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Tag: U.S. government

  • Venezuelan migrants sent to El Salvador demand justice after US judge ruling

    Men who were part of the group of Venezuelan migrants that the United States government transferred earlier this year to a prison in El Salvador demanded justice on Friday, days after a federal judge in Washington ruled that the Trump administration must give them legal due process.The men told reporters in Venezuela’s capital that they hope legal organizations can push their claims in court. Their press conference was organized by Venezuela’s government, which had previously said it had retained legal services for the immigrants.On Monday, a federal judge ordered the U.S. government to give legal due process to the 252 Venezuelan men, either by providing court hearings or returning them to the U.S. The ruling opens a path for the men to challenge the Trump administration’s allegation that they are members of the Tren de Aragua gang and subject to removal under an 18th century wartime law.The men have repeatedly said they were physically and psychologically tortured while at the notorious Salvadoran prison.”Today, we are here to demand justice before the world for the human rights violations committed against each of us, and to ask for help from international organizations to assist us in our defense so that our human rights are respected and not violated again,” Andry Blanco told reporters in Caracas, where roughly two dozen of the migrants gathered Friday.Some of the men shared the daily struggles they now face — including fear of leaving their home or encountering law enforcement — as a consequence of what they said were brutal abuses while in prison. The men did not specify what justice should look like in their case, but not all are interested in returning to the U.S.”I don’t trust them,” Nolberto Aguilar said of the U.S. government.The men were flown to El Salvador in March. They were sent to their home country in July as part of a prisoner swap between the Trump administration and the government of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.Camilla Fabri, Venezuelan vice minister of foreign affairs for international communications, said Maduro’s government is working with a bar association in the U.S. and “all human rights organizations to prepare a major lawsuit against Trump and the United States government, so that they truly acknowledge all the crimes they have committed against” the men.

    Men who were part of the group of Venezuelan migrants that the United States government transferred earlier this year to a prison in El Salvador demanded justice on Friday, days after a federal judge in Washington ruled that the Trump administration must give them legal due process.

    The men told reporters in Venezuela’s capital that they hope legal organizations can push their claims in court. Their press conference was organized by Venezuela’s government, which had previously said it had retained legal services for the immigrants.

    On Monday, a federal judge ordered the U.S. government to give legal due process to the 252 Venezuelan men, either by providing court hearings or returning them to the U.S. The ruling opens a path for the men to challenge the Trump administration’s allegation that they are members of the Tren de Aragua gang and subject to removal under an 18th century wartime law.

    The men have repeatedly said they were physically and psychologically tortured while at the notorious Salvadoran prison.

    “Today, we are here to demand justice before the world for the human rights violations committed against each of us, and to ask for help from international organizations to assist us in our defense so that our human rights are respected and not violated again,” Andry Blanco told reporters in Caracas, where roughly two dozen of the migrants gathered Friday.

    Some of the men shared the daily struggles they now face — including fear of leaving their home or encountering law enforcement — as a consequence of what they said were brutal abuses while in prison. The men did not specify what justice should look like in their case, but not all are interested in returning to the U.S.

    “I don’t trust them,” Nolberto Aguilar said of the U.S. government.

    The men were flown to El Salvador in March. They were sent to their home country in July as part of a prisoner swap between the Trump administration and the government of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

    Camilla Fabri, Venezuelan vice minister of foreign affairs for international communications, said Maduro’s government is working with a bar association in the U.S. and “all human rights organizations to prepare a major lawsuit against Trump and the United States government, so that they truly acknowledge all the crimes they have committed against” the men.

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  • Socialism, But Make It Trump

    Here in this country, Republican opposition to public ownership remains implacable, at least in theory. Conservatives have long argued that government-run enterprises, such as Amtrak and the U.S. Postal Service, are innately inefficient, and attacked even modest public initiatives as dangerous flirtations with socialism. Ironically, however, it’s a Republican President, Donald Trump, who is busy expanding the frontiers of the state by having government agencies take sizable stakes in privately run companies.

    In August, the chip manufacturer Intel announced that the Trump Administration would acquire 433.3 million of its shares for $8.9 billion, which translated into an ownership stake of just under ten per cent. This was one in a flurry of deals that has allowed the federal government to acquire either direct ownership stakes or options to purchase ownership stakes in the future, in five rare-earths companies, and obtaining a so-called golden share in U.S. Steel, which it received when the Trump White House approved its sale to the Japanese company Nippon Steel. Although this unusual arrangement didn’t grant the government any ownership rights to future profits that U.S. Steel generates, it gave the President the right to veto certain moves by the company, including decisions to shutter factories or move operations abroad.

    To be sure, this isn’t the first time that the U.S. government has acquired stakes in major companies, and the basic principle of rewarding the taxpayer for providing financing to private businesses is a sound one. (Bernie Sanders, hardly a fan of Trump, voiced qualified support for the Intel deal.) During the great financial crisis of 2008-09, the federal government supplied emergency financing to the carmaker General Motors and the insurance company A.I.G., taking ownership stakes of roughly sixty per cent and eighty per cent, respectively, which it subsequently sold off. It also seized control of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taking an eighty-per-cent ownership stake that it still has today.

    These government rescues were all crisis measures. Trump’s stakebuilding, which some observers refer to as “state capitalism,” is more arbitrary and opaque, and subject to his whims. Obviously, he isn’t a socialist, but, if a Democratic President were to intervene in the business sector in the ways that he has, many Republicans would be screaming about creeping socialism.

    The Intel transaction grew out of some unfinished business from the Biden Administration, which, through the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, agreed to give the struggling chipmaker around eight billion dollars in federal grants and eleven billion dollars in loans for the construction of new plants in the U.S. that would help the company catch up with overseas rivals. When Trump returned to the White House, only about a quarter of the promised money had been passed on to Intel, and it wasn’t clear what would happen to the rest. Evidently, the Trump Administration demanded an equity stake in exchange for transferring some of the money, and Intel could hardly say no. The federal government is now its largest shareholder.

    The Administration has already used the powers granted by its golden share in U.S. Steel. In September, according to the Wall Street Journal, the Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, heard that the company was planning to shutter a plant in Illinois and told its chief executive that Trump would exercise his right to block the move. U.S. Steel reversed course. This sort of interventionism is anathema to free-market conservatives, and it’s far from clear where it will end. Lutnick has said the Administration is even considering taking ownership stakes in big defense contractors, such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin, presumably as the price of renewing their lucrative federal contracts.

    There has also been some speculation that the Trump Administration could end up doing some sort of finance-for-equity deal with a big artificial-intelligence company, such as OpenAI, which is making huge investments in data centers that it needs to train and run its models. According to Sam Altman, the firm’s C.E.O., it has committed to spending $1.4 trillion in the course of the next eight years. Its revenues are growing fast: Altman said that by the end of this year they will be running at an annualized rate of twenty billion dollars. But the company is still spending far more than it takes in, and it needs to raise a great deal of external funding. Last week, Sarah Friar, OpenAI’s chief financial officer, said it was looking to “an ecosystem of banks, private equity, maybe even governmental,” and she raised the possibility of obtaining a federal-financing guarantee, which would reduce the firm’s borrowing costs and shift to the government at least some of the risk if OpenAI were unable to repay its loans. Essentially, if the company underperformed, the taxpayer could be left to pick up part of its tab.

    John Cassidy

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  • How Boston hotels are helping feed community members in need amid shutdown

    Boston-area hotels are stepping up as millions deal with SNAP cuts because of the government shutdown.

    The Fairmont Copley Plaza is using an app to offer discounted meals to those in need, while officials at the Seaport Hotel host a food drive.

    Questions around food stamps loom large as the shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, goes into its 37th day on Thursday.

    With federal funding cuts impacting assistance programs, local nonprofits are asking for help to feed neighbors in need.

    “As of 2022, we’ve fed over 6,000 people,” said Kwaku Boah, head chef at the Oak Long Bar + Kitchen at Fairmont Copley Plaza.

    Surplus prepared meals are packaged there to be sold at discounted prices.

    “What we are offering are things that have been left over, or are not used at all,” Boah said.

    Breakfast and dinner options priced at $6.99, available on the Too Good to Go app.

    “Too Good to Go is a mobile app whose mission is to ensure reduced food waste and also to fight food insecurity,” Boah said.

    Less than three miles away, sitting in the lobby of the Seaport Hotel are piles of donated food to support the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston.

    “The Seaport Hotel has just been a long-standing partner in the community, worked very closely with the Boys & Girls Club,” said General Manager Todd Gagnon. “We’re here to take care of the community.”

    And its a community that needs it most, as 82% of families involved in the Boys & Girls Clubs of Boston identify as low-income.

    “The food drive is going to run until Nov. 14,” Gagnon said. “You can drop food goods right off here in the lobby, or you can pull right up to the valet, and they would be happy to grab those goods for you.”

    Malcolm Johnson

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  • 42 Hours for 42 Million: Project Open Fridge is an awareness campaign & protest for the 42 million Americans facing food insecurity

    In respect to the 42 million Americans facing delayed Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, Love Beyond Walls founder Dr. Terence Lester will sit atop a refrigerator for 42 hours throughout the week Nov. 3rd – Nov. 10th at the Love Beyond Walls national headquarters in College Park, GA.  Love Beyond Walls’ latest awareness campaign Project Open Fridge, is a protest to food insecurity and hopes to expand resources for Title I schools with families and children impacted experiencing homelessness and poverty.

    As the recent U.S. government shutdown disrupts vital food assistance programs, its lingering impact has exposed the silent crisis of food insecurity impacting 1 in 5 children in Georgia. Exacerbated by federal funding cuts, the burden is overwhelming school districts, principals and educators witnessing students attend school for their only meal of the day.

    “The need is growing by the week. Principals in our partner schools share that resources are drying up, students are coming to school hungry or not at all due to basic needs not being met in the home,” says Dr. Terence Lester. “Zion’s Closet is our direct response to this crisis ensuring students in low-income communities have a space of dignity to access food, clothes and other necessities. The hope for this campaign is to draw attention to what’s really happening in schools that are trying to do more with less and how we can come together to help our most vulnerable students.”

    Love in Action

    The Project Open Fridgecampaign builds on Love Beyond Walls’ mission to amplify the voices of people experiencing poverty and homelessness. Each hour Dr. Lester sits on top of the fridge represents hope and resilience for millions of American families living in poverty whose voices are often silenced or ignored. Love Beyond Walls initiatives like Zion’s Closet and Love Feeds help restore lost dignity while ensuring accessible and healthy grocery options for students and their families.  

    Zion’s Closet partners with Title 1 schools to retrofit community resource rooms stocked with groceries, clothing, hygiene and essential household items for students and their families who are unhoused and experiencing poverty. The next Zion’s Closet is currently underway in Fulton County’s Love T. Nolan Elementary School.

    Love Feeds supports nearly 700 families with free groceries during its drive-thru store pop-up each month. The next one is Saturday, November 22nd just in time for Thanksgiving.

    Community Partnership & Call to Action

    Love Beyond Walls invites the community to participate by:

    • Sponsoring or hosting a Project Open Fridge community pop up of free groceries
    • Donating to the Zion’s Closet wishlist for Love T. Nolan Elementary School or Love Feeds wishlist 
    • Dropping off non-perishable items (i.e. rice, pasta, rice, canned goods such as milk, soups, vegetables, fruit, etc.) to the Love Beyond Walls HQ (3270 E Main St, College Park, GA 30337)

    For more information about upcoming Zion’s Closet, Love Feeds and volunteer opportunities visit, LoveBeyondWalls.org.

    About Dr. Terence Lester & Love Beyond Walls: Dr. Terence Lester is a storyteller, public scholar, speaker, community activist and author of From Dropout to Doctorate. He is the founder and executive director of Love Beyond Walls, a nonprofit organization focused on raising awareness about poverty, homelessness and community mobilization. Love Beyond Walls is a movement birthed out of the hope that love is greater than walls. Through nationwide campaigns, innovative outreach, and community-driven programs, Love Beyond Walls amplifies the voices of the forgotten, restoring dignity, fostering empathy, and mobilizing people to be agents of change. For more information, visit LoveBeyondWalls.org

    [ad_2] Terence Lester, PhD
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  • Lawmakers warn health care costs rising

    The federal government shutdown is now in its 20th day and among with many other looming problems, the deadline to renew the Affordable Care tax credits of Nov. 1 if approaching fast.

    Some of the biggest players in Congress are from the Bay Area and some came home to bring the fight to the people.

    Robert Handa shows how the political battle is going and the people caught in the middle. Watch his report in the video above.

    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • November SNAP benefits will not go out in PA unless immediate action: Officials

    Unless Congress takes immediate action to end the government shutdown, beneficiaries of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNPA) in Pennsylvania will not receive payments for November, the state’s Department of Human Services said on Monday.

    According to officials, SNAP payments rely on funding from the federal government, and Pennsylvania’s state government does not have the funds available to backfill the lost funding.

    “Republicans’ failure to pass a federal budget in Washington, D.C. is having a direct impact on our Commonwealth and now, this federal shutdown is threatening critical food assistance for two million Pennsylvanians who rely on SNAP to feed themselves and their families,” Gov. Josh Shapiro said in a press release.

    State officials said that the November payments could still go out if Congress takes immediate action, but Republicans and Democrats remained at odds on Monday and it is unclear when they will reach a funding deal.

    Democrats say they will not vote for a bill to fund the government until Republicans agree to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies that are set to expire this year, but Republicans say that can wait and a funding bill should be passed without the extension.

    If beneficiaries do miss their November payments, officials want them to know any unused funds from October will carry over, as funds carry over month-to-month.

    Brendan Brightman

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  • Republicans and Democrats haven’t talked about shutdown since Monday

    Republican and Democratic lawmakers at an impasse on reopening the federal government provided few public signs Sunday of meaningful negotiations talking place to end what has so far been a five-day shutdown.

    Leaders in both parties are betting that public sentiment has swung their way, putting pressure on the other side to cave. Democrats are insisting on renewing subsidies to cover health insurance costs for millions of households, while President Donald Trump wants to preserve existing spending levels and threatening to permanently fire federal workers if the government remains closed.

    The squabble comes at a moment of troubling economic uncertainty. While the U.S. economy has continued to grow this year, hiring has slowed and inflation remains elevated as Trump’s import taxes have created a series of disruptions for businesses and employers have hurt confidence in his leadership. At the same time, there is a recognition that the nearly $2 trillion annual budget deficit is financially unsustainable yet there has to be a coalition around the potential tax increases and spending cuts to reduce borrowing levels.

    House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, among those appearing on the Sunday news shows, said there have been no talks with Republican leaders since their White House meeting Monday.

    “And unfortunately, since that point in time, Republicans, including Donald Trump, have gone radio silent,” Jeffries said. “And what we’ve seen is negotiation through deepfake videos, the House canceling votes, and of course President Trump spending yesterday on the golf course. That’s not responsible behavior.”

    Trump was asked via text message by CNN’s Jake Tapper about shutdown talks. The Republican president responded with confidence but no details.

    “We are winning and cutting costs big time,” Trump said in a text message, according to CNN.

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said Trump’s behavior has been unserious and unhinged since their meeting on Monday before the government shut down.

    His administration sees the shutdown as an opening to wield greater power over the budget, with multiple officials saying they will save money as workers are furloughed by imposing permanent job cuts on thousands of government workers, a tactic that has never been used before.

    Even though it would Trump’s choice, he believes he can put the blame on the Democrats for the layoffs because of the shutdown.

    “It’s up to them,” Trump told reporters on Sunday morning before boarding the presidential helicopter. “Anybody laid off that’s because of the Democrats.”

    While Trump rose to fame on the TV show “The Apprentice” with is catchphrase of “You’re fired,” Republicans on Sunday claimed that the administration would take no pleasure in letting go of federal workers, even though they have put funding on hold for infrastructure and energy projects in Democratic areas.

    “We haven’t seen the details yet about what’s happening” with layoffs, House Speaker Mike Johnson said on NBC. “But it is a regrettable situation that the president does not want.”

    Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, said that the administration wants to avoid the layoffs it had indicated could start on Friday, a deadline that came and went without any decisions being announced.

    “We want the Democrats to come forward and to make a deal that’s a clean, continuing resolution that gives us seven more weeks to talk about these things,” Hassett said on CNN. “But the bottom line is that with Republicans in control, the Republicans have a lot more power over the outcome than the Democrats.”

    Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California defended his party’s stance on the shutdown, saying on NBC that the possible increase in health care costs for “millions of Americans” would make insurance unaffordable in what he called a “crisis.”

    But Schiff also noted that the Trump administration has withheld congressionally approved spending from being used, essentially undermining the value of Democrats’ seeking compromises on the budgets as the White House could decline to not honor Congress’ wishes. The Trump administration sent Congress roughly $4.9 billion in “pocket rescissions” on foreign aid, a process that meant the spending was withheld without time for Congress to weigh in before the previous fiscal year ended last month.

    “We need both to address the health care crisis and we need some written assurance in the law, I won’t take a promise, that they’re not going to renege on any deal we make,” Schiff said.

    The television appearances indicated that Democrats and Republicans are busy talking, deploying internet memes against each other that have raised concerns about whether it’s possible to negotiate in good faith.

    Vice President JD Vance said that a video putting Jeffries in a sombrero and thick mustache was simply a joke, even though it came across as mocking people of Mexican descent as Republicans insist that the Democratic demands would lead to health care spending on immigrants in the country illegally, a claim that Democrats dispute.

    Immigrants in the U.S. illegally are not eligible for any federal health care programs, including insurance provided through the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid. Still, hospitals do receive Medicaid reimbursements for emergency care that they are obligated to provide to people who meet other Medicaid eligibility requirements but do not have an eligible immigration status.

    The challenge, however, is that the two parties do not appear to be having productive conversations with each other in private, even as Republicans insist they are in conversation with their Democratic colleagues.

    On Friday, a Senate vote to advance a Republican bill that would reopen the government failed to notch the necessary 60 votes to end a filibuster. Johnson said the House would close for legislative business next week, a strategy that could obligate the Senate to work with the government funding bill that was passed by House Republicans.

    “Johnson’s not serious about this,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said on CBS. “He sent his all his congressman home last week and home this week. How are you going to negotiate?”

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Sunday that the shutdown on discretionary spending, the furloughing of federal workers and requirements that other federal employees work without pay will go on so long as Democrats vote no.

    “They’ll get another chance on Monday to vote again,” said Thune on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures.”

    “And I’m hoping that some of them have a change of heart,” he said.

    Josh Boak | The Associated Press

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  • Wall Street will be ruled by ‘rumor and pseudo-drama’ if government shutdown goes ahead, warns UBS | Fortune

    Washington seems fairly resigned to the fact a government shutdown will begin at midnight, the first to occur since 2018. Of course, this could be feigned acceptance to call the bluff of political opposition—or it could be a true reflection of the stalemate within Congress. Whatever the reason, Wall Street is caught in the middle.

    Casualties of the potential shutdown (caused by a standoff over how to fund government) are already significant: This Friday’s payroll data won’t be released, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has confirmed, if it goes ahead. This means analysts will be trading without a relatively key piece of contemporaneous data which markets have been watching closely.

    The further fallout from a potential pause to data releases is the Fed’s decision-making process. While shutdowns have been known to last only a matter of days, there is the chance it could rumble on for weeks. While it is unlikely the shutdown could last near a month, it does mean the Fed’s meeting at the end of October could be skewed by either a lack of data or economists frantically playing catch up with reporting.

    Trump isn’t afraid of a government shutdown—they’ve occurred under his administration before—and his vice president JD Vance said yesterday he believed the White House was headed for a stalemate despite efforts for negotiations.

    The will-they-won’t-they of the highest office in America is precisely the environment Wall Street doesn’t like: Uncertainty.

    “The United States is still heading for another government shutdown this evening, it may or may not happen as this political theater is a well-worn routine and very often a solution is created at the last possible moment,” chimed UBS’s Paul Donovan. “This all lowers the productivity of economists … as pointless hours are spent analyzing the effects. The [BLS] has said that they will not publish any economic data in the event of a shutdown—of course the BLS economic data is subject to quality criticism, but the problem is that the alternatives like sentiment surveys are even worse, and that’s all that markets will be left to work with in the absence of official numbers.”

    While the time taken to focus on this “pseudo-drama” will “unfortunately allow rumor and unreliable survey evidence to gain influence over markets,” Donovan noted, it does present an opportunity for private businesses. Companies can sneak through price increases—for profit as opposed to tariff-driven—because they know it will go “undetected” for some time, added Donovan. Of course, those increases will ultimately be identified when inflation reporting resumes but by then, consumers will already have felt the sting and have adjusted their inflation perceptions accordingly.

    Macro effects

    Potentially braced for volatility, UBS is reminding its clients to see through shutdown fears and “focus on other market drivers, such as the mix of continued Fed rate cuts, strong corporate earnings, and robust AI capex and monetization.”

    The bank’s chief investment officer, Mark Haefele, wrote in a note this morning that temporary delays to data shouldn’t delay cuts to the base rate–which the market has priced in—and any shutdown effects on the macro side are “typically minimal and quickly reversed.”

    For more significant—but still relatively minimal—effects to be felt, the shutdown would have to be “lengthy” added Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group, in a note Friday: “The last government shutdown … was also the lengthiest one to date. Afterward, a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) investigation concluded that the economic impact was small, but not trivial. As a share of quarterly real GDP, the level of real GDP in Q4 2018 was reduced by 0.1% (unannualized), and the level of real GDP in the first quarter of 2019 was estimated to be reduced by 0.2%.”

    “However, in subsequent quarters, GDP would be temporarily higher than it would have been in the absence of a shutdown, as activity ratchets back. As such, only a very small (0.02%) of GDP is permanently ‘lost’.”

    But the latest shutdown also comes with the threat that President Trump would permanently let go some of the furloughed workers, with Wizman noting: “If that were to happen, it could deepen whatever adverse impact on GDP would normally take place. It would also raise new hackles about ‘governability’ in the U.S.”

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    Eleanor Pringle

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  • Trump moves to declare antifa a domestic terrorist group

    President Trump moved Monday to classify the broad left-wing, anti-fascist movement known as antifa as a domestic terrorist organization, opening up a new front in his battle with political foes and raising legal and ethical questions about how the U.S. government can prosecute a movement.

    “Antifa is a militarist, anarchist enterprise that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the United States Government, law enforcement authorities, and our system of law,” Trump wrote in an executive order. “It uses illegal means to organize and execute a campaign of violence and terrorism nationwide to accomplish these goals.”

    Militant activists who identify with Antifa have espoused an uncompromising philosophy of zero tolerance for fascists. Since the Republican president took office in 2017, protesters — concealing their identities with masks, dressing head to toe in black — have sparred with police to block a rightwing provocateur speaking at UC Berkeley, confronted alt-right demonstrators with sticks, shields and chemical irritants in Charlottesville, Va., stormed a federal courthouse while protesting police brutality in Portland, Ore., and lobbed rocks at law enforcement as federal immigration agents ratcheted up raids in Los Angeles.

    But critics warn Trump is utilizing right-wing activist Charlie Kirk’s recent killing to launch a sweeping government crackdown on his political opponents — and crush their constitutional rights to free speech and free assembly.

    “I am very concerned that these actions are meant to punish disfavored dissent,” said Brian Levin, founder of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino.

    In his order, Trump instructed all relevant federal departments and agencies to use their authority to “investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations — especially those involving terrorist actions — conducted by Antifa or any person claiming to act on behalf of Antifa.”

    Trump claimed his administration would also investigate and prosecute anyone who funded such an operation.

    As justification, Trump cited recent protests that took place in L.A. and across the nation. Antifa, he said, used “coordinated efforts to obstruct enforcement of Federal laws through armed standoffs with law enforcement, organized riots, violent assaults on Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other law enforcement officers, and routine doxing of and other threats against political figures and activists.”

    Trump is fixating on left-wing violence even as data show U.S. extremists come from across the ideological spectrum: A 2024 federal report — recently purged from the Department of Justice website — stated that far-right extremists have killed more Americans than any other group and outpace “all other types of terrorism and domestic violent extremists.”

    To Levin, the administration’s laser focus on antifa, a diffuse movement that does not rely on traditional hierarchies, risks threatening “the civil liberties, not of perpetrators of violence, but the far larger and more visible civil society network of peaceful supporters, messengers and funders.” Experts say some of the groups are highly organized at a local level, but don’t have national or international coordination, as far as we know, or public leaders.

    There is no evidence that Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old suspect in Kirk’s murder, was affiliated with antifa or any other network. According to his mother, he had “started to lean more to the left, becoming more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.” Officials have said that in a text thread with his partner, Robinson said he killed Kirk because he “had enough of his hatred.”

    As Kirk’s shooting triggers furious debate on the perils of left versus right political violence, there is little consensus among Americans on what extremism is, who is perpetrating it and when it is justified.

    A significant swath of Americans, some experts note, tend to excuse or ignore violence on their side and not recognize it as terrorism if they sympathize with the cause.

    “The biggest problem we face is that there’s no agreement on what terrorism is and it’s become completely subjective,” said Bruce Hoffman, senior fellow for counter-terrorism and homeland security at the Council on Foreign Relations.

    “Luigi Mangione, for example, is he a terrorist?” Hoffman asked. “I would say yes. … But look, there’s a sold-out musical about him!”

    What is antifa?

    The term “antifa” — short for antifascist — was coined in Germany nearly a century ago, as shorthand for the Communist Party-affiliated Antifaschistische Aktion (Anti-Fascist Action) group that mobilized against Adolf Hitler and was brutally crushed when he came to power.

    According to Mark Bray, a professor of history at Rutgers University, the term was picked up across Europe in the 1980s and ’90s and adopted by a broad swath of leftists, anarchists and anti-authoritarian socialists.

    “Antifa is a kind of politics of pan radical left militant opposition to the far right,” said Bray, an ally of the movement and author of “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook.”

    In uniting socialists, anarchists, communists and other leftists to organize against what they perceive as a common threat, Bray said, antifa is like feminism.

    “There are feminist groups,” he noted, “but feminism itself is not a group.”

    The first U.S. organization to adopt the name was Rose City Antifa, founded in Portland in 2007. It’s goal, according to its website, is “to create a world without fascism” and “ensure that there are consequences for fascists who spread their hate and violence in our city.”

    “We are unapologetic about the reality that fighting fascism at points requires physical militancy,” Rose City Antifa said in 2017 before facing off with far-right groups and police at a pro-Trump march.

    Other groups across the U.S., such as NYC Antifa and Antifa Sacramento, are part of the same loose anti-fascist network, but many do not explicitly call themselves antifa. There is no central organization, no command, headquarters or formal membership list.

    The movement has grown in response to the rise of Trump.

    “Suddenly, anarchists and antifa, who have been demonized and sidelined by the wider Left have been hearing from liberals and Leftists, ‘you’ve been right all along,’” the anarchist, antifascist journal, It’s Going Down, said in 2016 after clashes broke out on a Texas campus as protesters tried to cancel an alt-right speaker.

    Could Trump designate antifa a terrorist group?

    Many national security experts agree that Trump would be cutting a radically new path if he designated antifa as a terrorism organization: The U.S. does not have a domestic terrorism law, and Trump does not have the authority to designate antifa a foreign terrorist organization without approval from Congress.

    “While the FBI has confirmed that antifa and other extremists are subjects of ongoing domestic terrorism investigations, it declines to designate any organization a “‘domestic terrorist organization,” a 2020 congressional report said. “Doing so may infringe on First Amendment-protected free speech — belonging to an ideological group in and of itself is not a crime in the United States.”

    Trump could try to go after antifa as an international organization, Hoffman said, pointing out that there are antifa cells active abroad. But it would be a stretch to designate antifa an international terrorist group because there’s no known international command, control or coordination.

    “It’s not like al Qaeda or ISIS, where you have a command or an emir in charge giving orders,” Hoffman said. “It’s an ideological affinity. Nothing more.”

    Is antifa engaged in domestic terrorism?

    According to the FBI, terrorism is “the unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a Government or civilian population in furtherance of political or social objectives.”

    For the Trump administration, the case is clear.

    “Left-wing organizations have fueled violent riots, organized attacks against law enforcement officers, coordinated illegal doxing campaigns, arranged drop points for weapons and riot materials, and more,” a White House spokesperson said in a statement.

    “These aren’t protests, these are crimes … where they are throwing bricks at cars of ICE and border patrol,” Trump said last week of the violence committed during demonstrations in Los Angeles over his administration’s immigration crackdown.

    “They should be put in jail. What they’re doing to this country is really subversive.”

    Bray rejected the idea that antifa is in any way a terrorist organization. “If by terrorists we mean something akin to Al Qaeda or ISIS with murdering people and blowing up buildings, it just is not any of that.”

    However, Bray has written, most if not all antifa members “wholeheartedly support militant self-defense against the police and the targeted destruction of police and capitalist property.”

    Hoffman argued that any acts of violence committed in pursuit of political goals constituted terrorism.

    “Terrorism doesn’t have to be lethal to be terrorism,” he said. “There’s no doubt if violence, or the threat of violence, is being used in pursuit of a political motive, it’s terrorism. You have to call it out.”

    A 2022 study from the University of Maryland’s National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism said U.S. data showed “left-wing radicals were less likely to use violence than right-wing and Islamist radicals.”

    While the consortium says antifa poses “a relatively small threat,” it also noted “a recent increase in violent activity by antifa extremists, anarchists and related far-left extremists” — a trend it links to the “concurrent increase in violent far-right activity.”

    Should the U.S. enact a law on domestic terrorism?

    In the 1990s, when President Clinton tried to enact sweeping domestic terrorism laws, Hoffman said, Republicans raised concerns about 1st Amendment violations.

    “The bottom line is back then it was as politicized as it is now,” Hoffman said. “If there’s a meeting, basically one side of the room wants to designate antifa and Black Lives Matter, and the other side of the room wants to designate Atomwaffen [Division] or the Base.”

    Ultimately, Hoffman said, the U.S. does need a clear and precise law on domestic terrorism. But now was not the best time, he argued, as emotions are running too high after the Kirk shooting.

    “If you’re going to go to these lengths, to change the laws of the United States, you have to have very firm, clear evidence,” he said. “At a time when talk show hosts are being deplatformed, when people are fired from their jobs, this is not the ideal moment to embrace profound changes in how we regard terrorism.”

    Jenny Jarvie

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  • Bonta demands FCC chair ‘stop his campaign of censorship’ following Kimmel suspension

    California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta on Monday accused Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr of unlawfully intimidating television broadcasters into toeing a conservative line in favor of President Trump, and urged him to reverse course.

    In a letter to Carr, Bonta specifically cited ABC’s decision to pull “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” off the air after Kimmel made comments about the killing of close Trump ally Charlie Kirk, and Carr demanded ABC’s parent company Disney “take action” against the late-night host.

    Bonta wrote that California “is home to a great many artists, entertainers, and other individuals who every day exercise their right to free speech and free expression,” and that Carr’s demands of Disney threatened their 1st Amendment rights.

    “As the Supreme Court held over sixty years ago and unanimously reaffirmed just last year, ‘the First Amendment prohibits government officials from relying on the threat of invoking legal sanctions and other means of coercion to achieve the suppression of disfavored speech,’” Bonta wrote.

    Carr and Trump have both denied playing a role in Kimmel’s suspension, alleging instead that it was due to his show having poor ratings.

    After Disney announced Monday that Kimmel’s show would be returning to ABC, Bonta said he was “pleased to hear ABC is reversing course on its capitulation to the FCC’s unlawful threats,” but that his “concerns stand.”

    He rejected Trump and Carr’s denials of involvement, and accused the administration of “waging a dangerous attack on those who dare to speak out against it.”

    “Censoring and silencing critics because you don’t like what they say — be it a comedian, a lawyer, or a peaceful protester — is fundamentally un-American,” while such censorship by the U.S. government is “absolutely chilling,” Bonta said.

    Bonta called on Carr to “stop his campaign of censorship” and commit to defending the right to free speech in the U.S., which he said would require “an express disavowal” of his previous threats and “an unambiguous pledge” that he will not use the FCC “to retaliate against private parties” for speech he disagrees with moving forward.

    “News outlets have reported today that ABC will be returning Mr. Kimmel’s show to its broadcast tomorrow night. While it is heartening to see the exercise of free speech ultimately prevail, this does not erase your threats and the resultant suppression of free speech from this past week or the prospect that your threats will chill free speech in the future,” Bonta wrote.

    After Kirk’s killing, Kimmel said during a monologue that the U.S. had “hit some new lows over the weekend, with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.”

    Carr responded on a conservative podcast, saying, “These companies can find ways to change conduct, to take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or, you know, there’s going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.”

    Two major owners of ABC affiliates dropped the show, after which ABC said it would be “preempted indefinitely.”

    Both Kirk’s killing and Kimmel’s suspension — which followed the cancellation of “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” by CBS — kicked off a tense debate about freedom of speech in the U.S. Both Kimmel and Colbert are critics of Trump, while Kirk was an ardent supporter.

    Constitutional scholars and other 1st amendment advocates said the administration and Carr have clearly been exerting inappropriate pressure on media companies.

    Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Berkeley Law School, said Carr’s actions were part of a broad assault on free speech by the administration, which “is showing a stunning ignorance and disregard of the 1st amendment.”

    Summer Lopez, the interim co-chief executive of PEN America, said this is “a dangerous moment for free speech” in the U.S. because of a host of Trump administration actions that are “pretty clear violations of the 1st Amendment” — including Carr’s threats but also statements about “hate speech” by Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi and new Pentagon restrictions on journalists reporting on the U.S. military.

    She said Kimmel’s return to ABC showed that “public outrage does make a difference,” but that “it’s important that we generate that level of public outrage when the targeting is of people who don’t have that same prominence.”

    Carr has also drawn criticism from conservative corners, including from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) — who is chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, which oversees the FCC. He recently said on his podcast that he found it “unbelievably dangerous for government to put itself in the position of saying we’re going to decide what speech we like and what we don’t, and we’re going to threaten to take you off air if we don’t like what you’re saying.”

    Cruz said he works closely with Carr, whom he likes, but that what Carr said was “dangerous as hell” and could be used down the line “to silence every conservative in America.”

    Kevin Rector

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  • President Trump says Intel agreed to give US a stake in its company

    President Donald Trump on Friday announced the U.S. government has secured a 10% stake in struggling Silicon Valley pioneer Intel in a deal that was completed just a couple weeks after he was depicting the company’s CEO as a conflicted leader unfit for the job.“The United States of America now fully owns and controls 10% of INTEL, a Great American Company that has an even more incredible future,” Trump wrote in a post.The U.S. government is getting the stake through the conversion of $11.1 billion in previously issued funds and pledges. All told, the government is getting 433.3 million shares of non-voting stock priced at $20.47 apiece — a discount from Friday’s closing price at $24.80. That spread means the U.S. government already has a gain of $1.9 billion, on paper.The remarkable turn of events makes the U.S. government one of Intel’s largest shareholders at a time that the Santa Clara, California, company is i n the process of jettisoning more than 20,000 workers as part of its latest attempt to bounce back from years of missteps taken under a variety of CEOs.Intel’s current CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, has only been on the job for slightly more than five months, and earlier this month, it looked like he might be on shaky ground already after some lawmakers raised national security concerns about his past investments in Chinese companies while he was a venture capitalist. Trump latched on to those concerns in an August 7 post demanding that Tan resign.But Trump backed off after the Malaysian-born Tan professed his allegiance to the U.S. in a public letter to Intel employees and went to the White House to meet with the president, leading to a deal that now has the U.S. government betting that the company is on the comeback trail after losing more than $22 billion since the end of 2023. Trump hailed Tan as “highly respected” CEO in his Friday post.In a statement, Tan applauded Trump for “driving historic investments in a vital industry” and resolved to reward his faith in Intel. “We are grateful for the confidence the President and the Administration have placed in Intel, and we look forward to working to advance U.S. technology and manufacturing leadership,” Tan said.Intel’s current stock price is just slightly above where it was when Tan was hired in March and more than 60% below its peak of about $75 reached 25 years ago when its chips were still dominating the personal computer boom before being undercut by a shift to smartphones a few years later. The company’s market value currently stands at about $108 billion – a fraction of the current chip kingpin, Nvidia, which is valued at $4.3 trillion.The stake is coming primarily through U.S. government grants to Intel through the CHIPS and Science Act that was started under President Joe Biden’s administration as a way to foster more domestic manufacturing of computer chips to lessen the dependence on overseas factories.But the Trump administration, which has regularly pilloried the policies of the Biden administration, saw the CHIPs act as a needless giveaway and is now hoping to make a profit off the funding that had been pledged to Intel.”We think America should get the benefit of the bargain,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said earlier this week. “It’s obvious that it’s the right move to make.”About $7.8 billion had been been pledged to Intel under the incentives program, but only $2.2 billion had been funded so far. Another $3.2 billion of the government investment is coming through the funds from another program called “Secure Enclave.”Although U.S. government can’t vote with its shares and won’t have a seat on Intel’s board of directors, critics of the deal view it as a troubling cross-pollination between the public and private sectors that could hurt the tech industry in a variety of ways.For instance, more tech companies may feel pressured to buy potentially inferior chips from Intel to curry favor with Trump at a time that he is already waging a trade war that threatens to affect their products in a potential scenario cited by Scott Lincicome, vice president of general economics for the Cato Institute.“Overall, it’s a horrendous move that will have real harms for U.S. companies, U.S. tech leadership, and the U.S. economy overall,” Lincicome posted Friday.The 10% stake could also intensify the pressure already facing Tan, especially if Trump starts fixating on Intel’s stock price while resorting to his penchant for celebrating his past successes in business.Nancy Tengler, CEO of money manager Laffer Tengler Investments, is among the investors who abandoned Intel years ago because of all the challenges facing Intel.“I don’t see the benefit to the American taxpayer, nor do I see the benefit, necessarily to the chip industry,” Tengler said while also raising worries about Trump meddling in Intel’s business.“I don’t care how good of businessman you are, give it to the private sector and let people like me be the critic and let the government get to the business of government.,” Tengler said.Although rare, it’s not unprecedented for the U.S. government to become a significant shareholder in a prominent company. One of the most notable instances occurred during the Great Recession in 2008 when the government injected nearly $50 billion into General Motors in return for a roughly 60% stake in the automaker at a time it was on the verge of bankruptcy. The government ended up with a roughly $10 billion loss after it sold its stock in GM.The U.S. government’s stake in Intel coincides with Trump’s push to bring production to the U.S., which has been a focal point of the trade war that he has been waging throughout the world. By lessening the country’s dependence on chips manufactured overseas, the president believes the U.S. will be better positioned to maintain its technological lead on China in the race to create artificial intelligence.Even before gaining the 10% stake in Intel, Trump had been leveraging his power to reprogram the operations of major computer chip companies. The administration is requiring Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, two companies whose chips are powering the AI craze, to pay a 15% commission on their sales of chips in China in exchange for export licenses.

    President Donald Trump on Friday announced the U.S. government has secured a 10% stake in struggling Silicon Valley pioneer Intel in a deal that was completed just a couple weeks after he was depicting the company’s CEO as a conflicted leader unfit for the job.

    “The United States of America now fully owns and controls 10% of INTEL, a Great American Company that has an even more incredible future,” Trump wrote in a post.

    The U.S. government is getting the stake through the conversion of $11.1 billion in previously issued funds and pledges. All told, the government is getting 433.3 million shares of non-voting stock priced at $20.47 apiece — a discount from Friday’s closing price at $24.80. That spread means the U.S. government already has a gain of $1.9 billion, on paper.

    The remarkable turn of events makes the U.S. government one of Intel’s largest shareholders at a time that the Santa Clara, California, company is i n the process of jettisoning more than 20,000 workers as part of its latest attempt to bounce back from years of missteps taken under a variety of CEOs.

    Intel’s current CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, has only been on the job for slightly more than five months, and earlier this month, it looked like he might be on shaky ground already after some lawmakers raised national security concerns about his past investments in Chinese companies while he was a venture capitalist. Trump latched on to those concerns in an August 7 post demanding that Tan resign.

    But Trump backed off after the Malaysian-born Tan professed his allegiance to the U.S. in a public letter to Intel employees and went to the White House to meet with the president, leading to a deal that now has the U.S. government betting that the company is on the comeback trail after losing more than $22 billion since the end of 2023. Trump hailed Tan as “highly respected” CEO in his Friday post.

    In a statement, Tan applauded Trump for “driving historic investments in a vital industry” and resolved to reward his faith in Intel. “We are grateful for the confidence the President and the Administration have placed in Intel, and we look forward to working to advance U.S. technology and manufacturing leadership,” Tan said.

    Intel’s current stock price is just slightly above where it was when Tan was hired in March and more than 60% below its peak of about $75 reached 25 years ago when its chips were still dominating the personal computer boom before being undercut by a shift to smartphones a few years later. The company’s market value currently stands at about $108 billion – a fraction of the current chip kingpin, Nvidia, which is valued at $4.3 trillion.

    The stake is coming primarily through U.S. government grants to Intel through the CHIPS and Science Act that was started under President Joe Biden’s administration as a way to foster more domestic manufacturing of computer chips to lessen the dependence on overseas factories.

    But the Trump administration, which has regularly pilloried the policies of the Biden administration, saw the CHIPs act as a needless giveaway and is now hoping to make a profit off the funding that had been pledged to Intel.

    “We think America should get the benefit of the bargain,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said earlier this week. “It’s obvious that it’s the right move to make.”

    About $7.8 billion had been been pledged to Intel under the incentives program, but only $2.2 billion had been funded so far. Another $3.2 billion of the government investment is coming through the funds from another program called “Secure Enclave.”

    Although U.S. government can’t vote with its shares and won’t have a seat on Intel’s board of directors, critics of the deal view it as a troubling cross-pollination between the public and private sectors that could hurt the tech industry in a variety of ways.

    For instance, more tech companies may feel pressured to buy potentially inferior chips from Intel to curry favor with Trump at a time that he is already waging a trade war that threatens to affect their products in a potential scenario cited by Scott Lincicome, vice president of general economics for the Cato Institute.

    “Overall, it’s a horrendous move that will have real harms for U.S. companies, U.S. tech leadership, and the U.S. economy overall,” Lincicome posted Friday.

    The 10% stake could also intensify the pressure already facing Tan, especially if Trump starts fixating on Intel’s stock price while resorting to his penchant for celebrating his past successes in business.

    Nancy Tengler, CEO of money manager Laffer Tengler Investments, is among the investors who abandoned Intel years ago because of all the challenges facing Intel.

    “I don’t see the benefit to the American taxpayer, nor do I see the benefit, necessarily to the chip industry,” Tengler said while also raising worries about Trump meddling in Intel’s business.

    “I don’t care how good of businessman you are, give it to the private sector and let people like me be the critic and let the government get to the business of government.,” Tengler said.

    Although rare, it’s not unprecedented for the U.S. government to become a significant shareholder in a prominent company. One of the most notable instances occurred during the Great Recession in 2008 when the government injected nearly $50 billion into General Motors in return for a roughly 60% stake in the automaker at a time it was on the verge of bankruptcy. The government ended up with a roughly $10 billion loss after it sold its stock in GM.

    The U.S. government’s stake in Intel coincides with Trump’s push to bring production to the U.S., which has been a focal point of the trade war that he has been waging throughout the world. By lessening the country’s dependence on chips manufactured overseas, the president believes the U.S. will be better positioned to maintain its technological lead on China in the race to create artificial intelligence.

    Even before gaining the 10% stake in Intel, Trump had been leveraging his power to reprogram the operations of major computer chip companies. The administration is requiring Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, two companies whose chips are powering the AI craze, to pay a 15% commission on their sales of chips in China in exchange for export licenses.

    Source link

  • U.S. declines to pursue death penalty against trio of accused Mexican cartel kingpins

    Federal authorities in the United States revealed Tuesday that they will not seek the death penalty against three reputed Mexican drug cartel leaders, including an alleged former partner of the infamous “El Chapo” and the man accused of orchestrating the killing of a Drug Enforcement Administration agent.

    Court filings showed decisions handed down in the trio of prosecutions, all being held in Brooklyn, N.Y.

    The cases involve drug and conspiracy charges against Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, 75, charged with running a powerful faction of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel; Rafael Caro Quintero, 72, who allegedly masterminded the DEA agent’s torture and murder in 1985; and Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, 62, also known as El Viceroy, who is under indictment as the ex-boss of the Juárez cartel.

    Prosecutors from the Eastern District of New York filed a letter in each case “to inform the Court and the defense that the Attorney General has authorized and directed this Office not to seek the death penalty.”

    The decision comes despite calls by President Trump use capital punishment against drug traffickers and the U.S. government ratcheting up pressure against Mexico to dismantle organized crime groups and to stanch the flow of fentanyl and other illicit drugs across the border.

    A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    It’s rare for the death penalty to be in play against high-level Mexican cartel figures. Mexico long ago abolished capital punishment and typically extradites its citizens on the condition that they are spared death.

    In Zambada’s case, the standard restrictions did not apply because he was not extradited. Zambada was brought to the U.S. in July 2024 by a son of his longtime associate, Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán. Zambada alleges he was ambushed and kidnapped in Sinaloa by Joaquín Guzmán López, who forced him onto an airplane bound for a small airport outside El Paso.

    Zambada has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him and remains jailed in Brooklyn while his case proceeds. A court filing in June said prosecutors and the defense had “discussed the potential for a resolution short of trial,” suggesting plea negotiations are underway.

    We’re going to be asking [that] everyone who sells drugs, gets caught selling drugs, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts

    — President Trump in 2022

    Frank Perez, the lawyer representing Zambada, issued a statement Tuesday to The Times that said: “We welcome the government’s decision not to pursue the death penalty against our client. This marks an important step toward achieving a fair and just resolution.”

    Federal authorities announced in May that Guzmán López, 39, an accused leader of the Sinaloa cartel faction known as “Los Chapitos,” would also not face the death penalty. He faces an array of drug smuggling and conspiracy charges in a case pending before the federal court in Chicago.

    Another son of El Chapo, Ovidio Guzmán López, 35, pleaded guilty to drug trafficking, money laundering and firearms charges last month in Chicago. Court filings show he has agreed to cooperate with U.S. authorities in other investigations.

    Caro Quintero and Carrillo Fuentes were two of the biggest names among a group of 29 men handed over by Mexico to the U.S. in February. The unusual mass transfer was conducted outside the typical extradition process, which left open the possibility of the death penalty.

    Reputed to be a founding member of Mexico’s powerful Guadalajara cartel in the 1980s, Caro Quintero is allegedly responsible for the brutal slaying of DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena 40 years ago.

    The killing, portrayed on the Netflix show “Narcos: Mexico” and recounted in many books and documentaries, led to a fierce response by U.S. authorities, but Caro Quintero managed to elude justice for decades. Getting him on U.S. soil was portrayed as a major victory by Trump administration officials.

    Derek Maltz, the DEA chief in February, said in a statement that Caro Quintero had “unleashed violence, destruction, and death across the United States and Mexico, has spent four decades atop DEA’s most wanted fugitives list.”

    Carrillo Fuentes is perhaps best known as the younger brother of another Mexican drug trafficker, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the legendary “Lord of the Skies,” who died in 1997. Once close to El Chapo, El Mayo and other Sinaloa cartel leaders, the younger Carrillo Funtes split off to form his own cartel in the city of Juárez, triggering years of bloody cartel warfare.

    Kenneth J. Montgomery, the lawyer for Carrillo Fuentes, said Tuesday that his client was “extremely grateful” for the government’s decision to not seek the death penalty. “I thought it was the right decision,” he said. “In a civilized society, I don’t think the death penalty should ever be an option.”

    Trump has been an ardent supporter of capital punishment. In January, he signed an order that directs the attorney general to “take all necessary and lawful action” to ensure that states have enough lethal injection drugs to carry out executions.

    The executive order directed the attorney general to pursue the death penalty in cases that involve the killing of law enforcement officers, among other factors. For years, Trump has loudly called for executing convicted drug traffickers. He reiterated the call for executions again in 2022 when announcing his intent to run again for president.

    “We’re going to be asking [for] everyone who sells drugs, gets caught selling drugs, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts,” Trump said.

    Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi lifted a moratorium on federal executions in February, reversing a policy that began under the Biden administration. In April, Bondi announced intentions to seek the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the man charged with assassinating a UnitedHealthcare executive in New York City.

    Bonnie Klapper, a former federal narcotics prosecutor in the Eastern District of New York, reacted with surprise upon learning that the Trump administration had decided to not pursue capital cases against the accused kingpins, particularly Caro Quintero.

    Klapper, who is now a defense attorney, speculated that Mexico is strongly opposed to executions of its citizens and officials may have exerted diplomatic pressure to spare the lives of the three men, perhaps offering to send more kingpins in the future.

    “While my initial reaction is one of shock given this administration’s embrace of the death penalty, perhaps there’s conversations taking place behind the scenes in which Mexico has said, ‘If you want more of these, you can’t ask to kill any of our citizens.’”

    Keegan Hamilton

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  • US court finalizes mandate for Silk Road's Bitcoin forfeiture

    US court finalizes mandate for Silk Road's Bitcoin forfeiture

    The U.S. Court of Appeals has approved a confiscation order for cryptocurrencies associated with the darknet platform Silk Road.

    The resolution was adopted on Dec. 20. The court approved the confiscation of 69,370 Bitcoins (BTC) and other cryptocurrencies as part of the Silk Road case. The defendants include Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht and the U.S. government as plaintiffs.

    Even though the decision was made in August, it will only come into force after the U.S. Court of Appeals ruling. According to the initial complaint, the U.S. government controlled the cryptocurrency after it was transferred by so-called “Individual X,” who hacked Silk Road and gained control of its funds.

    In 2020, the U.S. Department of Justice seized and began seeking formal confiscation of the cryptocurrency, valued at more than $1 billion (more than $3 billion at current rates). Ulbricht was taken into custody on Oct. 2, 2013. In 2015, a U.S. court sentenced him to two life sentences plus 40 years without parole.

    Confiscated Bitcoins make the U.S. government one of the largest holders of BTC. It owns about 195,000 BTC, almost 1% of the total supply. Most of the assets held in government accounts have been confiscated from cyber criminals.

    Source: 21.co

    Funds are stored offline in hardware wallets and are controlled by the Department of Justice (DoJ), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and other agencies. When a government agency takes control of a cryptoasset, it does not immediately become U.S. property. The court issues a confiscation order, the government takes ownership and transfers the asset to the U.S. Marshals Service, which subsequently liquidates it – converting it into fiat money.


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    Anna Kharton

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  • Americans Say The U.S. Government Is Abandoning Their Relatives In Gaza

    Americans Say The U.S. Government Is Abandoning Their Relatives In Gaza

    Hundreds of close relatives of American citizens are stuck in Gaza amid heavy Israeli bombardment and growing mass starvation ― and their family members in the U.S. say the government is doing nowhere near enough to help.

    In addition to evacuating U.S. citizens themselves ― more than 300 of whom are still in Gaza ― the Biden administration has publicly pledged to help the spouses and parents of Americans exit Gaza through its southern border with Egypt. The State Department has extended that pledge to include unmarried children and siblings of Americans who are younger than 21 and to the spouses and under-21 children of green card holders.

    But efforts to get those individuals on the daily lists of people permitted to exit Gaza via the Rafah Crossing into Egypt are slow, confusing and unpredictable, several members of affected families told HuffPost. Many of them worry their family members will be killed in Israeli airstrikes or succumb to Gaza’s growing health crisis before they can get the assistance they were promised, and many observers say the U.S. is doing too little to provide even limited aid to those stuck in Gaza.

    “Whatever the United States is doing, it’s not helping Americans leave,” said Susan Abdelsalaam, an Indiana resident whose husband of 42 years traveled to Gaza in September to visit relatives he hadn’t seen in more than a decade. He was still there on Oct. 7, when an attack by Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis, and Israel in turn began a retaliatory military campaign in Gaza (which has so far killed more than 17,000 people, a large proportion of them women and children, according to the United Nations). Roughly 90% of the Gazan population is now displaced. Aid, food and clean water are scarce, and people are unable to find shelter as Israeli bombardment continues to rain on civilians.

    Like many Americans with family in Gaza, once it became clear a war had begun, Abdelsalaam filled out State Department forms to request assistance to evacuate her husband. Since then, her husband has tried to leave Gaza through the Rafah Crossing three times and been rejected each time, losing more faith in his government with each denial, she said. She told HuffPost the lack of support has left her relying on Facebook groups with other Americans who also have families stuck in Gaza for ideas on how to help her husband.

    Several U.S. citizens with relatives trapped in the besieged strip said in the absence of effective official guidance, people are discussing ways to get on the Rafah exit list by bribing Egyptians with hundreds or even thousands of dollars. It’s hard to balance the fear of being scammed, and depriving families of the limited cash they have on hand in a war zone, with the fear of losing loved ones, they say.

    “I’m sad that I’m not being helped by people I’ve voted for,” said Moh Ghraiz, who lives in Illinois and is trying to help his parents and siblings flee Gaza. A month after he submitted their names, only his mother’s name has made it onto the Rafah exit list, though his father is also eligible under the State Department’s terms, a reflection of the inconsistencies many interviewees described. He recounted multiple frustrating calls with the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem, saying diplomats are reading off scripts rather than expressing empathy and have refused to transfer him to more senior personnel.

    “It’s unfair not to help these people and to help other people around the world, Ukrainians and Israelis and whoever else,” Ghraiz told HuffPost. “I’m a good citizen. My background is clear. I expect my Congress, my government to help me to help my family. These are the times when I really need the help.”

    Last week, the State Department shut down the online intake form it previously maintained to gather information about Americans and others eligible for U.S. help evacuating from Gaza. The department has acknowledged internally that Israeli authorities have prevented some eligible people from leaving Gaza, according to diplomatic cables viewed by HuffPost, and U.S. officials have privately shared that assessment with some U.S. citizen family members in informal conversations.

    The Department of State has no higher priority than the safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas. We continue to work in partnership with Egypt and Israel towards safe passage out of Gaza for U.S. citizens, LPRs [legal permanent residents], and their immediate family members. So far, we have assisted almost 1,300 U.S. citizens, LPRs, and family members to depart Gaza through the Rafah crossing into Egypt,” a State Department spokesperson told HuffPost via email, saying the intake form was not the only way for Americans to seek assistance for relatives. “We are aware that this is a difficult situation for U.S. citizens, LPRs, and their families who are seeking to depart Gaza, and we are doing what we can to assist. There is no second-class U.S. citizen ― an American is an American.”

    Meanwhile, humanitarian groups are expressing unprecedented alarm about the worsening conditions for Gaza’s population of 2.3 million. “As the leaders of some of the world’s largest global humanitarian organizations, we have seen nothing like the siege of Gaza,” the leaders of Mercy Corps, Oxfam America, the Norwegian Refugee Council, Refugees International, and Save the Children Fund wrote in a New York Times op-ed published on Monday.

    Aid workers say the U.S. can and should do far more to speed up the flow of assistance into the region through Egypt, and they are unsure why the Biden administration is failing to do so. David Satterfield, a retired ambassador who President Joe Biden appointed as a special envoy for Middle East humanitarian issues one week into the war, has not responded to requests for meetings with major humanitarian organizations, officials at three groups told HuffPost.

    A State Department spokesperson told HuffPost that Satterfield and his team “have engaged with a number of humanitarian groups doing important work across the region.”

    “We have worked with all partners to significantly increase …the flow of aid. Both Israel and Egypt have expanded inspection and logistics capacity for aid delivery, in addition to the U.N.,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “We also want to get to a point where more commercial goods are able to enter Gaza. We have been working on these very complex issues tirelessly and continue to do so.”

    Yet experts say they are disappointed the procedures for bringing aid into Gaza are still deeply flawed more than two months into the war. Food and water shortage is putting many at risk of infection and even death. Photos portray civilians standing on long lines for water and supermarket shelves that are bare. Aid organizations have struggled to deliver life-saving necessities. Last month, barely 200 aid trucks per day crossed at Rafah ― an underwhelming count far short of what experts said was needed ― during the weeklong cease-fire. However, since the fighting resumed, the number of vehicles has since dropped, with some days no aid being delivered at all.

    “Getting the logistics right can help alleviate human suffering, and I don’t think the United States has been effective on either the policy or the logistics and the operations of aid delivery,” said Dave Harden, who led the U.S. Agency for International Development operations in Gaza and the occupied West Bank between 2013 and 2016.

    For relatives of those suffering because of American policy failures, the daily pain is nearly unbearable.

    “We’re living in the greatest country in the world ― I’m sure there’s something they can do,” said Heiam Alsawalhi of Massachusetts. Alsawalhi’s sister and her family of eight are sheltering in one room not far from the Egyptian border, and send her daily updates of their attempts to remain alive.

    Heiam Alsawalhi’s sister and her family sheltering near the Egyptian border.

    Courtesy of Heiam Alsawalhi

    “Everyone comes to me because I am the American citizen here. They think I can do wonders. I wish I could do something,” Alsawalhi said.

    ‘They Don’t Care About My Family’

    Yousef Bashir, who currently resides in Washington, D.C., visited Gaza last year for the first time in more than a decade and was thrilled to see his childhood haunts in better condition than they had been back in the Second Intifada of 2000-2005, during which an Israeli soldier shot him in the spine. After he recovered, he moved to the U.S.

    “The farms are green again; the olive trees are big again,” he recalls thinking during that trip.

    On Oct. 6, he texted his mother and told her he planned to visit again this November so she could meet his new baby, now 10 months old. Instead, by Oct. 8, he was submitting her details to the State Department for possible evacuation through Rafah. Bashir’s mother did not and still does not know he made plans for her departure from Gaza, where their family has lived for generations. But with bombs falling near their home and tanks less than a mile away, he felt it was vital she had the option.

    The Department finally sent approval this week ― misspelling her name in an error that could bar her possible exit if she is ever able to travel from her home to the Rafah Crossing, a challenging prospect given the ongoing bombardment.

    Many of the families affected say they feel dehumanized by the Biden administration’s response to the problem.

    Heiam's nephew, Jamal, is now 18 months old.
    Heiam’s nephew, Jamal, is now 18 months old.

    Courtesy of Heiam Alsawalhi

    Jehad Zakaria, in Chicago, wants to evacuate his father, who as a legal permanent resident has a green card. He said he trusted the government at first, following its protocols, but has since been shocked by its disorganization.

    Zakaria said there was a “complete detachment from anything on the ground” from American officials he interacted with. The entire experience has made him rethink whether or not he wants to stay in the U.S.

    “I’m going to retire, and I’m leaving this country. I’m done,” said Zakaria, a 35-year-old neurosurgeon. “They don’t care about my family.”

    Yasmeen Elagha, who is also in Chicago, told HuffPost that in talking to U.S. officials about her 10 relatives stuck in the Gazan city of Khan Younis ― a group that includes two American citizens ― she has seen “how apathetic the government is to your life if you’re a Palestinian.”

    Together with Abdelsalaam, Elagha on Wednesday also filed a lawsuit in federal court against the government over the issue, alleging the U.S. dodged its responsibilities. “They are 100% choosing one side fully and wholeheartedly and cutting off their own citizens,” she said. She described how last week, her U.S. citizen cousins went to a grocery store that was destroyed in an Israeli airstrike just minutes after they left.

    Like most Americans with family ties to Gaza, Elagha has elderly relatives there who are especially vulnerable.

    Ghraiz said the approval for his mother to leave Gaza was moot given she is unable to travel to the Rafah Crossing by herself due to medical issues. It’s a reason why he is also pushing the U.S. to get his otherwise-ineligible sisters and his brother ― with whom he runs a volunteer dance group for Gazan children ― on the list to exit.

    “No one deserves to live under that dire situation,” said Alsawalhi, who wants the U.S. to expand its eligibility for evacuation assistance to help relatives of American citizens like her sister, who she described as struggling with the recent onset of winter. She left home in northern Gaza in October based on Israeli orders without taking sufficient warm clothing and blankets, and aid agencies are not providing blankets to displaced people, Alsawalhi said, noting the closest alternative are the shrouds provided to wrap corpses.

    “We’ve had a complete breakdown of the government’s responsibility to protect its own.”

    – Maria Kari, a lawyer with the Arab American Civil Rights League

    The State Department is currently not budging on its restrictions for who it will help.

    “We do not plan to update or expand [our] parameters,” the department spokesperson told HuffPost via email. “If elderly parents have mobility or medical issues that make it difficult for them to travel to the border, we recommend that other family or friends assist them as far as the border. Consular personnel from Embassy Cairo are available to assist on the Egyptian side of the border. We recognize that the decision to stay or leave has been difficult for many families.”

    The journey through the Rafah Crossing is complex, uncomfortable and takes multiple hours, per people who have previously used it.

    A State Department official described internal frustration with the agency’s handling of the evacuation file. Officials have been told they cannot reveal to U.S. citizens that Israeli authorities are blocking their relatives from being included on the exit lists. In internal messaging, they are instructed to tell citizens it may be safer for their family members to stay where they are, the official said, acknowledging that the U.S. cannot even ensure safe passage for people heading to the Rafah Crossing.

    “The State Department has completely failed these Americans, and it’s created a class of citizens that are being treated differently and that’s what has been the biggest source of despair,” said Maria Kari, a lawyer with the Arab American Civil Rights League who is representing Elagha and Abdelsalaam. “We’ve had a complete breakdown of the government’s responsibility to protect its own. What a nightmare for these people to have to deal with while worrying that their loved ones are going to be killed in a bombing any second.”

    Insufficient Aid

    With thousands of people linked to the U.S. stuck in Gaza, the U.S. is punching well below its weight in addressing the intense humanitarian needs there, aid workers say.

    The system for delivering supplies to the strip “is in no way near the scale and speed” required, said Bill O’Keefe, the executive vice president of Catholic Relief Services, who added that the network for food, medical equipment, fuel and other essential material is currently so fragile, a holdup at any point in the chain of transferring aid can lead to huge disruptions.

    He described frustration about slow inspections of aid by Israeli officials posted to Egypt, who his organization’s staff report are working normal 9-to-5 hours rather than emergency 24-hour shifts. And he said aid officials have little clarity about what criteria are used to approve trucks for transport into Gaza and how the process of those approvals will come.

    Sean Carroll, the president and CEO of the regionally focused aid group ANERA, said the most “damning” sign of the aid operation so far is that, except for during the weeklong pause in fighting, there have never been two consecutive days where the number of trucks permitted into Gaza has increased.

    “If that’s not an indication that somebody’s playing politics with humanitarian aid, I don’t know what is,” Carroll said, adding it was clear the capacity for allowing more and more trucks into the territory exists, but government officials involved do not seem willing to ensure that is always the case.

    A man and a boy push a wheelchair carrying sacks of flour that their family received from a warehouse of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, amid continuing battles between Israel and the militant group Hamas.
    A man and a boy push a wheelchair carrying sacks of flour that their family received from a warehouse of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, amid continuing battles between Israel and the militant group Hamas.

    MOHAMMED ABED via Getty Images

    Both Carroll and O’Keefe, and an official at another aid agency who requested anonymity to maintain professional relationships, said they requested meetings with Satterfield ― the U.S. humanitarian envoy ― but had not received a response.

    “I think it speaks less to a desire to marginalize humanitarians, and more [to] the very limited mandate of [Satterfield’s] office which is centered on the daily grind of access negotiations” with Israel and Egypt about the southern Gaza border, the official told HuffPost. They expressed concern about what that indicates about the overall Biden administration approach, saying the upshot of the current system is that outside experts are spending time in conversations with influential White House personnel talking about details like the number of trucks let into Gaza, rather than an end to the war.

    “It speaks to the overarching dynamic here… people aren’t all pulling in the same direction because there’s not an identified shared interest in appropriate levels of humanitarian access,” the official continued, adding that the U.S., Israel and Egypt were far from an agreement that would truly support Gazans.

    O’Keefe described how even aid group staffers attempting to support others in their communities are experiencing the impact of the plummeting conditions.

    “Our senior shelter specialist is sleeping with the men of his family on the street, and the women are in a rented room… our staff are professionals, they’re still working and never expected to find themselves homeless themselves,” he told HuffPost. “We have five pregnant or lactating women on our staff who can’t get enough to eat, can’t drink enough to breastfeed ― that’s what’s really taking them to the edge.”

    With some nudges from the Biden administration, Israel has recently said it will speed up processing for aid through moves like beginning inspections of aid trucks at another crossing point into Gaza, Kerem Shalom. But humanitarian groups say that step is far from sufficient since many of them believe true progress will only be possible if supplies can actually travel through points other than the Rafah Crossing.

    “We sincerely appreciate the efforts of the U.S. government to try to work on many of these issues,” O’Keefe said. But he can’t grasp why logistics for aid remain in question. “It’s hard for us to understand.”

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  • The Danger Ahead

    The Danger Ahead

    For all its marvelous creativity, the human imagination often fails when turned to the future. It is blunted, perhaps, by a craving for the familiar. We all appreciate that the past includes many moments of severe instability, crisis, even radical revolutionary upheaval. We know that such things happened years or decades or centuries ago. We cannot believe they might happen tomorrow.

    When Donald Trump is the subject, imagination falters further. Trump operates so far outside the normal bounds of human behavior—never mind normal political behavior—that it is difficult to accept what he may actually do, even when he declares his intentions openly. What’s more, we have experienced one Trump presidency already. We can take false comfort from that previous experience: We’ve lived through it once. American democracy survived. Maybe the danger is less than feared?

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    In his first term, Trump’s corruption and brutality were mitigated by his ignorance and laziness. In a second, Trump would arrive with a much better understanding of the system’s vulnerabilities, more willing enablers in tow, and a much more focused agenda of retaliation against his adversaries and impunity for himself. When people wonder what another Trump term might hold, their minds underestimate the chaos that would lie ahead.

    By Election Day 2024, Donald Trump will be in the thick of multiple criminal trials. It’s not impossible that he may already have been convicted in at least one of them. If he wins the election, Trump will commit the first crime of his second term at noon on Inauguration Day: His oath to defend the Constitution of the United States will be a perjury.

    A second Trump term would instantly plunge the country into a constitutional crisis more terrible than anything seen since the Civil War. Even in the turmoil of the 1960s, even during the Great Depression, the country had a functional government with the president as its head. But the government cannot function with an indicted or convicted criminal as its head. The president would be an outlaw, or on his way to becoming an outlaw. For his own survival, he would have to destroy the rule of law.

    From Trump himself and the people around him, we have a fair idea of a second Trump administration’s immediate priorities: (1) Stop all federal and state cases against Trump, criminal and civil. (2) Pardon and protect those who tried to overturn the 2020 election on Trump’s behalf. (3) Send the Department of Justice into action against Trump adversaries and critics. (4) End the independence of the civil service and fire federal officials who refuse to carry out Trump’s commands. (5) If these lawless actions ignite protests in American cities, order the military to crush them.

    A restored Trump would lead the United States into a landscape of unthinkable scenarios. Will the Senate confirm Trump nominees who were chosen because of their willingness to help the president lead a coup against the U.S. government? Will the staff of the Justice Department resign? Will people march in the streets? Will the military obey or refuse orders to suppress demonstrations?

    The existing constitutional system has no room for the subversive legal maneuvers of a criminal in chief. If a president can pardon himself for federal crimes—as Trump would likely try to do—then he could write his pardon in advance and shoot visitors to the White House. (For that matter, the vice president could murder the president in the Oval Office and then immediately pardon herself.) If a president can order the attorney general to stop a federal case against him—as Trump would surely do—then obstruction of justice becomes a normal prerogative of the presidency. If Trump can be president, then the United States owes a huge retrospective apology to Richard Nixon. Under the rules of a second Trump presidency, Nixon would have been well within his rights to order the Department of Justice to stop investigating Watergate and then pardon himself and all the burglars for the break-in and cover-up.

    After Trump was elected in 2016, he was quickly surrounded by prominent and influential people who recognized that he was a lawless menace. They found ways to restrain a man they regarded as, to quote the reported words of Trump’s first secretary of state, “a fucking moron” and, to quote his second chief of staff, “the most flawed person I’ve ever met in my life,” whose “dishonesty is just astounding.” But there would be no Rex Tillerson in a second Trump term; no John Kelly; no Jeff Sessions, who as attorney general recused himself from the investigation into the president’s connections to Russia, leading to the appointment of an independent special counsel.

    Since 2021, Trump-skeptical Republicans have been pushed out of politics. Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger forfeited their seats in the House for defending election integrity. Representative Tom Emmer withdrew his bid for House speaker over the same offense. The Republican Senate caucus is less hospitable to Trump-style authoritarianism—but notice that the younger and newer Republican senators (Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, J. D. Vance) tend to support Trump’s schemes, while his opponents in the Senate belong to the outgoing generation. Trump’s leading rivals for the 2024 nomination seldom dare criticize his abuse of power.

    Most of the people who would staff a second Trump term would be servile tools who have absorbed the brutal realities of contemporary Republicanism: defend democracy; forfeit your career. Already, an array of technically competent opportunists has assembled itself—from within right-wing think tanks and elsewhere—and has begun to plan out exactly how to dismantle the institutional safeguards against Trump’s corrupt and vengeful impulses. Trump’s likely second-term advisers have made clear that they would share his agenda of legal impunity and the use of law enforcement against his perceived opponents—not only the Biden family, but Trump’s own former attorney general and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

    If Trump wins the presidency again, the whole world will become a theater for his politics of revenge and reward. Ukraine will be abandoned to Vladimir Putin; Saudi Arabia will collect its dividends for its investments in the Trump family.

    First-term Trump told aides that he wanted to withdraw from NATO. Second-term Trump would choose aides who would not talk him out of it. Other partners, too, would have to adjust to the authoritarianism and corruption of a second Trump term. Liberals in Israel and India would find themselves isolated as the U.S. turned toward reaction and authoritarianism at home; East Asian democracies would have to adjust to Trump protectionism and trade wars; Mexico’s antidemocratic Morena party would have scope to snuff out free institutions provided that it suppressed migration flows to the United States.

    Anyway, the United States would be too paralyzed by troubles at home to help friends abroad.

    If Trump is elected, it very likely won’t be with a majority of the popular vote. Imagine the scenario: Trump has won the Electoral College with 46 percent of the vote because third-party candidates funded by Republican donors successfully splintered the anti-Trump coalition. Having failed to win the popular vote in each of the past three elections, Trump has become president for the second time. On that thin basis, his supporters would try to execute his schemes of personal impunity and political vengeance.

    In this scenario, Trump opponents would have to face a harsh reality: The U.S. electoral system has privileged a strategically located minority, led by a lawbreaking president, over the democratic majority. One side outvoted the other. The outvoted nonetheless won the power to govern.

    The outvoted would happily justify the twist of events in their favor. “We are a republic, not a democracy,” many said in 2016. Since that time, the outvoted have become more outspoken against democracy. As Senator Mike Lee tweeted a month before the 2020 election: “Democracy isn’t the objective.”

    So long as minority rule seems an occasional or accidental result, the majority might go along. But once aware that the minority intends to engineer its power to last forever—and to use it to subvert the larger legal and constitutional system—the majority may cease to be so accepting. One outcome of a second Trump term may be an American version of the massive demonstrations that filled Tel Aviv streets in 2023, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tried to remake Israel’s court system.

    And what might follow that? In 2020, Trump’s advisers speculated about the possibility of using the Army to crush protests against Trump’s plans to overturn that year’s election. Now those in Trump’s circle are apparently thinking further ahead. Some reportedly want to prepare in advance to use the Insurrection Act to convert the military into a tool of Trump’s authoritarian project. It’s an astonishing possibility. But Trump is thinking about it, so everybody else must—including the senior command of the U.S. military.

    If a president can summon an investigation of his opponents, or summon the military to put down protests, then suddenly our society would no longer be free. There would be no more law, only legalized persecution of political opponents. It has always been Trump’s supreme political wish to wield both the law and institutional violence as personal weapons of power—a wish that many in his party now seem determined to help him achieve.

    That grim negative ideal is the core ballot question in 2024. If Trump is defeated, the United States can proceed in its familiar imperfect way to deal with the many big problems of our time: the wars in the Middle East and Ukraine, climate change, educational standards and equal opportunity, economic growth and individual living standards, and so on. Stopping Trump would not represent progress on any of those agenda items. But stopping Trump would preserve the possibility of progress, by keeping alive the constitutional-democratic structure of the United States.

    A second Trump presidency, however, is the kind of shock that would overwhelm all other issues. It would mark the turn onto a dark path, one of these rips between “before” and “after” that a society can never reverse. Even if the harm is contained, it can never be fully undone, as the harm of January 6, 2021, can never be undone. The long tradition of peaceful transitions of power was broken that day, and even though the attempt to stop the transition by violence was defeated, the violence itself was not expunged. The schemes and plots of a second Trump term may be defeated too. Yet every future would-be dictator will know: A president can attempt a coup and, if stopped, still return to office to try again.

    As we now understand from memoirs and on-the-record comments, many of Trump’s own Cabinet appointees and senior staff were horrified by the president they served. The leaders of his own party in Congress feared and hated him. The GOP’s deepest-pocketed donors have worked for three years to nominate somebody, anybody, else. Yet even so, Trump’s co-partisans are converging upon him. They are convincing themselves that something can justify forgiving Trump’s first attempted coup and enabling a second: taxes, border control, stupid comments by “woke” college students.

    For democracy to continue, however, the democratic system itself must be the supreme commitment of all major participants. Rules must matter more than outcomes. If not, the system careens toward breakdown—as it is careening now.

    When Benjamin Franklin famously said of the then-new Constitution, “A republic, if you can keep it,” he was not suggesting that the republic might be misplaced absentmindedly. He foresaw that ambitious, ruthless characters would arise to try to break the republic, and that weak, venal characters might assist them. Americans have faced Franklin’s challenge since 2016, in a story that has so far had some villains, many heroes—and just enough good luck to tip the balance. It would be dangerous to continue to count on luck to do the job.


    This article appears in the January/February 2024 print edition with the headline “The Revenge Presidency.”

    David Frum

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  • Treasury Dept. Now Taking ‘Extraordinary Measures’ On Debt

    Treasury Dept. Now Taking ‘Extraordinary Measures’ On Debt

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The countdown toward a possible U.S. government default is in the offing, and frictions between President Joe Biden and House Republicans are raising alarms about whether the United States can sidestep a potential economic crisis.

    The Treasury Department on Thursday said in a letter to congressional leaders it has started taking “extraordinary measures” as the government has brushed up against its legal borrowing capacity of $38.381 trillion. An artificially imposed cap, the debt ceiling has been increased roughly 80 times since the 1960s.

    Markets so far remain calm, given that the government can temporarily rely on accounting tweaks to stay open and any threats to the economy would be several months away. Even many worried analysts assume there will be a deal.

    But this particular moment seems more fraught than past brushes with the debt limit because of the broad differences between Biden and new House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who presides over a restive Republican caucus.

    Those differences increase the risk that the government could default on its obligations for political reasons. That could rattle financial markets and plunge the world’s largest economy into a wholly preventable recession.

    Biden and McCarthy, R-Calif., have several months to reach agreement as the Treasury Department imposes “extraordinary measures” to keep the government operating until at least June. But years of intensifying partisan hostility have led to a conflicting set of demands that jeopardize the ability of the lawmakers to work together on a basic duty.

    Biden insists on a “clean” increase to the debt limit so that existing financial commitments can be sustained and is refusing to even start talks with Republicans. McCarthy is calling for negotiations that he believes will lead to spending cuts. It’s unclear how much he wants to trim and whether fellow Republicans would support any deal after a testy start to the new Congress that required 15 rounds of voting to elect McCarthy as speaker.

    Asked twice on Wednesday if there was evidence that House Republicans can ensure that the government would avert a default, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said it’s their “constitutional responsibility” to protect the full faith and credit of the United States. She did not say whether the White House saw signs at this stage that a default was off the table.

    “We’re just not going to negotiate that,” Jean-Pierre said. “They should feel the responsibility.”

    McCarthy said Biden needs to recognize the political realities that come with a divided government. The speaker equates the debt ceiling to a credit card limit and calls for a level of fiscal restraint that did not occur under President Donald Trump, a Republican who in 2019 signed a bipartisan suspension of the debt ceiling.

    “Why create a crisis over this?” McCarthy said this week. “I mean, we’ve got a Republican House, a Democratic Senate. We’ve got the president there. I think it’s arrogance to say, ‘Oh, we’re not going to negotiate about pretty much anything’ and especially when it comes to funding.”

    Any deal would need to pass the Democratic-run Senate. Many Democratic lawmakers are skeptical about the ability to work with Republicans aligned with the “Make America Great Again” movement started by Trump. The MAGA movement has claimed that the 2020 election lost by Trump was rigged, a falsehood that contributed to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

    “There should be no political brinkmanship with the debt limit,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “It’s reckless for Speaker McCarthy and MAGA Republicans to try and use the full faith and credit of the United States as a political bargaining chip.”

    In order to keep the government open, the Treasury Department on Thursday was making a series of accounting maneuvers that would put a hold on contributions and investment redemptions for government workers’ retirement and health care funds, giving the government enough financial space to handle its day-to-day expenses until roughly June.

    What happens if these measures are exhausted without a debt limit deal is unknown. A prolonged default could be devastating, with crashing markets and panic-driven layoffs if confidence evaporated in a cornerstone of the global economy, the U.S. Treasury note.

    Analysts at Bank of America cautioned in a report last week that “there is a high degree of uncertainty about the speed and magnitude of the damage the U.S. economy would incur.”

    The underlying challenge is that the government would have to balance its books on a daily basis if it lacks the ability to issue debt. If the government cannot issue debt, it would have to impose cuts equal in size on an annual basis to 5% of the total U.S. economy. Analysts say their baseline case is that the U.S. avoids default.

    Still, if past debt ceiling showdowns such as the one that occurred in 2011 are any guide, Washington may be in a nervous state of suspended animation with little progress until the “X-date,” the deadline when the Treasury’s “extraordinary measures” are depleted.

    Unlike the 2011 showdown, the Federal Reserve is actively raising interest rates to lower inflation and is rolling off its own holdings of U.S. debt, meaning that recession fears are already elevated among consumers, businesses and investors.

    Biden administration officials have said they will not prioritize payments to bondholders if the country passes the “X-date” without an agreement. Over the years, officials have studied this emergency option, which Treasury officials across administration have said is unworkable because of the government’s payments system.

    “To some extent, the ‘extraordinary measures’ are the backup plan, and once those are exhausted the next step is a major question mark,” economists at Wells Fargo wrote in a Thursday analysis.

    AP writer Lisa Mascaro contributed to this story.

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  • Caitlin Dickerson on the Moral Catastrophe of Family Separations

    Caitlin Dickerson on the Moral Catastrophe of Family Separations

    Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic’s editor in chief, joined staff writer Caitlin Dickerson to discuss her cover story, a years-long investigation into the secret history of the Trump administration’s family-separation policy. Dickerson’s story argues that separating children was not an unintended side effect, as previously claimed, but its core intent. How did officials work to keep families apart longer? Did they obscure the truth to both Congress and the public? What will happen if the Trump administration is restored to power in the 2024 election? This dialogue is an edited and condensed version of a conversation Dickerson and Goldberg had on Friday for The Atlantic’s “Big Story” broadcast.

    Leer este artículo en español.


    Jeffrey Goldberg: When did you realize that the Trump administration was doing something new?

    Caitlin Dickerson: There were two things here that really stood out from the norm in my experience as a reporter. The first, with family separations, is just the mere fact that they took place in relative secrecy. In 2017, hundreds of separations took place starting out in El Paso, Texas, in a program that later expanded. But when reporters would ask about it, the administration would tell us, “No, this isn’t happening. You know, we’re not separating families.” There’s some complicated reasons for that which we can get into, but that’s really not normal. As a reporter, you’re used to hearing “no comment” in response to a story that the government doesn’t want you to report. Or you’re used to hearing a public-affairs officer offer some context that at least helps to soften the blow of a story that they know the public is not going to react kindly to. But in this case, we actually got denials.

    And then, of course, having looked back at immigration policy all the way back to the 19th century in the United States, separating children from their parents as an immigration policy hasn’t happened before. It was the harshest application any of us have seen of this basic concept of prevention by deterrence, which is how we approach immigration enforcement generally. And it was so harsh and painful for parents and for children, and continues to be, that I had to stick with it.

    Goldberg: So to be clear, no presidential administration going back all the way had ever done anything this dramatic?

    Dickerson: No. As you know, there are examples of kids being taken from their parents in American history, though not in a border context. We’ve had some pretty cruel and pretty harsh border-enforcement policies. But the forcible separation of children from their parents is just not something that the Border Patrol has ever engaged in in American history.

    Goldberg: One of the great achievements of your story is that you take us all the way into the bureaucratic decision making that allowed this to happen. But somebody had to think of this first. The assumption, on the part of people who think about this, is that it must have been Stephen Miller, Donald Trump’s very hard-line adviser. He worked for Jeff Sessions and brought a lot of his ideas to Donald Trump. But it’s more complicated than that.

    Dickerson: It took a lot more than Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and Jeff Sessions to forcefully separate thousands of kids from their parents. The idea actually came from within the border-enforcement apparatus: a man named Tom Homan, who started out as a Border Patrol agent in his early 20s, spent a career in enforcement, and ultimately became the head of ICE under President Trump.

    He first came up with the idea to separate families as an escalation of the concept of prevention by deterrence: this idea of introducing consequences to discourage illegal border crossing, even when it’s for the purposes of seeking asylum. He first proposes separating children from their parents in 2014, during the Obama administration, which is when we saw the first major surge of children and families crossing the border. Border Patrol was totally overwhelmed at the time. Congress didn’t intervene. And so you have, essentially, a police force that’s left to figure this out—this policy, which is really humanitarian policy; it’s economic policy. When you leave this to the Border Patrol, the solution that they come up with time and again is punishment. So Homan proposes it, and Jeh Johnson, who was Homeland Security secretary at the time, rejects the idea. Then the idea resurfaces very soon after Donald Trump takes office.

    Goldberg: So there was a bureaucratic impetus from below. Take us through that—Donald Trump wins in 2016, comes into office, and this dormant idea is brought to whom?

    Dickerson: Trump comes into office and is visiting Border Patrol headquarters and Customs and Border Protection headquarters and saying, “Hey, we’ve got to shut this border down, and, really, we’ll stop at nothing to do it. Bring me your best ideas.” Tom Homan, who was the head of ICE, and a man named Kevin McAleenan, who was the head of Customs and Border Protection, very quickly reraise this concept that they had already talked about and already favored. They tell Miller about it, who gets really excited and kind of obsessed with it. And Miller continues to push for the next year and a half until it’s officially implemented. Donald Trump also begins to favor it.

    I was surprised about this, ultimately, but the story ends up being kind of a case for the bureaucracy. I learned, in reporting this, the way the policies are made. Typically, you have principals, who are the heads of agencies and have great decision-making power but have huge portfolios. Policy ideas should only ever reach the desk of someone like Kirstjen Nielsen—who was the Homeland Security secretary, who ultimately signs off on family separation—if they’ve been thoroughly vetted. Subject-matter experts have determined these policies are logistically feasible, they’re legal, they’re ethical. They make sense politically for the administration in office. All these layers exist to prevent bad policies from ever even reaching somebody who has the authority to sign. And these systems were really either sidelined, disempowered, or just completely cut out of the conversation. Everybody who was raising red flags was really cut out.

    Goldberg: I want you to talk about child separation in its details. The idea is preventative. Which is to say, if word gets out into Guatemala, Honduras, wherever, that if you try to cross the border with your kid, the U.S. government will take your kid from you—actually kidnap your child in some kind of bureaucratically legal way—then all the people who are trying to come to America, asylum seekers, workers, etc., will not come. Is that the theory of the case?

    Dickerson: That is the theory of the case. And there’s a lot of reason to believe it’s not a good theory.

    Goldberg: Why is it not a good theory? It sounds pretty scary if you’re sitting in Guatemala and somebody says you might lose your kid.

    Dickerson: It does. That’s what’s difficult about it: that it is somewhat intuitive, this idea of prevention by deterrence. Academics have been studying it for a long time and know what ways it works, and what ways it doesn’t work. In the early 2000s, we started prosecuting individual adults who crossed the border illegally.

    To begin with, there’s this program called Operation Streamline. It completely floods courts along the border, and immediately, prosecutors—assistant U.S. attorneys—are unhappy with it because they’re saying it’s taking away resources from these more important cases that we need to deal with. And not only that, but it doesn’t seem to be influencing long-term trends.

    If you look at shifts in migration that have taken place over the last 20 years, those can be explained entirely by looking at economic shifts and demographic shifts in the United States and the countries where people are coming from. All of those changes are attributable to the availability of resources here and the availability of jobs here, and then the inverse: what opportunities people have available to them in their home countries, as well as whether people actually feel safe.

    Even though prevention by deterrence, first in the form of Streamline, wasn’t making a dent in border crossings in any significant way, this idea becomes more and more popular until ultimately we get to the point of separating children from their parents. Anecdotally, Lee Gelernt—the ACLU lawyer who’s heading up the federal case against family separations, the main case that prompted family reunification—talks about asking every parent that he interviewed for that case, “If you had known about family separation, would you have left your country to begin with? Would you have decided to stay home?” And they’d just kind of shrug their shoulders and say, “Well, what was I going to do? You know, we left because our lives were in danger. I couldn’t stay.” That is something that people like Tom Homan, who came up with the idea to separate families, didn’t really take into account.

    Goldberg: The level of desperation at home is the key determinant of whether somebody is going to start the trek.

    Dickerson: It’s a very, very high bar to surpass when you’re talking to a parent who not only can’t feed themselves or their child, but on a day-to-day basis fears that their child may be killed.

    Goldberg: Stay on that for one second so people understand this population. You’re talking about people who are living in very dangerous Central American countries, mainly.

    Dickerson: You’re talking about a lot of times a combination of deep poverty, daily fear of death, and daily encounters with violence. I can tell you about my experiences reporting in parts of Mexico, where people come to the United States from, and in Central America. When The New York Times sent me to Guatemala to write about a family that was trying to get into the United States, I had security with me the entire time. Many people, just within this family, had been murdered. It’s a domino effect where a gang identifies one person in a family and wants that person to join the gang. If that first individual doesn’t do right by the gang, relatives continue to be murdered.

    When I would go house to house to visit with people associated with this family, we were hiding. They couldn’t let anybody know where they lived. They couldn’t let anybody know that I was there, because it would have put them in greater danger. The poverty, too, is really something that I don’t know a lot of Americans have really sat down and thought about. Houses that have no roofs, no floors. Families of four that are splitting a tortilla among them. Access to school is almost nonexistent. Kids don’t have shoes. It’s stuff that I think most Americans have a hard time envisioning. Think about how scared you would have to be to decide to go to the United States, knowing that you’re going to have to travel through a hot and dangerous desert and encounter murderous gangs. Nobody signs up to do that unless they feel like they have absolutely no choice.

    Goldberg: Let’s come back to the narrative of the adoption of this policy. One of the reasons, when we were talking about doing this story over the past year and a half, was to try to understand the mentality of government officials and bureaucrats. Somehow the idea of taking children from their parents becomes socialized within these government structures. Talk about that. Did anybody along the way say, “Hey, I’m all for deterrence. I have these views on immigration. I’m a hard-liner. But this does not seem to comport with my notions”—and I’m using this term advisedly—“my notions of family values”?

    Dickerson: A lot of people said that. And ultimately, by the time the decision to pursue separating families is made, they had been left out of the room. When family separations are first proposed, they’re described in pretty blatant terms. I interviewed Jeh Johnson—again, who was the Homeland Security secretary under President Obama, and did believe in deterrence—but he said, “That’s too far for me. I’m not comfortable with it.” John Kelly, who was President Trump’s first Homeland Security secretary and considered the idea after it was proposed by Tom Homan, Kevin McAleenan, and others, said the same thing. He wasn’t really a big believer in deterrence, but he’d taken the job for the Trump administration. But this felt too far for him.

    Goldberg: John Kelly then goes to the White House as chief of staff and is there when all of this is still going on. What role did he play there?

    Dickerson: Kelly told me that his approach to opposing family separations was to focus purely on the logistics. When the idea is formally proposed to him, he requests a briefing to find out whether it’s possible. And he learns, rightly, that the federal government did not have the resources to impose such a program without total chaos, which we ultimately saw—without losing track of parents and kids, without really inhumane situations where kids are being physically taken out of their parents’ arms. You need training, theoretically, to do this in a way that isn’t chaotic if you’re going to do it at all.

    He told me that he knew that appealing to the president and to Stephen Miller on some sort of moral basis wasn’t going to be effective. They weren’t going to listen. Instead, he said, you focus purely on the logistics. “It’s not possible. We just can’t do it.” He would say, “Mr. President, if you want to pursue this, you need to go ask Congress for the money,” knowing that Donald Trump wouldn’t be willing to do that. The problem is that when you ask these more hawkish members of the administration what their understanding of John Kelly’s view is, they would say to me, “Well, I didn’t know he had any issue with it. All he said was that we needed more money; we needed more training.” You can see that there’s logic behind Kelly’s approach, but there’s also, as a result of it, repeated meetings where this idea is being discussed. He could have jumped up and down and screamed and said, “I oppose this; I don’t want to do it.” But he didn’t. He just said, “Sir, we don’t have the money.”

    Goldberg: I mean, to be fair to Kelly, he did have a reasonable understanding that Trump would never respond to the humanitarian argument.

    Dickerson: There are so many different approaches that people say they took to try to prevent this, and it ultimately didn’t work. The higher the numbers rose, the more obsessed Donald Trump became with finding some way to minimize them.

    Goldberg: I do want to ask about two people whose names are very intimately associated with this. Kirstjen Nielsen, who was the DHS secretary and signed off on this, and Stephen Miller. I want you to talk about her role, which is more complicated, morally, than we initially thought. And Miller, who obviously is still the ideological driver of a whole set of policies.

    Dickerson: Kirstjen Nielsen came into the Trump administration a moderate. She was a cybersecurity expert who helped to establish DHS the first time under George W. Bush. No experience in immigration, and no real strong feelings about immigration. She’s one of a lot of people whom I interviewed who joined DHS under Trump and just said, “I didn’t know all that much about immigration. It wasn’t that important to me.” From the very beginning, they seemed a bit misguided in terms of what their expectations for their job might look like, given how much this White House really cared about the issue.

    Family separations are proposed to her right after she’s confirmed, in December of 2017, and she says, “Absolutely not. John Kelly has said no to this. I’m not doing it. I oppose it. I don’t believe in it.” Over time, this alternative version of achieving the same end is proposed to her via prosecution, and conveyed to her in these terms that are quite bland. You know, “We’re going to pursue a prosecution initiative. There are people who have been committing misdemeanor crimes; we’ve been letting them go simply because they’re parents.” There was a lot of fearmongering around this idea that a lot of the parents might have been smugglers, that families may not have actually been related at all, that these children might all have been victims of trafficking. There’s no evidence to support that a significant number of those false families existed. She’s also told, “It’s been done before,” and that systems and processes exist to prevent chaos from ensuing. And so, based on that information, she ends up approving the policy.

    Another really important thing to know about her is she came into her role at a disadvantage because she was viewed as a moderate. She was one of a lot of people who were viewed very skeptically in the White House.

    Goldberg: Are these people who are trying to prove they’re tough so that Donald Trump likes them?

    Dickerson: Or keeps them in their job.I heard in my reporting that, in fact, “You’re not tough enough” is a quote that Trump repeated to Nielsen all the time. At one point an adviser suggested, “Maybe you should write a memoir and call it Tough Enough because he’s always telling you you’re not tough enough.” Nielsen was always trying to kind of meet these expectations and show that she wasn’t a closeted liberal. She eventually signs off on this policy that she intellectually, at least prior, seemed to totally oppose, but had convinced herself of a lot of illogical realities and decided, Okay, I agree to zero tolerance. She’s a really smart person, but she worked so hard to please her bosses.

    The other person you were asking about was Stephen Miller. What I understand from people close to him and familiar with his thinking is that he continues to believe that President Trump’s harshest immigration policies were Trump’s most popular and successful accomplishments. I think he still believes in separating families and doing anything to seal the border, stopping at nothing. He’s even made clear to close confidants that the groundwork has been laid so that a future Trump administration, or a future Republican administration that looks like Trump’s, can pursue these policies even more quickly and even more dramatically.

    He exerted pressure really kind of shamelessly. He would call not only Kirstjen Nielsen, who was Homeland Security secretary, but all of her advisers and even lower people in DHS: people who had no authority to sign off on anything. He was calling people incessantly to press for his policies, trying to get buy-in. I heard about something he would do on a conference call where he would introduce an idea and say, “Hey, I believe X, Y, and Z needs to happen. And this head of this division of DHS agrees with me.” Then that head of the division might say, “Oh, well, I have some questions about that. You know, I’m not exactly sure.” And Stephen would say, “Well, are you saying that this isn’t a priority?” And they would say, “Oh, no, I do agree with you that it’s a priority.” And Stephen would say, “Great; I have your support.” And then he would go into White House meetings and then repeat it and say that he had buy-in from DHS. He was bullying people into accidentally or tacitly or passively agreeing with his ideas. He was not embarrassed to keep people on the phone after midnight, ranting, not even letting the other person speak. It was a singular focus for him.

    Goldberg: John Kelly would give him the cold shoulder. But not everybody had John Kelly’s power, right?

    Dickerson: Exactly. And John Kelly is a career military official and general. He believed really strongly in the chain of command. He couldn’t believe that Miller would call people below Kelly and make demands and try to pressure Kelly into making decisions. And so Kelly would call the White House and actually try to get Miller in trouble. He’s one of the few people to do it. But other people much higher in the official chain of command, such as cabinet secretaries, really let themselves be bullied by Miller. When I would ask why, they basically just said Miller had this mystique. He was so close to the president and was protected because of this narrative that immigration is the reason why Donald Trump was elected president and was the key to him being able to hold on to power. Because of that, Miller was insulated from any kind of accountability, even as he defied the chain of command over and over again.

    Goldberg: Do you think that these same people, if they came back to government, would do it better? Do you think that they have learned lessons about how to try to pull this off in a more efficient, effective way that wouldn’t draw so much attention?

    Dickerson: I do think that a lot of them still believe in this idea, and they’ve taken lessons away from the experience in order to be able to “do it better.” They didn’t have a system for keeping track of parents and kids, so children were sent over to the Department of Health and Human Services, which houses any kid who’s in federal custody on their own. That agency doesn’t have computer systems that talk to DHS. Something like that could be updated. I do think that these officials would go into such a policy in the future a little bit more eyes open about what would actually happen once the separation occurs. But they still believe in this idea. And a lot of them, Tom Homan and many others, would sort of whisper out of the side of their mouth to me in interviews like, “Nobody really likes to say this, but it really worked. And zero tolerance was effective.” Again, the data that they’re citing is inaccurate. There isn’t evidence that family separations were effective. In fact, after zero tolerance ended was the year when a million people crossed the border under President Trump. It was a record-breaking year for border crossings.

    Goldberg: Are there any heroes in the story, from your perspective?

    Dickerson: There are a lot of people within the federal bureaucracy who tried to prevent family separations from taking place. Within the Health and Human Services agency, which cares for children, there was a man named Jonathan White who oversaw, at the beginning of the Trump administration, the program that houses kids in federal custody. He found out about family separation in an early and rare meeting where you actually had HHS invited to meet with the law-enforcement side. Normally those two agencies—which have to work together on immigration—really don’t play well together, because HHS is made up of a lot of people like White, who are social workers and have backgrounds in child welfare, and then are sitting in the room with cops. It’s a fraught relationship that is detrimental for all sides.

    White finds out in an early meeting about this proposal to separate families. And he starts writing up reports mentioning that the agency did not have enough space to house children who are separated, who tend to be younger than those who crossed the border on their own. They didn’t have the resources to deal with the emotional fallout that was easily anticipated by any expert familiar with child welfare and the state a child is going to be in when they’ve just been separated from their parent. He also pointed out that children who cross the border with their parents don’t necessarily have anywhere to go. A child who chooses to cross the border on their own is typically coming here because they have an aunt or a relative, somebody who can take them in in the United States. A child who comes to the United States with their parent is expecting to remain with their parent. Whether they get asylum status or are ultimately deported, the expectation is that they’re going to stay together. And so White started to point out, along with several of his colleagues, that not only did they believe this was a bad idea, the resources just didn’t exist.

    You have versions of that same fight, that same argument, being made within DHS, the DOJ, and the U.S. Marshal system. I found examples in all of these places of people within the federal bureaucracy who tried to raise concerns with the White House, with people in their agency leadership, about why this was such a bad idea. There are a lot of people who fought back, and ultimately they didn’t win the argument.

    Goldberg: What’s your assessment of the success of President Biden’s executive order setting up the task force for family reunification? How many children do we still think are out there floating in the bureaucratic abyss who haven’t been unified with their parents?

    Dickerson: Almost all of the children who were separated have been released from federal custody. If they haven’t been reunified with their parents, they’re in the care of a sponsor: an extended relative or a family friend who went through an application process and was approved to take that child in. That’s very different from reuniting them with the parent with whom they crossed the border, with whom they were living and planning to continue living more than four years ago. That number is between 700 and 1,000—those who have not been officially reunited with their parents, according to government records. Some of them may have, and are thought to have found, their parents on their own and just not reported it to the U.S. government, kind of understandably—not wanting to deal with the U.S. government anymore and fearing future consequences.

    The Biden administration had a really tall order in front of it when this task force to reunify separated families was established. So much time had passed, and record keeping was so poor that they had very little to work with. Thus far they’ve been able to track down more than 400 families that have been reunified, and there are several hundred more who are in the process of applying. What I hear from the ACLU and advocacy groups is that the Biden administration is working really hard and doing its best to reunify these families, and they’ve had a significant amount of success in the face of this challenge.

    But now they’re dealing with really complicated cases. I’ve heard about parents, for example, who were deported without their kids. That happened in over 1,000 cases. They’ve been back at home since then, and they’ve had to perhaps take custody of an extended relative’s child. I heard about one parent whose sister had been killed. And so the sister’s children were now being taken care of by the separated parent. So then the separated parent is applying to come back and rejoin their own child. And are those other children eligible to come to the United States? It’s not totally clear. I mean, this is what happens. It’s very messy logistically when you separate a family for four years and then try to bring them back together. And so the numbers are shrinking, but the challenge is kind of growing in terms of getting these final families reunified.

    Goldberg: Something that, in the colloquial sense, is completely unbelievable to me is that when family separation actually started, no one—for weeks—thought to even write down, keep a log, an Excel spreadsheet, of where the children were going, who their parents were. You could define that as negligence, but negligence bleeds over into immorality very quickly. That, to me, of all the incredible reporting that you did, struck me as almost too much. What for you is the aspect of this entire multiyear saga that you still can’t get your mind around? What’s the thing that still stays in your mind as, “I can’t believe that actually happened?”

    Dickerson: The one that I still can’t really believe is the number of people I interviewed who held very significant roles in DHS or in the White House overseeing this issue, to whom I had to explain basic tenets of the immigration-enforcement system. They would say to me, “We never expected to lose track of parents and children. Couldn’t have imagined things would go as poorly as they did.” That just doesn’t make any sense. You can call up any prosecutor in the country and ask them, “Hey, tomorrow I want to start prosecuting hundreds of parents at a time who are traveling with young children who are outside of their communities, with nobody nearby to take those children in. And by the way, they don’t speak the language that most government officials talking to them are going to be using. Is that going to work?” They would tell you it obviously won’t. I was shocked that, to this day, many people involved in this decision making still don’t understand how immigration enforcement works.

    Watch: Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg in conversation with staff writer Caitlin Dickerson

    Jeffrey Goldberg

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  • Staffing Firm Receives Recognition From the U.S. Small Business Administration

    Staffing Firm Receives Recognition From the U.S. Small Business Administration

    On the heels of winning the 2017 KellyOCG Preferred Supplier Award and the 2016 TAPFIN Premier Partner Award, Rangam Consultants, Inc. receives the 2017 Regional Subcontractor of the Year Award for Region II from the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 2, 2017

    Out of a nationwide pool of 10 competing subcontractors, it was Rangam Consultants, Inc. that won the 2017 Regional Subcontractor Award from the U.S. Small Business Administration — a federal agency protecting and advancing the interests of small businesses.

    The Somerset, New Jersey-based staffing firm came out on top because of its superior technical and management capability, financial strength, customer interface, and the ability to deliver quality services and products on time and at a competitive cost to the U.S. government.

    To be nominated by Sanofi, a well-respected and successful global life sciences company committed to improving access to healthcare, is a testament to not only the value a small business can deliver, but also the hard work and integrity of each and every Rangam employee that enables our company to consistently deliver quality services on a timely basis. Each of our employees shares a sense of commitment and pride in their work that contributes to the success we enjoy today and has put us in a position to be recognized as SBA’s 2017 Regional Subcontractor of the Year.

    Hetal Parikh, President, Rangam Consultants, Inc.

    Rangam has been efficiently meeting the staffing needs of both private and public sector organizations for years. The company has built a reputation as one of the top vendors in the area of MSP-driven contingent workforce solutions that continue to shape the current and future talent sourcing trends in the country.

    “To be nominated by Sanofi, a well-respected and successful global life sciences company committed to improving access to healthcare, is a testament to not only the value a small business can deliver, but also the hard work and integrity of each and every Rangam employee that enables our company to consistently deliver quality services on a timely basis,” Rangam President Hetal Parikh said as she thanked Kathleen Castore, Head of Supplier Diversity & Sustainability North America Procurement for Sanofi, for nominating Rangam in the SBA program.

    Hetal also thanked Al Titone, SBA New Jersey District Director, and Michael Cecere, SBA Procurement Center Representative, for acknowledging Rangam’s capability as a woman-owned small business. “Each of our employees shares a sense of commitment and pride in their work that contributes to the success we enjoy today and has put us in a position to be recognized as SBA’s 2017 Regional Subcontractor of the Year,” she said.

    Notably, SBA acts as a bridge between woman-owned and service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses and the federal government, with the objective of procuring 23 percent of prime federal contracts for small businesses.

    “This is a small business that has a rich history of specializing in providing its customers with staffing services,” Al Titone said. “Rangam Consultants, Inc. is a prime example why small businesses across the country are so vital to supplying the U.S. government with superior quality services and goods.”

    About Rangam Consultants, Inc.
    Established in 1995, Rangam Consultants, Inc. is a high-performing diverse supplier of enterprise-wide staffing services in IT, Clinical, Scientific, Healthcare, Engineering, Government, Finance and Administrative sectors. Rangam is a certified WMBE that has consistently grown year over year while establishing a history of providing exceptional service to clients. We pride ourselves for developing a culture of inclusion and collaboration through innovation in education and employment.

    Rangam improves the quality of life for our candidates while providing exceptional service to our clients. We do this by delivering an integrated recruitment solution that combines technology, training, and education to our candidates while providing our clients with a large, diverse network of qualified personnel options. We adhere to a philosophy of “empathy drives innovation” in everything we do. To learn more, visit https://www.rangam.com.

    Source: Rangam Consultants, Inc.

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