state is doing is saying ‘We are offering a particular public benefit and the particular benefit is a nonsectarian mural, a secular mural, and to the extent that you’re not wanting that, we’re rejecting your proposal?’”

The court is poised to deliver a one-two punch that profoundly changes public education.

Justice Elena Kagan stressed that in keeping with their faith, religious charter schools might not just teach religious beliefs as fact but also seek to upend state-mandated curriculums and nondiscrimination requirements. Today, St. Isidore’s might promise to teach the content required by Oklahoma law. But why couldn’t a Hasidic community in New York get the state to pay for a yeshiva that teaches only religious texts in Yiddish, Hebrew, and Aramaic? The attorney for St. Isidore’s couldn’t deny the possibility.

Kagan later asked Garre to share what he predicts would happen if the Supreme Court found that states must allow religious charter schools—essentially ushering in an era of public religious schools.

“First, every charter school law and the federal charter school program is unconstitutional, because they all require that charter schools be public schools and that they be nonsectarian. So we’re dealing with the confusion and uncertainty that’s created by that to begin with.” From there, Garre predicted some states might end charter programs altogether, disrupting education, while others would push forward and accommodate religious charters. He foresaw fights over whether federal law mandating education for disabled kids wouldapply to charters deemed to be private. Every aspect of this new education regime would go through the Supreme Court. He predicted litigation over which students can attend, who can teach (“can you have a gay teacher?”), and finally, over the curriculum itself. Questions over what can be taught will be mediated not through the local democratic process but through nine Supreme Court justices.

This case alonewill be a bombshell if the court mandates that states begin funding religious schools through their charter school programs. But this term, the Supreme Court is poised to deliver a one-two punch. Last week, the court heard arguments in Mahmoud v. Taylor, in which it considered whether religious parents could opt their kids out of lessons that did not conform with their beliefs. Again, the GOP-appointed majority appeared ready to side with the plaintiffsand allow religious parents to pull kids from the classroom when material they object to is taught—a policy that threatens to create a backdoor through which religious parents have veto power over elements of the curriculum and classroom discussion.

In any school that cannot accommodate children leaving the classroom and being provided alternate materials, the religious preferences of a minority seem destined to dictate the curriculum for all. The likely result is the wide elimination of LGBTQ content. Teachers may fear answering a question about a gay politician, for example, or even displaying a picture of their same-sex partner on their desk.

If the justices decide in the next few months to allow religious opt-outs in public schools and the creation of religious charter schools, it’s hard to see how public education will not change profoundly. In many districts, together the decisions would likely meanthe only publicly-funded school options would be either explicitly religious or circumscribed by the religious preferences of certain parents.

President Donald Trump, whose administration has argued for the religious interests in both cases, has ordered the shuttering of the Department of Education and threatened to withhold funding to schools that engage in diversity, equity, and inclusion programming. But the president’s ability to direct public school curriculums is limited, because public education is primarily controlled at the state and local level.

The Supreme Court, on the other hand, can dramatically reshape public education, reaching across geographic boundaries to make decisions for individual districts and schools. When it comes to the religious right’s agenda of returning religion to public classrooms, it’s not the administration that is to be feared the most, but the Supreme Court.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Mark Carney, Canada’s Newly Elected PM, Has a Very Squishy Climate Plan

This story was originally published by Canada’s National Observer a_nd is reproduced here as part of the_ Climate Desk collaboration.

Liberal Leader Mark Carney’s plan to address climate change is something of a Rorschach test, with the platform laying out a vision that can be interpreted in contradictory ways.

The platform includes commitments to advance major “nation-building” projects like high speed rail, an east-west power grid, producing hydrogen in Edmonton, and prioritizing clean and Canadian procurement for these projects. Liberals are also pitching investments in EV charging networks, issuing “transition bonds” to attract more finance to the energy transition, prefabricated and modular housing to curb construction emissions, and strengthening the industrial carbon price.

But the platform also leaves lots of room for interpretation about the role of fossil fuels in the Canadian economy.

Even though much of the platform describes modernizing the economy and reducing emissions, there is reason to be concerned that oil and gas could feature heavily in a Carney government because of his commitment to Canada becoming an energy superpower for both clean and conventional energy, says Keith Stewart, senior strategist with Greenpeace Canada.

A commitment to cap oil and gas emissions is notably absent from the platform—despite being a signature climate policy from the Trudeau era that has slowly worked through government bureaucracy for four years and is still not yet finalized.

“We’ve heard Carney waffle away from it and then waffle back towards it, and what I am expecting is some kind of emissions cap but with more flexibility mechanisms, which would basically weaken the cap,” Stewart said. “But the fact that it’s not in the platform is concerning.”

The exposure of Canada’s financial sector to fossil fuels “is equivalent to the amount of subprime mortgages that triggered the crisis 12 or 14 years ago.”

Stewart suspects its omission may be a strategy to avoid giving the Conservatives ammunition; the party has accused Carney of being “sneaky” in eliminating the consumer carbon tax while leaving plans in place to cap emissions and maintain the industrial pricing system.

“Is that them trying to not give Conservatives anything to latch onto as they just want to cruise to victory and then they’ll do what they’re going to do? Because they also don’t say they’re not going to do it.”

Asked to clarify whether the Liberal Party is still committed to the policy, a spokesperson for Carney pointed to comments the leader made in early April—in which the leader did not confirm he will proceed with the cap.

“My government is focused on results, and the results of the current consultation on the emissions cap will reflect the importance of efficiently and fairly achieving these objectives,” Carney said on April 9. “My government will work closely with our oil and gas industry to reduce their emissions over time, so that Canadian conventional energy will supply the world for decades to come.”

The spokesperson said Carney is still committed to the cap, but it was left out of the platform because it was a promise made by the previous government. However, a number of policies announced under Justin Trudeau are included in Carney’s platform, such as continuing investment tax credits for clean electricity, clean hydrogen, electric vehicle supply chains and carbon capture, utilization and storage, as well a commitment to finalizing sustainable investment guidelines that had previously been included in Chrystia Freeland’s mandate letter as finance minister.

Laura Tozer, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto specializing in climate politics, energy transition and decarbonization, told Canada’s National Observer she doesn’t want to see backsliding on emission-reduction policies and so it would’ve been good to see a commitment to strengthening the emissions cap in the platform.

“But I also don’t want to put too much pressure on one thing as the thing that’s going to deliver the wind-down of the fossil fuel industry,” she said. By putting too much emphasis on a single policy, it can distract from the suite of measures that are required to transition the country’s economy in a climate safe manner.

Tozer said the Liberal platform contains many good things for climate, specifically referring to electric vehicle support, power grid modernization, investments in rural transit and phasing out fossil fuel use from federal buildings. The fact that climate policies were not siloed in a climate section of the platform, but rather infused across policy areas, she says, indicates Carney’s Liberals see climate concerns as something to integrate across government efforts. But there was an opportunity to put forward a more credible plan too.

“The Liberal platform in some ways shows some missed opportunities to advance this vision of how climate action can bring economic development and affordability for Canadians because it…is mired in propping up dying fossil fuel industries,” she said.

Carney’s Liberal Party hasn’t yet said which energy projects they will prioritize. “Have they not decided yet…or is it they’re just not telling us?”

For Tozer, Carney’s pitch to make Canada an energy superpower in both clean and fossil fuels is a major concern because climate science is clear that to avoid catastrophic warming a managed decline of the fossil fuel industry is required.

For that reason, the big missed opportunity for Carney was to redefine what being an “energy superpower” means in 2025, Tozer said.

“What an energy superpower should mean for Canada in this day and age is support for renewable energy expansion, remaking our communities in ways that are sustainable and a managed decline of the fossil fuel industries that are introducing all of this risk into our economy,” she said.

The risk to the Canadian economy by staying in the oil and gas business is severe because as demand for oil and gas drops as forecasted, the very expensive infrastructure will become stranded, meaning investors won’t recoup costs. That risk is especially acute for Canadian financial institutions.

At a Senate banking committee meeting in May, Brussels-based Finance Watch chief economist Thierry Philipponnat compared the fossil fuel risk to the 2008 housing crisis, calling it imperative that Canada start seriously tackling fossil fuel risks to the financial sector.

“If we don’t, it’s certain that, in human terms, we’ll have a new financial crisis on top of the climate crisis,” he said. “Exposure to fossil fuels is equivalent to the amount of subprime mortgages that triggered the crisis 12 or 14 years ago.”

Previously, Carney has said he does not support legislation like the Climate Aligned Finance Act that would require federally regulated financial institutions, such as banks and pension funds, to align their portfolios with Canada’s emission reduction targets. Carney told a Senate committee last year he disagrees with the bill because it “dictates” how banks should adjust their practices with “punitive” rules.

Stewartcalled the platform a document designed to be open to interpretation, particularly when it comes to building major national projects without detailing what those are.

All major parties are leaning into nation-building projects as a way to strengthen the Canadian economy in the face of economic aggression from US President Donald Trump.

Carney’s top rival, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, outlined in early April 10 projects he would rapidly approve, including LNG Canada Phase 2, Suncor’s proposed bitumen mine expansion and an all-season road to access critical minerals in northern Ontario’s Ring of Fire. (LNG Canada Phase 2 is waiting on a decision from its owner Shell, not the federal government, to proceed.)

Carney hasn’t outlined which projects he is focused on, Stewart said.

“So it’s a question of have they not decided yet?” he said. “Or is it they’re just not telling us so that they can allow everyone to see what they want to see?”

At last week’s debate, Carney endorsed the Pathways Alliance’s carbon capture megaproject as something his government would advance if elected.

​​“One of the big projects we need to move forward with is carbon capture and storage—the Pathways project—so that we have oil and gas that is competitive not just today, but 10 years from now, 20 years from now,” he said. “As the world uses less, we want to have more market share.”

To achieve that, the Liberal platform proposes extending tax credits for carbon capture investments, using “carbon contracts for difference” to guarantee a price on carbon to derisk emission reduction investments and for Canada to be “a world leader in responsible energy production” by using carbon capture, utilization and storage technology.

With less than a week until voters head to the polls and the leaders’ debates in the rearview mirror, platforms are one of the last opportunities federal parties have to earn support from the public.

An Angus Reid poll published Monday found little is budging voters. Carney’s Liberals maintain about the same lead over Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives they enjoyed at the start of the campaign—at 44 per cent to 39 per cent.

Nationally, support for the NDP, Bloc, and Greens have similarly held steady.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Mohsen Mahdawi Has Been Released from Federal Custody

Mohsen Mahdawi, the Palestinianstudent at Columbia University who was arrested on April 14 at his naturalization interview in Vermont, was released on bail from federal custody on Wednesday. He is the first student to be released in the Trump administration’s widening crackdown on foreign students and academics who have been involved in Palestine advocacy while legally studying in the United States.

Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident, has lived in the US on a green card for ten years. He is now free on bail pending the result of his habeas petition.

Ruling from the bench, Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford found that Mahdawi, 34, did not pose a danger to the public and was not a flight risk. This was “not our proudest moment,” Crawford reportedly told the courtroom, comparing recent detentions of immigrants and student activists to McCarthyism.

Since the election of PresidentDonald Trump, immigrant academics across the country have been targeted for detainment and deportation, particularly those who are Palestinian or have spoken up for Palestinian rights.The government’s various justifications for these apprehensions, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s claim that Mahdawi’s presence in the US undermines the administration’s efforts to “combat antisemitism” and “the peace process” in the Middle East have prompted widespread alarm among civil rights advocates and immigration experts who warn that the apprehensions are illegal.

Though Mahdawi’s release marks a rare victory for opponents of the Trump administration’s crackdown on protesters, students like Mahdawi’s Columbia classmate Mahmoud Khalil, Rumeysa Ozturk of Tufts University, and Badar Khan Suri of Georgetown are still being detained on similar grounds.

As Mahdawi exited the court on Wednesday, he flashed a peace sign to supporters awaiting him with Palestinian flags. “To my people in Palestine: I feel your pain, I see your suffering; and I see freedom and it is very, very soon.”

He also addressed the president directly.

“I am saying it clear and loud. To President Trump and his cabinet: I am not afraid of you.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

How Public Schools Became Ground Zero for America’s Culture Wars

Mike Hixenbaugh first knew things had changed when someone on a four-wheeler started ripping up his lawn after his wife placed a Black Lives Matter sign outside their home on the suburban outskirts of Houston.

Hixenbaugh is an award-winning investigative reporter for NBC News. He’s covered wrongdoing within the child welfare system, safety lapses inside hospitals, and deadly failures in the US Navy. But when his front yard was torn apart in the summer of 2020 in the wake of the George Floyd protests, he saw a story about race and politics collide at his own front door. “They’re targeting us,” Hixenbaugh recalls. “My wife, my kids, me—and it’s about race.”

So like any investigative journalist, he started investigating and soon discovered that “the ugliness of our national politics was really playing out at the most visceral level in these suburbs.”

Hixenbaugh’s reporting about the growing divides in his neighborhood soon led him to the public schools, specifically those in Southlake, Texas, a suburb of Dallas where parents were engaged in heated, emotional battles over race, gender, DEI programs, and the role of public education in the US.

As more than a dozen states sue the Trump administration over its policies aimed at ending public schools’ diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, More To The Story host Al Letson talks with Hixenbaugh about how America’s public schools have become “a microcosm” for the country’s political and cultural fights—“a way of zooming in deep into one community to try to tell the story of America.”

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

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump’s Attack on ActBlue’s “Dark Money” Was Backed By Dark Money.

President Donald Trump last week told the Justice Department to investigate Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue, and claimed in a fact sheet that the order was aimed at “foreign contributions in American elections.”

Republicans quickly touted the order as cracking down on hidden sources of funds in US elections. “The Democrats’ Dark Money scam has gone on long enough,” Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley said last week.

ActBlue last week called Trump’s order part of his “brazen attack on democracy in America,” adding that the act is “blatantly unlawful and needs to be seen for what it is: Donald Trump’s latest front in his campaign to stamp out all political, electoral and ideological opposition.”

Trump’s claim that he can order the Justice Department to investigate a fundraising platform used by his political foes based on vague allegations is part of his ongoing effort to use the government’s powers to target political enemies. It’s not a particularly realistic accusation—the fact sheet claims it’s targeting “straw donor” schemes, where one person donates on behalf of another person. Given the fairly strict limitations on campaign contributions—$6,600 in 2024—any straw donor scheme that wants to inject any noticeable amount of money into an electoral system that had $15.5 billion run through it, is a great deal of tedious high-risk work for a scammer.

On the other hand, in the post-Citizens United era, there are plenty of ways to inject unaccounted-for-money—even theoretically foreign money—into the election. Super-PACs can accept unlimited donations from fairly easy to obscure sources, for instance, which makes the idea of anyone using a small-dollar conduit like ActBlue (or the GOP equivalent, WinRed) fairly silly.

And, notably, the funding for some of Trump’s “data” on an alleged ActBlue “fraud” seems to have come from just such a source: a super-PAC bankrolled by Elon Musk.

Last year, an opaque group called the Fair Election Fund began promising to pay “whistleblowers” who cited election fraud “with payment from our $5 million dollar fund.” That never panned out, but the same organization found more success with a claim that “60,000 people who were named as small-dollar donors in the Biden-Harris campaign’s July [FEC] report but did not recall making the contribution when contacted by the Fair Election Fund.”

As Mother Jones reported last year, the Fair Election Fund appears to have generated this finding by blasting out ominous sounding texts and emails telling ActBlue donors their donations had been “flagged,” then tallying people who responded – accurately or not – by checking a box saying they did not recall making the contribution.

But the Fair Election’s fund’s findings have nevertheless become part of an array of GOP efforts to attack ActBlue, which the White House’s fact sheet cited, vaguely, on Thursday. “Press reports and investigations by congressional committees have generated extremely troubling evidence that online fundraising platforms have been willing participants in schemes to launder excessive and prohibited contributions to political candidates and committees,” the fact sheet says.

The Fair Elections Fund shared its findings, which it said cost $250,000 to produce, with conservative media. And in a subsequent ad questioning Kamala Harris’ fundraising, the group exaggerated them. “The Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue has been accused of stealing our identities to conceal donations from bad actors,” the ad said.

The group’s accusations were later cited by state attorneys general and House Republicans investigating ActBlue. Right-leaning media outlets continue to cite the Fair Election Fund’s findings as the product of a “conservative watchdog group.”

The group’s claims, however, appear to have resulted not from any independent watchdog effort, but as part of a vast dark money effort by Musk aimed at helping elect Trump last year. The New York Times reported in October that the fund was financed by a nonprofit called Building America’s Future, which was bankrolled in part by Musk.

The Fair Election Fund went silent after election day last year. A former spokesperson for the group did not respond to requests for comment.

In a March the Investigative watchdog site Documented reported additional details tying the Fair Election Fund to Musk. The report noted that the Fair Election Fund is housed within a non-profit now called Interstate Priorities, formerly known as For Which It Stands Fund, formed in 2023 with a single $8.2 million donation. The group is led by Tori Sachs, a Michigan GOP Republican operative who appears to have set up the groups to support Ron DeSantis’ presidential run, which Musk initially supported. The groups appear to have been repurposed in 2024 to boost Trump’s campaign.

The Fair Election Fund allegations last year were part of what appeared to be a broader attack by Republicans on ActBlue. The group’s efforts last year piggybacked on on a 2023 campaign by far right activist James O’Keefe, who accused ActBlue of assigning large numbers of donations to the names and addresses of people who did not remember donating so often.

Various GOP probes into ActBlue, which incorporated the Fair Election Fund findings, have largely failed to turn up evidence of significant donor fraud or foreign donations being channeled through ActBlue. They have instead focused on ActBlue’s past acceptance of some donations without requiring card verification values—the 3- or 4-digit codes on credit cards used to confirm their validity.

That is, they allege the possibility of fraud via the platform, without documenting much actual fraud, or any indication that ActBlue is more susceptible to fraud or straw donor schemes than WinRed.

A House Judiciary Committee report released earlier this month did point to 22 suspected “fraud campaigns” in recent years involving ActBlue, including nine with a “foreign nexus.” But a close look at the report’s findings reveals these were suspected fraud efforts identified by ActBlue itself. And the donations involved were generally tiny.

For instance, the report touts suspected fraud efforts from “Iraq, Jordan, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Saudi Arabia.” But the ActBlue document that claim is based on indicates it was not an effort at electoral influence but a scam targeting platform users. And the suspect contributions were “all for $1.”

The alleged fraud cited—if real—also represent an infinitesimally small proportion of the donations that went through ActBlue last election. Even if fraud were real, the basic mechanics of ActBlue’s operation as a pass-through for small dollar donations makes the allegation of foreign donors accounting for more than a negligible portion of ActBlue’s fundraising implausible. In the third quarter alone, ActBlue reported to have more than 6.9 million unique donors using their site and channeled $1.5 billion in donations. Republicans have not produced evidence that ActBlue was used for any straw donor scheme at a significant scale, and such a scheme would be extremely challenging to arrange, or hide.

Musk, meanwhile, spent hundreds of millions of dollars to back Trump last year, much of it through dark money PACS that shrouded their spending in secrecy. If Trump really wanted to crack down on secretive election influence efforts, he would start not with small dollar Democratic donors, but with Elon Musk.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Facing Corruption Allegations, Albanian Opposition Leader Hires Trump-Linked Lobbying Team

Sali Berisha—the allegedly corrupt leader of Albania’s opposition party—wants help from Donald Trump. And Berisha, or someone backing him, is paying big bucks to get it.

Berisha is seeking removal of a “persona non grata” designation imposed by the US government because of what the Biden-era State Department said was his involvement in “in corrupt acts.” Berisha’s right-leaning Democratic Party of Albania recently hired Florida-based Continental Strategy to lobby the Trump administration under a contract that will pay the firm more than $6 million over two years. While lobbying disclosure forms filed by Continental don’t specifically mention the sanctions against Berisha, they note that the firm has already been in touch with the State Department on behalf of Berisha’s party.

Continental employs a roster of lobbyists with ties to Trumpworld, including Katie Wiles, whose mother is White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. According to the Democratic Party of Albania, or DPA, the hefty tab for Continental’s work is being picked up by the “Make Albania Great Again Foundation”—an organization recently established by a New Jersey contractor and registered at a suburban residential address.

Berisha separately employs Chris LaCivita, who, along with Susie Wiles, led Trump’s 2024 campaign. LaCivita says he was brought on to provide electoral advice for the country’s parliamentary election next month, and that he is not advocating for Berisha in the United States. The veteran political operative has boosted Berisha’s efforts to sell himself in Albania as the candidate who can work with Trump. LaCivita has declined to say how he is being paid. (Trump, who is often willing to weigh in on foreign elections, has not opined on the Albanian contest, or on Berisha’s legal issues.)

The State Department in 2021 designated Berisha, along with his wife, son and daughter, under an “anti-kleptocracy” law that allows the department to bar officials and immediate family members suspected of corruption from entering the United States.

Announcing that designation in 2021, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Berisha—who served as Albania’s prime minster in the 1990s and from 2005 to 2013—has been “involved in corrupt acts, such as misappropriation of public funds and interfering with public processes, including using his power for his own benefit and to enrich his political allies and his family members at the expense of the Albanian public’s confidence in their government institutions and public officials.”

In 2023, Albania’s parliament stripped Berisha of legal immunity. Last year, prosecutors in the country charged him with corruptly helping his son-in-law privatize public land to build 17 apartment buildings in Tirana, Albania’s capital. Berisha seems to be hoping that a victory in next month’s election, along with the possibility of assistance from Washington, will help him clear up his legal troubles—a trulyTrump-like turnabout.

That’s a comparison that Berisha has encouraged. He’s blamed his prosecution on Prime Minister Edi Rama, the leader of the governing left-wing Socialist Party—and on an international leftist conspiracy led by the 94-year-old liberal philanthropist George Soros.

Continental Strategy has deep ties to Trump administration figures, including to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has the power to undo Berisha’s sanctions problem. In addition to Katie Wiles—whom the firm promoted to director of its DC and Jacksonville lobbying offices just after Trump named her mother as his chief of staff—Continental employs Alberto Martinez, a former Senate chief of staff for Rubio. The firm’s founder, Carlos Trujillo, is a former Florida congressman who Trump picked as ambassador to the Organization of Latin American States during his first term.

In a Foreign Agents Registration Act registration filed last week, the firm offered only a boilerplate description of its lobbying plans, saying its work involves steps like “establishing relationships with key stakeholders in the executive and legislative branches to facilitate policy development.”

But Continental appears to have quickly begun using administration connections to make contact with the State Department, which has the authority to remove Berisha’s designation. The firm’s FARA filing notes an April 17 phone call with Dan Holler, Rubio’s deputy chief of staff at State.

The Democratic Party of Albania also hired a separate law firm also run by Trujillo, Continental PLLC, to do legal work on Berisha’s behalf. Legal counsel is generally exempt from FARA, meaning the firm would not have to publicly disclose details of those efforts.

Melissa Stone, a spokesperson for Continental, said the firm “is supporting Berisha through their legal and lobby teams, all of which is being fully disclosed in accordance with the law.” Stone noted that Wiles is not herself registered under FARA to lobby for the Albanian party.

Continental’s contract says it will be paid $250,000 per month over two years for the lobbying work work. But the DPA itself isn’t paying the firm.

Instead, the work appears to be financed through a 73-year-old Albanian American contractor in New Jersey. A contract filed as part of Continental’s FARA registration lists Nuredin Seci as “guarantor.” (The Albanian Top Channel news network reported that Seci is a member of Vatra, a US Albanian diaspora organization.)

The DPA has told reporters in Albania that Continental will be paid by a nonprofit called the “Make Albania Great Again Foundation,” which the party says is funded by Albanian Americans. An organization with that name was established on March 27 this year based at a Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey, residence that appears to be owned by Seci’s daughter and son-in-law. The foundation does not have a website or a public footprint, nor does it appear in public listings of registered nonprofits. None of the family members responded to inquiries from Mother Jones.

The opaque funding scheme has drawn criticism from Albanian Prime Minister Rama and, reportedly, scrutiny from an Albanian anti-corruption unit. Albanian media has also questioned the source of the funds Continental is receiving. Some Albanian press outlets compared the financing setup to a 2017 lobbying contract in which the Democratic Party of Albania secured $500,000 in funding, also purportedly from a US businessman with Albanian ties, for lobbying the first Trump administration—an arrangement that resulted in criminal charges, though no conviction, against the party’s prior leader.

Mother Jones reported in 2018 that the funds for the party’s 2017 influence efforts appeared to come, via several shell companies, from Russia. And in 2023, when the State Department issued a summary of a US intelligence review detailing Russian efforts “to shape foreign political environments in Moscow’s favor,” an administration official told the AFP that Russia had spent roughly $500,000 backing the DPA in 2017. The DPA at the time was supporting some policies backed by Moscow. The DPA has denied receiving Russian backing. But last year, a team of investigative reporters at the BBC, the Seychelles Broadcasting Corporation, and Finance Uncovered revealed that a Scottish shell company that had paid the US lobbyist who worked in 2017 for the DPA had been secretly owned by a Moscow resident.

In 2017, the head of the DPA sought inroads with Trump, adopting a “Make Albania Great Again” slogan. Berisha has taken a similar tack in 2025, bragging to Albanians that his ties to Trump’s circle will benefit the small country if he wins.

LaCivita has said his work includes zero advocacy for Berisha in the United States. “I was retained to organize and provide strategic political guidance on the [Albanian] Democrat Party and its coalition for the upcoming elections May 11,” he told Mother Jones via text. “I do not lobby or consult in any other capacity other than political and campaigns period.”

LaCivita has not been shy, though, about helping Berisha tout his ties to Trump.

“We want to help elect a prime minister who is a true friend of the United States and who will successfully work with President Trump and the United States,” LaCivita said at a February press conference in Tirana after signing on with Berisha. LaCivita called Rama “a puppet of George Soros,” adding, “You cannot be a puppet of George Soros and a friend of United States.”

LaCivita’s team advising Berisha appears to include former Trump aide Paul Manafort—who was convicted in 2018 of crimes that included secretly lobbying for Ukraine’s former pro-Russian president—as well as longtime Trump pollster Tony Fabrizio. Trump pardoned Manafort in 2020.

LaCivita, who has around 75,000 followers on X, has regularly tweeted support for Berisha and attacks on Rama, and he has amplified Berisha’s criticism of the sanctions imposed by Blinken.

LaCivita’s rhetoric dovetails with efforts by Berisha allies in the US. In February, the DPA’s press director published an op-ed in the Washington Examiner urging Rubio to lift the sanctions on the Berisha; the op-ed suggested that Soros, and his son Alex Soros, were partly responsible for the DPA leader’s legal problems. A separate Examiner opinion piece—headlined “Albania lawfare? How Biden aided Soros’s favorite narco-state”—cites Berisha’s “striking” similarities with Trump.

Another Berisha ally, Fetimir Mediu, met earlier this month with GOP Sens. Mike Lee (Utah) and John Cornyn (Texas). Mediu previously negotiated the deal for LaCivita to advise the Democratic Party of Albania, both men have said.

LaCivita has made clear the general message of the efforts to link Berisha to Trump. “I’m exporting MAGA,” he told the New York Times in February. “Make Albania Great Again!”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Mistakes Were Made. And Made. And Made Again.

What will you remember about Donald Trump’s second first 100 days? Probably the cruelty and arrogance of the people in charge, and the fecklessness of so many institutions that were supposed to fight back. Maybe the image of the world’s richest men, and some of their wives, sitting obediently in front of the president’s cabinet on Inauguration Day. Or the way the New York Times described Elon Musk as having “extended his arm diagonally upward, palm facing down.” Or the enthusiasm with which the Secretary of Agriculture encouraged Americans to raise chickens. Or the words, “They hate our beef because our beef is beautiful and theirs is weak.”

But personally, I’m going to remember all the mistakes.

I have never seen a government get so many things wrong, in so many different ways. It was like an Obamacare website every 18 hours. It was like the soft opening of Jurassic Park. And these were not the sort of run-of-the-mill snafus that are endemic to any large organization. They all had something in common: People who thought they knew better than everyone else took on work they didn’t understand, and sidelined the people who did. They were making mistakes, quite simply, because the people who didn’t make mistakes were gone, and because there was no one left to tell them not to, or to correct them when they did.

In 100 days the administration has, in no particular order:

  • “Accidentally cancelled,” in Musk’s words, funding for “Ebola prevention.”
  • Sent Harvard an “unauthorized” list of demands, which led the nation’s wealthiest university to stop negotiating with the administration and fight back in the courts.
  • Rescinded job offers for the Veterans Crisis Line, “due to an administrative error.”
  • Fired Health and Human Services employees that, according to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., “should not have been cut.”
  • Accidentally fired, and tried to rehire, employees at the National Animal Health Laboratory Network who were working on the administration’s response to bird flu.
  • Fired, and scrambled to rehire, people responsible for maintaining the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.
  • Fired, and then un-fired, workers at the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • Fired, and then rehired, people responsible for ensuring the safety of medical devices.
  • Fired workers at the Small Business Administration, then un-fired them, and then fired them again.
  • Accidentally fired people who had already taken a buyout offer.
  • Tried to fire 22 US attorneys, but sent the termination emails to the wrong addresses.
  • Mistakenly” gave the “normalize Indian hate” guy the power to rewrite Treasury payment systems.
  • Accidentally published classified information about the National Reconnaissance Office.
  • Accidentally outed the CIA’s station chief in Kabul.
  • Shared an unclassified list of new CIA employees via email.
  • Tried to sell a government complex that includes a secret CIA facility.
  • Inadvertently put both the Justice Department and the FBI headquarters up for sale.
  • Accidentally made Brian Driscoll (aka “Drizz”) acting director of the FBI and then just went with it rather than acknowledge the mixup.
  • Accidentally revealed living peoples’ Social Security numbers as part of their big dump of JFK assassination files, after Trump ordered the documents released with 24 hours notice.
  • Accidentally cut off the ability of people in Maine to get Social Security numbers for their newborns because, according to the acting Social Security administrator, “it looked like a strange contract.”
  • Accidentally made it possible for anyone to update the Doge.gov homepage, which resulted in the words “THESE ‘EXPERTS’ LEFT THEIR DATABASE OPEN” staying up on the site for 12 hours.
  • Claimed $8 billion in savings on an $8 million contract.
  • Completely invented a non-existent $50 million program to supply condoms to Gaza.
  • Hired a new IRS chief—on Tax Day—without telling the Treasury Secretary, leading to the new IRS chief being replaced with yet another new IRS chief three days later.
  • Paid $2 billion because the acting solicitor general appealed the wrong court ruling.
  • Submitted an internal legal brief saying that their congestion pricing case against New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority is bad, as an unsealed filing in their congestion pricing case.
  • Added Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg to an emoji-riddled group chat about war plans in Yemen.
  • “Accidentally” terminated and then reinstated environmental grants in Michigan.
  • Cut off funding to food programs “that were not meant to be cut.”
  • Announced an investigation into a non-existent medical school.
  • “Mistakenly” removed Jackie Robinson and Japanese-American soldiers from the Department of Defense website.
  • Imposed tariffs on an island of penguins.
  • Made tariffs 4 times too high because of an incorrect math equation.
  • Broke, for 10 hours, the mechanism for actually collecting tariffs.
  • Accidentally told an immigration attorney from Massachusetts, who is a US citizen, she had to leave the country.
  • Accidentally told Ukrainian refugees they had to leave the country.
  • Accidentally detained US citizens in immigration sweeps.
  • Deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia to El Salvador due to an “administrative error.”
  • Accidentally pronounced 82-year-old Ned Johnson of Seattle dead.

In a functioning society, many of these actions would lead to resignations and firings. But the list of people who have paid a professional price for making any of these missteps is a bit shorter; other than the Department of Justice lawyers who submitted that congestion pricing brief in court and were subsequently reassigned, it’s honestly not clear if anyone has.

It was an explicit choice to govern exactly like this, to apply the Silicon Valley mantra of “move fast and break things” to starving children and cancer research. The driving force behind all of these errors is a carelessness about the world today that stems from a disregard for how it will look tomorrow

If anything, the opposite has occurred. Rather than acknowledge its propensity for pressing random buttons just to see what happens, the administration has codified many of its mishaps as policy. (A fair number, of course, were always matters of principle merely masked as incompetence.) Sending people to prison in El Salvador without due process simply became an official White House position. The precise timing of missile strikes simply became unclassified. A tariff rate that didn’t make sense simply became the tariff rate. We’ve always been at war with the penguin islands. The “emperor has no clothes” parable has no purchase in Trump 2.0—everyone just moves along as before without pants.

That’s not just a reflection of the White House’s sense of impunity; fucking up is the governing philosophy.

“Nobody’s going to bat a thousand, so we will make mistakes, but we’ll act quickly to correct any mistakes,” Musk said in the Oval Office in February, with his son, X, sitting on his shoulders. “Elon himself has said that sometimes you do something, you make a mistake, and then you undo the mistake,” Vice President J.D. Vance said in March. “Part of the DOGE, we talked about this from the beginning, is we’re going to do 80 percent cuts, but 20 percent of those are going to have to be reinstated, because we’ll make mistakes,” Kennedy said in April. That, too, was a mistake—the 20-percent were not ultimately reinstated.

It was an explicit choice to govern exactly like this, to apply the Silicon Valley mantra of “move fast and break things” to starving children and cancer research. The driving force behind all of these errors is a carelessness about the world today that stems from a disregard for how it will look tomorrow, and a deep-seated loathing of the people who keep the lights on. On a case-by-case basis many of these were accidents. In the aggregate they constitute an ethos: a determination to break things in a way that the next person won’t be able to put back together—to shatter a way of life so thoroughly that in the future, no one will even try.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Florida Man Loses Canadian Election

Preliminary results projected by CBC in Canada’s snap federal election, which took place Monday, suggest that the country’s Liberal Party—which is currently in power—will win enough seats in the Canadian parliament to allow party leader Mark Carney to remain Prime Minister, though it remains unclear whether with a majority or minority government.

In some ways, it was the United States—specifically, President Donald Trump—that handed victory to Carney’s party, headed until March by then–Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Before Trump launched a trade war with Canada and began insisting that the country should become America’s “51st state”—a Trump fixation and source of ire to Canadians—Trudeau was dropping in popularity, as was his party. But in a rousing speech in February, Trudeau—who had already planned to step down—vowed that Canada would fight back:

We will stand strong for Canada. We will stand strong to ensure our countries continue to be the best neighbours in the world. With all that said, I also want to speak directly to Canadians in this moment. I’m sure many of you are anxious, but I want you to know we are all in this together. The Canadian government, Canadian businesses, Canadian organized labour, Canadian civil society, Canada’s premiers and tens of millions of Canadians from coast to coast to coast are aligned and united. This is Team Canada at its best.

Riding the wave of Canadian nationalism that Trump evoked, the Liberal Party was able to maintain its hold on power. Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, meanwhile, running on a “Canada First” platform, had been endorsed by Canadian citizen Elon Musk; Musk holds a Canadian passport through his family, including his maternal grandfather, an enthusiastic supporter of apartheid who left Canada for South Africa in 1950. A formal petition to Canada’s House of Commons calling for Musk’s Canadian citizenship to be revoked has garnered more than 300,000 signatures.

Earlier on Election Day, Trump made a Truth Social post seemingly encouraging Canadians to vote for Poilievre—and again floating the idea that Canada should become America’s 51st state. Trump and Musk’s backing may not have helped Poilievre, who rejected Trump’s support in a post on X; many Canadians now see the Liberal Party as their best option against absorption into the US.

complete batshit insanity

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) April 28, 2025 at 7:49 AM

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump Ramps Up His Unpopular Immigration Crackdown

President Donald Trump is continuing to prioritize his anti-immigration agenda despite multiple polls in recent days showing thatmost Americans disapprove of it.

On Monday, the White House announced that Trump will sign two executive orders, one directing Attorney General Pam Bondi and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem to draw up a list of sanctuary cities and states that are not complying with the federal government’s deportation orders, and another that will boost law enforcement capabilities to arrest immigrants.

At an early morning briefing alongside Border Czar Tom Homan, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt tried to justify the plan by reiterating the administration’s go-to—and false—trope that undocumented immigrants disproportionately commit crimes in the US. “It’s quite simple,” Leavitt said. “Obey the law, respect the law, and don’t obstruct federal immigration officials and law-enforcement officials when they are simply trying to remove public safety threats from our nation’s communities.” (In reality, research shows undocumented immigrants commit crimes at lower rates than US citizens.) The orders come just days after a federal judge blocked federal officials from carrying out a previous threat to withhold funding from 16 sanctuary jurisdictions.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Trump will direct the Justice Department to open civil-rights cases against jurisdictions that he believes favor undocumented immigrants over US citizens. The Journal reports that the executive order cites at least 25 states that have adopted laws that provide immigrants with lower in-state tuition rates at public universities than those available to U.S. citizens. It is not clear which executive order the directive will be part of.

Also on Monday, the White House debuted a set of lawn signs that appeared to highlight undocumented people who have been arrested since Trump’s return to power. The White House account on X posted a video of the signs set to Michael Bublé’s rendition of Nina Simone’s song “Feeling Good.” (A representative for Bublé—who is Canadian and has spoken out against Trump’s desire to annex the country as a 51st state—did not immediately respond to a request for comment about whether Bublé has a statement on the video.)

Under Joe Biden, criminal illegal aliens called the shots. Under President Trump, it’s a new dawn, a new day, a new life for America — and we're feeling good. 🎶 pic.twitter.com/pD7hf1A07G

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 28, 2025

All this seems like an attempt to distract from the fact that, as I reported yesterday, Trump’s poll numbers are in the toilet on the cusp of his 100th day in office, which will come on Tuesday. The polls—from NBC, ABC, and CNN—show that the majority of Americans disapprove of Trump’s second term thus far, with broad disapproval on immigration and border security specifically. His administration’s authoritarian approach has included arresting a judge for allegedly helping a man without legal immigration status avoid arrest while in her courtroom; deporting Venezuelans to a notorious prison in El Salvador without due process; and seeking to deport international students who have protested Israel’s war in Gaza, as my colleagues have covered.

Spokespeople for the White House did not respond to requests for comment Sunday about Trump’s poll numbers. But Trump did what he usually does when he’s confronted with unfavorable polls: He claimed they can’t be trusted. In an early morning Truth Social post, Trump called them “FAKE POLLS FROM FAKE NEWS ORGANIZATIONS.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump’s Poll Numbers Are Historically Awful

So much for winning.

New polls show that President Donald Trump’s approval rating has hit record lows as he nears the 100-day mark of his second term on Tuesday.

An ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll found that Trump has the lowest 100-day approval rating of any president in the past 80 years, with only 39 percent of respondents saying they approve of Trump’s term thus far. The 80-year comparison appears to refer to when Gallup first started measuring public approval of presidents, back during President Harry Truman’s term; according to data compiled by ABC, Trump had the lowest approval ratings of all presidents at 100 days in both of his terms, and he’s the only president to have the disapproval of the majority of Americans only three months into his term.

Seventy-two percent of respondents to the ABC poll also said they believe Trump’s economic policies—such as his tariff-induced global trade war—will likely cause a recession in the short term, and 53 percent believe the economy has gotten worse since Trump took office. More than 60 percent said that his administration does not respect the rule of law and that he is going too far in trying to expand his power. Majorities also disapproved of nearly every other action. The poll asked about Trump’s moves—reducing funding for medical research, shutting down the Department of Education, freezing foreign humanitarian aid, seeking to deport international students, and sending a group of Venezuelans to a notorious prison in El Salvador without due process—and they were all disliked.

Meanwhile, a new NBC News Stay Tuned poll found 55 percent of Americans disapprove of Trump’s approach to his second term. Majorities also disapprove of his handling of border security and immigration and his tariff policy, thepoll found.

There’s more. A CNN poll found only 22 percent of Americans approve of Trump’s approach to the job, with broad disapproval on issues ranging from the economy to managing the federal government, immigration, and how he’s handling foreign affairs.

Spokespeople for the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. So far, Trump has avoided directly addressing the dismal poll numbers; instead, he seems to be making up his own favorable findings. “JUST RELEASED: 99.9% at the Border,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Sunday morning. (It’s unclear what, exactly, he was referring to, as is the source of that statistic.) “There has NEVER been such a difference before. Congratulations America!”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

In Louisiana, a Judge Just Vacated a Controversial Death Row Case

This article was first published by Bolts, as part of a collaboration with Mother Jones_._

Jimmie Christian Duncan has spent over 26 years on death row at Louisiana’s Angola prison for the rape and murder of his girlfriend’s toddler daughter—a crime he has always maintained never happened. On Thursday, a Louisiana judge dismissed his conviction, vindicating Duncan’s fierce, decades-long effort to prove his innocence.

Between 1976 and 2015, an astonishing 80 percent of Louisiana’s capital sentences were later reversed.

In his order vacating the conviction, District Court Judge Alvin Sharp wrote that Duncan had successfully demonstrated his claim of “factual innocence” based on new evidence that was not available at the original trial. His conviction relied on a so-called bite mark analysis, a method that’s since been discredited and is widely regarded as ‘junk science’, that was conducted by a now-infamous duo, doctor Steven Hayne and dentist Michael West. As I reported in Bolts and Mother Jones last month, Hayne and West have since been found responsible for a host of other wrongful convictions; Duncan is the last man left on death row who had been convicted on the basis of their work.

Related

A black-and-white vintage photograph of a young man with short dark hair, wearing a collared shirt. He is smiling. The photo is set against a pale green background.Louisiana Is Executing Prisoners Again. His Case Shows the Costs.

Duncan’s case fits with a long tradition of wrongful convictions in Louisiana. Between 1976 and 2015, an astonishing 80 percent of the state’s capital sentences were later reversed—nine people have been exonerated off death row in the time that Duncan has been there.

But he is also the first person to receive relief under Louisiana’s factual innocence statute, a reform that the state created in 2021 under Governor John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, which dramatically expanded how prisoners can make innocence claims by allowing people to introduce new facts rather than simply raise constitutional violations as part of their post-conviction review process.

When I spoke to Duncan shortly after he learned about the ruling, he told me he was in shock. “I’m scared to have full joy because I ain’t walked out that gate yet,” he said. “It’s been a really really long and difficult time.” He called his lawyers heroes, saying: “I would need a notepad to write down all the attorneys I would owe thanks to.”

He remains in prison for now; state officials could pursue options to fight Sharp’s ruling or try to seek a new conviction.

I’ve been talking to Duncan about his case for well over a year now as I’ve reported the feature article, which detailed his fight to clear his name during the decades he’s spent on death row. Duncan was arrested in December 1993 and charged with negligent homicide after his girlfriend’s daughter Haley drowned in the bathtub while he was caring for her. But after Hayne and West, who were tasked with the autopsy, reported that Haley had been bitten and raped, Duncan’s charges were upgraded to capital murder and he was convicted and sentenced to death.

Over the years, successive legal teams for Duncan turned up significant exonerating evidence, some of which the prosecution never turned over to his original trial lawyers. Perhaps most damning was the mid-2000s discovery of a shocking videotape that depicted Dr. West pressing a mold of Duncan’s teeth into Haley’s body, appearing to create the bite marks the dentist claimed were already there—evidence that the jury in Duncan’s trial never saw. Despite these discoveries, broader advancements in forensic scientific understanding, and revelations about the extent of Hayne and West’s misconduct, Duncan remained on death row.

In 2024, he was finally granted a new evidentiary hearing. At the hearing this past September, which I attended, Duncan’s legal team presented a series of experts who testified that Hayne and West’s methods were indefensible, that bite mark matching is no longer considered scientifically valid, and that Haley’s death was most likely an accidental drowning.

The judge, in his ruling filed on April 24,determined this testimony to be convincing**.** He wrote that Duncan had “carried his burden” in providing new evidence under the factual innocence statute.

An additional witness, a capital defense expert named Jim Boren, testified about the inadequate representation Duncan received from his trial lawyers, who had never defended a death penalty case before, a common state of affairs in Louisiana in the 1990s. In light of Boren’s testimony, the judge found that Duncan was also entitled to relief under Louisiana’s standard post-conviction review process, which focuses on constitutional violations.

What happens next is uncertain. The district attorney in Duncan’s home parish, Ouachita Parish, Steve Tew, could appeal the decision. He could also choose to retry Duncan on equal or lesser charges, though the burden of proof would be back on the state, and prosecutors would have to contend with the fact that key evidence used against Duncan at his original trial is now discredited. The age of the case also means that other evidence has been destroyed or lost, and some of the initial participants, including Hayne, have passed away.

As of publication, the DA’s office has not responded to my requests for comment regarding their next steps. Duncan’s legal team declined to comment.

This stunning development in Duncan’s case comes at a time when the state’s Republican leaders are actively seeking to execute as many death row prisoners as they can, as well as significantly restrict the post-conviction review process for Louisiana prisoners that Duncan has relied on to prove his innocence.

Landry, the Republican governor who has pushed hard to make state laws more punitive since he took office in early 2024, has derided the 2021 law that created the factual innocence statute as a “woke, hug-a-thug policy,” arguing that it gave too much discretion to DAs to let prisoners go free. In a blog post about the law written while he was running for governor in 2023, he opined: “once a verdict has been finalized, there are no more ‘get out of jail free’ cards.”

After Landry assumed office, the state legislature under his direction amended part of the 2021 post-conviction relief law that established the factual innocence statute, restricting DAs’ power to consider cases for relief and handing more control over the process to the attorney general. They also passed a bevy of laws designed to speed up the machinery of death in Louisiana, including legalizing new methods of execution and shielding execution procedures from scrutiny.

Bill Quigley, a veteran capital appeals lawyer and law professor, told me previously that these changes will mean that “people are going to be executed who wouldn’t be executed if the system was really working.”

In March, the state carried out its first execution in 15 years, using nitrogen gas to kill Jessie Hoffman, a close friend of Duncan’s. “This state has got the wrong agenda, and Jessie had to pay the price,” Duncan told me.

Now, lawmakers have introduced legislation to further limit compensation for wrongfully convicted people and significantly roll back post-conviction relief, which could make it much harder for people in Duncan’s position to appeal their convictions. Duncan fears that the law, if passed, will make it easier to send to the execution chamber the many other people he knows on death row who do not have factual innocence claims but whose cases are marred by procedural violations and other injustices.

“How is that okay?” he asked.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Disability Protection Groups in Two States Pause Services After Missing Federal Funds

State organizations that advocate for disabled residents in New Jersey and Arkansas announced this week that they will have to limit their work due to not receiving the full federal funds they are owed by the US federal government.

Each state, territory, and Washington, DC, has a protection and advocacy agency to support the rights of disabled people, including providing one-on-one legal services. These agencies were created by the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 1975, which means their work is federally mandated. It’s currently unclear whether all protection and advocacy agencies have been impacted by shortages in federal funds.

“Are we going to a worldview that just contracts all those social services and basically says people must stand on their own or fall on their own?”

NJ.com reported that Disability Rights New Jersey (DRNJ) has received only $1.6 million of the $3.1 million it needs this year to represent disabled people, including those in group homes and in prisons. As a result, the agency—which also receives some state funding—is shutting down its services until May 5, and says it will not be able to make payroll next month if it does not receive its designated federal funds. The White House did not respond to NJ.com‘s request for comment on funding issues.

“We are fighting for our very survival,” DRNJ executive director Gwen Orlowski told NJ.com, noting that some DRNJ attorneys left last year with anticipation of chaos during the second Trump administration. “We’re at a crossroads as an American society.”

In a Facebook post, Disability Rights Arkansas (DRA) announced that it won’t be accepting new cases as of Friday, with exceptions for a few types of cases, due to not receiving all its federal funds.

“This pause allows us to continue to support the clients we have in case funding is not released at all,” the post reads. “In the meantime, DRA will be providing information, referral, and technical assistance only.” The post encourages people who need help to contact their Arkansas state representatives and members of Congress.

This isn’t the first time the Trump administration has attacked protection and advocacy agencies. First, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy announced in late March that he was closing the Administration for Community Living, which has overseen P&As for over a decade. Then, leaked HHS report draft revealed that the department plans to strip funding for protection and advocacy agencies.

However, Kate Caldwell, director of research and policy at Northwestern University’s Center for Racial and Disability Justice, had told me that this will not likely stick. “If HHS withheld funding or dismantled the program without an actual statutory repeal,” Caldwell said, “it would face multiple lawsuits from disability rights organizations, as well as state attorneys general, for violating the law.”

In the NJ.com article, Orlowski expressed deep concerns about how the Trump administration is pushing forward towards a future where disabled people do not receive the support they need.

“Are we going to a worldview that just contracts all those social services and basically says people must stand on their own or fall on their own?” Orlowski questioned. “I think that that’s where we’re at.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

A Small School District Blew Experts Away With Reading Scores—Until Ohio Passed a New Law

In Steubenville, Ohio, many students are considered to be economically disadvantaged. But unlike some similar towns and cities across the United States, standardized testing doesn’t strike fear among members of the school board, principals, and superintendent.

That’s because for the past two decades, 93 percent or more of students in Steubenville’s public schools have scored proficient on state reading tests by the time they’re in third grade.

“It was astonishing to me how amazing that elementary school was,” said Karin Chenoweth, who wrote about Steubenville in her 2009 book How It’s Being Done: Urgent Lessons From Unexpected Schools. According to research from the Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University, Steubenville has routinely scored in the top 10 percent or better of schools nationwide for third-grade reading, sometimes scoring as high as the top 1 percent.

But a new law in Ohio put all the small city’s success at risk. Learn more this week on Reveal, as reporter Emily Hanford shares the latest from APM Reports podcast Sold a Story.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump’s Latest Deportation Tear Includes a 2-Year-Old and a Kid With Cancer

On Friday morning, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials in New Orleans deported members of two families, including young children and a pregnant mother, under circumstances that have raised serious due process concerns. Among those deported were three children who are US citizens, including a two-year-old who was born in New Orleans and a child with a rare form of metastatic cancer who’d been receiving treatment in the US.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) alleges that ICE did not allow the mothers and children detained to have substantial or any contact with attorneys and family members, including with the two-year-old’s father.

“If this is what the Trump administration is orchestrating just three months in, we should all be terrified of what the next four years will bring.”

“These families were lawfully complying with ICE’s orders and for this they suffered cruel and traumatic separation,” Mich P. Gonzalez, founding partner of Sanctuary of the South, which provides legal assistance, said in a statement. “If this is what the Trump administration is orchestrating just three months in, we should all be terrified of what the next four years will bring.”

Regarding the child with cancer, Rolling Stone reported that they were “deported out of the country without medication or consultation with their treating physicians,” even though ICE had been notified of the child’s health needs.

The father of the two-year-old filed an emergency petition on Thursday for the child to be released to his custody after he was only able to get one minute on the phone with the child’s mother “before the call was abruptly terminated when her spouse tried to provide legal counsel’s phone number,” according to the ACLU. Chief Judge for the Western District of Louisiana Terry Doughty, who is overseeing the case, wrote that there is a “strong suspicion that the Government just deported a US citizen with no meaningful process” to Honduras. The court had asked for a phone call with the child’s mother to assess “her consent and custodial rights,” but the US government said that would not be possible, “because she (and presumably [the two-year-old]) had just been released in Honduras.” There will be a hearing on May 16 to further discuss this case.

According to reporting in Politico, the two-year-old (known in papers by the initials V.M.L) has a good chance of being able to return to the United States, but their case reveals a disturbing lack of disregard for constitutional rights:

As a U.S. citizen, V.M.L. is likely to have the ability to return to the United States, setting her case apart from others that have drawn national attention in recent weeks, such as the case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia. The Salvadoran native was deported to a prison in his home country in violation of a 2019 immigration court order. But the Louisiana case is the latest concern by the courts that the Trump administration’s rush to carry out deportations is violating due process rights — in this case, the rights of a U.S. citizen child.

“Deporting US citizen children is illegal, unconstitutional, and immoral,” ErinHebert of law firm Ware Immigration said in a statement on these cases. The White House and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“The speed, brutality, and clandestine manner in which these children were deported is beyond unconscionable,” Hebert wrote, “and every official responsible for it should be held accountable.”

Update, April 26, 2025, 1:12pm ET: A senior official from the Department of Homeland Security wrote in an email that in the case of the two-year-old, “the parent made the decision to take the child with them to Honduras.” The official added: “We take our responsibility to protect children seriously and will continue to work with federal law enforcement to ensure that children are safe and protected.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Ed Martin Isn’t Coming Clean About His Ties to an Alleged Nazi Sympathizer

Ed Martin, the far-right-activist-turned-acting US attorney for DC, apologized this week for praising an alleged Nazi sympathizer at an event last year.

But Martin’s ties to Timothy Hale-Cusanelli—who is known for wearing a Hitler-style mustache, and who allegedly once told a coworker that the Nazis “should have finished the job”—are far more extensive than just that one meeting.

Martin told the Forward this week that he was “sorry” for bestowing an award on Hale-Cusanelli during an August 2024 event at Donald Trump’s golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

“I denounce everything about what that guy said, everything about the way he talked, and all as I’ve now seen it,” Martin said. “At the time, I didn’t know it.”

Martin was not specific in the portions of interview quoted by the Forward, but he seemed to suggest he had previously known only of a photo in which Hale-Cusanelli wore the Hitler-syle mustache, not “the full scope of his repulsive behavior.” Martin reportedly said that he now understands Hale-Cusanelli’s behavior was “clearly far more serious than a singular act that, by itself, might look like a mistake.” Martin’s office did not respond to requests for comment from Mother Jones.

Martin’s tenure as acting US attorney is set to expire May 20. His apology appears aimed at softening opposition from lawmakers in both parties as he seeks Senate confirmation to hold the post permanently. It is a notable exception to his general refusal to respond to the overwhelmingly negative press generated by his efforts to help President Trump use the Justice Department as a partisan weapon. It appears that Martin believes his past praise for an alleged antisemite could be particularly damaging to his nomination.

But Martin’s suggestion that he was not familiar with the broader scope of Hale-Cusanelli’s alleged bigotry when he gave him an award is implausible. The prior month—in July 2024—Martin asked Hale-Cusanelli about his alleged extremism during an interview on a podcast hosted by Martin. Martin asserted on the program that the allegations, which emerged in court filings following Hale-Cusanelli’s indictment for entering the Capitol on January 6, 2021, were “leaked” by federal prosecutors in an effort to push the narrative that “MAGA people are antisemitic.”

“I’ve gotten to know him really well,” Martin said of Hale-Cusanelli during the show. “I’d say we’re friends.”

The two men know each other because Martin, a former “Stop the Steal” activist and lawyer for January 6 defendants, served until January 2025 on the board of the Patriot Freedom Project, a nonprofit that was launched in 2021 by Cynthia Hughes, a New Jersey activist who refers to herself as Hale-Cusanelli’s “adoptive aunt.” Martin reported on a Senate financial disclosure form that he was paid $30,000 last year to serve on the board. Hughes, who did not respond to a request for comment_,_ has previously said she launched the group as a result of Hale-Cusanelli’s arrest and “incredibly unfair” treatment.

That treatment included court filings in which Justice Department prosecutors called Hale-Cusanelli an “avowed white supremacist and Nazi sympathizer” and cited a litany of antisemitic and racist statements his former colleagues said they had heard him make. In a sentencing memo filed in September 2022, prosecutors also quoted a conversation secretly recorded by an unidentified person, in which Hale-Cusanelli said, “I really fucking wish there’d be a civil war.” In the same conversation, according to prosecutors, Hale-Cusanelli stated that he would like to give Jews and Democrats “24 hours to leave the country” and to have many of them arrested.

Prosecutors also noted a picture of Hale-Cusanelli sporting a Hitler-like mustache and hair style, an image that drew substantial media coverage.

Cusanelli was convicted on all counts at a jury trial this year. The judge — a Trump appointee, who has been skeptical of some J6 cases — panned Cusanelli's testimony on the witness stand, where he claimed he didn't know Congress met at the Capitol. /4 https://t.co/S4nkmnyBoA

— Marshall Cohen (@MarshallCohen) September 3, 2022

Hale-Cusanelli—who has said he has Jewish and Puerto Rican ancestry—testified during his trial that he is not antisemitic or racist. He said the statements prosecutors cited were meant to be “ironic” and “self-deprecating humor” intended to gain attention. Hale-Cusanelli did not respond to a request for comment from Mother Jones.

While imposing a 48-month prison sentence, Judge Trevor McFadden, a Trump appointee, said Hale-Cusanelli’s “statements and actions” make Jews “less safe and less confident they can participate as equal members of our society.”

Martin sounded conversant on the details of the government’s accusations during a more-than-hour-long interview on July 2, 2024, on Martin’s podcast, video of which remains available on Rumble.

“They used your phone and…leaked the photo to say, ‘Look, these people, these MAGA people are antisemitic,'” Martin said. “And the photo was of you…you had like a mustache shaped in such a way that you looked vaguely like Hitler.”

Throughout the conversation, Martin indicated familiarity with the accusations about Hale-Cusanelli that emerged in his court case. Their discussion also referenced the same secretly recorded conversation in which Hale-Cusanelli and a confidential informant talked about Jews and civil war. Hale-Cusanelli told Martin he was drunk when he made the statements later cited by prosecutors.

Martin repeatedly defended Hale-Cusanelli, arguing prosecutors had improperly “leaked” the photo and other material from Hale-Cusanelli’s phone. (Hale-Cusanelli acknowledged that material in fact appeared in publicly filed court documents related to his detention.)

“I really think that your story is now sort of the quintessential example,” Martin said later.

That interview came amid multiple appearances that Hale-Cusanelli made at events with Martin last year. Those include a June 2024 event at Bedminster and the August 14 event at the club where Martin gave Hale-Cusanelli an award for promoting “God, family and country.”

Hale-Cusanelli’s presence at the Bedminster events gained attention when NPR reported on them in September. And Martin’s role attracted notice after he began serving as US attorney in January. Martin’s ties to an alleged Nazi sympathizer were noted in a February bar complaint against him and in a March speech by Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on Senate Judiciary Committee, which is considering Martin’s nomination.

Still, weeks later, Martin appeared alongside Hale-Cusanelli—this time at a March 24, 2025, fundraiser in Naples, Florida, for an organization that Martin previously ran.

As I reported with Amanda Moore, Martin was the keynote speaker at the March 24 event. The event was also attended various January 6 defendants, including two who were convicted of seditious conspiracy and whose appeals Martin’s office is still opposing—an apparent conflict of interest. (Moore reports additional details on Martin’s ties to Hale-Cusanelli here.)

Martin did not address this event in his comments printed by the Forward. But at that fundraiser, there was no evidence of distance between Martin and Hale-Cusanelli.

In a speech at the event, Hale-Cusanelli called January 6 “a psy-op led by three-letter agencies.” And he said he had an ally in Martin, who has fired, demoted, and investigated former January 6 prosecutors, even as he has promoted, while US attorney, a conspiracy theory that the FBI had a hand in January 6.

“Led by the current US attorney,” Hale-Cusanelli said in Naples, “we’re starting to see a vast restoration of the truth, which is that January 6 defendants were not criminals, they were in fact the victims…And we will expose these nefarious actors who set us up in the first place.”

In his own remarks, Martin did not denounce those claims.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

FBI Arrests Judge, in Dangerous Escalation of Immigration Enforcement

Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan was charged with two felonies after being arrested by federal officers early Friday morning for allegedly helping a man without legal immigration status avoid arrest while in her courtroom on April 18. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that Dugan helped direct an undocumented immigrant through a side door in her courtroom and down a private hallway into a public area when the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrived to apprehend him.

The arrest of a sitting judge is a pivotal moment in the Trump administration’s escalation of immigration enforcement. It comes just months after the Justice Department ordered federal prosecutors to push forward criminal cases against local government officials who impede Trump’s immigration crackdown and go after state and local laws in court.

A spokesperson for the US Marshals Service in Washington, DC, confirmed to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that Dugan was taken into custody at around 8 a.m. at the Milwaukee County Courthouse in Wisconsin. The spokesperson also told the newspaper that Dugan was charged with obstruction and concealing an individual.

FBI Director Kash Patel posted the news on X on Friday morning, writing that the FBI arrested Dugan “on charges of obstruction” during an immigration arrest operation last week. According to Patel, the judge “intentionally misdirected federal agents” away from their target, allowing the man to evade arrest. (Patel later deleted his post.)

In a press release regarding Dugan’s arrest, Congressmember Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) stated that the Trump administration demonstrated “overreach” with its eagerness to “weaponize federal law enforcement…in particular ICE, who have been defying courts and acting with disregard for the Constitution.”

“It is remarkable that the Administration would dare to start arresting state court judges,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.). “It’s a whole new descent into government chaos.”

The man, Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, a 30-year-old Mexican immigrant accused of misdemeanor battery, is reportedly in the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s custody at Dodge Detention Facility in Juneau, Wisconsin.

According to interim guidance from a January 2025 memorandum by former Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Benjamine Huffman—who served as part of the Trump administration prior to Kristi Noem’s US Senate confirmation—officers can make civil immigration arrests “in or near courthouses” when they have “credible information” that the person in question will make an appearance. In the guidance document, former acting ICE director Caleb Vitello wrote that the directive would “reduce safety risks to the public, targeted alien(s), and ICE officers and agents” and was necessary when jurisdictions “refuse to honor immigration detainers.”

The Milwaukee County Court has not yet responded to a request for comment from Mother Jones.

There could be additional arrests. On Thursday, a former New Mexico judge and his wife were arrested, according to a local Fox affiliate, by the FBI for tampering with evidence after a late February raid of their home and arrest of three Venezuelan men staying in a rented house on the property. All three men arrested on the property are accused of involvement with Tren de Aragua. The former judge called the claim that the men were members of Tren de Aragua “sensationalism at the highest possible level.”

According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Flores Ruiz’s arrest is at least the third time that ICE agents have come to the Milwaukee County Courthouse with arrest warrants. Officials took two people into custody in March and early April.

Update, April 25, 2:25 p.m.: This post has been updated to include an additional arrest.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

DOJ Reverses Grant Cancellations For Crime Victim Support

The Department of Justice has restored two previously canceled grants supporting victims of violent crimes, including domestic violence, following a Mother Jones report on Thursday that highlighted the critical roles the programs played for survivors.

The DOJ informed the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV) and the National Center for Victims of Crime (NCVC) on Thursday night that officials would restore the grants they previously canceled on Tuesday. Those cancelations were reportedly part of mass cuts to grants worth more than $800 million, according to Reuters, that supported victims of gun violence, addiction, and domestic violence. The terminations came as especially ironic in light of President Donald Trump’s campaign trail pledge to “protect women” if re-elected and to offer “unending support to every victim of crime” per a proclamation he issued for National Crime Victims’ Rights Week earlier this month.

Mother Jones was the only news outlet to report on the NNEDV grant cancelation, which supports an email hotline that offers personalized legal information for survivors in English and Spanish. The canceled, and since-restored, $2 million, three-year grant was intended to “increase awareness of and enhance access to its Spanish email hotline services.” On Tuesday, NNEDV officials learned that the remainder of the grant, about a half million dollars, was cut. A spokesperson previously said that while the NNEDV hoped to keep the services going with alternative funding, they would wind up being “drastically reduced.”

In a statement provided to Mother Jones on Friday, Stephanie Love-Patterson, the organization’s president and CEO, said that while officials are “relieved and appreciative” that the grant cancelation was reversed, “the concerns and heartache remain, as this highlights the vulnerable state of services for survivors, which will affect those who need them most.”

As I reported yesterday, advocates and lawmakers are also concerned that further cuts could be coming from the Office of Violence Against Women at the DOJ, which scrubbed funding opportunities from its website in February. The latest reversals follow restorations of other canceled grants to shelters that support survivors’ pets, as I previously reported.

Mother Jones was one of several news outlets that reported on the NCVC grant cancelations on Thursday, which were also reversed. The restored grants include one that supported its VictimConnect Resource Center, a helpline that provides emotional and logistical support to survivors; a spokesperson for NCVC said Thursday that the helpline would indefinitely shutter Friday at 5 p.m. EST as a result of the cancelation of the $2.8 million grant. Another grant, which supported programs for crime victims around the country, was also restored, according to an NCVC spokesperson. A third canceled grant, used to create a resource guide for lawmakers and advocates who want to observe the annual National Crime Victims’ Rights Week, was not restored, the spokesperson added.

“We’re celebrating at NCVC today, but the reality is that our partners in the field, all of whom also provide vital victim services all around the United States are still facing a funding crisis,” Renée Williams, NCVC CEO, said in a statement Friday. “There are thousands of great people in our country who have dedicated their careers to ensuring that victims don’t have to find justice alone. As a society, we owe it to victims and providers to make sure those services remain available.”

Spokespeople for the DOJ did not immediately respond to questions Friday morning.

Attorney General Pam Bondi, who previously bragged about the mass cuts in a post on X, calling the canceled grants “wasteful,” was noticeably silent about the about-face on Friday.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

China’s Xi Prepares to Eat America’s Lunch as Trump Cedes Leadership on Clean Energy

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

China will continue to push forward on the climate crisis, Xi Jinping has said while appearing to criticize the “protectionism” of Donald Trump’s tariff policies.

The Chinese president was attending a closed-door virtual meeting with the UN secretary general, António Guterres, Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and about a dozen other heads of state and government to discuss the climate crisis.

Xi told the meeting that China would “not slow down its climate actions,” according a draft of his remarks. He did not name the US or Trump but made apparent reference to them while noting that China had “built the world’s largest and fastest-growing renewable energy systems as well as the largest and most complete new energy industrial chain.”

Xi said: “Although some major country’s persistent pursuit of unilateralism and protectionism has seriously impacted international rules and the international order…as long as we enhance confidence, solidarity and cooperation, we will overcome the headwinds and steadily move forward global climate governance and all progressive endeavors of the world.”

After the meeting, Guterres said no government or fossil fuel interest could hold the world back from pursuing a clean energy future. “The world is moving forward, full speed ahead,” Guterres said. “No group or government can stop the clean energy revolution. Science is on our side, and the economics have shifted.”

Guterres did not mention Trump directly but the actions of the US president clearly overshadowed the meeting. The Guardian understands that the US administration was not invited to the online summit.

China’s presence was key. It is unusual for Xi to take part in such meetings but China appears to be attempting to position itself on the world stage as a stable and predictable superpower, a leader to developing countries, an economic partner and a counterweight to the unpredictability of Trump.

The global trade war launched by the US president is hitting the US economy hard, with stock markets plummeting and bond investors seeking other havens for their money.

China has responded by putting controls on some of the minerals and other materials that are critical for clean energy technology such as electric vehicles, solar panels, wind turbines and batteries.

China is snubbing a separate summit to be held on Thursday and Friday in London, hosted by the UK government and the International Energy Agency, to discuss the future of energy security. The US will be represented at the London meeting by Tommy Joyce, the acting assistant secretary for the office of international affairs at the US Department of Energy.

The White House was forced to deny this week that there were plans for new restrictions on the activities of nonprofit organizations that advocate for action on the climate crisis, after widespread rumors of a fresh executive order in the offing.

Guterres told journalists on Wednesday that China, Brazil, the EU, and the other countries and blocs present—including the heads of government of the countries currently chairing the African Union, the Asean group of Asian and Pacific countries, and the Alliance of Small Island States—had expressed “a unifying message” of support for climate action.

He said: “Our world faces massive headwinds and a multitude of crises. But we cannot allow climate commitments to be blown off course.”

At the high-level UN meeting on Wednesday, countries affirmed the collective agreement to put forward their national plans on greenhouse gas emissions by September, before the next UN climate summit, Cop30, which will take place in Brazil in November.

Guterres also urged countries to provide more climate finance to poor and vulnerable nations and set a roadmap for how to deliver the $1.3 trillion a year promised to the poor world by 2035 at last year’s Cop29.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

At Last, College Presidents Are Standing Up to Trump

When we think of “organizing” we tend to think of protesters—of scruffy and earnest demonstrators taking on giant corporations, of people with cardboard signs standing in the cold or the sun. But, really, organizing is any concentrated attempt of the (relatively) small and many to stand up to the mighty and the few, and the last few days have seen some of the most unlikely and potentially effective organizing in a long time.

In this case, the small and many were not people used to thinking of themselves that way. Instead, they were university presidents and boards of trustees—almost without exception, people of real distinction and power in their communities. I’ve served on university boards and broken bread with hundreds of college presidents (the price of lecturing to their students), and I know the breed: they tend towards the cautious and the conciliatory, but they have big reserves of local influence. They are, invariably, pillars of the community.

And so when Trump decided to try and crumple those pillars, they decided to stand up, circulating a letter that’s now been signed by more than four hundred college presidents. It was—perhaps only after the Hands Off demonstrations and Tesla takedowns—the most effective response yet to the creeping fascism in the Oval Office.

Everyone took their lead and their nerve from Harvard, where president Alan Garber and board chair Penny Pritzker pushed back hard a week ago against the administration’s attempt to basically take over the university in order to enforce something called “viewpoint diversity.” Harvard’s sharp response obviously stunned the White House, which had doubtless been lulled by Columbia University’s pathetic capitulation; as is often the case with bullies, Trump started looking for a way to back down, with his people eventually claiming that they had sent Harvard their diktat “by mistake.”

“We speak with one voice against the unprecedented government overreach and political interference now endangering American higher education.”

But by that time, the damage had been done—other educational leaders saw both the danger and the opportunity to confront it. For the first time, really, since James Conant in the Second World War, Harvard’s leaders have been serving the role they should as leaders of higher education. The extraordinary privilege of these places comes with the implicit promise that when the chips are down, they’ll actually stand up: that’s why Harvard’s Memorial Chapel is lined with the names of men who went off to die as officers in the world wars. In recent years, the Ivies have been too content to be finishing schools for Morgan Stanley; now perhaps they’re remembering their obligations.

The letter these hundreds of presidents have been signing is not strident or impolite; it acknowledges that there’s always room for improvement in any institution, but it definitely gets the point solidly across: “As leaders of America’s colleges, universities, and scholarly societies, we speak with one voice against the unprecedented government overreach and political interference now endangering American higher education.”

The list of signatories is wonderful to read—I’ve been on the majority of these campuses over the years, and so they summon up memories. Grinnell College, in the cornfields of Iowa, where my beloved aunt and uncle taught Latin and Greek to five decades of young scholars; St. Lawrence College, near the Canadian border, where I once gave a June graduation speech in a swirling snowstorm (shortest address ever!); Warren Wilson College, the North Carolina work school where I spent a day working alongside the livestock crew.

My own institution, Middlebury College, is between presidents, so we got both the interim president, Stephen Snyder, and his soon-to-be replacement Ian Baucom; our former president, Laurie Patton, who stepped down in January to head the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, not only signed the letter but did much to circulate it, so of course there’s hometown pride for me. But for lots of other people too: by many reports, alumni have been suddenly mailing in checks to their alma maters.

You could, I suppose, call all of these institutions the “elite,” though a tag that covers both Yale and Framingham State, Princeton and Hudson County Community College, doesn’t mean much. But this is a group of people self-selected to care about the idea of education and the future. They’ve been much abused in recent years, when one interest group after another has beaten up on them for being too hard or too soft on Gaza protesters, too accommodating to students climbing walls, too concerned with trigger warnings; the New York Times ran what seemed like a thousand op-eds attacking Harvard’s Claudine Gay last year for not being sufficiently anti-anti-Semitic. It’s mostly nonsense—college administrators are no better than anyone else at dealing with angry protesters; most of their efforts and expertise are about coming up with new degree programs to address the local nursing shortage, or raising enough money to fix the roof on the fieldhouse.

They take those tasks seriously, and they should. They were attacked for being who they are, by people who despise the very idea of education. Trump confidante Peter Thiel has literally paid kids money not to go to college; his protégé JD Vance has described his alma mater in New Haven as “genuinely totalitarian,” which seems both like nonsense to anyone who’s ever been there, and also a foreshadowing of the administration he now helps helm. So it’s right and refreshing for all these people to be able to say: colleges are good. They’re collections of smart people, passing on their knowledge to the next generation, which is both necessary and noble.

They were attacked for being who they are—by people who despise the very idea of education.

“Colleges and universities,” they write, in words that seem to me both restrained and correct, “are engines of opportunity and mobility, anchor institutions that contribute to economic and cultural vitality regionally and in our local communities. They foster creativity and innovation, provide human resources to meet the fast-changing demands of our dynamic workforce, and are themselves major employers. They nurture the scholarly pursuits that ensure America’s leadership in research, and many provide healthcare and other essential services. Most fundamentally, America’s colleges and universities prepare an educated citizenry to sustain our democracy.”

It’s that last bit, about sustaining democracy, that perhaps has not been their strong suit in recent years: if there’s a reasonable complaint against higher education, it’s that it’s perhaps tried too hard to make students feel comfortable, when a little challenge would be a more useful introduction to the hurly-burly of our current democracy. But challenge is what they’re providing now; this is the college president equivalent of gathering on the quad with candles for a vigil. Their document is designed to send a message to Washington (“back off—we’re unified enough to cause you trouble”) but it’s also a teaching document. It says, when someone questions your honor and your purpose, you better stand up.

It’s a lesson that won’t be lost on decent people.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Pat Bondi Cuts “Wasteful” Funds to Support Victims of Violent Crime

On Tuesday night, Claire Ponder Selib, executive director of the National Organization for Victim Assistance (NOVA), received an email from the Office of Justice Programs at the Department of Justice (DOJ) that left her devastated.

The message informed her that a federal grant that supported a pilot program to train victim advocates who staff domestic violence shelters, hotlines and rape crisis centers was being cut. The program, called the Victim Advocacy Corps, began in 2022 and selected 15 students from six colleges and universities that serve minority populations to take part in a year-long, paid fellowship at local organizations, including campus-based sexual assault programs, domestic violence agencies and family justice centers. The DOJ notice claimed the grant “no longer effectuates Department priorities,” which it said were focused on “more directly supporting certain law enforcement operations” and “combatting violent crime.”

To Selib, this rationale made no sense. “Our victim advocacy corps members are providing direct victims services in communities across the country,” she told me by phone on Thursday afternoon. “Cutting these programs puts victims at risk and cuts essential lifesaving services.”

The pilot program also aimed to solve turnover among advocates caused by low pay and an uptick in domestic violence that experts attribute to the pandemic and new abortion restrictions. “I would sayquite frankly that our workforce is in crisis,” Selib said. “Our goal with this program was to create a pipeline for the new generation of victim advocates.” Selib had hoped the program would eventually expand nationwide.

Selib’s grant was one of hundreds the DOJ reportedly canceled on Tuesday that supported victims of gun violence, addiction, and domestic violence. According to Reuters, the canceled grants were valued at more than $800 million when they were awarded. In a post on X, Attorney General Pam Bondi bragged about the cuts, alleging the grants were “wasteful” and highlighting a few examples that supported LGBTQ people. She told the Washington Post she has been “a lifelong advocate for victims of crimes against women” and claimed she “will continue to ensure that services for victims are not impacted.”

But experts say that the grant cancelations will, in fact, be particularly devastating for survivors of domestic and sexual violence, who tend to be mostly women and LGBTQ people. These anticipated outcomes are a far cry from Trump’s campaign trail pledge to “protect women” if re-elected and to offer “unending support to every victim of crime” per a proclamation Trump issued for National Crime Victims’ Rights Week earlier this month. (Spokespeople for the Department of Justice and the White House did not immediately return requests for comment from Mother Jones.)

Hundreds of state and national organizations focused on combatting domestic and sexual violence have drafted a letter they plan to send to Bondi, requesting assurance that those services will continue to be funded. “Local, state, and national service providers have been anguished and panicked to receive recent notices terminating their federal grants,” they write. “The terminations of grants, programmatic restructuring, loss of staff, disappearance of [funding opportunities], and lack of communication from DOJ to the field are causing grave insecurity and alarm across the nation” for providers, the draft adds.

Stephanie Love-Patterson, president and CEO of the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV), said in a statement that the latest cuts “will have devastating, real-life consequences for survivors and their children.” Love-Patterson’s organization provided free legal information for victims, including via an email hotline, for more than 25 years. Its website offers state-by-state information on divorce, custody, and child support laws and its hotline served nearly 6,300 survivors in both English and Spanish. Much of that work was funded by a $2 million grant over three years. On Tuesday, Love-Patterson learned that the remainder of the grant, about a half million dollar, was cut.

A spokesperson said the organization aims to keep services afloat using its other funds, but they will wind up being “drastically reduced.”

The National Center for Victims of Crime (NCVC) announced that it lost a $2.8 million grant Tuesday that will force it to indefinitely close its VictimConnect Resource Center, a helpline that provides emotional and logistical support. Last year, the helpline supported more than 16,000 victims, according to the organization. “We’re shocked that an administration that claims to care about protecting victims would leave so many vulnerable Americans without access to an essential lifeline,” Renée Williams, the organization’s CEO, said in a statement.

The groupalso lost a grant to build peer-support group programs for crime victims around the country and another grant the team used to create a resource guide for lawmakers.

Crystal Justice, chief external affairs officer of The National Domestic Violence Hotline, noted that many organizations that received termination notices were already underfunded, and that the Hotline is anticipating in surge in calls due to the cuts. “Reduction in services and support for victims means more women, men and children will be harmed,” Justice said.

It appears that Bondi has sympathy for some victims, though. The DOJ reversed some cancelations of grants for shelters working to accommodate survivors’ pets, NBC News reported.(Many shelters do not allow pets, which can prevent survivors from leaving their abusers.)

About 24 hours after Jennifer Pollitt Hill, executive director of the Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence, received a notice Tuesday night that a grant to help local shelters support pets would be canceled, she got word she would get to keep the funds. Then a third, more personal note arrived, from Maureen Henneberg, deputy assistant attorney general at the DOJ. That note said shelters supporting pets were “critical..to broadening the safety net for survivors,” and said that Bondi “personally extends her appreciation” to the Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence. “Our understanding is that all the pets grants were reinstated as it is a passion area for the AG,” Pollitt Hill told me.

The most recent round of cuts are the latest challenge facing domestic and sexual violence service providers across the country. Earlier this month, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s purge of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) led to the elimination of the team working on efforts to prevent sexual and intimate partner violence in the Division of Violence Prevention, as my colleague Kiera Butler reported. The steady depletion of a critical pot of money for providers has also put lifesaving services for survivors in peril long before Trump resumed office, I reported last year.

Even more devastation could be coming. In February, the DOJ’s Office of Violence Against Women scrubbed funding opportunities from its website, leading advocates to worry that those funds could also be cut. More than 100 House lawmakers drafted a letter they plan to send to Bondi on Thursday requesting the DOJ “clarify the status of these grants as soon as possible and take swift action to ensure funding remains available to support survivors and the organizations that serve them,” NBC News first reported.

Selib, who oversaw the pilot program of young victim advocates, is also worried.

“When we cut these services,” she said, “frankly, all Americans are at risk.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

A Federal Court Just Blocked Key Parts of Trump’s Anti-Voting Executive Order

A federal judge on Thursday blocked key parts of a sweeping anti-voting executive order issued by President Donald Trump in March. Voting rights advocates described the order as “an astonishing and unprecedented voter suppression” effort that would upend how Americans register to vote, how they cast their ballots, and how their votes are counted.

District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, an appointee of President Bill Clinton, found that Trump lacked the power to unilaterally change election rules. “Our Constitution entrusts Congress and the States—not the President—with the authority to regulate federal elections,” she wrote.

For that reason, she blocked the centerpiece of Trump’s executive order—a requirement that voters show documentary proof of citizenship when registering to vote. Trump ordered the Election Assistance Commission (EAC), an independent agency created by the Help America Vote Act of 2002, to mandate that information on a federal voter registration form.

Democrats and voting rights groups who challenged the order, including the League of Women Voters and League of United Latin American Citizens, argued that Trump lacked the authority to force the EAC to require proof of citizenship. The order, if enforced in full, would prevent tens of millions of Americans from registering to vote.

According to the Brennan Center for Justice, more than 9 percent of American citizens, roughly 21 million people, don’t have ready access to citizenship documents like a birth certificate or passport. Trump’s order could disenfranchise many more people than that because it does not specify that birth certificates or naturalization papers can be used to determine US citizenship for the purposes of registering to vote. And because driver’s licenses in most states don’t specify citizenship, those without access to their birth certificate would have to use a passport to register to vote, which 146 million Americans don’t have.

“If this policy were implemented, it would block tens of millions of Americans from voting,” Eliza Sweren-Becker of the Brennan Center told me in March. (The House passed a bill in April, the SAVE Act, that would also require proof of citizenship to register to vote, but it currently lacks the 60 votes necessary to pass in the Senate.)

Judge Kollar-Kotelly agreed that Trump did not possess the power to unilaterally change how Americans registered to vote. “Neither the Constitution nor any statute explicitly grants the President the power to dictate the contents of the Federal Form,” she wrote. “On the contrary, both the Constitution’s Elections Clause and the NVRA [National Voter Registration Act] vest control over federal election regulation in other actors, leaving no role for the President.”

In a partial victory for the administration, the judge declined to block other parts of Trump’s executive order, including one provision that gives the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Government Efficiency enhanced power to search for alleged non-citizen voters on state voter lists. (Non-citizens on such a list are exceedingly rare.) Another provision that was not blocked penalizes states that allow ballots to be counted after Election Day, so long as they are postmarked by the day of the election.

“On the present record, challenges to those provisions are premature or properly presented not by these plaintiffs but by the States themselves,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote. “In fact, many States are already bringing those challenges elsewhere.” Nineteen states, led by Massachusetts, have sued the administration over the executive order, which could lead to further provisions being blocked in subsequent litigation.

Voting rights groups celebrated Thursday’s order.

“President Trump’s attempt to impose a documentary proof of citizenship requirement on the federal voter registration form is an unconstitutional abuse of power,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project. “If implemented, it would place serious and unnecessary burdens on everyday Americans and strain already overburdened election officials. This executive order is part of a broader attack on our democratic elections by promoting baseless nativist conspiracy theories. Today, the court blocked a key strategy of this attack. And we will keep fighting to ensure every eligible voter can make their voice heard without interference or intimidation.”

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump May Loathe Wind Energy, But This Red State Loves It

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

If you drive across Iowa, you’ll probably notice two things aside from the many farms: Trump signs and wind turbines.

Iowa is Trump country. While the state was once considered politically purple, it decisively supported President Donald Trump in 2016, in 2020, and in 2024, when Trump won in 94 of Iowa’s 99 counties. Iowa’s governor and two senators are also Republicans, and, after some early friction, have fallen in line with Trump.

Iowa is also a wind energy powerhouse. A remarkable 59 percent of the state’s energy in 2023 came from wind turbines, a larger share than any other state in the country. Texas is the only state that produces more wind energy than Iowa, though wind power makes up a much smaller portion of the Lone Star State’s energy mix. Wind turbines are now so common in Iowa that they appear on the state’s regular license plates.

At face value, wind energy and Trump don’t mix. Many of his supporters downplay or disregard climate science showing that fossil fuels are warming the planet far faster than it would naturally—a key fact underlying the value of wind energy and other power sources that don’t have significant carbon emissions. In some cases, Trump supporters, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., also help elevate unproven claims that offshore wind turbines are killing whales.

Trump himself, meanwhile, is the most anti-wind-energy president in history. He’s been bad-mouthing wind power for over a decade, often relying on similarly spurious claims. “We’re not going to do the wind thing,” Trump said in a speech on Inauguration Day. “Big, ugly wind mills. They ruin your neighborhood.” And Trump has already made policy moves intended to slow growth in the sector—causing some developers to halt or totally abandon projects.

On one hand, Iowa is a test case for the staying power of renewable energy. Wind farms have expanded in the state not because of climate concerns but because of economics. Wind energy is cheap in Iowa.

But Iowa also highlights an important disconnect that exists across the country—between the anti-climate, “drill, baby, drill” rhetoric that helped get Trump elected and the reality facing much of his base living in states that benefit from renewable energy. The economics of wind energy are incredibly strong, experts told me, so the industry won’t just disappear. But Trump’s energy policies, if successful, could have harmful consequences for Republican strongholds like Iowa. A question now is if conservatives who rely on wind energy push back, will Trump soften his anti-wind stance?

If you want to learn about wind energy in Iowa, the person to talk to is Tom Wind. (Yes, his name is actually Wind, and yes, people point it out a lot to him.) He’s a crop farmer and electrical engineer in Iowa who’s been working in the sector—first at a utility, then as a consultant, and now as a wind-farm manager—for decades.

There are several reasons for Iowa’s ascendency to wind dominance, Wind told me. The simplest reason is that Iowa is windy. And while some Great Plains states like Nebraska and Kansas are technically windier, Iowa is closer to big population centers, like Chicago, that need lots of power.

Iowa was also quick to adopt policies that benefited wind and other renewables. In fact, Iowa was the first state in the country to establish what’s called a renewable portfolio standard in 1983. It required the state’s investor-owned utilities to contract out or own at least 105 megawatts of renewable energy, which is enough to power tens of thousands of homes. Iowa reached that goal by 1999, Wind said. When the RPS was enacted, the state legislature was run by Democrats, though it still wasn’t that controversial: Iowa lawmakers, including Republican Gov. Terry Branstad, saw an opportunity to make Iowa more energy independent in the wake of the 1970s energy crisis (an actual crisis, by the way, not the manufactured energy emergency Trump has conjured). The state has also never had a large fossil-fuel industry to lobby against pro-renewable legislation, Wind said.

“Maybe it’s the commonsense approach of Iowans: We need energy, and if we can do it renewably—and it’s not costing us a fortune—why wouldn’t we do it?”

Later, state and especially federal tax incentives for renewable energy further propelled wind to dominance in Iowa. In the ’90s, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, a Republican, helped establish a federal tax credit for building wind farms. That ultimately helped earn Grassley the title of “father” of Iowa wind energy.

MidAmerican Energy Company, the largest electric utility in Iowa and a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway Energy, was especially hungry for tax credits, Wind said, and has since built out an enormous amount of wind energy. (In reporting this story, Vox reached out to several Republican politicians and energy authorities in the state. Branstad, Grassley’s office, MidAmerican, and Berkshire Hathaway Energy all declined interview requests. Sen. Joni Ernst and Gov. Kim Reynolds did not respond to interview requests.)

The state’s many farmers—a core section of Iowa’s economy that maintains a lot of political power—have also helped the wind industry take off. Farmers across Iowa have put turbines on their land as a way to earn more income. While crop prices and yields are volatile and at the whims of natural disasters, wind turbines offer a relatively stable source of revenue, on the scale of thousands of dollars per year, per turbine.

“It’s a real blessing for us,” said Dave Johnson, a livestock farmer in northern Iowa who leases his land to a utility that installed four turbines on his property. He earns about $30,000 a year from the four turbines combined, he told Vox. Johnson’s son also has turbines on his farm.

Johnson, a Republican who says he voted for Trump, had the turbines installed primarily because he wanted his farm—where he raises cattle and hogs—to generate more value. “I never had a 401(k),” he said. “I farmed and stuck everything back into the farm. This is the 401(k) that I never had.”

Fred Koschmeder, a corn and soybean farmer near Johnson’s farm, also has turbines on his land. “I don’t even look at it as a political thing,” Koschmeder, who also says he voted for Trump, said of wind energy. “It is economic development. If you’ve got a chance to participate in something that brings value, I think you’re kind of foolish not to do it…It adds a lot of value to your farm and extra income, too.”

Farming in Iowa has become more economically challenging in recent years, as the price of some crops like soybeans have dipped, and farm costs, such as tractor repairs, have spiked due to inflation. Climate change is also raising the risk of drought and flooding, according to government and academic researchers. Wind energy “is allowing farmers to stay on the farm,” Johnson said. “That helps rural America.”

But even if you’re not a farmer, you likely benefit from wind turbines if you live in Iowa, said Steve Guyer, senior energy policy counsel at Iowa Environmental Council, a nonprofit green group. The state has stable energy bills that tend to be well below the national average in cost. Onshore wind is the cheapest source of energy with or without tax credits, as of 2024, according to the financial firm Lazard.

“All customers benefit from it,” said Guyer, who formerly worked for utilities in Iowa. “Although other costs may rise over time, the cost of the wind actually remains stable or lowers. When we factor that into the overall utility bill, it at least stabilizes the bill.”

The wind industry also employs roughly 4,000 people across the state and draws billions of dollars in capital investments. Plus, it’s the No. 1 taxpayer in a third of Iowa counties, according to Mak Heddens, who runs a group called Power Up Iowa, a coalition of clean energy companies in Iowa.

While wind energy projects have faced fierce opposition in several counties—anti-wind advocates often rely on misinformation to argue that turbines harm wildlife and threaten human health—the industry is popular on the whole. This likely has little to do with politics or concerns about climate change. People across the political spectrum like wind energy because it’s cheap, local, and generates money for the state’s economy. These are things Republicans really care about, said James McCalley, an electrical engineer and wind energy expert at Iowa State University. (McCalley identifies as Republican.)

“We’re a red state, and we’ve embraced it, and I’m proud of that,” said Brent Siegrist, a Republican state representative in the western Iowa’s Pottawattamie County, where a large wind farm produces enough electricity to power up to 122,000 homes. “Maybe it’s the commonsense approach of Iowans: We need energy, and if we can do it renewably—and it’s not costing us a fortune—why wouldn’t we do it?”

There’s no doubt that wind energy is a massive part of Iowa’s economy—powering the bulk of homes and businesses in the state—and a boon to residents. Yet people who support Trump often don’t see his anti-wind position as much of a threat or expect it to shift.

Johnson, the livestock farmer, says he doesn’t pay close attention to Trump’s comments on wind energy. “I know he just shoots his mouth off,” Johnson said. When asked about real policies Trump has put in place, including an executive order that pauses new approvals for wind projects, Johnson said he’s not worried because wind energy has a lot of support, even among Republicans.

Siegrist, meanwhile, downplayed how much Iowa depends on wind energy, mentioning that the state still uses coal. And while Siegrist doesn’t think the federal government should be controlling what happens to wind development within states, he’s not worried about Trump’s anti-wind statements. “I’ve got enough things to do in Iowa to worry about Washington, DC,” he told me.

Paul Roeder, a Republican who owns a handful of wind turbines in Iowa, is similarly untroubled by the administration’s position. “I’m not so much worried about politics as I am about some of the other external factors that drive the price of energy,” Roeder told me. “The president doesn’t drive the price of energy.”

Roeder says he voted for Trump but not because of the president’s stance on renewable energy. This raises a key point: Many Republicans support renewable energy, and they may even worry about carbon emissions, but energy simply isn’t as salient for them as other issues, such as immigration. That helps explain how someone like Grassley — the father of Iowa wind energy, remember — is a Trump ally, even though he’s previously called Trump’s comments about wind energy “idiotic.”

It’s also worth pointing out that, more generally, people don’t often think about where their energy comes, as long as their lights turn on and their bills aren’t surging. I grew up in Iowa and have visited at least once a year since. But it wasn’t until recently — through my environmental reporting — that I realized how important wind energy is to the state. So it’s not shocking that Iowan’s don’t connect their energy to Trump. “They don’t necessarily make the connection to what the president is saying,” said Bob Keefe, executive director of E2, an association of business leaders, many of whom work in the clean energy industry.

But there is real cause for concern.

The strong economics of wind energy — what allowed turbines to proliferate in a conservative state — persist today, and so it’s reasonable to expect that the sector will still grow. Yet policies from the Trump administration could seriously dent the industry across the country, including in Iowa. On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order that aimed to curtail growth of the wind-energy industry. Among other things, it directed agencies to pause new and renewed federal approvals and leases for both onshore and offshore wind projects.

Since Trump’s executive order from January 20, the administration has put in place or threatened additional tariffs on countries, such as China, that would substantially raise the cost of onshore turbines, some of which are manufactured in Iowa. Even turbines that are manufactured locally are typically built with at least some foreign parts.

“There is a certain level of nervousness in the market,” Manav Sharma, North America division CEO for Nordex Group, a wind turbine manufacturer that has a production facility in Iowa, told KCRG.

In a statement, Alliant Energy, the third-largest utility owner and operator of regulated wind energy in the US, according to the company, said it will “continue to monitor the Trump Administration executive orders on national energy policy.” TPI Composites, a global company that manufactures wind turbine blades in Iowa, declined an interview request.

Some wind advocates and lawmakers — including some conservatives — are also worried that the Republican-controlled Congress may stamp out tax incentives for clean energy that are part of former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Those incentives have largely benefitted Republican districts but are at risk of getting cut as Trump has vowed to repeal the IRA. “I think the subsidies are the biggest issue,” Ernie Goss, an economist at Creighton University who specializes in the Midwest, told Vox. “If they are reduced, will wind energy survive?”

Even if tax credits remain, the Trump administration may still weaken incentives, such as through efforts to shrink the IRS. “What could also happen is they cut the IRS workforce,” Wind said, adding that applications to get tax credits have to go through the agency. “If you start losing employees, things start slowing down. It just gets harder to do business with the IRS.”

These concerns are especially pressing today as Iowa becomes a hot spot for energy-intensive data centers in step with the AI boom. It will need more energy quickly. Google, Meta, and Microsoft are all building out or operating data centers in the state, in part, because the state has affordable energy.

Policies from the administration that harm renewable energy stand to harm Iowa, said Keefe of E2. This is true whether or not you care about climate change. “You don’t do this kind of damage to an industry, you don’t spin off this kind of market uncertainty, and things will be okay,” Keefe said. “The only way they’re going to be okay is if businesses and consumers stand up and demand that their lawmakers not take an energy source away from them that happens to be the cheapest energy we can develop right now.”

“If I was one of those thousands of Iowans that work in the wind industry, or if I had family that worked in the industry, I would be calling my lawmaker today and saying, ‘Hey, recognize the risks that you are putting my community at — my family, these jobs, our economy,’” he said.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Trump Crypto Coin Buyers Offered VIP Tour of White House

The cryptocurrency Donald Trump launched days before returning to the Oval Office got a big boost on Wednesday afternoon, as the Trump-owned company behind the meme coin announced that its top holders would be invited to an exclusive dinner with the president—and the 25 leading buyers will get a special VIP tour of the White House.

Launched one business day before Trump’s inauguration in January, the cryptocurrency—which has no inherent value or particular use—immediately saw its value shoot from just $6.29 to $74, before crashing to around $10 by early March. The price has slumped as low as $7.57 and was hovering around $9 on Monday. But a little before noon Eastern Time on Tuesday, the price steadily began rising, hitting a peak of $14.28 a few moments after the coin’s official X account announced a special event for top investors of $TRUMP.

“This is about as unethical as you can get—essentially selling off access to the president.”

According to the coin’s official website, its top 220 holders will be invited to a special May 22 dinner at Trump’s country club outside Washington, DC.

An even more special perk is in store for the 25 biggest holders, who “will be invited for an ultra-exclusive private VIP Reception with the President. And separately by us to a Special White House Tour.” Although littered with grammatical errors, the coin’s website emphasizes at every opportunity that it’s promoting an event with the sitting president of the United States.

“This is one of the most exclusive events in the world,” the website notes in its FAQ. “This is a high-security, high-status event with President Trump. If you earned a seat at the table, it’s because you earned it.”

“You are having Dinner with the President of the USA!” the website enthuses under a section about event security, warning that anyone attending will have to pass a background check and can’t hail from a country that doesn’t participate in Know Your Customer banking regulations.

Meme coins have no intrinsic value or particular usefulness as currency, but serve more as a cultural signifier. They usually are based on an internet joke, such as the internet’s fascination with the “doge” dog (Dogecoin), or make use of a celebrity’s image. While real money can be made riding the speculative highs and lows of meme coin trading, it’s also one of the sectors of the crypto world most prone to bubbles and subsequent collapses.

After Trump announced the coin, many crypto enthusiasts—who have largely been supportive of the president—cringed at his association with one of the blockchain’s more frivolous incarnations. But Trump coin holders did appear to heed the call to enter to win a seat at the event—or on the tour—with a number of users registering multi-million dollar caches of $TRUMP in the hours following.

Jordan Libowitz, a spokesperson for the nonpartisan group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, characterized the move as a naked quid pro quo. “The closest situation I can think of was Bill Clinton hosting major donors in the Lincoln Bedroom,” Libowitz said, “but that pales in comparison to this. This is about as unethical as you can get—essentially selling off access to the president and the White House.”

What it probably wasn’t, he said, was illegal: “There are, unfortunately, no laws that apply to the president that could be violated here, unless one of the top 25 holders was something like a foreign state’s wealth fund.” In that case, Libowitz said, the Constitution’s emoluments clause could come into play—and, separately, “any staffer involved in selling access to the White House may have some issues.”

The coin’s official website notes in its fine print that the tours were set up by FightFightFight LLC—a company whose ownership is unclear, but which controls 80 percent of the coin’s theoretical supply in partnership with CIC Digital, a company owned by the Trump Organization.

The White House did not return a request for comment on the tours and what they might include—or how they might differ from standard White House tours, which are typically arranged through members of Congress.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

The Supreme Court Is Trying to Normalize Its Own Anti-LGBTQ Animus

On Tuesday, a group of religious parents had their day at the Supreme Court, hoping the justices would grant them something extraordinary: the ability to pull their kids out of a classroom whenever instruction verges into territory that contradicts their religious beliefs. Based on the justices’ responses inoral arguments, those parents are very likely to win the day—and public education may never be the same.

The case, Mahmoud v. Taylor, came out of Montgomery County, Maryland, where a group of Christian and Muslim parents, represented by the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a Christian legal advocacy firm, are suing the the county board of education for the ability to pull their kids from the classroom when certain books with LGBTQ content are read. While the attorney representing the parents was careful to say that they could never dictate what was taught—they simply want the option to opt out—that’s not where such a demand leads.

A classroom where kids will be escorted out every time information about an LGBTQ person or subject comes up is one in which, ultimately, those subjects will be suppressed. The few parents who want to shield their children from knowledge about LGBTQ people may go a long way toward eradicating the idea of their existence from American classrooms. We know this opt-out route doesn’t work because the school district alreadytried itthree years ago —and, as my colleague Sarah Szilagy explains, it failed.

During oral arguments, Justice Neil Gorsuch raised the possibility that the Montgomery County Board of Education didn’t actually end the policy because of infeasibility, but because of animus.

“We have some statements from Board members suggesting,” Gorsuch said, quoting the parents’ brief, “that some parents might be promoting hate and suggesting that it was unfortunate that they were taking a view endorsed by white supremacists and xenophobes.” Based on these comments (which the board’s lawyer said were intemperate, but taken out of context), Gorsuch pressed, why shouldn’t the court treat this as a religious discrimination case? And, he implied, why shouldn’t the court side with the parents on those grounds?

Gorsuch’s question is worth turning on the court itself. When a majority rules in June, as it almost certainly will, that religious parents can pull their kids out of a classroom whenever a book or lesson contradicts their religious beliefs, it will be fair to ask whether those justices applied the law neutrally, or whether they acted out of religious animus against LGBTQ people: whether their own disinclination to view LGBTQ people and their lives in a positive light led them to attempt to banish such views from public school classrooms.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett, for example, was dismayed that a teacher might explain “transgenderism” according to instructional material that read, as she quoted: “When we’re born, people make a guess about our gender and label us boy or girl based on our body parts. Sometimes they’re right; sometimes they’re wrong. When someone’s transgender, they guess wrong. When someone’s cisgender, they guessed right.” Barrett called that more about “influence” than “communicating respect”; if so, how does Barrett think teachers should define being transgender?

Consider this wild hypothetical from Justice Samuel Alito, in which he describes a completely unrealistic scenario about how tolerance of LGBTQ people could be weaponized to attack Catholics like himself:

Suppose a school says we’re going to talk about same-sex marriage and same-sex marriage is legal in Maryland and it’s a good thing, it’s moral, it makes people happy, same-sex couples form good families, they raise children. Now, there are those who disagree with that. Catholics, for example, they disagree with that. They think that it’s not moral, but they’re wrong and they’re bad and anybody who doesn’t accept that same-sex marriage is normal and just as good as opposite-sex marriage is not a good person.

Alan Schoenfeld, the attorney who represented the county board of education, said that would be coercion. But the example demonstrated Alito’s long-held belief that LGBTQ rights are actually a vehicle for attacks on religious people like himself.

Then there’s this (lightly edited) exchangebetween Alito and Schoenfeld, in which Alito grows increasingly upset at the idea that children should hear a positive portrayal of two men getting married, as happens in one of the books raised in the case, Uncle Bobby’s Wedding. Like Barrett, Alito argued that a positive portrayal of an LGBTQ issue is intrinsically coercive. The back-and-forth gets at the key question in the case: Is exposure to a fact or idea a burden or form of coercion on religious expression?

Alito: Exposure is telling the students that there are a lot of people who marry a person of the opposite sex, there are also people who marry a person of the same sex. Period. Leave it at that. That’s exposure. If you go beyond that, is it still exposure?

Schoenfeld: It depends on the context. I mean, I think Uncle Bobby’s Wedding is teaching third graders or second graders precisely that. It’s telling it through a story.

Alito: I think it clearly goes beyond that. It doesn’t just say that Uncle Bobby and Jamie are getting married. It expresses the idea subtly, but it expresses the idea this is a good thing. “Mommy, said Chloe, I don’t understand, why is Uncle Bobby getting married. Bobby and Jamie love each other, said Mommy. When grownup people love each other that much, sometimes they get married.” I mean, that’s not sending—subtly sending the message this is a good thing?

Schoenfeld: I think that’s a way of a mother consoling her daughter who’s annoyed that they are favorite uncle is distracted and doesn’t have time for her. But even if the message were some people are gay, some people
get married, I don’t think there’s anything impermissibly normative about that. It is a story that is being used to teach students that, just as in the 99 of the 100 books that we read about couples, it’s a man and a woman, there also may be a man and a man.

Alito: Why is the Montgomery County Board of Education in this argument running away from what they clearly want to say? They have a view that they want to express on these subjects. And maybe it’s a very good view, but they have a definite view. And that’s the whole point of this curriculum; is it not?

Schoenfeld: I think what’s in the record is that the Board wants to teach civility and respect for difference in the classroom. There is obviously an incidental message in some of these books that these life choices and these life styles are worthy of respect. I don’t know how you can teach students to respect each other without teaching that… So the incidental message that these things ought to be normalized and treated with respect, I think, is simply part of the work that the school is doing in cultivating respect in a pluralistic school.

Alito: Well, the plaintiffs here are not asking the school to change its curriculum. They’re just saying, look, we want out. Why isn’t that feasible? What is the big deal about allowing them to opt out of this?

Schoenfeld: I think on the facts of this case, we have the natural experiment of the school’s permitting these opt-outs and then finding that it was not administrable.

Alito: Well, why is it not administrable?

The debate went on, with Justice Brett Kavanaugh jumping in to claim that if schools can set up an alternative health class—a single discrete class where an alternative is mandated by the state, and therefore prepped in advance—then surely they could do it for parents who don’t want their kids exposed to Uncle Bobby’s Wedding. Schoenfeld took one last stab at trying to explain the problem:

If you think about the way a third-grade classroom operates and you think about the fact that there are some students sitting in the corner, and they say: This is a great book, I’m going to take it off the shelf, and three and then five and then nine students gather around to read it, and they say: Teacher, I want you to come over and watch us doing that. All of those things, I think, fall within the definition of “curriculum” at that lower grade.

It’s mayhem. And the ability of teachers to manage the line between what is
curriculum content coming directly from the teacher and coming indirectly from the sort of socialization in the classroom, I think, is very hard to draw.

Kavanaugh and Barrett, whose kids are still young, must know this. Alito and the other Republican-appointed justices surely do as well. But the infeasibility is really the point. If you can’t actually accommodate some parent’s opt-out requests, then the religious beliefs of those parents begin to dictate what is discussed in the classroom. If you can’t feasibly remove students every time a book is opened, or every time a student raises their hand to ask what transgender means, then that content is ultimately silenced, and with it the idea that LGBTQ people exist, much less are normal and deserving of respect. It’s why some commenters have taken to calling this the “Don’t Say Gay” case—because that’s where it leads.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson even got the Justice Department’s Sarah Harris, who argued for the Trump administration in support of the parents, to admit that the ramifications could travel beyond the classroom. “There are obviously going to be contexts besides the school context in which we would agree that there is a burden,” she said.

The question isn’t who will win the case, but how big a win it will be. If Gorsuch’s logic about animus on the Board of Education prevails, then the ruling could apply just to Montgomery County schools. But if the view is adopted that exposure to the idea that it’s okay for men to marry men is now a violation of the Free Exercise Clause, then public education across the country could change dramatically.

If so, it will be only logical to wonder whether exposure to the idea of a socially accepted gay couple is deemedunconstitutional because parents’ religious rights have been violated—or because the justices’ own inability to accept LGBTQ people has prevailed.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

The Pentagon Is Getting a New Glam Room

The Pentagon is finally undergoing a shake-up as concerns grow over Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth: The Defense Department confirmed to CBS News on Wednesday that a new makeup studio is coming to the Pentagon.

No, of course, Hegseth is not resigning. He made clear in several appearances this week that he remains defiant, committed to the unsubstantiated claim that fired workers are to blame for spreading fake, anti-Trump news. The studio, which will feature a mirror outfitted with professional make-up lights and a director’s chair, will be constructed adjacent to the Pentagon’s briefing room, where Hegseth has yet to talk to reporters. The former Fox News host is instead likely to use the room to prepare for television appearances, like this animated one:

Hegseth had booze on his mind at 8:30 this morning

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-04-22T14:04:49.721Z

The project does not address the many scandals Hegseth has endured, including his reported penchat for sharing war plans on Signal. But it does make sense.

As I wrote in a feature last month, the physical appearance of those in President Donald Trump’s orbit, a man notorious for his obsession with the literal pageantry of beauty, is paramount; the tactics employed to achieve prominent positions of power in this administration seem to rely on how camera-ready you appear.

Hegseth, under enormous pressure to resign, might feel the need to level up his make-up game, especially after this week’s botched sideburn look. For the next scandal, he will look, one hopes, beautiful.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

US Citizen Wrongly Detained by the Border Patrol Says Government’s Account Is False

This story was originally published by Popular Information, a substack publication to which you can subscribe here.

On April 8, Jose Hermosillo, a 19-year-old U.S. citizen, was wrongfully incarcerated by immigration authorities in Arizona, who claimed he was an undocumented immigrant. He was held for 10 days at Florence Correctional Center, a privately run immigration detention facility, before being released on April 17.

These facts are not disputed.

On X, the Department of Homeland Security said, “Hermosillo’s arrest and detention were a direct result of his own actions and statements.” According to DHS, “Jose Hermosillo approached Border Patrol in Tucson Arizona stating he had ILLEGALLY entered the U.S. and identified himself as a Mexican citizen.”

DHS also released what purports to be a transcript of Hermosillo’s conversation with a Border Patrol agent signed “JOSE.” In the transcript, Hermosillo allegedly said he was born in Mexico, was a citizen of Mexico, and entered the United States illegally.

Hermosillo says he tried to tell staff at Florence Correctional Center he was a US citizen, but “they say, tell your lawyer.”

In an interview with Popular Information, Hermosillo said DHS’s account was false.

According to Hermosillo, he was visiting his girlfriend’s family in Tucson from his home in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Several hours before his arrest, Hermosillo was transported to a hospital in Tucson by ambulance after suffering from a seizure. He has a New Mexico state ID, but did not take it with him during the medical emergency.

After being released from the hospital following treatment, Hermosillo did not know how to return to where he was staying. He approached the Border Patrol officer because he was looking for someone to help him. “I saw a car, and I ask[ed] him for help,” Hermosillo said. He told the officer that he was staying in Tucson.

“You’re not from here. Do you have your papers?” the officer said, according to Hermosillo. When the officer asked where he was from, Hermosillo said he told the officer, “New Mexico.” The officer then accused Hermosillo of lying. “Don’t make me [out] like [I’m] stupid,” the officer said. “I know you’re from Mexico.” After that, Hermosillo said, he was arrested.

Hermosillo said that he never told the officer that he was born in Mexico, was a citizen of Mexico, or entered the country illegally—and he would not have said those things because they are not true. He signed the transcript released by DHS because the officer ordered him to “sign everything.” But Hermosillo did not read it, because he cannot read.

According to Hermosillo’s girlfriend, Grace Hernandez, Hermosillo has learning disabilities and can only write his name. Hermosillo said he did not graduate from high school and dropped out after the 10th grade.

The officer also signed the document, which said Hermosillo “read” the document or had it read to him. But Hermosillo said no one read him the document.

Other documents created by the officer have inaccuracies. For example, the criminal complaint says that Hermosillo was detained “at or near Nogales, Arizona.” But Hermosillo was detained in Tuscon, which is more than 70 miles from Nogales. John Mennell, a spokesperson for the U.S. Border Patrol, said that it was an “unintentional” error.

Hermosillo said he was detained with about 15 other men in a cell at the Florence Correctional Center. He was served only cold food. He said he contracted the flu because “they have it cold in there and everybody’s getting sick.” Hermosillo said he requested medicine but was not provided with any.

Hermosillo said he tried to tell people at Florence Correctional Center that he was a US citizen, but was dismissed. “They say, tell your lawyer,” he recalled. Hermosillo, a father to a six-month-old, said he spent time while he was detained crying because he was afraid “they’re not going to let me out.”

Two days after his detention, Hermosillo told a judge that he was a US citizen. Prosecutors then requested that the hearing be delayed and that Hermosillo be detained until it was rescheduled. Hermosillo was held for an additional seven days until, at the next hearing, his family provided the court with his birth certificate.

Since his release, Hermosillo has struggled. “When I dream, I dream I’m still in there,” he said.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

Tesla’s Deadbeat CEO Is Coming Back

Amid plunging stock prices and a staggering 71 percent profit drop, Tesla CEO Elon Musk is pivoting back to his day job. “My time obligation to DOGE will drop significantly,” Musk told investors Tuesday after the company’s Q1 earnings report attributed a “changing political sentiment,” among other factors, for a precipitous drop in business.

The report did not go into specifics. It declined to highlight Musk’s singular role in decimating the federal government, flirting with Nazi salutes, trying—and failing—to buy a state Supreme Court seat. Nor did the report directly refer to the hundreds of protests that have popped up outside Tesla dealerships around the country. The embrace of the middle finger to bully Cybertruck drivers? That certainly wasn’t mentioned either.

Investors who called in on Tuesday, perhaps encouraged to hear that Musk would be scaling back his near lock-step partnership with President Donald Trump, were all but certain to be disappointed. In the same earnings call, Musk, unasked about the protests, reportedly volunteered to talk about the demonstrations himself, claiming, without evidence, that they were being “paid for.” Musk also took to X to exhibit the same noxious behavior that has become synonymous with Tesla, re-posting content in support of the AfD, Germany’s far-right political party, and space travel to Mars. Elsewhere, a former Tesla engineer accused Musk of threatening to deport an entire team at the company after the engineer, Cristina Balan, had broached Musk with her concerns over Tesla’s brake safety.

So, will Musk’s pledge to cut back on DOGE make Tesla great again? Judging by the billionaire’s compulsive inability to stop posting, coupled with China’s immense investment in the electric car market at a time when the global economic order is being rapidly upended, I wouldn’t bet that this is the company’s white knight moment.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

The Parental Rights Movement Has a Big Day at the Supreme Court

Montgomery County, Maryland, is the most religiously diverse county in the United States. When its Board of Education approved a slate of storybooks with queer characters for K-5 English classes beginning in the 2022-23 school year, its main goal was to give kids tools to “work effectively in cross-cultural environments” and “confront and eliminate stereotypes.”

For the first year, the district let parents opt their children out of instruction related to the readings, including on religious grounds. But then it reversed course, announcing that for the next school year, exemptions wouldn’t be allowed. So many families were opting out that the situation became unworkable, the district said. Dozens of students missed class. Teachers and librarians couldn’t keep track of which kids needed alternate assignments.

On Tuesday, the US Supreme Courtheard arguments in a case about the constitutionality of that change in policy, with a group of mostly Christian and Muslim parents arguing that exposing their children to LGBTQ-inclusive books amounts to government indoctrination.

The case, Mahmoud v. Taylor, is not just about religious freedom. It puts an expansive framing of parental rights before the nation’s highest court at a time when conservatives are invoking such rights to justify a host of right-wing policies, including forced outing of queer students; campaigns against DEI policies and teachings; and parental consent requirements for contraception, STI testing, and other healthcare.

At Tuesday’s hearing, the themes of religious rights and parents’ rights were often intertwined. “Forcing [parents] to submit their children to such instruction violates their religious beliefs and directly interferes with their ability to direct the religious upbringing of their children,” declared Eric Baxter, senior counsel with the Becket Fund, a religious liberty firm that claims credit for “almost half of all Supreme Court victories for religious freedom over the last decade.”

The disputed books share many similarities with classic fairy tales. “The only difference is that the storybooks include LGBTQ characters and their points of view.”

The books at the center of the case include Prince & Knight, featuring a young prince who falls in love with a knight who helps him protect his kingdom from a dragon, and Uncle Bobby’s Wedding, about a little girl whose favorite uncle is marrying another man. A third book, IntersectionAllies, follows characters from different marginalized groups, including people who are queer, Muslim, and disabled. In court briefs, the parents argue that the books’ themes—including same-sex romance and discussions of trans identity—are intended to “disrupt students’ religious beliefs.”

Baxter pointed out that the school district allows parents to opt their children out of sex education classes, and choir students can opt out of singing religious songs. “In a system where thousands of students are daily opted in and out of class for multiple reasons,” he told the court, “there’s no basis for denying opt-outs [to picture books] for religious reasons.”

But the attorney for the school district, Alan Schoenfeld, disputed the idea that exposing kids to books about LGBTQ characters infringes on their parents’ rights. “Every day in public elementary school classrooms across the country, children are taught ideas that conflict with their family’s religious beliefs,” Schoenfeld told the court, including exposure to books about working mothers or war. The goal of the Montgomery County policy isn’t to indoctrinate kids, he said, but rather “to foster mutual respect in a pluralistic school community….The lesson is that students should treat their peers with respect.”

According to the district, a committee of literacy specialists vetted every LGBTQ-friendly book for appropriateness and educational value and posted the books publicly for parents to review before the school board approved them. The disputed books share many similarities to classic fairy tales such as Cinderella, Rapunzel, and Sleeping Beauty that focus on heterosexual romance, the district argues in court briefs. “The only difference is that the storybooks include LGBTQ characters and their points of view.”

One of the key issues at the hearing was the lack of evidence about how the books were actually used in classrooms and how teachers responded to children’s questions about them. According to the district, teachers were explicitly instructed not to use the books to teach about gender or sexuality, or to encourage students to reject their faith. The school board also left it up to individual teachers to decide when and how to incorporate the books into lessons.

For these reasons, there’s no evidence one way or the other in the court record that children wereinstructed to reject the religious teachings of their parents. Rather, the parents sued to block the no-opt-out policy before it took effect; the Maryland district court rejected their request, but according to court filings, most of the named plaintiffs have since pulled their children from the district. “The record is seriously underdeveloped,” Schoenfeld told the court.

That lack of evidence troubled Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who at one point wondered whether the case was “really the right vehicle to evaluate any of these issues.” But several of her conservative colleagues seemed willing to accept the premise that children’s exposure to the storybooks could violate their parents’ religious expression—and they seemed less willing to entertain the district’s reasoning for no longer permitting opt-outs.

The same reasoning could apply to “the parents of a student who wish to prevent their ninth grader from being exposed to evolution, or their sixth-grader being exposed to any pictures of girls who are not wearing a hijab.”

“The plaintiffs here are not asking the school to change its curriculum, they’re just saying, ‘Look, I want out,’” Justice Samuel Alito said. “Why isn’t that feasible? What’s the big deal about allowing them to opt out?”

The “big deal,” as school boards and administrators warn in an amicus brief, is that a ruling for the parents would likely have repercussions far beyond discussions of gender and sexuality. The same reasoning could apply to parents “who wish to prevent their ninth grader from being exposed to evolution, or their sixth-grader being exposed to any pictures of girls who are not wearing a hijab,” the administrators argued.

Justice Elena Kagan seemed to agree. “Once we say … what you’re asking us to say, it will be opt-outs for everyone,” she told Baxter. “I suspect there are a lot of non-religious parents who [also] weren’t all that thrilled” about having their young children exposed to books about gender and sexuality, she added.

In recent years, the Supreme Court has pushed the boundaries of religious freedom while ripping the teeth out of the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause—the provision prohibiting the government from endorsing particular religious views. Since 2018, the court has upheld the right of Christian business owners to refuse to bake wedding cakes and create wedding websites for same-sex couples; allowed the use of state-funded private school vouchers at religious schools; and sided with a public high school football coach who was fired for hosting on-field team prayers after games.

Under President Donald Trump, the federal government has used parental rights to justify eliminating DEI programs in K-12 schools and launching investigations into policies that protect queer students from being outed to their parents. Arguing briefly in support of the parents, Principal Deputy Solicitor General Sarah Harris told the justices Tuesday that denying parents the right to opt their children out of the LGBTQ storybooks amounted to a denial of a “public benefit”—education—because of the parents’ religious beliefs. “Here, Montgomery County offers a free public education to parents only if their children use books featuring same sex relationships and transgender issues,” Harris said.

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

How Trump Exploits Working Class Pain

Arlie Hochschild, an award-winning author and sociologist, has spent years talking with people living in rural parts of the country who have been hit hard by the loss of manufacturing jobs and shuttered coal mines. They’re the very people President Donald Trump argues will benefit most from his sweeping wave of tariffs and recent executive orders aimed at reviving coal mining in the US. But Hochschild argues that Trump’s policies will only fill an emotional need for those in rural America. She should know.

In 2016, Hochschild’s Strangers in Their Own Land was a must-read for anyone who wanted to better understand the appeal of Trump and his ascent to the White House. She spent time in Louisiana talking with Tea Party supporters about how they believed women, minorities, and immigrants were cutting in line to achieve the American Dream. But in her latest book, Stolen Pride, Hochschild shifted her focus to Pikeville, Kentucky, a small city in Appalachia where coal jobs were leaving, opioids were arriving, and a white supremacist march was being planned. The more she talked to people, the more she saw how Trump played on their shame and pride about their downward mobility and ultimately used that to his political advantage.

“A lot of people in this group have felt that neither political party was offering an answer,” Hochschild says. “And they have turned instead to a kind of charismatic leader.” She argues that the secret to Trump’s charisma among his supporters has to do with “alleviating the shame of that downward mobility.”

On this week’s episode of More To The Story, host Al Letson talks with Hochschild about the long slide of downward mobility in rural America and why she thinks Trump’s policies ultimately won’t benefit his most core supporters.

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

Continue Reading…

Mother Jones

“Americans Will Be Less Safe”: An Author of the Country’s Biggest Climate Report Reflects on Its Gutting

The Trump administration is coming for the National Climate Assessment. Officials reportedly cut funding for the federal program behindthe congressionally mandated report, which describes how climate change impacts everything from agriculture and transportation to human health and economics in the United States.

Under the Global Change Research Act of 1990, researchers issue a new assessment, updated with the latest science, every four years. Writing it typically requires extensive peer review from federal agencies and the public. It’s aimed at helping all sorts of people—elected officials, business owners, farmers, and home-buyers alike—make climate-informed decisions.

“Effectively, it is a massive literature review,” an author working on the current assessment told Mother Jones, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “This is the core of the US government’s effort to make climate change understandable and knowable to the American people.” Hundreds of authors, customarily all volunteers, had already begun work on the next assessment, scheduled to be published in late 2027 or early 2028.

But now, that’s all been thrown into chaos. As Politico first reported earlier this month (and has since been confirmed by multiple outlets), the Trump administration cut funding for the US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), the multi-agency body that produces the National Climate Assessment. NASA, which helps oversee the Assessment, reportedly ended its contract with a consulting firm that supplied staff to coordinate work on the report. “The operations and structure of the USGCRP are currently under review,” a NASA spokesperson said via email. (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which also helps oversee the assessment, didn’t respond to a request for comment from Mother Jones.)

The action, although widely expected, is unprecedented. The first Trump administration published the assessment in 2018, albeit quietly—on the Friday after Thanksgiving. But completely hindering work on the project, some experts say, is illegal. “The National Climate Assessment is a report required by law,” David Doniger, a senior strategist and attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, wrote on Bluesky. “Another example of Trump administration lawlessness.” (The administration also ended the National Nature Assessment, a similar report on the state of nature in the US; some of its authors are currently working to independently publish it anyway.)

To get a better sense of what disrupting the National Climate Assessment means for all of us, I spoke with one of its current authors, who asked that I not use their name, given the sensitivity of the situation.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Several outlets have reported that the Trump administration is gutting program funding and staff supporting the National Climate Assessment. Have you heard anything directly from the administration?

We have an internal communication system that allows all of the authors to hear from [the administration]. And we heard through that chain that work has been paused.

There was an all-hands call last week, in which we were given the opportunity to say goodbye to our departing federal colleagues, which was a very emotional call, a very frustrating one.

Were you surprised that this happened? What were you thinking over the past few weeks as all of this was unfolding?

All of this happened to coincide with a quiet stage in the process. The chapter team had produced outlines, and those outlines had been sent out to federal agencies for their comments.

That federal agency review period took longer than I think would normally, because of all the firings and disruptions that were taking place across federal agencies.

So you’d already realized something was wrong, because the process had been slowed down to begin with?

I think anyone who worked in any way with the federal government has experienced that something is wrong in the last couple of months.

It sounds like you weren’t overly shocked about the pause to your work, maybe because of how the first Trump administration delayed the assessment? And all the news of federal firings and cuts had been going around. Is that fair to say?

I think the first Trump administration fundamentally followed the law [in producing the assessment] and acknowledged that even though they didn’t believe in the purpose of the law, they were still required to do this life-saving and constructive and fundamentally patriotic work. And while I was not surprised at the decision to be lawless here, I’ll always be shocked by it.

“While I was not surprised at the decision to be lawless here, I’ll always be shocked by it.”

At the very least, the administration’s actions raise legal questions about whether or not it can put a stop to the National Climate Assessment. Do you have any thoughts on the legality of all of this?

It’s illegal. Congress was unambiguous in mandating that assessments be produced. This is not expensive. We’re not talking about vast legions of federal employees. We’re talking about a small—too small—team of incredibly hard-working, dedicated professionals who have chosen to serve the public and to make this knowledge more widely available to everyone. Obstructing their work is a very, very clear violation of the intent of Congress.

The climate assessment is not optional. It is required by law, and it appears that the Trump administration is trying to break that law.

Note: President Donald Trump did not respond to a request for comment via a White House spokesperson.

Without this report, what would that mean for people trying to get information about how climate change will affect them? What do you want people to take away from all of this?

Without a new National Climate Assessment, Americans will be less safe, and climate change will get worse. This is one of the many tools that we use to make sure that everything we know is available for anyone who needs to know it. And if we don’t produce this report, the available information will be worse. People will be working with outdated findings. It will be more fragmented and more scattered.

One of the other big benefits of this process is that it’s a way for researchers who tackle the really hard questions raised by climate change to meet each other and collaborate in understanding the state of the knowledge.

We’re going to know less, and knowing less means more people die. More people are injured. More people are impoverished. More irreplaceable cultural heritage and history are lost. More ecosystems are degraded. And climate change gets worse.

What’s next? Do you have any thoughts on what the future might hold?

That’s a really good question. I don’t right now. I think everyone is still a bit stunned.

Continue Reading…