Gas Bandit's Political Thread V: The Vampire Likes Bats

GasBandit

Staff member
  1. Trump plans direct talks with Putin on Ukraine war after Russian leader skipped peace negotiations in Turkey.
  2. Senate Democrats move to block arms sales to Qatar and UAE after nations offered Trump a luxury jet and $2 billion crypto investment.
  3. Conservative Republicans block Trump’s agenda bill in House Budget Committee for not cutting enough government spending despite Trump’s public rebuke.
  4. Moody’s becomes last of big three rating agencies to downgrade U.S. credit rating due to growing debt as Trump’s tax cuts threaten $4 trillion deficit increase.
  5. U.S. measles cases surge to 1,024 across 30 states as CDC reports 13% hospitalization rate despite disease being preventable with vaccination.

CDC map showing measles cases. 13% of people diagnosed are hospitalized. Two doses of the MMR vaccine are 97% effective at preventing measles.
  1. Trump-appointed judge blocks Trump administration’s attempt to cut $11 billion in congressional public health funding despite HHS claims pandemic is over.
  2. Trump officials deny ordering intelligence analyst to “rethink” assessment contradicting Venezuelan deportation justification days before he was fired.
  3. Army will place metal plates on DC streets to protect pavement from 25 Abrams tanks during $25-45 million June 14 parade honoring Trump’s 79th birthday.
  4. Intelligence Director Gabbard calls for jailing former FBI Director Comey over social media post she claims called for Trump’s assassination.
  5. FBI announces relocation of 1,500 employees from DC to distribute personnel where crime occurs despite Trump’s earlier promise to keep agency in capital.
  6. Supreme Court indefinitely blocks Trump administration from deporting Venezuelans from Texas facility under 1798 Alien Enemies Act without due process.
  7. Federal judge rejects Trump administration’s “take my word for it” state secrets claim in case of wrongfully deported man despite court orders to return him.
  8. Trump administration admits it falsely claimed deported Guatemalan man said he wasn’t afraid to return to Mexico in latest of several illegal deportations exposed in court.
  9. Trump-appointed Texas judge strikes down federal workplace protections for transgender workers as EEOC leadership abandons discrimination cases.
  10. Congressional watchdog GAO rejects Trump’s DOGE team citing their lack of authority over legislative branch.
  11. Trump administration asks Supreme Court to overturn federal judge’s 14-day block on mass layoffs across executive branch agencies.
  12. Oregon Humanities and state councils sue Trump administration over terminated federal funding they claim violates congressional appropriations and separation of powers.
  13. Violent threats against judges on social media increase 327% as Trump, Musk, and administration officials publicly attack judiciary for finding their actions unlawful.
  14. Half of investors who spent up to $4.2 million on Trump’s cryptocurrency to secure dinner with president sell off tokens immediately after winning access.
  15. Trump posts online telling Springsteen to “KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT” until he returns to U.S. and “then we’ll all see how it goes for him” after musician called president corrupt and treasonous.
FIGHTING BACK


FOIA request reveals zero EPA employees responded to Trump administration’s call to report colleagues working on DEI programs.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
  1. FBI declares Palm Springs fertility clinic bombing an “intentional act of terrorism” that killed one person and injured four others.
  2. Trump announces scheduled Monday phone call with Putin to discuss ending Ukraine “bloodbath,” followed by calls to Zelensky and NATO leaders.
  3. Iran’s president vows to continue nuclear talks with the U.S. despite Trump’s repeated airstrike threats.
  4. Trump demands Walmart “eat the tariffs” rather than raise prices after retailer warned consumers about higher costs due to import duties.
  5. FDA grants Novavax COVID-19 vaccine full approval but restricts use to adults over 65 and higher-risk individuals, reflecting Trump administration’s vaccine skepticism.
  6. Deadly Kentucky tornado that killed 18 people tracked by weather office struggling with staffing cuts that eliminated overnight shifts at many National Weather Service locations.
  7. Oklahoma adds debunked 2020 election fraud claims to high school history curriculum.
  8. Trump administration lifts ban on rapid-fire gun triggers previously classified as illegal machine gun conversion devices.
  9. Trump calls former FBI director James Comey a “dirty cop” for Instagram post “8647” which Trump says was an assassination threat against him
  10. Appeals court lifts injunction blocking Trump’s executive order that strips collective bargaining rights from 75% of unionized federal employees.
  11. Trump shares debunked “Clinton body count” conspiracy video online falsely linking the Clintons to deaths of JFK Jr., Seth Rich, and others.
FIGHTING BACK
Thousands of California teachers rally outside SpaceX headquarters to protest Trump-Musk education budget cuts threatening special education and meal programs.
 

GasBandit

Staff member

GasBandit

Staff member
  1. Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for 350,000 Venezuelans, shortening Biden’s extension to 2026.
  2. Trump announces immediate Russia-Ukraine ceasefire negotiations following Putin call, though Putin made no ceasefire commitment.
  3. Senate confirms Charles Kushner as France ambassador despite previous felony conviction for tax evasion and witness retaliation that Trump pardoned in 2020.
  4. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy sold stocks in 34 companies days before Trump’s tariff announcement caused markets to plunge.
  5. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick transfers Cantor Fitzgerald ownership to his children’s trusts while selling $361 million in affiliated shares.
  6. Justice Department announces False Claims Act will be used against universities with diversity initiatives by citing alleged antisemitism violations.
  7. Justice Department charges Democratic Rep. McIver with assaulting federal officers and drops trespassing case against Newark mayor at immigration detention center.
  8. Trump administration pays $5 million to settle wrongful death lawsuit with family of Capitol rioter Ashli Babbitt despite officer’s clearance of wrongdoing.
  9. Homeland Security reports 64 migrants “self-deported” on government-funded flight with $1,000 stipends through new “Project Homecoming” program.
  10. Federal judge blocks Trump’s takeover of U.S. Institute of Peace, ruling president unlawfully fired board, president, staff and seized headquarters.
  11. Paramount ousts CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon amid pressure over “60 Minutes” editorial independence and Harris interview settlement with Trump administration.
  12. Trump threatens ABC News over Qatar plane coverage after winning $15 million settlement for Stephanopoulos “liable for rape” statement.
  13. Trump falsely claims Biden has ‘Stage 9’ cancer and delayed diagnosis disclosure as part of White House cognitive decline coverup.
  14. Trump calls for “major investigation” into Springsteen, Beyoncé, Winfrey, and Bono for Harris campaign endorsements, claiming illegal payments despite documented production expenses.
  15. Trump vows to “turn around” Kennedy Center at White House dinner with loyalist board members, criticizes “phantom revenue” and previous “woke” programming.
  16. Trump signs Take It Down Act, criminalizing revenge porn and AI-generated deepfakes despite free speech advocates’ concerns about censorship.
FIGHTING BACK
RFK family foundation awards Maine Gov. Mills human rights prize for defying transgender policies of administration where RFK Jr. serves as HHS Secretary.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
1/ House Republicans advanced Trump’s tax and immigration bill in a 17–16 committee vote after four Republican holdouts dropped their opposition but refused to endorse it – instead they voted “present.” The move came after closed-door talks over Medicaid work rules and energy cuts, though Rep. Chip Roy warned, “The bill does not yet meet the moment.” The bill, dubbed “The One Big Beautiful Bill,” would extend Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, end taxes on tips and overtime, and direct billions toward defense and immigration. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated it would add $3.3 trillion to the debt. The Congressional Budget Office hasn’t released a score and House Republicans acknowledged the bill is still being negotiated. Senate Republicans, meanwhile, have already raised objections. Speaker Mike Johnson, nevertheless, called the outcome a “big win” but admitted “there’s a lot more work to do.” (NBC News / NPR / New York Times / Washington Post)
  • The Stark Math on the GOP Tax Plan: It Doesn’t Cut the Deficit. “House Republicans advance bill late Sunday, as budget analysts across the political spectrum warn that the proposal worsens the U.S. fiscal picture.” (Wall Street Journal)
  • The ugly truth about Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.” “Trump’s bill does cut taxes. But those tax cuts are partially offset by steep cuts to healthcare programs and the social safety net.” (Popular Information)
2/ Moody’s stripped the U.S. of its last triple-A credit rating, citing unchecked debt growth and rising interest costs. The downgrade to Aa1 follows failed efforts by Congress and multiple administrations to contain deficits that are now running near $2 trillion a year. Moody’s warned that if current policies continue, debt could reach 134% of GDP by 2035. (Axios / CNBC / Washington Post / New York Times / Reuters / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal)

3/ Consumer sentiment fell to 50.8 in May – the second-lowest level ever recorded since tracking began in the late 1970s. Expectations for inflation jumped to 7.3% over the next year – the highest since 1981. And, nearly 75% of Americans cited tariffs as a key concern, up from 60% in April. Long-term inflation expectations also rose to 4.6%, the highest since 1991. (Wall Street Journal / Bloomberg / Axios / CNBC)

4/ Trump told Walmart to “EAT THE TARIFFS” after the company said it would be forced to raise prices in response to Trump’s tariffs. “Walmart made BILLIONS […] Between Walmart and China they should […] ‘EAT THE TARIFFS,’” Trump posted. Walmart responded, saying it couldn’t absorb the cost from the import taxes he imposed, and warned that prices on food, toys, and baby gear will rise by June. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent claimed Walmart “will […] eat some of the tariffs,” but admitted that consumers will still pay more. (New York Times / Politico / Reuters / CNN / Axios / The Guardian / Associated Press / CBS News / The Hill)

5/ The Supreme Court cleared the way for the Trump administration to revoke deportation protections from nearly 350,000 Venezuelans, allowing removals to begin while legal challenges continue. The justices issued an unsigned, two-paragraph order with no explanation. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the only one to note her dissent. The decision overturned a lower court ruling that had blocked Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem from canceling Temporary Protected Status, which was extended by the Biden administration in 2023. U.S. District Judge Edward Chen found the termination likely illegal, calling it “arbitrary and capricious” and based on “negative stereotypes.” A lawyer for the plaintiffs called it “the largest single action stripping any group of noncitizens of immigration status in modern U.S. history.” (Associated Press / New York Times / CBS News / Washington Post / Axios / NBC News / USA Today / Reuters / Bloomberg)

6/ The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly considering a reality TV show where immigrants compete in challenges for a chance at U.S. citizenship. The pitch came from Rob Worsoff, a Canadian-born producer known for Duck Dynasty, who said the show would “celebrate being an American.” DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin confirmed the idea is under review, but stressed it is “in the very beginning stages” and not yet approved. The proposal includes contests like gold mining in San Francisco and car assembly in Detroit. Contestants would lose train seats as episodes progress, with one winner sworn in at the U.S. Capitol. Worsoff said, “This isn’t ‘The Hunger Games’ for immigrants,” and claimed “no one would be deported for losing.” Secretary Kristi Noem has not seen the proposal, but her department has spent over $200 million on immigration-themed publicity. (Wall Street Journal / Washington Post / New York Times)
  • The Trump administration proposed a $2.9 billion “America First” fund that could help expand deportations by offering incentives to foreign governments that accept U.S. deportees. The proposal originated from the Office of Management and Budget – not State – and is overseen by Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, who manages intelligence budgets. (Semafor)
  • The Trump administration’s first charter flight under a new “self-deportation” program took off from Houston, carrying 65 immigrants to Honduras and Colombia. Participants received a free plane ticket and $1,000 after applying through a government app. Homeland Security officials said those who don’t opt in face detention. (Axios)
7/ U.S. taxpayers will pay nearly $5 million to settle a lawsuit from the family of a Jan. 6 rioter who was shot by Capitol Police while trying to climb through a barricaded door near the House chamber as lawmakers were being evacuated during the disrupted certification of the 2020 election. The Trump administration reversed the Justice Department’s earlier finding that the shooting was justified and that the officer acted to protect members of Congress. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger called the settlement “extremely disappointing” and warned it “sends a chilling message to law enforcement.” The lawsuit claimed that Ashli Babbitt was unarmed and had her hands in the air. Video, however, shows her attempting to enter through a shattered window as police ordered rioters to back away. Trump, who pardoned most Jan. 6 defendants, called Babbitt “a really good person” and has cast her death as a political injustice. (Washington Post / ABC News / CBS News)

The midterm elections are in 533 days.

✏ Notables.
  1. Newly released audio of Biden’s 2023 interview with special counsel Robert Hur shows the former president struggling to recall key dates and facts, including when his son Beau died and why he had classified documents. At one point, Biden asked, “What month did Beau die? Oh God, May 30th,” before aides reminded him it was 2015. He misstated the year Trump was elected and later said he “wanted to hang onto” a classified Afghanistan memo “just for posterity’s sake,” prompting his lawyers to intervene. Hur cited Biden’s “poor memory” in his decision not to pursue charges, saying a jury would likely see him as “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man.” The Biden White House blocked release of the audio last year, arguing Republicans would “distort” it. (Axios / New York Times / Politico / ABC News)
  2. Biden was diagnosed with Stage 4 prostate cancer that has spread to his bones, according to a statement released by his personal office. The cancer received a Gleason score of 9, among the most aggressive, and is considered incurable once it reaches the bone. His office, however, said it is “hormone-sensitive,” which could allow for treatment. Biden, 82, disclosed the diagnosis, posting online: “Cancer touches us all.” J.D. Vance, meanwhile, questioned whether Biden had been “capable of doing the job,” while Trump Jr. wrote: “How did Dr. Jill Biden miss stage five metastatic cancer or is this yet another coverup???” Right-wing figures called for hearings into when the White House knew and whether the diagnosis was hidden during the 2024 campaign. (Associated Press / NPR / New York Times / Washington Post / NBC News / Rolling Stone / Wall Street Journal)
  3. The Trump administration plans to strip the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section of its authority to oversee prosecutions of members of Congress, removing a key safeguard against politically motivated cases. Under the proposal, federal prosecutors could bring charges against lawmakers without approval or input from the unit, which was created after Watergate to enforce corruption laws with neutrality. (Washington Post / New York Times)
  4. A federal judge blocked Trump’s attempt to seize control of the U.S. Institute of Peace. Judge Beryl Howell ruled that Trump lacked authority to fire the board or install DOGE officials, writing that his administration used “brute force and threats of criminal process” to take over the institute’s headquarters. Howell said the agency was never part of the executive branch and that the board removals, staff firings, and asset transfers were “null and void.” (CNN / NBC News / Washington Post / Reuters)
  5. Over 60,000 metric tons of U.S. food aid is rotting in warehouses after Trump cut USAID funding. The food – worth $98 million and enough to feed 3.5 million people for a month – remains locked in facilities in Houston, Djibouti, Durban, and Dubai. USAID canceled contracts and froze funds in January. (Reuters)
  6. CBS News chief Wendy McMahon resigned after opposing efforts by parent company Paramount to settle a $20 billion lawsuit that Trump filed over a “60 Minutes” interview with Kamala Harris. Her departure follows “60 Minutes” producer Bill Owens, who quit last month after Paramount began reviewing stories before air. Trump accused CBS of editing the Harris interview to favor her, a charge the network denies. Paramount’s controlling shareholder, Shari Redstone, has pushed for a settlement, while also seeking Trump administration approval for a multibillion-dollar merger with Skydance. (The Hill / Associated Press / New York Times)
  7. Trump threatened ABC News over its reporting on a $400 million Boeing 747 jet from Qatar, calling the coverage “Fake News” and warning network executives to stop describing the plane as a personal gift. “Everyone, including their lawyers, has been told that ABC must not say that Qatar is giving ME a FREE Boeing 747,” Trump posted on his social network. While Trump claims the jet is being donated to the U.S. military, the plane will serve as his personal aircraft before transferring to his presidential library. (The Hill / New Republic)
  8. Trump called for a criminal investigation into Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé, Oprah Winfrey, and Bono, alleging – without evidence – that Harris’s 2024 campaign paid them for endorsements. Trump’s all-caps claims on Truth Social followed Springsteen’s remarks at a UK concert where he called Trump “corrupt, incompetent and treasonous.” Trump responded by calling Springsteen a “dried out ‘prune’” and asking: “HOW MUCH DID KAMALA HARRIS PAY BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN FOR HIS POOR PERFORMANCE?” Federal records show Harris’s campaign paid production companies linked to Oprah and Beyoncé for event costs, not endorsements. (Variety / Politico / Axios / Mediaite / The Hill / Rolling Stone / Wall Street Journal)
 

GasBandit

Staff member
  1. Federal judge orders U.S. to maintain control of migrants sent to South Sudan after finding Trump administration potentially violated court restrictions on third-country deportations.
  2. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem shocks Senate committee by incorrectly defining habeas corpus as presidential power to deport immigrants.
  3. Senate unexpectedly passes “No Tax on Tips” bill through unanimous consent, sending legislation to House for consideration.
  4. House Republicans push trillion-dollar tax cut package forward after Trump visits Capitol and warns lawmakers, “Don’t f— around with Medicaid,” despite CBO projections of $3.8 trillion deficit increase.
  5. Trump IRS nominee Billy Long grilled by Senate Democrats over nonexistent ‘tribal tax credits’ after committee reveals recording of promised favorable treatment.
  6. Trump announces $175 billion Golden Dome missile defense system with three-year completion timeline despite lacking finalized plans and congressional funding approval.

    Trump announcing the U.S. will build a 175 billion dollar missile defense shield in three years, despite no funding, approval, or plans.
  7. FBI Director Kash Patel eliminates internal watchdog team monitoring Fisa surveillance compliance despite his own past criticisms of bureau abuses.
  8. Justice Department launches investigation into former NY Governor Andrew Cuomo over testimony to Congress about his pandemic nursing home policies.
  9. Supreme Court orders Maine House to restore voting rights of Republican lawmaker punished for identifying transgender student athlete in social media post.
  10. Acting TSA Administrator tells House committee “nothing is off the table” regarding potential privatization of airport screening while Trump administration proposes $247 million budget cut to agency.
  11. FAA orders reduction of Newark Airport flights through October after radar failures, radio outages, and staffing shortages caused weeks of severe delays.
FIGHTING BACK
New social media toolkit provides ready-made content to support Rep. McIver’s fight against federal charges while she was at an immigration facility.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
1/ Trump demanded that House Republicans support his tax and spending bill or risk facing primary challengers backed by him. The legislation would extend Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, eliminate taxes on tips and overtime, and boost defense and border spending. To offset the cost, it would reduce federal support for Medicaid, roll back clean energy tax credits, and cuts SNAP benefits. The Congressional Budget Office estimates at least 7.6 million people would lose Medicaid coverage under the bill. “Don’t fuck around with Medicaid,” Trump privately told members, urging them to stop pushing for deeper cuts to the program. Trump also criticized Republicans from high-tax states like New York for holding out over the SALT (state and local tax) deduction cap, telling them to “let it go.” Speaker Mike Johnson can only afford to lose three Republican votes and has set a Memorial Day deadline. Despite Trump’s pressure, lawmakers said the bill is “still a long ways away” and that he “didn’t convince enough people the bill is adequate.” (Washington Post / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / CNBC / CNN / NPR / Axios / Politico / Bloomberg / NBC News / Politico / Axios / The Hill / Associated Press)
  • The Senate voted 66–32 to advance the GENIUS Act, a bipartisan bill to regulate stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency tied to assets like the U.S. dollar. The bill had previously failed to move forward after all Senate Democrats and two Republicans blocked it earlier this month over concerns related to Trump’s crypto ventures. After negotiations, 16 Democrats ultimately joined Republicans to support a revised version with added consumer protections and conflict-of-interest rules. The bill would require stablecoin issuers to hold asset reserves, prioritize repayment to holders in bankruptcy, and comply with anti-money laundering laws. (ABC News / CBS News / CNN / NBC News)
2/ Elon Musk will cut back on political donations after spending nearly $300 million to help Trump win the 2024 election. “I think I’ve done enough,” Musk said, adding,“I don’t currently see a reason” to keep spending and that he would “do a lot less” politically moving forward. Musk’s pullback follows a failed $25 million push in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race – his candidate lost by 10 points – and growing backlash over his role in Trump’s second term overseeing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. The agency cut tens of thousands of federal jobs, canceled contracts, and tried to shut down entire departments. DOGE claimed $170 billion in savings, though independent reviews called the numbers “inflated” and “misleading.” Tesla profits, meanwhile, dropped 71% last quarter. (NBC News / Washington Post / Associated Press / Axios / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / Politico)

3/ Trump abandoned his pledge to broker an immediate ceasefire between Russia-Ukraine after a two-hour call with Putin. Instead, Trump said Russia and Ukraine should negotiate directly without U.S. involvement, backing away from his earlier threats of sanctions. Trump called the conversation with Putin “excellent” and said talks would begin “immediately,” suggesting the Vatican as a host. European leaders, meanwhile, had expected Trump to pressure Putin to accept a ceasefire or face penalties. Ukrainian President Zelensky warned that sidelining the U.S. would benefit Russia and urged tougher sanctions. Trump declined, focusing instead on future trade with Russia if the war ends. (New York Times / Axios / Politico / Wall Street Journal / NPR / Axios / Bloomberg)

4/ Trump reportedly instructed aides to tell Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to “wrap it up” and end the war in Gaza. The U.S. wants Israel and Hamas to accept a new ceasefire and hostage deal proposed by envoy Steve Witkoff, but negotiations have made little progress. Netanyahu, meanwhile, has expanded the war with continued airstrikes and plans to flatten most of Gaza and relocate nearly 2 million Palestinians to a single “humanitarian zone.” (Axios / Wall Street Journal)

5/ The Justice Department charged Rep. LaMonica McIver with assaulting federal law enforcement officers during a confrontation outside a Newark ICE facility. Interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba said McIver impeded and interfered with officers as they arrested Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, who had trespassing charges dropped “for the sake of moving forward.” Video shows McIver using her arms to push past officers, though it’s unclear if the contact was intentional. McIver denied wrongdoing, calling the charges politically motivated and intended to deter congressional oversight. House Democrats condemned the prosecution and accused the Trump administration of abusing power to silence opposition. (CNN / Associated Press / Politico / Axios / Politico / Axios)

The midterm elections are in 532 days.

✏ Notables.
  1. Trump – without evidence – accused Biden of hiding his prostate cancer diagnosis while in office. Speaking off script at the White House, Trump said it “took a long time” for Biden’s cancer to be revealed and questioned why the public hadn’t been notified sooner. Trump misstated details of the diagnosis, confusing the Gleason score of 9 with cancer staging; Biden has Stage 4 prostate cancer. Trump also cast doubt on Biden’s past medical evaluations, referencing the White House doctor who cleared Biden cognitively. Biden’s office said the diagnosis was made last Friday after he developed urinary symptoms, and confirmed the cancer had spread to his bones. (NPR / Axios / The Hill / HuffPost)
  2. FDA will require new clinical trials before approving annual COVID-19 boosters for healthy individuals under 65. The agency said future approvals will focus on people over 65 and those with medical conditions that raise the risk of severe illness. FDA leaders Marty Makary and Vinay Prasad published the policy in the New England Journal of Medicine, stating there is not enough evidence to justify routine boosters for healthy adults. Vaccine makers will need to conduct randomized, controlled trials to get approval for use in lower-risk groups. The FDA estimated that 100 to 200 million people would still qualify for boosters under the new guidelines. (Reuters / Associated Press / STAT News / New York Times / Washington Post)
  3. Trump plans to appoint Space Force Gen. Michael Guetlein to lead the development of the “Golden Dome” – a U.S. missile defense system modeled after Israel’s Iron Dome. The system would combine ground-based interceptors and satellites to defend against threats like hypersonic and low-flying ballistic missiles. The Congressional Budget Office estimated parts of the project could cost up to $831 billion over 20 years. (ABC News / Wall Street Journal)
  4. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem defended the Trump administration’s potential suspension of habeas corpus during a Senate hearing, but mischaracterized the legal principle as the president’s “constitutional right” to deport people. Sen. Maggie Hassan corrected her that habeas corpus protects against indefinite detention without public justification. Noem, nevertheless, repeated her support for habeas corpus, but falsely claimed Trump could suspend it – even though the Constitution assigns that power to Congress in cases of rebellion or invasion. (Axios / Politico)
  5. Trump’s nominee to lead the IRS promoted a tax credit the IRS confirmed does not exist. Former Missouri congressman Billy Long worked with White River Energy Corp. and other firms to market “tribal tax credits” and the pandemic-era employee retention credit. The IRS froze the retention credit program in 2023 and warned that promoting false credits could trigger penalties. Long, meanwhile, earned nearly $250,000 from these efforts and received more than $135,000 in campaign donations from affiliated companies after his nomination. He faces Senate questioning Tuesday. (New York Times)
 
I'm coming to realize that whenever Trump says, "The Democrats are destroying our country!" he does not mean "the country in which we currently live," he means "the country we (the GQP) are trying to build for ourselves."

--Patrick
 

GasBandit

Staff member
  1. Donald Trump played a video and presented news articles falsely claiming white genocide in South Africa to President Cyril Ramaphosa during their Oval Office meeting, despite South Africa’s denials.
  2. Pentagon accepts unprecedented $400 million Boeing 747 gift from Qatar to serve as Air Force One during Trump’s presidency before transferring to Trump’s personal library afterward.
  3. Chicago man fatally shoots two Israeli Embassy staffers outside Capital Jewish Museum in Washington D.C. while shouting “Free Palestine” before surrendering inside the building.
  4. Trump claims U.S. is close to brokering peace between Congo and Rwanda through negotiations led by Tiffany Trump’s father-in-law despite continued fighting in eastern Congo.


    Secretary of State Marco Rubio meeting with the foreign ministers of the DRC and Rwanda in April 2025.
  5. House GOP leaders schedule vote within hours on Trump budget bill after making concessions to conservative holdouts despite Congressional Budget Office finding it would add $3.8 trillion to deficit.
  6. House GOP proposes giving $1,000 investment accounts to newborns born through 2028 in “Trump Accounts” despite financial experts calling the tax structure less attractive than existing savings options.
  7. Trump-appointed federal judge strikes down EEOC regulations requiring employers to provide time off and accommodations for abortions.
  8. ICE denies Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil’s request to hold his newborn son during detention center visit after jailing the legal resident for over two months without criminal charges
  9. Senate GOP establish new precedent to bypass filibuster rules and block CA clean air standards with simple majority vote.
  10. Defense Secretary Hegseth holds Christian prayer service for Pentagon workers during work hours as his pastor declares Trump was chosen by God to bring “moral clarity” to America.
  11. Army will pay for road damage from 56 tanks and armored vehicles rolling through DC streets during June 14 military parade scheduled on Trump’s birthday.
  12. Naval Academy returns nearly 400 books removed from library during Pentagon DEI purge including works on Holocaust and Maya Angelou’s autobiography after more detailed Pentagon review.
  13. Federal judge rules US deportation of eight migrants to South Sudan “unquestionably” violated prior court order and considers holding Homeland Security officials in contempt.
  14. Justice Department cancels Minneapolis and Louisville police reform settlements following George Floyd and Breonna Taylor killings days before fifth anniversary of Floyd’s murder.
  15. FEMA acting administrator rescinds agency’s strategic plan less than two weeks before hurricane season starts.
  16. Federal judge reverses Trump’s firing of Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board members, ruling president lacks authority to remove independent agency officials without cause.
FIGHTING BACK
Bruce Springsteen releases EP calling Trump administration “corrupt, incompetent and treasonous” as Trump shares meme showing himself hitting Springsteen with golf ball.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
/ Trump warned House Republicans that failure to pass his tax and spending bill would be “the ultimate betrayal.” Trump demanded immediate passage of the bill – which would make his 2017 tax cuts permanent, eliminate federal taxes on tips and overtime wages, cut Medicaid by tightening work requirements, and reduce clean-energy tax credits created under the Inflation Reduction Act – “to show the American people that they’re serious about ‘promises made, promises kept.’” Trump also warned that GOP holdouts “wouldn’t be a Republican much longer” if they vote against it. Despite the push, several Republicans continue to resist, citing rushed negotiations, lack of bill text, and opposition to a $40,000 cap on the state and local tax (SALT) deduction. Members of the House Freedom Caucus have also objected to the weaker Medicaid work requirements and the delayed rollback of green energy tax credits. The Congressional Budget Office, meanwhile, said the bill would add $2.3 trillion to the deficit over ten years, which under current law would trigger automatic spending cuts starting in 2026. Medicare could face cuts of up to 4% annually, totaling nearly $500 billion over a decade, unless Congress intervenes. Economists have also warned that eliminating taxes on tips and overtime – both subject to payroll taxes – could weaken Medicare’s long-term funding by reducing its primary revenue source. Separately, the bill’s changes to Medicaid, including the new work requirements and cuts to state financing methods, could cause nearly 9 million people to lose coverage. That would put added pressure on Medicare, which covers 13 million Americans who rely on Medicaid to pay premiums and out-of-pocket costs. As of now, the House Rules Committee has been meeting since 1 a.m., but hasn’t advanced the bill. Republican leaders, however, say a vote could still happen as soon as today, though Speaker Mike Johnson hasn’t formally scheduled one. (Politico / CNN / New York Times / Washington Post / Bloomberg / NBC News / Wall Street Journal / Axios / Washington Post / The Hill)

  • The Senate unanimously passed the No Tax on Tips Act. Sen. Jacky Rosen, a Democrat from Nevada, brought the bill to the floor, where no senators objected to its passage by unanimous consent. The bill creates a tax deduction of up to $25,000 for cash tips reported to employers. It applies to workers earning $160,000 or less. The bill now heads to the House, where Republicans are considering whether to pass it as a standalone bill or fold it into the broader tax package they’re working on. Estimates suggest the measure could reduce federal revenue by $110 billion over 10 years. (Axios / The Hill / USA Today / NBC News)
2/ The Justice Department moved to dismiss police reform agreements in Minneapolis and Louisville – days before the anniversaries of the killings that prompted them. George Floyd was murdered on May 25, 2020; Breonna Taylor was killed on March 13 the same year. The Biden-era DOJ found both departments engaged in unconstitutional policing and negotiated court-enforceable consent decrees. The Trump administration, however, claimed that the findings were flawed and the agreements “would not be in the public interest,” calling the reforms “factually unjustified” and a form of “federal micromanagement.” Both cities, meanwhile, said they will move forward with the proposed reforms, including limits on use of force, improved officer training, and independent monitoring without Justice Department oversight. (ABC News / NPR / Reuters / New York Times / NBC News / Washington Post / CNN / Wall Street Journal / Axios)

3/ Trump used a televised Oval Office meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa to push false claims that White Afrikaner farmers are facing a “genocide.” Trump dimmed the lights and played video clips showing chants of “Kill the Boer,” then waved printouts of articles, saying they showed “death, death, death.” Ramaphosa, who was visibly uncomfortable, denied the claims and said that the video “is not government policy,” while his agriculture minister added: “We have a rural safety problem, not genocide.” South African police data shows 12 farm-related murders last year, including both farmers and workers, with no racial breakdown and no evidence of systematic targeting. Trump, meanwhile, granted refugee status to 59 White South Africans this month while cutting aid and restricting protections for nonwhite asylum seekers. (New York Times / Washington Post / ABC News / Bloomberg / Politico / NPR / Axios / NBC News / CNN)

4/ A federal judge ruled that the Trump administration “unquestionably” violated a court order by deporting eight men to South Sudan without giving them time to object. Judge Brian Murphy said the men were given “roughly 24 hours” notice, mostly outside business hours, making it “impossible” for them to contact lawyers or prepare a challenge. “I don’t see how anybody could say these individuals had a meaningful opportunity to object,” Murphy said. The flight carried men from Cuba, Mexico, Laos, Vietnam, Myanmar, and South Sudan, and landed in Djibouti after leaving Texas. Of the eight on board, only one was a South Sudanese citizen. Nevertheless, the Department of Homeland Security called the deportees “monsters” and accused Murphy of trying to “dictate the foreign policy and national security of the United States.” Murphy, meanwhile, threatened contempt proceedings and ordered officials to determine whether the men can still be granted due process. (Washington Post / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / ABC News / CNN / Politico)

The midterm elections are in 531 days.

✏ Notables.
  1. The Defense Department accepted a luxury Boeing 747-8 from Qatar for use as Air Force One. Trump had pushed for the $400 million gift, calling it a “great thing,” as delays have slowed delivery of Boeing’s new presidential jets. The Air Force will oversee retrofitting the Qatari plane to meet security and operational standards, though details remain classified. Lawmakers from both parties have raised concerns about security, whether accepting the plane is legal under the Constitution, and the cost of converting the 13-year-old jet, which experts estimate could exceed $1 billion. The aircraft will eventually be transferred to Trump’s presidential library. (Politico / Axios / NBC News / New York Times / Washington Post / ABC News / CNBC / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal)
  2. The Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into Andrew Cuomo over allegations that he lied to Congress about his role in a July 2020 New York state report on COVID-related nursing home deaths. The investigation began about a month ago following a renewed referral from House Republicans, which came after the DOJ dropped corruption charges against Mayor Eric Adams – Cuomo’s rival in the New York City mayor race. The investigation is being handled by the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington, which is now led by former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro – a longtime critic of Cuomo. (CNN / Wall Street Journal / Axios / NBC News / Reuters / New York Times)
  3. The chief of staff to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard ordered intelligence analysts to rewrite an assessment that contradicted Trump’s claim that Venezuela directs the criminal gang Tren de Aragua. Emails show Joe Kent told analysts on March 24 and April 3 to revise the report so it could not be “used against” Trump or Gabbard. The original assessment, dated February 26, found no credible evidence linking Venezuela’s government to gang operations in the U.S. (New York Times / Reuters)
 

From the press release: “Let this serve as a warning to all universities and academic institutions across the country.”
A free press and free educational facilities are the biggest dangers and opponents of tyrants and dictators.
I'm not a fan of Harvard, but, you know.
 
When the future generations look back and ask, "How did they not see what was happening?" I want them to know that we absolutely did know what was happening, we just couldn't lean hard enough to capsize it before it acquired sufficient momentum.

--Patrick
 

GasBandit

Staff member
1/ The House passed Trump’s tax and immigration package by a single vote after Speaker Mike Johnson made late-night concessions to win over Republican holdouts. The 1,000-page bill, called the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” extends the 2017 tax cuts, eliminates taxes on tips and overtime pay, raises the SALT deduction cap to $40,000, expands business tax breaks, temporarily increases the child tax credit to $2,500, repeals most clean energy tax credits from Biden’s 2022 climate law, cuts Medicaid and SNAP by more than $900 billion, and imposes new Medicaid work requirements starting in 2026. The Congressional Budget Office projected the bill would add $2.3 trillion to the debt and result in 8.6 million people losing health coverage over ten years. The bill also includes a $4 trillion increase to the debt ceiling, which the Treasury Department says is needed by August to avoid default, overhauls the student loan system by replacing existing repayment plans with two options, imposes a 21% tax on wealthy university endowments, allocates $150 billion for military spending, and $46.5 billion for border enforcement. The legislation also creates $1,000 federally funded “Trump accounts” for babies born between 2024 and 2028. Trump, who directly pressured lawmakers and threatened primary challenges, claimed victory, saying: “Now, it’s time for our friends in the United States Senate to get to work, and send this Bill to my desk AS SOON AS POSSIBLE!” Democrats, meanwhile, called the bill “one big broken promise,” citing CBO projections that the poorest 10% of households would lose 4% of their after-tax income while the top 10% would gain 2%. Senate Republicans, however, have already said they plan to rewrite major sections, including the Medicaid and tax provisions. The bill also faces additional constraints under reconciliation rules, and with key policies unresolved, Trump’s goal of signing it by July 4 is uncertain. (Bloomberg / New York Times / Washington Post / Associated Press / Politico / NBC News / Wall Street Journal / CNN / CNBC / Axios / ABC News)

2/ The Senate voted 51–44 to revoke California’s authority to ban sales of new gas-powered cars by 2035, eliminating a waiver granted by the EPA under Biden and overriding a legal opinion that said the repeal wasn’t allowed under the Congressional Review Act. Republicans, nevertheless, used a procedural workaround to bypass the Senate parliamentarian, who had said the waiver didn’t qualify. The vote also struck down two other California rules targeting truck emissions and smog pollutants. California’s ban had been adopted by 11 other states, together representing about 40% of the U.S. auto market. “The weaponization of the Congressional Review Act […] is just another part of the continuous, partisan campaign against California’s efforts,” Attorney General Rob Bonta said, who vowed to sue. (Politico / NPR / New York Times / Associated Press / Bloomberg / Washington Post / Wall Street Journal)

3/ A federal judge blocked Trump’s executive order to dismantle the Education Department, ordering the agency to reinstate over 1,300 fired employees. Judge Myong Joun issued a preliminary injunction, writing that the “record abundantly reveals that Defendants’ true intention is to effectively dismantle the Department without an authorizing statute.” The ruling also barred the Trump administration from transferring federal education programs to other agencies. The Education Department said it would challenge the ruling, calling the decision “a dramatic overstep” by “a far-left judge.” (Associated Press / New York Times / Washington Post / Politico / NPR / CNN / Wall Street Journal / Axios / ABC News / NBC News / CNBC)

4/ The Supreme Court deadlocked 4-4 on whether Oklahoma could create the nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school, leaving in place a state court ruling that blocked the effort. With Justice Amy Coney Barrett recused, the tie allowed the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision to stand, which found the proposed St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School unconstitutional under both state and federal law. The ruling, however, didn’t set a national precedent, but stops a plan supporters said would “bring Catholic education to rural parts of the state” that critics called “a constitutional oxymoron.” Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond, who brought the suit, called the outcome “a resounding victory for religious liberty” and said it ensures “Oklahoma taxpayers will not be forced to fund radical Islamic schools.” [Editor’s note: Drummond’s comment reflects the argument from opponents that approving a Catholic charter school would force states to also allow religious schools of any kind.] (Associated Press / Politico / CNN / Wall Street Journal / ABC News / New York Times / NBC News / Washington Post / Axios)

5/ The Trump administration revoked Harvard’s ability to enroll international students, requiring nearly 6,800 current foreign students to transfer or lose their legal status. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said “It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students,” claiming – without evidence – that Harvard “fostered violence, antisemitism, and coordinated with the Chinese Communist Party.” Noem said Harvard “refused” to meet the Trump administration’s unusually broad demand for information on foreign students allegedly involved in “illegal and violent activities.” She added: “Let this serve as a warning to all universities.” Harvard called the move “unlawful” and “retaliatory,” saying it “threatens serious harm” and “undermines Harvard’s academic and research mission.” President Alan Garber said, “No government […] should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire.” (Washington Post / The Guardian / Bloomberg / CNBC / Reuters / New York Times)

poll/ 58% disapprove of Trump’s economic performance, while 42% approve. 63% of Americans disapprove of Trump’s handling of tariff policies and 66% disapprove of his handling of inflation and the cost of living. (Politico)

The midterm elections are in 530 days.

✏ Notables.

  1. The first report from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again Commission blamed childhood chronic illnesses on ultra-processed food, environmental toxins, overprescribed drugs, and corporate influence. It calls U.S. children “the sickest generation in American history” and warns that poor health threatens national security. The 69-page report, however, avoids major regulatory proposals, but does support stricter food stamp rules, new dietary guidelines, and more research on vaccines and pharmaceuticals. Kennedy called it a “radical consensus” and pledged full policy recommendations within 100 days. (Politico / Axios / New York Times / ABC News / NBC News / CNN / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal)
  2. House Republicans reopened their investigation into Biden’s mental fitness, requesting interviews with his former physician Kevin O’Connor and four ex-White House aides. The Oversight Committee, led by James Comer, revived last year’s inquiry, citing new books and audio recordings that raised concerns about Biden’s cognitive state. Comer also questioned Biden’s use of an autopen to sign official documents, implying others may have made key decisions during his presidency. The committee hasn’t issued new subpoenas but said interviews could begin this week. (Wall Street Journal / Politico / NBC News)
  3. The Supreme Court allowed Trump to fire two Biden-appointed members of federal labor boards, despite laws protecting them from removal without cause. In a 6–3 order, the conservative majority paused lower court rulings that had reinstated Cathy Harris of the Merit Systems Protection Board and Gwynne Wilcox of the National Labor Relations Board. The court’s majority said the boards wield “considerable executive power” and Trump is “likely to show” he has authority to remove such officials. The justices, however, emphasized their decision didn’t apply to the Federal Reserve, calling it a “uniquely structured, quasi-private entity.” Justice Kagan dissented, writing: “Today’s order favors the President over our precedent.” (ABC News / Politico / NBC News / Washington Post / Wall Street Journal)
  4. Federal prosecutors charged Elias Rodriguez with murdering two Israeli Embassy staffers in Washington, calling it a targeted act of terror. Surveillance video showed Rodriguez shooting Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim in the back, then firing again as they lay on the ground. Rodriguez told police, “I did it for Palestine, I did it for Gaza,” and shouted “Free Palestine” as he was arrested inside the Capital Jewish Museum. Prosecutors said they’re treating the case as both a hate crime and an act of terrorism. (Associated Press / Washington Post / ABC News)
  5. The Treasury Department will stop minting new pennies early next year – ending production of the coin after over 230 years. Each penny costs nearly four cents to produce, and the phaseout is expected to save $56 million annually. Businesses will be instructed to round cash transactions to the nearest five cents, while electronic payments will remain unchanged. (Wall Street Journal / NBC News)
  6. Trump is scheduled to host his private, crypto-themed dinner tonight at the Trump National Golf Club in Washington, D.C. for 220 people who spent a combined $394 million on his memecoin, $TRUMP, which is mostly owned by two Trump-linked companies. The average participant spent over $1.7 million, with some paying as much as $37.7 million for access. About 72% of the winners appeared to be foreign nationals. Trump benefited financially through fees on every $TRUMP trade, which netted nearly $900,000 in the first two days. (NBC News)
 
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