Trump unsurprisingly prefers billionaires to workers

Bob Sheak, Dec 15, 2025

Trump favors corporations over workers. This is one influence that shapes the policies of Trump and his administration.

Although it has a profound influence on what Trump does, it is not original with him. It is part of a Republican Party bias that extends back to the Gilded Age and the emergence of corporations in the late 19th Century. For in-depth analyses of this issue, among many others, see Sheldon S. Wolin examines this subject in his book, Democracy Inc: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism (publ. 2008), and Thom Hartmann does so in his book “The Hidden History of Monopolies (publ. 2020).

And Chuck Collins’ new book is an eye-opener. It’s titled “Burned by Billionaires: How Concentrated Wealth and Power Are Ruining Out Lives and Planet” (publ. 2025). Collins writes this in “The Introduction,”

“…this book explores the very direct and personal ways that extreme concentrations of wealth and power touch your life, from trashing the environment and jeopardizing a livable future to increasing your tax bill, pushing up housing costs, putting your health at risk, robbing you of your political voice, and widening the racial economic divide” (p. 8).

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Five examples from Collins’ book.

Chuck Collins draws examples in this article from his book, Inequality, Oct 14 2025 (https://inequality.org/article/ten-ways-you-are-being-burned-by-billionaires).

Here are five of his examples.

  1. The billionaires stick you with their tax bill. By opting out of their tax obligations, the billionaire class is shifting responsibility on to you to pay for everything from infrastructure to national defense to veterans’

services.

2. They rob you of your voice and vote. With the billionaire capture of the government, what you think barely matters. Your vote might still make a difference, but only in marginal situations where the billionaires haven’t dominated candidate selection, campaign finance, and policy priorities. The billionaires love gridlock and government shutdowns because they can block popular legislation from happening. 

3. The billionaires supercharge the housing crisis — and profit from it. Billionaire demand for luxury housing is driving up the cost of land and housing construction, supercharging the already existing housing crisis. Billionaire speculators are buying up rental housing, single family homes, and mobile home parks to squeeze more money out of the housing shortage. Global billionaires are coming to “tax haven USA” to park their money in U.S. farmland, timber and housing.

4. They inflame existing divisions in society. The billionaires don’t want you to understand how they are picking your pocket. So, they invest heavily — pouring millions into partisan media organizations and divisive politicians — to deflect our attention away from their harmful behavior. Their divisive policy and social agenda drives down wages, worsens the historic racial wealth divide, and scapegoats immigrants.

5. They are trashing your environment. The billionaires are super polluters and carbon emitters, burning up the earth with their excessive consumption through yachts, private jets, and multiple mansions. While you’re recycling and walking, they are zooming around in private jets and yachts with the carbon emissions and pollution of small nation states. While we all need to do our part, the billionaires make us feel like chumps for making ecological choices and sacrifices.

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Trump favors billionaires

Svante Myrick, president of People for the American Way,

 criticizes Trump’s billionaire bias in an article for The Hill (https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/5636808-trump-regime-corruption-wealthy). The title of the article is “Trump’s handouts put billionaires first and Americans last.” Here is some of what he writes.

He refers to Trump’s operating principal in his second term as president, not America first but Trump first, or more accurately “What’s in it for Trump and the Repubicans.”

For example, Trump and the Congressional Republicans are “giving trillions in tax cuts to corporations and wealthy Americans,” while allowing health care costs rise to levels that are unaffordable for millions of individuals and families.”
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Trump’s Cabinet and Chief advisers

Aaron Schaffer and Clara Ence Morse, report on the 12 billionaires in the Trump administration, Washington Post, December 11, 2025 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/interactive/2025/trump-white-house-billionaires-musk).

“In total, “ they report, “they’re worth $390.6 billion as of March [2025]. While previous administrations have included the ultrarich, the wealth held by this group is larger than even the first Trump administration, previously the wealthiest in U.S. history. They all have made large financial contributions to Trump’s presidential campaign.

They further report, “[e]xcluding Elon Musk — who poured more than $294 million into contributions boosting Trump and other Republicans in 2024 — the billionaires in the Trump administration, along with their spouses, gave more than $52 million to Trump, pro-Trump PACs and the Republican National Committee in the 2024 campaign alone, according to a Washington Post analysis.”

Schaffer and Morse write up summaries of the wealth of each of the 12 billionaires. Here’s one example. Howard Lutnick is Trump’s Secretary of Commerce, has a net worth if $3.2 billion. They additionally write the following About Lutnick.  

“Trump’s boisterous commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, was the longtime chief executive of the financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald. He and his wife didn’t contribute to Trump’s 2016 campaign but gave $550,000 to Trump, pro-Trump PACs and the Republican National Committee for the 2020 election. In the 2024 cycle, he gave $8.8 million, and Trump named him a co-chair of his transition. And this year the Lutnick family contributed to Trump’s White House ballroom project, according to the White House.”

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A very hostile climate for workers’: US labor movement struggles under Trump

Michael Sainato considers examples of how the US labor movement struggles under Trump (https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/14/labor-movement-union-trump-nlrb).


Sainato’s main point is that the “National Labor Relations Board, the federal watchdog for workers’ rights, has been rendered toothless as employees grapple with corporations.” Here’s some of what he writes.

“The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), the top US labor watchdog, is tasked with protecting workers’ rights, overseeing the labor movement and ruling on disputes between employers and unions.

“Its five-seat board, which hears disputes and oversees union elections, requires at least three members to issue a ruling. But days after regaining power, Trump fired Gwynne Wilcox – an unprecedented decision – from the board, leaving it without this crucial quorum to make decisions.”

As an example of the effects, Sainato refers to how Whole Foods, which is owned by Amazon, has obstructed the efforts of their employees to negotiate for union representation. The striking workers’ union, UFCW 1776, was given support by a regional National Labor Relations Board but only met ‘a long process of delays and legal challenges’ at the national level.

“The Trump administration thus far seems to have been treating the agency with this kind of combination of hostility and aggressive neglect,” said Lauren McFerran, who served as chair of the NLRB under Joe Biden. ‘This is an administration that professes to be very pro-worker in its orientation, but we haven’t had a functional agency to resolve labor disputes and to protect workers rights … in a year.’

The outlook is not good. “Sainato writes, “Even when quorum is restored with Trump appointees, Ellen Dichner, former chief counsel to the NLRB chair, warned the agency is likely to rescind decisions issued under Biden , such as a ban on captive audience meetings held by employers to deter unionization.

“‘This is a very, very hostile climate for workers,’ said Dichner. ‘What I think labor is seeing, and will continue to see, is a fundamental attack on workers’ rights, and the rights of workers to organize, and the ability of workers to achieve collective bargaining agreements.’”

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Trump is the biggest union-buster in U.S.

Patrick Oakford and Margaret Poydock make the case  on The Economic Policy Institute website, Sept 2, 2025 (https://www.epi.org/trump-is-the-biggest-union-buster-in-u-s-history-more-than-1-million-federal-workers-collective-bargaining-rights-are-at-risk). Here is their evidence on “some of Trump’s most egregious actions so far.”  

“Union-busting the federal workforce. In March, Trump issued an executive order that stripped union protections from more than 1 million federal workers across dozens of federal agencies. And in advance of Labor Day, Trump issued another executive order expanding these actions to additional agencies. Despite ongoing litigation, some agencies have unilaterally canceled collective bargaining agreements with the unions that represent their employees. For example, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced in early August that union contracts for 400,000 employees were terminated, eliminating crucial protections for federal workers.” 

Stacking the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) 

“In January, Trump fired NLRB Board member Gwynne Wilcox and severely jeopardized the independence of the agency. When Trump fired Wilcox, he cited that her opinions on the Board had ‘unduly disfavored’ employers—an implicit warning about how any future Board members should rule if they want to keep their jobs. 

“While Wilcox continues to fight her firing in court, Trump has nominated Scott Mayer and James Murphy to be Board members. If confirmed, the NLRB would have enough members to establish a quorum and a Republican majority. If Mayer and Murphy are confirmed, workers and unions are likely to find their cases ultimately before a Board that is heavily influenced, if not controlled by, Trump and the interests of bosses over workers.”

“Undercutting efforts to foster and support labor-management mediation. In

March, Trump directed the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) to eliminate “non-statutory components” and to “reduce the performance of their statutory functions and associated personnel to the minimum presence and function required by law.” 

Since 1947, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) has helped resolve difficult labor disputes, especially those that have resulted in strikes, by providing mediation services to encourage negotiations. However, Trump is undermining the availability of such services and encouraging employers to oppose or delay unions’ struggles to secure first-time contracts.

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A step forward for federal unions, despite Trump

Chris Isidore and Tami Luhby report for CNN, Dec 12, 2025, on a House vote that is a rare rebuke of Trump (https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/12/business/unions-labor-trump-republicans). Here’s some of what they report.

“A group of House Republicans handed President Donald Trump a rare rebuke on Thursday, voting to restore collective bargaining rights he had stripped from about 1 million federal workers earlier this year.

“But the legislation still faces significant hurdles before it can become law and aid the unions and their members.

“Trump has moved to void labor contracts for about 700,000 federal workers as part of his move to take more control of the federal workforce. He wants to defund their unions by ending the practice of collecting union dues from workers’ paychecks.

“Trump signed an unprecedented executive order in March citing national security as the reason to strip many federal workers of their collective bargaining rights.”

Isidore and Luhby continue.

“But the vote late Thursday afternoon saw 20 Republicans join all the present Democrats to pass a bill 231-195, a vote that Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, said “demonstrated their support for the nonpartisan civil service.”

“The vote took place only because, as was the case on the vote on the release of Jeffery Epstein files, enough Republicans joined virtually all House Democrats to force legislative action through a so-called ‘discharge petition.’”

“The legislation could face an even tougher fight in the Senate and it is tough to imagine Trump signing a bill that would overturn his own executive action. But labor leaders vowed to continue the fight.

“‘It’s an uphill climb, but many people said it would never pass the house,’ Liz Shuler, president of the AFL-CIO, told CNN ahead of the vote when it became clear it had the bipartisan support needed to pass this first step. ‘We are keeping our foot on the gas for the Senate to do the same.’”

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Meanwhile, the hardships for workers and everyday citizens remain

Brad Reed reports on Nov. 6, 2025 that layoffs under Trump have cut 1 million jobs (https://commondreams.org/news/mass-layoffs-trump-economy). Here’s some of what Reed writes.

“The US labor market, which in recent months had ground nearly to a halt, now appears to be entering a downward spiral.

“As reported by theWashington Post on Thursday, new data from corporate outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas found that employers in October announced 153,000 job cuts, which marked the highest number of layoffs in that month since October 2003.

“Total announced job cuts in 2025 have now reached 1.1 million, a number that the Post describes as a ‘recession-like’ level comparable to the steep job cuts announced in the wake of the dotcom bust of the early 2000s, the global financial crisis of 2008, and the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.”

Reed quotes John Challenger, the CEO of Gray and Christmas.

“‘We haven’t seen mega-layoffs of the size that are being discussed now—48,000 from UPS, potentially 30,000 from Amazon—since 2020 and before that, since the recession of 2009,’ he explained. ‘When you see companies making cuts of this size, it does signal a real shift in direction.’”

CNBC noted that the Challenger report found that the tech sector is currently being hardest hit by the layoffs, and it said that the adoption of artificial intelligence was a significant driver of job cuts.

“‘Some industries are correcting after the hiring boom of the pandemic, but this comes as AI adoption, softening consumer and corporate spending, and rising costs drive belt-tightening and hiring freezes,’ the report said. ‘Those laid off now are finding it harder to quickly secure new roles, which could further loosen the labor market.’”

Reed points out that AI adoption is “just one factor in companies’ decision to enact mass layoffs, as some firms have also cited the need to protect their profit margins from the impacts of President Donald Trump’s tariffs, which have raised prices for a wide variety of products and materials.”

Democratic lawmakers refer to how ‘Trump inherited the fastest growing economy in the [Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development], fastest reduction in inflation, record job creation,’ said Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.). ‘Dumb tariffs, racist immigration policies, attacks on the rule of law and termination of congressionally mandated programs did this.’”

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Concluding thoughts

Nothing in this post should surprise anyone who pays some attention to the news. While Trump pursues his anti-democratic, pro-corporate agenda, his overall popularity is very low and recent Democratic election victories indicate that the Republicans are going to lose big in the 2026 midterm elections. Still, he ignores the deep and pervasive harm done by his decisions. It will take effort and dedication to defeat Trump and his political party. Luckily, there is momentum against them.

The fight for democracy and justice continues

The fight for democracy and justice continues

Bob Sheak, Dec. 11, 2025

Arlene Sheak edited

Introduction

It’s not a sure thing that an already tenuous democracy in the US will survive over the next few years from the onslaught of Trump’s abuses and misuses of presidential power. Millions of people will suffer. At the same time, there is opposition to him from large majorities of Democrats and Independents. And his support from his base is less strong than in the recent past.

Unfortunately, he still has over three years in the White House or more likely at Mar-a-Lago.

And he glories in the power. You may have also noticed that he typically doesn’t acknowledge bad news about him or his administration. For the public, he says there has never been a better president than he (https://www.livemint.com/news/us-news/donald-trump-nobody-does-it-better-than-me-10-times-us-president-said-hes-the-best-11741083334974.html). At the same time, journalists and doctors question his mental acuity and stability.

(https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-mental-health-fears-cognitive-decline-b2625124.html).

Whatever his mental state, Trump is using his enormous presidential power for self-glorification and to enrich himself, his family, and his allies among the rich and powerful (How Trump’s Family Enriches from Presidential Policies). He is supporting the deployment of ICE and sometimes of state national guard to apprehend and deport immigrants, including even naturalized citizens and immigrants who have lived in the country for many years and who have contributed to making the economy better than it would otherwise be (https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/12/04/us/ice-arrests-criminal-records-data.html).

………

Trump’s poll numbers

Whatever his mental state, Trump continues to dominate the Republican Party and continues to have the support of his Republican base, though the economic fallout of his tariffs and from his links to the Epstein scandals have led to some weakening in that support. His overall poll numbers remain low.

Kathryn Palmer reports on a poll released on December 9 that attests to Trump’s unpopularity (https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/12/09/trump-poll-ratings-increase-cost-of-living-affordability/87683560007). Here is some of what she reports.

“President Donald Trump‘s approval rating ticked up a few points in the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, after it dipped last month to the lowest in his second term.

“In the survey released Dec. 9, Trump had a 41% approval rating, compared with the Nov. 18 poll that put him at 38%. The most recent poll interviewed 4,434 adults nationwide and had a margin of error of 2 percentage points in either direction. His disapproval rate was 57%.” The small increase is due, Palmer points out, “to Trump’s scaling back some of his tariff increases and his pledge to combat high food prices.” A veiled admission of his mistakes.

Whatever he thinks, “Trump’s performance on the cost of living, where he earned a 31% approval rating, is among his weakest popularity scores, Reuters reported. But the numbers are still up several points from last month’s poll, which was at 26% in late November.”

Republicans are unsurprisingly less critical of Trump, but the findings are mixed.

“In the December poll, which lasted six days and closed on Monday, Dec. 8, 69% of Republicans rated Trump favorably on cost-of-living issues. Overall, 85% of Republicans said that they approved of his overall performance as president; that

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Affordability – A “hoax.” No, a real problem.

In a speech Trump gave in Pennsylvania on Dec. 9, Trump called “affordability” a hoax.

Julianne McShane reports on the president’s speech for MSNow, Dec 9, 2025

(https://www.ms.now/news/trump-affordability-speech-pennsylvania-economy). Here’s some of what she reports.

“President Donald Trump’s Tuesday night visit to the swing state of Pennsylvania was billed by administration officials as part of an ongoing, broader effort to reshape perceptions of an economy that many Americans say is failing to meet their needs.”

“It was 15 minutes into his Pennsylvania address before President Donald Trump first uttered the word ‘affordable’ — and it wasn’t long before he began railing against the concept entirely.”

“‘They have a new word, you know’ Trump said of Democrats. ‘They always have a hoax. The new word is ‘affordability.’ So they look at the camera and they say, ‘This election is all about affordability.” He agrees there is some truth in the statement, but blames high prices on Joe Biden and the Democrats.

“‘They gave you high prices,’ Trump said. ‘They gave you the highest inflation in history, and we’re bringing those prices down rapidly — lower prices, bigger paychecks.’

“Between mocking Biden’s alleged cognitive decline and railing against the Democratic-led impeachments he faced in his first term, Trump touted a drop in the prices of eggs and Thanksgiving turkeys. He brought onstage local workers whom he said benefitted from his policies, including eliminating taxes on tips and overtime work. And he made several dubious claims — about newly-created jobs going entirely to American citizens and wage growth for factory workers and miners — that do not appear to be supported by publicly available evidence.”

“‘But’ McShane writes, “the reality is more complex, and the White House has scrambled to soften some of the harsher consequences of the administration’s economic policies. Last month, the White House rolled back tariffs on dozens of food products in an effort to reduce rising prices for consumers. And on Monday, the administration rolled out a $12 billion aid package for farmers who have been hit by Trump’s trade war.”

McShane notes that such measures are insufficient. And she refers to policies he has supported that have the opposite effect.

“The Trump-backed ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ enacted historic cuts to both Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which many low-income families rely on to afford health care and groceries. More than 20 million low- and middle-income Americans are about to be walloped with skyrocketing health care premiums if Congress does not extend enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies by the end of the year.”

Polls find that many Americans are finding it difficult to cope with high prices. “A new Harvard CAPS/Harris poll out Tuesday shows that affordability and inflation remain top concerns for voters, and that a majority of voters think Trump’s tariffs are hurting the economy. The U.S. inflation rate has remained steady at close to 3 percent, about the same as it was when Trump took office in January.”

“A Politico poll released last week found that almost half of respondents — including 37 percent of Trump voters — say the cost of living is the worst they ever remember. And a Fox News poll released in November found about twice as many voters blame Trump for the economy than blame Biden.” 

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Trump’s tariffs and high prices

David E. Sanger considers this problem in The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/08/us/politics/trump-trade-affordability.html).

Here are excerpts from the article.

The tariffs have generated economic chaos and contributed to rising prices

Sanger writes: On President Trump’s proclaimed ‘Liberation Day’ in April, he introduced his tariffs and promised that ‘jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country.’ “The imposition of taxes on imports, the president promised, ‘will pry open foreign markets and break down foreign trade barriers,’ leading to lower prices for Americans and a revival of domestically-based manufacturing.

As we know, Trump’s rosy forecast was totally wrong. The tariffs raised domestic prices, “putting the Trump administration on the defensive over deep public concern about the cost of living.” Sanger adds: “there is scant evidence to date of any wholesale return to American towns and cities of the manufacturing jobs lost to decades of automation and globalization.” Still, in Trumpian-fashion,

“he has dismissed talk of high prices at grocery stores, insisting they are coming down. But inflation edged upward in September, to about a 3 percent annual increase, almost exactly where it was when his predecessor left office.

And manufacturing jobs have continued to decline gradually this year, with losses of roughly 50,000 since January.

American farmers were hit hard by the tariffs. Under pressure, Trump authorized $12 billion in emergency relief for American farmers after a Chinese boycott of American farm goods. Sanger cites Scott Lincicome, director of general economics at the Cato Institute, who said “Prices are depressed because the Chinese boycotted our farm goods much of the year,” he noted. “But fertilizer, machinery, those costs have remained elevated, and subject to tariffs.”

Mr. Lincicome said that the tariffs have also introduced a new level of “unprecedented, crippling and truly insane complexity” to operating businesses.”

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Health costs are up and coverage is down

Millions will likely go without health care insurance in 2026. Some of this situation is due to unaffordable health insurance and the relative absence of health care insurance. This problem and others burdening people with low incomes is analyzed in Mariana Chilton’s book, The Painful Truth About Hunger In America (published in 2025).

Karissa Waddick and Stephanie Innes discuss part of the problem

(https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2025/11/19/aca-obamacare-tax-credit-shutdown/87336302007).

 In the absence of government subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, health care premiums will rise to levels that millions of Americans cannot afford.

“Democratic lawmakers had been pushing to include an extension of the Obamacare subsidies in a spending package to reopen the government. But eight Senate Democrats relented on those demands and voted with Republicans Nov. 10 to end the record-breaking 43-day government shutdown. Shortly after, the compromise passed in the House, and President Donald Trump signed it into law, without the health care measure.” Note that Trump and the Republicans showed no willingness ever to support the extension.

“Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-South Dakota, has promised to hold a vote in December on a plan to extend the Obamacare subsidies that help millions of Americans afford health care. But Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said he would not commit to a similar vote in his chamber.”

Some background on the tax credits

“Congress initially created the enhanced tax credits in 2021 to ensure Americans could afford health coverage amid the COVID-19 pandemic.  

“The plan expanded the pool of people eligible to receive subsidies on ACA plans to include those making more than four times the federal poverty level, which is about $63,000 for a single earner today, if their premiums exceeded 8.5% of household income, according to an analysis by the health policy organization KFF.

“It also decreased the percentage of income all enrollees needed to pay for coverage.  

“In the past five years, the enhanced subsidies have more than doubled the number of people enrolled in ACA plans, and a majority come from red states such as North Carolina, Florida, Georgia and Texas, according to KFF.” 

Without subsidies

Waddick and Innes: “The organization estimates that as many as 22 million Americans on ACA plans could see their monthly health insurance premiums jump 114% if the tax credits lapse, and many could lose coverage. 

“The Congressional Budget Office estimated that about 4 million people would go uninsured without an extension to the ACA tax credits.

Sabrina Corlette, codirector of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, says the soaring prices are caused by several factors.

“Without the expanded subsidies, people will need to pay a larger percentage of their health insurance costs.  

“At the same time, insurance companies in the ACA marketplace are increasing the price of premiums because they expect more people to drop insurance coverage as a result of sticker shock from the ACA cuts. Fewer people, particularly fewer healthy people, paying into the system means the expenses are spread over a smaller pool, which raises rates.

“That’s why they’re implementing gross premiums that are on average 20% to 30% higher than they would be otherwise,” Corlette said. “This is a serious financial hit to millions and millions of American families.” 

“Who is impacted by the loss of subsidies? 

“Of the 24.3 million Americans insured through ACA plans, about 92%, or about 22 million, receive some form of subsidy. 

“Small-business owners and people who work for small businesses that don’t provide employer-sponsored health insurance make up a large chunk of people on the ACA marketplace, according to KFF. 

“Those include farmers, real estate agents, restaurant workers, retail employees and people working gig jobs, among others, said Anthony Wright, executive director of Families USA, a health care advocacy group.” 

Trump and the Republican-dominated Congress seem unprepared or unwilling to take any meaningful action.
 

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Medicaid as an example of Republican negligence

Jasmine Laws considers updates from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) on Trump’s pending changes to Medicaid eligibility (https:www.msn.com/en-us/money-other-medicaid-changes-trump-provides-updates-for-states/ar-AA1S1?ocid=BingNews/Serp).

The article was published on Dec 9, 2025.

The changes don’t go into effect right away, but they will be instituted in about a year and will make it more difficult to obtain assistance through Medicaid. The key change is that it will require recipients to complete at least 80 hours of work or community service per month.

Laws quotes CMS: “The requirements outlined by the Working Families Tax Cut (WFTC) legislation are among the “most significant Medicaid eligibility and financing changes in more than a decade,” CMS said.

The agency advised that, in their implementation of the policy, states should ensure they “connect members to work and community,” and “balance the benefits of state flexibility with the potential costs of options, including systems and operational costs.” States are also expected to ensure that “state community engagement determinations and verifications are easily auditable.”

The agency also provided additional guidance for states, outlining a total of $200 million in fiscal 2026 for states to establish the necessary systems to carry out these measures.

This is a Republican initiative, with the aim of cutting Medicaid spending by $785 billion over a decade.

Laws continues. “No Democrats voted for the bill in the House, and no Democratic supporters for it have emerged in the Senate. So, Republicans who hold a slim 53-47 Senate majority must reconcile demands of budget hawks who want deeper spending cuts against concerns of others worried about the toll on rural and working-class voters who helped elect Trump.” Medicaid covers 71 million low-income Americans.”

“Any cuts to Medicaid would hit hard in rural areas and small towns, where roughly 18% of adults are enrolled in Medicaid compared with 16% for the country as a whole, according to Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families.”

“Rural residents tend to be sicker, with higher rates of addiction, mental illness, and mortality from heart disease, cancer and stroke, the center found.

“The National Rural Health Association said the bill could force providers to cut services or close. Nearly half of rural hospitals currently lose money, and 120 have closed or stopped offering inpatient services over the past decade, the trade group says.”

“At least 41 of the Senate’s 53 Republicans represent rural states, and several said they will work to remove the bill’s limits on the provider tax.

“Leave the provider tax alone. Put the work requirements in and all that kind of stuff. But for God’s sakes don’t cut into the bone,” said Senator Jim Justice of West Virginia.

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The Trump administration attack on “free speech.”

Melinda Haas writes on the unconstitutional policy of Trump’s government to label dissenting beliefs as terrorism, Dec 3, 2025 (https://theconversation.com/labeling-dissent-as-terrorism-new-us-domestic-terrorism-priorities-raise-constitutional-alarms-269161). Hass is an Assistant Professor of International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh.

Hass opens here article with these statements. “A largely overlooked directive issued by the Trump administration marks a major shift in U.S. counterterrorism policy, one that threatens bedrock free speech rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights.

National Security Presidential Memorandum/NSPM-7, issued on Sept. 25, 2025, is a presidential directive that for the first time appears to authorize preemptive law enforcement measures against Americans based not on whether they are planning to commit violence but for their political or ideological beliefs.

“You’ve probably heard a lot about President Donald Trump’s many executive orders. But as an international relations scholar who has studied U.S. foreign policy decision-making and national security legislation, I recognize that presidents can take several types of executive actions without legislative involvement: executive ordersmemoranda and proclamations.

“This structure allows the president to direct law enforcement and national security agencies, with little opportunity for congressional oversight.

“This seventh national security memorandum from the Trump White House pushes the limits of presidential authority by targeting individuals and groups as potential domestic terrorists based on their beliefs rather than their actions.

“The memorandum represents a profound shift in U.S. counterterrorism policy, one that risks undermining foundational American commitments to free speech and association.

“The presidential memorandum signed by Donald Trump identifies ‘anti-Christian,’ ‘anti-capitalism’ or ‘anti-American’ views as potential indicators that a group or person will commit domestic terrorism.”

Executive memoranda instruct government officials and agencies by delegating tasks and directing agency actions.”

“Unlike executive orders, they are not required to be published. When these memoranda, like NSPM-7, relate to national security and military and foreign policy, they are called national security directives, although the specific name of these directives changes with each administration.

“Many of these directives are classified. They may not be declassified, if at all, until years or decades after the end of the administration that issued them.

Haas continues. “The stated purpose of NSPM-7 is to counter domestic terrorism and organized political violence, focusing mainly on perceived threats from the political left. The memorandum identifies ‘anti-Christian,’ ‘anti-capitalism’or ‘anti-American’ views as potential indicators that a group or person will commit domestic terrorism.”

“The strategy laid out in NSPM-7 includes preemptive measures to disrupt groups before they engage in violent political acts. For example, multiagency task forces are empowered to investigate potential federal crimes related to radicalization, as well as the funders of those potential crimes.”

‘Domestic terrorist organizations’

The memorandum directs the Department of Justice to focus the resources of the FBI’s approximately 200 Joint Terrorism Task Forces on investigating “acts of recruiting or radicalizing persons” for the purpose of “political violence, terrorism, or conspiracy against rights; and the violent deprivation of any citizen’s rights.”

Domestic terrorism

“NSPM-7 marks a major conceptual shift in U.S. counterterrorism policy. Its focus on domestic terrorism significantly departs from historical approaches that primarily targeted foreign threats.

Earlier presidential directives largely defined terrorism as a foreign threat to be countered through military power, diplomacy and international cooperation.” NSPM-7 “reorients the machinery of national security toward the policing of belief.”

Conflicts with First Amendment on “Free Speech”

Thirty-one members of Congress sent a letter to Trump expressing “serious concerns” about NSPM-7, warning that it poses “serious constitutional, statutory and civil liberties risks, especially if used to target political dissent, protest or ideological speech.”

As the ACLU warns, any definition of terrorism that includes ideological components risks criminalizing people or groups based on belief rather than based on violence or other criminal conduct.

The purpose: Silencing dissent

“NSPM-7 does not authorize new actions in the legal and institutional framework for counterterrorism. It does not criminalize previously legal conduct.

“Rather, it states that the Trump administration’s investigative focus will be around the identity and ideology of supposed perpetratorsPrioritizing investigations into this broad swath of ideologies serves to instill fear, silencing anti-fascist and other messages in opposition to the Trump administration.”

“In fact, most domestic terrorists in the U.S. are politically on the right, and right-wing attacks account for the vast majority of fatalities from domestic terrorism.

Yet NSPM-7 focuses disproportionately on left-wing ideologies. NSPM-7 departs from prior U.S. counterterrorism frameworks by prioritizing the suppression of ideologically motivated dissent, even in the absence of concrete evidence of violent intent.”

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Concluding thoughts

The reality is that Trump and his government dominate the federal government. Their immense power is issuing policies that are doing great harm to millions of Americans and immigrants. Trump is inept and has pushed policies that will likely do yet more harm before his term ends – it if does – in 2028. There is concern that he may start a war or arbitrarily institute the Insurrection Act to stay in office before the end of his presidency. At the same time, his economic policies are alienating more people. And, as recently elections won by Democrats indicate, strong leaders may emerge that will alter the ominous, anti-democratic policies of Trump and his following.

Child separation during Trump’s two administrations

Bob Sheak

Arlene Sheak edits

Nov 24, 2025

Introduction

This post offers a position against Trump and his administration policies during his first and second presidential terms of authorizing the separation of children from their families and treating them in abhorrent ways. It’s part of their efforts to deport immigrants and the promises they made to their base to do so. Such policies deserve our criticism and scorn. There is also something new currently, that is, to push for the end of birthright citizenship.

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Looking Back to Trump’s first presidential term

 Caitlin Dickerson looks Back at the Family Separation Policy of Trump’s first term, writing for the American Immigration Council, Oct 30, 2025

(https://americanimmigrationcouncil.org/report/family-separation-policy). Here are comments and excerpts.

Family separation during the first Trump administration

“In the spring and summer of 2018, the first Trump administration sought to deter migrants from coming to the United States through the cruel practice of separating children from their parents. To do this, they implemented the zero-tolerance policy, which aimed to prosecute all adults who crossed the southern border without inspection. If a family was apprehended, the parents were taken into custody by the Department of Homeland Security, while their children were taken into custody by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.”  

Dickerson continues.

The children were often sent to shelters thousands of miles away from their parents, without a way for the children and parents to contact each other.

“In many cases, these kids were sent to shelters thousands of miles away from their parents, without a way to contact them.”

Then government had difficulty in reuniting them and thousands of the children remained without their parents

“Later, the government struggled to reunite families, in part because there was no centralized database of where the children had been sent or who their parents were. Years later, some of the nearly 3,000 children taken by the government during the zero-tolerance period had still not been reunited with their parents.   

The harms to the children

The American Immigration Council and partners filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act for records to better understand how the government was doing. “In 2020, the Council published a tranche of documents highlighting the harms and trauma to children caused by the separations. After years of continuing litigation, the Council received tens of thousands of additional pages from government documents about this policy.” 

There is new evidence, Dickerson points out.

“This site showcases a new subset of the records obtained.” It reveals how journalists, attorneys and members of Congress fought to expose this horrific policy and hold the government accountable for the pain and havoc it created.

Further evidence from the report on the past

“In trying to deter migrants from coming to the United States, the first Trump administration implemented one of the cruelest tactics of its tenure.” The government implemented a “zero-tolerance policy,” resulting “in thousands of children being torn away from their relatives. To this day, many still have yet to be reunited with their families.” 

A New Analysis of the effects of Trump’s zero-tolerance policy

Dickerson continues. “The Trump administration ended the zero-tolerance policy after just six and a half weeks, thanks in part to the actions of journalists, legal advocates, and representatives from other branches of government. The purpose of this new analysis—produced after years of litigating public records requests—is to look at the interventions that contributed to the end, at least officially, of this shameful policy. The documents featured here serve as a stark reminder of the government’s actions during the time, and in the aftermath, of family separation. They also show how entities opposed one of the most egregious anti-migration policies of the first Trump administration.” 

Government Records Show that Journalists, Advocates, and other Government Representatives Sought Transparency and Accountability

“This chronicle is based on government documents and correspondence provided in response to the Council and our partners’ Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. As such, the records contain limited information about the personal experiences of those who were affected, such as separated children and parents; attorneys and social workers; journalist witnesses; and impacted communities.

“These key stakeholders—immigration and children’s advocacy organizations and others— sought transparency and accountability. Journalists published photos and stories on the plight of separated families. A wave of public outcry forced Congressional leaders to demand answers from government agencies. On June 20, 2018, President Trump signed an executive order mandating the end to categorical family separation, a little over six weeks after it had begun.”

The “Legal” Framework for Family Separation

“In the early days of the first Trump administration…key officials were fixated on deterring families from crossing the southern border. To carry out this plan, they announced their intent to prosecute everyone who crossed the border without permission…. Family separation was the intended consequence of this so-called zero-tolerance policy.”

“The Trump Administration criminally charged thousands of parents with misdemeanors for entering the United States without proper authorization, requiring prosecution of parents and directly causing family separation by treating parents and their children as unrelated. The goal was to achieve deterrence through en masse family separation.

Dickerson writes: “By designating all adults, including those traveling with minor children, as subject to prosecution, the administration triggered a process by which children were immediately sent to the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), a subagency of HHS. The government took the position that because parents apprehended by Border Patrol were likely to go into criminal custody (even for a short period of time), they would become unavailable to care for the children. The children were then classified as unaccompanied… and sent to ORR custody, often thousands of miles away from where their parents were detained. The children were relocated even if their parents had spent only a few hours in criminal custody or were never actually prosecuted.

Reunification made difficult

“Parents had to follow cumbersome processes to reunify with their children. Under the Trump administration, agencies were adamant that parents who had already been removed from the United States could not re-enter the country to reunite with their children (though a limited number of parents were eventually paroled into the United States for this purpose). Furthermore, U.S. agencies had to coordinate with embassies and consulates in the families’ home countries to secure travel documents and arrange for parents to reunite with their children at an

Efforts of the ACLU

“The Ms. L case, filed in 2018 by the ACLU on behalf of a separated mother, helped establish significant measures to ensure family reunification, including following a 2023 settlement agreement.

“In 2020, two years after the official end of the family separation policy, hundreds of the 4,368 children the U.S. government identified as taken from their parents remained separated.”

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A valuable source

Jacob Soboroff wrote a book titled Separated: Inside an American Tragedy (publ 2020) about these years. It covers the time from March 2017 through October 2019, years of the first Trump administration. Here are two examples from the book.

“The Trump administration’s deliberate and systematic separation of thousands of migrant children from their parents was, according to humanitarian groups and child welfare an unparalleled abuse of the human rights of children. The American Academy of Pediatrics says the practice will leave thousands of kids traumatized for life” (xiii)

Soboroff quotes Dr. Colleen Kraft, the head of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “Studies overwhelmingly demonstrate the irreparable harm caused by breaking up families. Prolonged exposure to highly stressful situations – known as toxic stress – can disrupt a child’s brain architecture and affect his or her short- and long-term health” (p. 245)

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How the system works presently

Hamed Aleaziz, a reporter for The New York Times delves the issue in the first months of Trump’s second presidential term  (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/05/politics/trump-administration-family-separation.html).

He opens his article with an example of a family caught up in the US immigration system and illustrates how the options they have are all bad.

Evgeny and Evgeniia, who fled their native Russia to seek political asylum, have been separated from their 8-year-old son, Maksim, since May. It is now August. They face “an excruciating choice.”

“Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers told the couple they could leave the United States with their child and return to their native Russia, which they had fled seeking political asylum. Or they could remain in immigration detention in the United States — but their 8-year-old son, Maksim, would be taken away and sent to a shelter for unaccompanied children.” They chose to stay in the U.S. in a condition of what ICE officials call “interior separation.”

“Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, insisted [falsely] that ‘ICE does not separate families and placed the onus on the families themselves, saying that the parents have the option of staying with their children by leaving the country together.”

“Previous administrations separated undocumented families for reasons including national security concerns, public safety and child endangerment. But Claire Trickler-McNulty, a former ICE official who has served in Republican and Democratic administrations, said that previous administrations, to her knowledge, did not use the threat of family separation as leverage to get people to leave the country.”

Encouraging deportation

Now, with illegal crossings notably low, the Trump administration is focusing on immigrants who are in the United States and have been ordered to leave.

The American Civil Liberties Union is investigating the legality of the separations, said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer for the group.

“That the Trump administration has found a new form of family separation is hardly surprising given they have yet to acknowledge the horrific harm caused by the original policy and are now blatantly breaching provisions of the settlement designed to provide relief to those abused families, many of whom to this day still remain separated,” he said.

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Trump’s administration wants to eliminate Birthright Citizenship Under the U.S. Constitution

The Trump administration wants to do away with the constitutional right of birthright citizenship, that is, the doctrine that says if you are born in the U.S., then you are automatically deemed a citizen. The Supreme Court is presently considering the issue and may well side with Trump.

The right is specified in Section 1 of the 14th amendment of the Constitution and has long been understood to grant American citizenship to anyone born on US soil. Here is how the Constitution states it.

“All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which will abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

Samuel Breidbart and Maryjane Johnson offer a review of the concept and point out that there is considerable opposition to what the administration wants (https://www.brennancenter.org/research-reports/birthright-citizenship-under-us-constitution). Their analysis was published on July 29, 2025. Here are excerpts.

The original intent

“When Congress debated the language of the Citizenship Clause in 1866, Sen. Jacob Howard explained that the clause was ‘simply declaratory of . . . the law of the land already, that every person born within the limits of the United States, and subject to their jurisdiction, is by virtue of natural law and national law a citizen of the United States.’ Several lawmakers expressed concerns that such a broad guarantee would extend citizenship to the children of immigrants. Sen. John Conness affirmed that the proposed language ‘declare[s] that the children of all parentage . . . should be regarded and treated as citizens of the United States, entitled to equal civil rights with other citizens of the United States.’

In line with Howard and Conness’s understandings, the final text of the Citizenship Clause featured no language barring the children of immigrants from citizenship. The Supreme Court affirmed this understanding in Wong Kim Ark, where it rejected claims that children born in the United States to noncitizen parents were not themselves citizens.”

Breidbart and Johnson continue.

What Trump wants

“On his first day in office, President Trump issued an executive order attempting to end the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of birthright citizenship.

The president’s “Executive Order 14160 purports to deny citizenship to any baby born in the United States to a mother who is present ‘unlawfully’ or ‘lawful[ly] but temporar[ily]’ and a father who is ‘not a United States citizen or lawful permanent resident.’ In other words, under this order, the U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants and the children of parents residing in the country under temporary legal authorization, such as student visas and work visas, would not be considered U.S. citizens.”

Breidbart and Johnson add: “The order directs federal departments and agencies to deny ‘documents recognizing United States citizenship’ to these children. While the order doesn’t specify what this means, its express mention of the secretary of state and the commissioner of social security suggests that it would bar affected children from receiving passports and social security numbers, among other documents. The children would still presumably get birth certificates, which are issued by local governments, but these would no longer necessarily be considered proof of U.S. citizenship.”

Opposition to Trumps Executive Order

“State attorneys general, civil rights organizations, and immigrant rights groups soon filed lawsuits challenging the order in federal courts around the country.” But the administration remains undeterred.

Breidbart and Johnson also consider the problematic consequences of ending birthright citizenship

They write: “Trump’s executive order would cause major problems across the country if it were allowed to go into effect. Lawyers challenging the order believe that hundreds of thousands of children in the United States would be denied citizenship, thereby creating a new subclass of people lacking the full rights and protections long enjoyed by citizens.

“Additionally, without U.S. citizenship, some of these children could be rendered stateless, meaning they would not be recognized as citizens of any country. As the United Nations Refugee Agency has noted, people who are stateless often lack access to basic rights and services, such as health care, education, and the ability to travel freely. Without U.S. citizenship, these children could also end up deported to foreign countries where they have never lived and where their welfare would be endangered.”

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Concluding thoughts

Child separation is one disturbing aspect of Trump’s immigration policy, as indicated by the information examined in this post. It is harmful to the thousands of children and families affected by the policy. It is – or has been – unconstitutional. And it overlooks the evidence on how productive immigrants are and how important they are to the American economy, especially as the American population ages.

Trump disregarded the children during the shutdown, but not his self-glorifying projects….

Trump disregarded the children during the shutdown, but not his self-glorifying projects. And then the Epstein saga reemerged.

Bob Sheak, Nov 14, 2025

The Shutdown and the effects on children

The shutdown lasted 43 days, the longest federal shutdown in American history. From October 1 to November 12, 2025, government operations were partially frozen, millions of workers were affected, and the economy faced mounting pressure. Among the victims were children. Trump exacerbated a problem affecting children that already existed. Michele Kayal puts it in context (https://firstfocus.org/news/what-trump-2-0-means-for-americas-children)

“U.S. investment in the nation’s children has fallen for the third year in a row, according to First Focus on Children’s recently released Children’s Budget 2024, and actions planned by the incoming Trump Administration threaten to accelerate that trend. The report finds that the U.S. allocates less than 9% of the federal budget to children — who make up roughly one-quarter of the population. Overall, U.S. investment in children has declined nearly 6% from Fiscal Year 2023, according to the report, largely driven by deep cuts to food assistance and other life-sustaining programs. 

But it’s been worse: namely, during the first Trump Administration. In 2019, under President Trump, the United States spentmore servicing the national debt than it did on the nation’s children for the first time in history. By FY 2021, President Trump proposed eliminating 59 children’s programs, slashing $21 billion from their services, and reducing federal investment in children to just 7.32% of the budget, the lowest level since First Focus on Children began tracking in 2006.

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More on the cruelty to children

Brad Reed, a writer for Common Dreams, also reports on the cruel effects on children during the shutdown, Nov 4, 2025 (https://www.commondreams.org/snap-beneficiaries-government-shutdown).

“Beneficiaries of federal food aid are expressing anger and bewilderment at the Trump administration’s efforts to use the program as a hostage to end the current shutdown of the federal government.”

“Roughly 42 million people living in the US currently receive SNAP benefits, and The Washington Post estimates that SNAP payments account for 9% of all grocery sales in the US.”

‘On Monday [Nov 3], the Trump administration said that it would partially restart funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in the wake of two district court rulings mandating that the administration use emergency funds set up by Congress to continue the program,’ but “that it would only fund around 50% of the $8 billion in total monthly benefits, while also warning that there could be delays before SNAP beneficiaries are able to access the funds.”

The administration has options. “Before the administration allowed more than 40 million people—nearly 40% of whom are children—to go without food assistance on November 1 and refused to use a contingency fund to keep SNAP running, the Republican Party passed roughly $186 billion in cuts to the program in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act this summer.

“The bill expanded work requirements, shifted some of the cost of SNAP to the states, and restricted benefit increases, leaving millions of people vulnerable to losing their benefits.”

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Shutdown Impact on Head Start Programs

First Five Years Fund reports on this issue on Nov. 13 (https://www.ffyf.org/resources/2025/11/shutdown-2025-impact-on-head-start-programs).

“After 43 days, the federal shutdown has officially ended. In the days ahead, we urge Congress to act quickly to provide increased stability for families by passing a spending bill that funds childcare and early learning programs through Fiscal Year 2026. Passing the remaining Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill and prioritizing federal investment in early childhood care and education are vital steps for supporting young children and families.”

But, as of 11/12/25, the last day of the shutdown, “Head Start programs in 40+ states did not receive their scheduled funding on November 1st. This put many in immediate jeopardy of closing their doors.

“On November 1st, Head Start programs located in 40+ states and Puerto Rico did not receive their operational funding. These programs serve nearly 60,000 children.” This jeopardizes “access to the care, early learning, nutrition, and the stability Head Start provides. The writers add,

“In addition to those which have closed, many Head Start programs are only able to remain open by making serious concessions. Some have been forced to eliminate transportation and services, while others have had to cut back on staff or shorten operating hours. Still others have had to take out loans or open private lines of credit, raising concerns about paying interest rates and taking on associated risks if their full funding is not issued quickly once the government reopens.” 

There has been some progress. “As of Wednesday, 11/12/25, Head Start sites in 17 states and Puerto Rico had not opened.”

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Cuts to programs for the poor and “a Gleaming new bathroom in the White House.”

Jess Bidgood reports on “Lines at the Food Pantry, Billionaires at the White House” (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/us/politics/shutdown-trump-rich-poor.html). Here’s some of what she writes on contrasting images.

The longest government shutdown in American history is over, but Bidgood writes, “‘there are two sets of images from these last few weeks that could endure well beyond it.

“The first shows the lines snaking out of food pantries after the Trump administration chose not to use available funds to keep full food stamp benefits flowing to millions of poor Americans this month, and fought the federal rulings requiring it to make full benefits available.” This has been discussed above.

“The second, released on social media by President Trump himself, shows his gleaming new bathroom in the Lincoln Bedroom, renovated in gold fixtures and marble.”

These two images highlight “the striking difference in the president’s treatment of the rich and the poor.”

Bidgood reports on some of the effects of the cuts in programs of social aid to the poor, including cuts to SNAP and Medicaid, programs that Trump vowed to get rid of, which the president refers to as “Democratic things.” There were “sharp cuts to Medicaid by scaling back the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of coverage for the working poor.”

Party time for rich donors and friends

Bidgood continues. “Trump, whose administration is stocked with billionaires, has shown few reservations about cozying up to the wealthy during the government shutdown — nor about the optics of turning the White House into an opulent playground while it was going on.

‘Tonight, for example, he is slated to host a private White House dinner with Wall Street executives like Jamie Dimon. He held a dinner for donors to his White House ballroom project about two weeks into the government shutdown. And then, of course, he attended a glitzy Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago, where guests dressed as flappers and the theme was ‘A little party never killed nobody’ — a line from a song in the film version of ‘The Great Gatsby.’”

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Epstein and Trump: More evidence on Trump and girls

The Epstein scandal is relevant in any discussion of the president’s views and contacts with children, in this case with young girls. Indeed, he has a history of denigrating women. Now, the The New York Times reports on the most recent revelations (https://www.nytime.com/live/2025/11/12/us/epstein-files-trump). The article written by Glenn Thrush, Annie Karni and Devlin Barrett was updated on the 13th. Here’s some of what they report.

Messages in which Jeffrey Epstein discussed President Trump were among 20,000 documents posted online. President Trump called the release a distraction engineered by Democrats.”

“The mocking and accusatory voice of Jeffrey Epstein emerged from a trove of more than 20,000 emails made public by lawmakers on Wednesday [Nov 12], including his claim that President Trump once ‘spent hours at my house’ with a young woman who later accused Mr. Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking her when she was a teenager.

“In a series of emails with friends and associates — surfacing first in a few messages selected by House Democrats and then in full by Republicans on the House Oversight Committee — Mr. Epstein described Mr. Trump as a ‘dirty’ businessman who was ‘borderline insane,’ untrustworthy and worse in ‘real life and upclose’ than the image he sought to portray to the public.

“Mr. Trump, White House officials and administration allies dismissed the disclosures as the utterances of a discredited sexual predator who had fallen out with Mr. Trump long before his crimes became publicly known. Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, called the emails a ‘clear distraction.’ The president labeled them a ‘hoax.’”

The reporters continue.

“Wednesday’s document dump was the latest act in the rapidly unfolding political drama engulfing Speaker Mike Johnson and his Republican majority. They shuttered the House for the past two months, in part, to forestall a bipartisan effort to force a floor vote on a bill to force the Justice Department and F.B.I. to release a separate set of documents, this one involving their investigation into Mr. Epstein and his longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

“That bid gathered enough supporters to force a vote within weeks, and Mr. Johnson, who has opposed considering the measure, said he would relent and bring it to a vote next week. Congress’s newest member, Adelita Grijalva, a Democrat of Arizona who was sworn in on Wednesday, provided the final signature necessary on the resolution.”

Trump’s response

“Mr. Trump urged Republicans to reject any effort to revive a discussion of his relationship with Mr. Epstein, blaming Democrats for the release of the documents in a post on social media and writing that they were ‘trying to bring up the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax again because they’ll do anything at all to deflect on how badly they’ve done on the Shutdown.’”

What else to know:

  • Trump connections: The thousands of documents include numerous references to Mr. Trump, including some in which Mr. Epstein discusses their relationship. Others are innocuous. In one exchange, Mr. Epstein is apparently pitched on a transaction related to his Boeing 727 by someone who says they previously worked for Mr. Trump.
  • Pressure campaign ramps up: Top administration officials summoned Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado for a meeting in the White House Situation Room, escalating their pressure campaign against Republican lawmakers who have demanded a full release of files related to Mr. Epstein. Mr. Trump also reached out to Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina, one of three Republican women in the House who signed a petition that calls for a vote demanding that the Justice Department within 30 days release all of its investigative files on Mr. Epstein, but she refused his pleas on the petition.
  • A de facto adviser: A recurring presence in the messages is the author Michael Wolff, who acted as an adviser to Mr. Epstein. “I believe Trump offers an ideal opportunity,” Mr. Wolff wrote to Mr. Epstein in March 2016, according to the emails, suggesting that “becoming an anti-Trump voice gives you a certain political cover which you decidedly don’t have now.”

———-

Concluding thoughts

Trump’s priorities favoring the rich, the big corporations, and Republicans is, by now, an old story. Overall, recent polls indicate that the president has low poll ratings for his economic policies, even among about one-third of Republicans. Meanwhile, he and his administration will do their best in trying to fool the public by distracting them from the poor economy and the flood of Epstein revelations. So, far they are failing in these efforts. Despite that, the rich and powerful continue to make record profits, Trump and his family enrich themselves, while tens of millions of Americans struggle to pay the bills.

Trump wants more nuclear weapons and protection against them

Bob Sheak, Nov. 4, 2025

Testing nuclear weapons is a bad idea

Chris Walker reports on “Trump’s Push to Resume Nuclear Weapons Testing Rests on Falsehoods,” November 3, 2025 (https://truthout.org/articles/trumps-push-to-resume-nuclear-weapons-testing-rests-on-falsehoods). Walker is a news writer at Truthout, and is based out of Madison, Wisconsin. Here’s some of what he writes.

“This past week, President Donald Trump called on the Department of Defense (DOD) to restart nuclear weapons testing ‘immediately, citing false claims about other countries’ nuclear arsenals and testing.”

“Despite Trump’s suggestion that other countries are testing nuclear weapons, only one country, North Korea, has even tested such weapons in the 21st century. Indeed, most countries ended their nuclear weapons testing in the 1990s. (The U.S. suspended tests in 1992.)”

Walker writes, “Notably, Project 2025 (the policy blueprint for the Trump administration developed by the Heritage Foundation during last year’s presidential election) includes sections that discuss nuclear testing. For example, the document calls on Trump to reject the international Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. It also encourages the Trump White House to ‘move to immediate test readiness’ when it comes to the country’s nuclear arsenal.”

Opposition

Walker cites The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND).

If the U.S. re-starts testing its nuclear weapons, this will accelerate a new nuclear arms race, as other nuclear weapons states do the same.”

“CND calls for more global pressure to create diplomatic space for new treaties to be established, to push for nuclear weapons states to abide by nuclear disarmament obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and for the ratification of the CTBT by all the nuclear weapons states,” the organization continued.

Focusing on both national and local topics since the early 2000s, he has produced thousands of articles analyzing the issues of the day and their impact on the American people. He can be found on most social media platforms under the handle @thatchriswalker.

Share

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Tom Engelhardt offers criticism of Trump’s decision

(https://counterpunch.org/2025/09/08/a-potentially-world-ending-president). Engelhardt is a co-founder of the American Empire Project and the author of The United States of Fear and other books. Here’s some of what he writes

Nuclear war would end the world as we know it

He points out that the world now has “an estimated…an estimated 12,000 or so nuclear weapons of various kinds on this planet — enough, that is, to do in an almost unimaginable number of planets. Worse yet, two of the countries that possess them, India and Pakistan, only recently came close to launching a full-scale war with each other, even exchanging rounds of conventionally armed missiles, before agreeing to a ceasefire.  And keep in mind that, if those countries were to use nuclear weaponry against each other in what would still pass for a ‘limited’ nuclear war, it would most likely result not just in almost unimaginable local destruction but planetary devastation. Massive clouds of dust from those nuclear explosions could potentially block the sun, leaving us in what has come to be known as nuclear winter in which more than two billion people on this planet might indeed die.”

———-

Dan Drolletee Jr, the executive head of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists considers Trump’s proposal to start testing nuclear weapons (https://thebulletin.org/2025/10/the-experts-respond-to-trumps-proposal-to-start-testing-our-nuclear-weapons-on-an-equal-basis/#report-heading).

He points out that “Trump wrote on Truth Social, his social media site, that he had instructed the Department of War (formerly the Defense Department) to return to ‘nuclear testing’ — although it’s unclear whether he was referring to testing a nuclear delivery system (such as  a rocket) or testing a nuclear explosive device (the actual bomb itself). Those are two very different things that Trump seems to be confused about.”

In the words of prominent nuclear weapons expert Hans Kristensen of the Federation of American Scientists (who is one of the lead authors of the “Nuclear Notebook” column, published regularly in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists):

‘It’s hard to know what he means. As usual, he’s unclear, all over the map, and wrong.’ Kristensen then goes into detail, debunking a series of Trump’s assertions in his social media post.” “For example, even if China was to up the number of its warheads dramatically, that would still amount to less than a third of what the United States and Russia each already have.”

Kristensen also notes, the US already tests its missiles (without nuclear payloads) to ensure that they can launch safely and correctly: “If by testing he [Trump] means nuclear explosive testing, that would be reckless, probably not possible for 18 months, would cost money that Congress would have to approve, and it would certainly trigger Russian and Chinese and likely also India/Pakistan nuclear tests. Unlike the US, all these countries would have much to gain by restarting test testing.”

Drollete cites veteran national security reporter Walter Pincus,

“People today seem to have forgotten—if they ever knew—what a single nuclear weapon can do. The inhabitants of the Marshall Islands, whose home was turned into a nuclear proving ground, have certainly never forgotten.”

———-

Norman Solomon, the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, the author of War Made Invisible:  How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine, and a cofounder of RootsAction.org, writes here on how

“the Dangers of Nuclear War Have Never Been Higher” (https://thenation.com/article/world/nuclear-war-military-spending-doomsday).

He is particularly concerned about Trump’s decision to resume nuclear weapons’ testing. Here’s some of what he writes.

“The dangers of nuclear war have never been higher, but political pressure to prevent it is at low ebb. Eighty years after the atomic age began with the Trinity bomb test in New Mexico on July 16, 1945, words can’t possibly be adequate to describe the extent of global horrors that today’s nuclear arsenals are capable of inflicting. But mainstream US media outlets and partisan politics are routinely oblivious to the threat of oblivion.

“Despite the efforts of individuals and groups striving for arms control, the national discourse ignores the likely results of nuclear buildups—which continue to boost the actual risks of annihilation. Pronouncements from the nuclear establishment about a need to ‘maintain deterrence’ and ‘modernize’ usually go unquestioned as to the underlying assumptions. Senators and representatives praise nuclear systems with components produced in their state or district.”

“More than 700 scientists signed a letter last summer,” Solomon writes, “going beyond the focus on cost to urge the complete elimination of America’s ICBMs. The letter, organized by the Union of Concerned Scientists, explained that ‘the US could eliminate the land-based leg of the triad tomorrow and the US public would only be safer for it.’”

“The history of the last eight decades [since the US dropped two nuclear weapons on Japan]tells us that Americans will go along with astronomical spending for nuclear weaponry if they believe it makes them safer.

“Unless we effectively make the case that the opposite is true, the nuclear arms race will continue to play out in media and politics as a pricey necessity.

In recent years, numerous activists and groups have given priority to calling for abolition of nuclear weapons. It’s a position that occupies the highest moral ground, famously seized by the Nobel laureate scientist George Wald in a widely reprinted 1969 anti-war speech at MIT. ‘Nuclear weapons offer us nothing but a balance of terror, and a balance of terror is still terror,’ he said. ‘We have to get rid of those atomic weapons, here and everywhere. We cannot live with them.’”

There are profits

Solomon writes, “Meanwhile, for the corporate beneficiaries of a trillion-dollar Pentagon budget and an out-of-control nuclear weapons program, the more hostility toward Russia and China the better. And the country that first brought atomic weapons into the world is continuing to lead the way toward thermonuclear destruction.’

Nuclear weapons await launch by accident, if not intention

“For those of us who have lived in the era of nuclear bombs for many decades, still being alive can seem close to miraculous. Luck and collective efforts for sanity must have been factors. Now, the generations with most of their lives potentially ahead are in a world that could instantly make that impossible. The heightened militarism of American politics is threatening to seal their fate.”

———-

Trump dreamily thinks of protection against foreign enemies. Calls for U.S. Iron Dome are “a Fantasy”

Dr. Laura Grego, takes this position, Common Dreams, Jan 29, 2025

(https://commondreams.org/newswire/calls-for-u-s-iron-dome-a-fantasy). She is a member of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

Shortly after being elected president, “Trump issued an executive order mandating development of a hugely expensive, unrealistic and counterproductive homeland missile defense system. Comparisons to Israel’s Iron Dome are inaccurate and such a system has a low likelihood of success, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).”

Grego continues.

“President Trump’s vision of an Iron Dome over America is a fantasy. The apparent successes of Israel’s Iron Dome system are not relevant to US homeland defense. Iron Dome defends small areas from short-range nonnuclear missiles. It’s a vastly easier task than defending the whole country against missiles that travel 100 times further and seven times faster than those Iron Dome is built for.

“Homeland missile defense requires an entirely different kind of defense, and because ICBMs carry nuclear-armed missiles, it needs to be very reliable and effective. Invoking Iron Dome is just marketing, trying to manufacture credibility for something that has never worked.

“Over the last 60 years, the United States has spent more than $350 billion on efforts to develop a defense against nuclear-armed ICBMs. This effort has been ineffective against a real-world threat. A UCS-MIT technical analysis found that even a less-developed country such as North Korea could use long-understood countermeasures to fool midcourse defenses like the current homeland defense system, the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system. Proposals to get around those weaknesses by building space-based missile defenses have repeatedly been abandoned because they are expensive, very technically challenging, and readily defeated. Trump’s idea of a space-based missile defense is a bad investment.”

———-

Concluding Thoughts

Trump is again – and again – advocating policies that, if advanced, would be ineffective and harmful to the country. When it comes to nuclear weapons’ policies, the wrong decisions could destroy not only the US but all nations. And given his power, he could well launch these weapons with little or no restraint against any supposed enemy (e.g. China). He has said he is against war, but his rhetoric and decisions contradict that position.

There is opposition to such policies, but it appears too weak to sway the president. He will do what he wants to do, perhaps in a moment of anger, distraction, or mental breakdown.

The president abuses power

Bob Sheak, Oct 28, 2025

On Oct. 18, an unprecedented 7 million or more Americans joined in a reported
2,600 rallies across the country to express opposition to Trump’s self-serving
ambitions and abuse of power. The millions who rallied said loud and clearly that
they don’t want a King as president. Over his second presidency, Trump has often
acted something like a king, or as a president who is above the law. Worrisome, he
dominates the Republican Party, has support from 30% of so of the population in
MAGA, has numerous allies among the rich and powerful corporations, and can
often count on the Supreme Court.
In this post, I identify some of the evidence that supports Trump’s anti-democratic

thirst for power.

Behaves like a “king”
Chris Walker offers some evidence (https://truthout.org/articles/trump-says-hes-
not-a-king-a-majority-of-americans-believe-he-wants-to-be). He is a news writer
at Truthout, and is based out of Madison, Wisconsin.
In his article, Walker cites statements by Taegan Goddard, who manages the
site Political Wire. Goddard says it only took a minute to come up with examples
of how Trump has acted like a king. Goddard wrote:
“He’s raised taxes without approval from Congress; He’s canceled programs that
were duly enacted into law; He’s directed prosecutors to charge his political
opponents despite little or no evidence; He’s deployed National Guard troops over
the objections of state governors.
“Each of these actions reflects the kind of unchecked, unilateral power that
America’s founders rebelled against,” Goddard opined. “In fact, the list reads like
an updated version of the Declaration of Independence’s grievances against King
Walker also points to new polling that shows that most Americans are worried
about the functioning of U.S. democratic norms, and that they do not want Trump
to act as a king. He cites a poll, “52 percent of Americans believe Trump wants to

be a king, with only 36 percent saying they don’t believe he wants to be a king. In
a separate question, 85 percent of respondents said they don’t think Trump should

be a king, either.”

Deployment of troops just to “Democratic” cities
He has found various dubious justifications for deploying National Guard troops in
only Democratic cities and threatening the constitutional rights of Americans.
George Cassidy Payne writes on how the White House is waging war at home
((https://commondreams.org/opinion/trump-wages-war-on-us). The article was
published on Sept. 26, 2025. Here’s some of what he writes.
“President Donald Trump has treated the US military less as an instrument of
national defense than as a personal tool for enforcing political will. National Guard
units have been deployed to Washington, DC, Los Angeles, and other cities under
circumstances that critics argue constitute intimidation rather than legitimate
security operations. Citizens and green card holders have reportedly been detained
without clear legal authority, raising urgent questions about the erosion of civil
liberties. Meanwhile, the Department of Defense has been rhetorically rebranded
as the Department of War, signaling a broader offensive posture not just abroad,
but potentially at home.”
Payne notes that the deployment of National Guard forces to US cities reflects
“the militarization of domestic governance.” Trump has framed these deployments
as necessary for “security,” yet the timing, targets, and accompanying
rhetoric—such as memes depicting him as a cavalry commander in Apocalypse
Now—signal political theater intended to intimidate and assert personal authority
over the citizenry.”
He is exercising anti-democratic orders and advancing “executive orders,
emergency declarations, or selective enforcement” and enabling the National
Guard and other government agents to engage in “illegal detention of residents,
militarized policing in domestic spaces, emergency declarations used to bypass
Congress, all examples of authoritarian rule.
“The consequences for democracy are tangible, Payne writes. “Norms are eroded
incrementally: The legitimacy of elections is challenged, opposition figures are
threatened, and civil liberties are subordinated to political calculation. Militarized

Democracy does not collapse in a single moment; it atrophies when citizens fail to
defend institutions designed to protect them.”
The central question for Payne is this: “Will Americans exercise the tools the
Constitution provides to resist authoritarian drift? The blueprint exists, but it
requires active defense. Democratic institutions are not self-sustaining; they
depend on the vigilance, courage, and collective action of citizens. Failure to act
risks normalizing domestic militarization and the gradual erosion of civil liberties.
In this sense, Trump’s presidency is both a warning and a test. It challenges us to
confront the vulnerabilities of our political system, to insist upon accountability,
and to recognize that democracy is not merely procedural, it is relational,
contingent on a society willing to defend it against those who would wield power

as an instrument of personal dominion.

Talks about a third term
Trump continues to toy with the unconstitutional idea of being a third-term
president, which would mean ignoring the 22nd Amendment. Kristen Welker and
Megan Lebowitz are among those reporting on this story
(https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-third-term-white-house-
methods-rcna198752). Their story was published in March 30, 2025. Here’s some
of what they write.
“President Donald Trump did not rule out the possibility of seeking a third term in
the White House, which is prohibited by the Constitution under the 22nd
Amendment, saying in an exclusive interview with NBC News that there were
methods for doing so and clarifying that he was ‘not joking.’”
“‘A lot of people want me to do it,’ Trump said in a Sunday-morning phone call
with NBC News, referring to his allies.”
“When asked whether he has been presented with plans to allow him to seek a third
term, Trump said, ‘There are methods which you could do it.’”
Welker and Megan continue.

“The White House has amplified Trump’s comments likening himself to royalty,
posting a picture of a fake magazine cover depicting the president with a crown
after the administration shot down congestion pricing in New York City.
“The White House’s post to X quoted Trump’s previous comments on Truth Social:

‘LONG LIVE THE KING!’”

Says the greatest threat is “the enemy within”
Trump has said that that the greatest threat to the United States is the “enemy
within,” by which he seems to refer to Democrats and anyone else who opposes
him or doesn’t like him.
He says he “hates” Democrats and would, at least, like to marginalize them
politically. He has a list of those he wants to punish by having his Justice
Department manipulate and distort the law. They are, in his words, “the enemy
within,” Michael Klare considers this anti-democraticTrump plan
(https://thenation.com/article/politics/trump-hegseth-military-war-diversity).
Klare is the Nation’s defense correspondent, is professor emeritus of peace and
world-security studies at Hampshire College and senior visiting fellow at the Arms
Control Association in Washington, DC. Most recently, he is the author of All Hell
Breaking Loose: The Pentagon’s Perspective on Climate Change.
“The generals and admirals who traveled from their posts around the world to
Quantico, Virginia, last month to hear from President Trump and Secretary of War
(as he now fashions himself) Pete Hegseth have been training for over a dozen
years to fight and overcome China and or Russia in an all-out, high-end conflict.
“… they were told to put all that aside, and to dismantle the diversity measures
they had long embraced, while also mobilizing for the ‘war within.’
“Without actually coming out and saying it, Trump indicated that the primary focus
of US strategy would now shift from a focus on war with other great powers to
combatting narco-cartels in Latin America and leftist ‘insurrectionists’ in US
cities.” And without evidence, he got specific.
“Many US cities are safe, he claimed, ‘but it seems that the ones that are run by the
radical-left Democrats—[look] what they’ve done to San Francisco, Chicago, New

York, Los Angeles—they’re very unsafe places, and we’re going to straighten them
out one by one.” Then, facing the assembled officers, he added, “This is going to
be a major part for some of the people in this room. That’s a war, too. It’s a war
from within.”
“Trump then went on to describe major Democratic-governed US cities like those

four and Portland, Oregon, as ‘war zones,’ requiring military intervention.

Arbitrarily orders the demolition of the East Wing
He has arbitrarily ordered that the East Wing of the White House be demolished.
David E. Sanger has reported at length about this. Sanger covers the Trump
administration and a range of national security issues. He has been a Times
journalist for more than four decades and has written four books on foreign policy
and national security challenges.
In this article, Sanger emphasizes two “lessons” that capture what Trump has done.
“First is the permanence of the act — once torn down, it is hard to imagine that the
East Wing will ever be re-created. For President Trump, of course, that was the
point. He learned that lesson in his New York real estate days, when he was known
to bring out the wrecking balls to turn a vision into a fait accompli. Once his $300
million ballroom rises in its place, he may be betting that how it got there will be
all but forgotten.
“But perhaps more important, and more telling, is how Mr. Trump went about it:
the initial claim that his new ballroom would not be ‘touching’ the White House,
and the absence of notice when that changed. Then, the elaborate descriptions by
White House officials of the legal loopholes that made it perfectly fine to destroy a
wing of the people’s house without consultation about whether Mr. Trump’s

90,000-square-foot ballroom was worth the historical or architectural trade-offs.”

Concluding thoughts
There are plenty of reasons to support the millions of Americans who rallied
against Trump on “No King” day. In this post, I have considered just a few of the

prominent reasons. It is not hopeless. Recent polls indicate that a majority of
Americans are critical of Trump and what he is doing as president. And millions of
Americans are suffering financially, in part because of the effects of the president’s
tariffs and the Republican Party’s efforts to cut government programs, with the
firing of tens of thousands of federal workers. Writing in The Atlantic Magazine,
David A. Graham offers some hope
(https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2025/12/2026-midterms-trump-
threat.684615).
“The most important defense against losing our democracy is the same thing that
makes it a democracy in the first place: the people. An engaged electorate,
demanding clean elections and turning out in force, has been the strongest and
most consistent bulwark against Trump. “It is going to require that every single
American do everything in their power to ensure that elections happen, to ensure
that they are free and fair, and to push back on this extremism,” Skye Perryman,
the president and CEO of Democracy Forward, told me.”

Trump’s dubious claim for compensation

Bob Sheak, Oct 23, 2025

The Washington Post quoted Trump on Tuesday, Oct. 21, that “the federal government owes him ‘a lot of money’ for prior Justice Department investigations into his actions and insisted he would have the ultimate say on any payout because any decision will ‘have to go across my desk’” (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/21025/10/21/trump-fbi-justice-department-47b2c9ac-aed0-11f0-ab72-a5fffa9bf3eb_story.html).  The implication is that Trump thinks he can use the power of his office and his control over the Justice Department to ensure that he will be given this money. And it is a substantial amount of money.

The Post story further explains the issue in question.

“Trump’s comments to reporters at the White House came in response to questions about a New York Times story that said he had filed administrative claims before being reelected seeking roughly $230 million in damages related to the FBI’s 2022 search of his Mar-a-Lago property for classified documents….”

The flaw in Trump’s views of the case is that he did break federal law when, after the end of his first presidency, he took boxes of public documents to his Florida private estate. At the time, there were news stories about the case. One of the news reports was written by CNN journalists Kaitlan CollinsKevin LiptakKatelyn PolantzSara MurrayEvan PerezGabby Orr and Dan Berman, CNN, Aug 9, 2022 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/21/trumlp-fbi-justice-department/4 7b2c9ac-aed0-11f0-ab72-a5fffa9bf3eb_story.html).  Here are excerpts.

“The FBI executed a search warrant Monday at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, as part of an investigation into the handling of presidential documents, including classified documents, that may have been brought there, three people familiar with the situation told CNN.”

”The search began early Monday morning and law enforcement personnel appeared to be focused on the area of the club where Trump’s offices and personal quarters are, according to a person familiar with the matter.

“The FBI’s search included examining where documents were kept, according to another person familiar with the investigation, and boxes of items were taken. Following the National Archives’ recovering of White House records from Mar-a-Lap..”

It’s worth noting, as Collins and her colleagues point out,

“Christina Bobb, Trump’s attorney, said the FBI seized documents. ‘President Trump and his legal team have been cooperative with FBI and DOJ officials every step of the way. The FBI did conduct an unannounced raid and seized paper,’ Bobb said.”

“The National Archives, charged with collecting and sorting presidential material, has previously said at least 15 boxes of White House records were recovered from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort – including some that were classified.”

The journalists also note, “It is a federal crime to remove classified documents wrongly.”

———-

Ali Velshi’s book, The Trump Indictments: The 91 Criminal Counts Against the Former President of the United States (publ. 2023), includes one having to do with the documents (pp. 54-57). Here is some of what Velshi reports.

“1. Defendant Donald J. Trump was the forty-fifth President of the United States of America. He held office from January 20, 2017, until January 20, 2021. As President, Trump had lawful access to the most sensitive classified documents and national defense information gathered and owned by the United States government, including information from the agencies that comprise the United States Intelligence Community and the United States Department of Defense.

“2. Over the course of his presidency, Trump gathered newspapers, press clippings, letters, notes, cards, photographs, official documents, and other materials in cardboard boxes that he keeps in the White House. Among the materials Trump stored in his boxes were hundreds of classified documents.

“3. The classified documents Trump stored in his boxes included information regarding defense and weapons capabilities of both the United States and foreign countries; United States nuclear programs; potential vulnerabilities of the United Cto a foreign attack. The authorized disclosure of these classified documents could put at risk the national security of the Untied States, foreign relations, the safety of the United States military, and human sources and the continued viability of sensitive intelligence collection methods.”

Velshi makes other points, including this one: “On August 8, pursuant to a court-authorized search warrant, the FBI recovered from Trump office and storage rooms at the Mar-a-Lago Club 102 more documents with classification markings.”

———-

Concluding thoughts

Given the official record of Trump’s handling of classified documents, it appears that his demands for $230 million in compensation border on the absurd. However, the question remains whether in the present context, in which he and his party have something like total control over the federal government, he may get away with it.

Republicans put the interests of the rich over the majority. They disregard the healthcare system in crsis

Bob Sheak

Reasons for and effects of the government shutdown

The country is in shutdown because the Democratic Party wants to ensure that the Affordable Care tax credits are extended, while Trump and the Republicans refuse to discuss the issue until the government is opened. However, whenever it comes to a vote, the Republicans are expected to reject the Democratic proposal.  

Selena Simmons-Duffin writes for NPR that the tax credits make “ACA [Affordable Care Act] health care premiums affordable for many Americans” (https://npr.org/1025/10/12/nx-s1-5570849/shutdown-aca-health-care-tax-credits}.

She explains. “The tax credits that make ACA health care premiums affordable for many Americans don’t expire until December, as Republican lawmakers note. But Democratic lawmakers want to see them extended before enrollment begins Nov. 1, and they have made that a condition of voting to reopen the government.” The Democrats fear that Trump and the Republicans will not extend the tax credits, which otherwise continue into 2026.  

“It’s not just a battle over political messaging,” Simmons-Duffin writes. “These are real health insurance marketplaces where real people — 24 million of them — buy coverage. The amount the federal government picks up for their monthly premiums makes a big difference.” She identifies “5 things to know about the healthcare fight behind the shutdown.” (1) She refers to polls indicating that a majority of respondents favor extending the tax credits. (2) The issue is urgent since open enrollment starts Nov. 1. (3) Premiums are set to shoot up next year.

(4) “When researchers at KFF analyzed 2026 insurance filings, they found that premiums will double for many consumers next year. ‘On average, we’re expecting premium payments by enrollees to increase by 114% if these enhanced tax credits expire,’ says Cynthia Cox, director of the Program on the ACA at KFF.

Sky-high premiums might drive people to risk it and go uninsured, she says. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 4 million people will become uninsured in the next few years if the enhanced tax credits expire.”

(5) “The subsidies are expensive for the government. The subsidies that kept costs down for consumers cost the federal government a lot of money. The Congressional Budget Office estimates it would cost the government $350 billion over the next decade if the enhanced subsidies were extended permanently.”

Simmons-Duffin adds: “Conservative groups that have always opposed the Affordable Care Act are against the enhanced subsidies. A coalition of groups recently argued in a letter to the president that the enhanced tax credits were meant to be temporary during the COVID-19 pandemic and that extending them will exacerbate rising health care costs.” They dismiss the harm that will cause so many people to be priced out of the healthcare market.

One of the principal arguments invoked by the Republicans is that the national debt of some 37 trillion dollars makes it irrational to add more to that debt. The truth is that Republican President and Congress are principal actors in raising this debt. Their tax cuts for the rich are so much greater than the tax-credit issue now at stake makes their argument ridiculous. Consider the following evidence reported on April 10, 2025 (https://budget.senate.gov/ranking-members-newsroom/press/news-cbo-analysis-shows-republican-tax-giveaways-add-52-trillion-to-national-debt-over-30-years).

“At the request of U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Ranking Member of the Senate Budget Committee, the independent, nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a new projection showing that the tax giveaways in the Senate Republicans’ budget proposal will add $52 trillion to the national debt over the next 30 years. The previous projection for the cost of extending the Trump tax law and the Republican leadership’s attempt to use a budget gimmick, known as “current policy baseline,” was $37 trillion over the 2024-2054 period.

This new projection follows recently released data from the Joint Committee on Taxation showing a new estimate that the Republican plan to extend the 2017 Trump tax law will cost $5.5 trillion including interest over the next decade. The budget resolution Senate Republicans passed last week allocates an additional $1.5 trillion for tax giveaways. This brings the total potential 10-year cost of the Republican tax plan, which will overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy and corporations, to more than $7 trillion. 

“It has taken over 249 years, since the Founders signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, for the U.S. to accumulate nearly $37 trillion in debt – and today the Republicans want to use a budget gimmick to add an astronomical $52 trillion to our debt with one bill with one intention: to fund massive tax giveaways for billionaires,” said Senator Jeff Merkley, Ranking Member of the Senate Budget Committee. “For 30 years, Republicans have been changing the rules to give tax cuts to the wealthy – and families have been stuck paying the bill. Republicans who claim to care about fiscal responsibility should be outraged and doing everything they can to stop it. This is the Great Betrayal of working families across the country.”

———-

The current Republican agenda is far-reaching

The current political fight reflects a broader goal of the Trump administration, namely, to diminish the size and power of the federal government generally and to create a presidency with extraordinary power, that of a “king.” Coral Davenport and her colleagues provide a detailed and insightful analysis of this anti-democratic vision (https://nytimes.com/2025/09/29/us/politics/russel-vought-trump-budget.html). She highlights the role of Russel Vought, the White House budget director, in this project. Vought is a central figure in Trump’s administration when it comes to budget issues. Here is just a little of what Davenport writes.

“Now Mr. Vought, 49, is leveraging the shutdown of the federal government to further advance his goals of slashing agencies and purging employees. In a series of social media posts on Thursday, Mr. Vought said the administration had delayed or halted about $8 billion in what he called “Green New Scam funding to fuel the Left’s climate agenda,” a move that affects projects in 16 states, most of which are led by Democrats. He also paused about $18 billion in approved infrastructure funding for two major transportation projects primarily in New York City, whose state delegation includes Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, and Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader.

Just before the shutdown, Mr. Vought’s office had told agencies to prepare for mass firings unless Congress could strike a deal to keep the government open.”

———-

 US Healthcare System Is in Crisis

James K. Elsey, MD, FACS analyzes how the US health care system as a whole is in crisis (https://facs.org-articles/bulletin/2025/february-2025-volume-110-issue-2/us-healthcare-system-is-in-crisis). The article was published on Feb. 5 of this year. Dr. James Elsey is a professor of surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, and Past Vice-Chair of the ACS [Affordable Care Act] Board of Regents.

Bear in mind, Trump, Vought, and the Republicans want to cut overall government healthcare spending, along with other government programs they don’t like.  

Here is some of what Elsey writes.

“During my 44 years of active surgical practice, I have witnessed numerous, significant, and onerous progressive changes that threaten the quality, safety, accessibility, and affordability of medical care in this country. Sadly, it has evolved into a highly corporatized system controlled by a decreasing number of increasingly powerful conglomerates where profit is often the main metric of performance and success. The stark realities of this dark devolution create daily difficulties for patients trapped in this harsh and inequitable system.”

His patients are commonly more concerned about the costs of a procedure. They ask: “How can I pay for this? Will I lose my house or my job? How fast can I get back to work?,” followed, all too frequently, by comments like: “There is no way I can afford this. I don’t have access to that level of deductible. This will bankrupt me.” And, periodically, they would come to this decision: “I just can’t proceed, doctor. This will put my family in the street. I’ll just tough it out and take my chances.”

Elsey continues. “There is something deeply and fundamentally wrong with this increasingly common situation where the accessibility of healthcare, which I believe should be a basic human right, is determined by one’s financial station in life. For this to be occurring in the most affluent country in the world is not just wrong, but in my opinion, abjectly amoral.”

“This system leaves too many people out resulting in 26 million uninsured and 43 million underinsured.In fact, recent World Health Organization metrics suggest that the US does an incredibly poor job with healthcare delivery, with the US ranked 37th overall to comparable Western country metrics and last among the 11 highest-income countries.4 These rankings are not surprising when you consider the fact that the US healthcare delivery system consumes 17% of our current gross domestic product and is the leading cause of personal bankruptcy accounting for 66.5% of total US individual monetary defaults.5,6

Placing Profits over Patient Care

“The US healthcare system handicaps business competitiveness with a crippling 160% increase in employer healthcare costs in the last 20 years, which averages about $14,000 per employee.” Elsey writes.7 “This system also causes downward pressure on employee wages resulting in a 8.9% inflation adjusted decrease in employee household income.8 In addition, it requires many Americans and their families to line up in fields for humanitarian healthcare events mirroring the activities of many third-world countries as well as requiring increasing numbers of citizens to use the ER as their default medical care.

“This default is fragmented, costly, inefficient, and a generally poor method of providing care with a total lack of continuity. This healthcare model also drives significant racial disparities in the availability and quality of care, and in the outcomes for these patient populations.

“Currently the US, compared to similar Western countries [all of which have some form of universal healthcare] has the lowest life expectancy at birth, highest reported maternal and infant mortality, highest hospitalization rate from preventable causes, highest death rate for avoidable and treatable conditions, highest suicide rate, and highest chronic disease burden rate in the world.9

“Our system lacks an emphasis on primary and preventive care. We strain under a dysfunctional payment system. It is plagued by a costly and onerous liability industry, and it has fallen prey to the detrimental policies of the medical industrial complex and corporatized care.”

———-

Concluding Thoughts

The Trump-Republican justification for not negotiating on an end to the shutdown reflects a dubious view of the causes. Rather than suggesting that their phony concern with the nation’s fiscal issues is what drives them, the evidence indicates they want what right-wing politicians have always wanted, less government spending on healthcare and other programs for Americans, expansive deregulation, and any other policy to improve profits for big corporations and the rich.  

A hateful president

Bob Sheak, Oct. 3, 2025

This article provides five examples that illustrate this hatefulness.

#1 – The Central Park Five

Here are extracts from Wikipedia’s account (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Park_jogger_case)/

The Central Park jogger case (sometimes termed the Central Park Five case) was a criminal case concerning the assault and rape of Trisha Meili, a woman who was running in Central Park in Manhattan, New York, on April 19, 1989.[1][2] Crime in New York City was peaking in the late 1980s and early 1990s as the crack epidemic surged.[3][4] On the night Meili was attacked, dozens of teenagers had entered the park, and there were reports of muggings and physical assaults.[2]

Six teenagers were indicted in relation to the Meili assault. Charges against one, Steven Lopez, were dropped after Lopez pleaded guilty to a different assault. The remaining five—Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Korey Wise (known as the Central Park Five, later the Exonerated Five)—were convicted of the charged offenses and served sentences ranging from seven to thirteen years.[5]

More than a decade after the attack, while incarcerated for attacking five other women in 1989, serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed to the Meili assault and said he was the only actor; DNA evidence confirmed his involvement.[6] The convictions against McCray, Richardson, Salaam, Santana, and Wise were vacated in 2002; Lopez’s convictions were vacated in July 2022.”

Donald Trump took out ads in major newspapers for $85,000, urging that the boys suffer the death penalty. Even after they were exonerated, Trump did not publicly admit his mistake.

Tyler Page reports on the case (http://nytimes.com/2025/09/22/us/politics/trump-kirk-memorial-hate.html).

“After five teenagers were accused of assaulting and raping a young female jogger in New York City in 1989, Mr. Trump called for New York State to bring back the death penalty and told reporters, ‘I want society to hate them,’ according to a book on the president by Maggie Haberman, a New York Times reporter. (The men were later exonerated.)”

#2 – Trump vows retribution against his opponents (e.g. Democrats and critics).

During the campaign for a second presidential term, Trump told his supporters that HE is their retribution, as reported on July 25, 2025, by Jacob Knutson (https://democracydocket.com/analysis/trump-administration-weaponization-government-targeting-political-opponents).

“At a political conference in Maryland two years ago, Trump told hundreds of his supporters that he would be a tool of vengeance should they return him to the White House.

“‘I am your retribution,’ Trump said before repeating it again for emphasis.

Trump’s now returned to the White House, and he is fulfilling his promise. 

From the Department of Justices to the most peripheral federal agencies, Trump and his political appointees are weaponizing the bureaucracy to go after hundreds of the president’s political opponents and public officials who attempt to hold him accountable.

“To carry out this effort, Trump has obliterated the longstanding firewall protecting the Department of Justice (DOJ) and other agencies from being used for political ends.

“The use by Trump of the massive resources of federal law enforcement against his political opponents threatens fair elections and aims to intimidate public officials out of using their positions to hold Trump accountable. As such, it represents perhaps his most chilling move yet to undermine democracy.”

#3 – Trump’s remarks at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service

Tyler Pager reports on some of what Trump said at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service  (http://nytimes.com/2025/09/22/us/politics/trump-kirk-memorial-hate.html. Tyler Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.

“As tens of thousands of people mourned the conservative activist Charlie Kirk on Sunday, President Trump made a seemingly unscripted remark that summed up the retribution campaign that has come to define his second term.”

“‘I hate my opponent,’ Mr. Trump told the crowd at the memorial in Arizona, ‘and I don’t want the best for them.’”

“He spoke just minutes after Mr. Kirk’s widow, Erika, said she forgave her husband’s killer. Here is what she said.

“I forgive him because it was what Christ did, and it is what Charlie would do,” she said. “The answer to hate is not hate. The answer we know from the Gospel is love and always love.”

Pager continues. “‘At a time where the nation desperately needs to be bringing down the temperature, you’re saying he authentically doesn’t want to bring it down, or you’re saying that he authentically hates half of America,’ said Sarah Matthews, who was Mr. Trump’s deputy press secretary in the first term until breaking with him over the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. ‘It just goes to show that’s what his mantra has always been. It’s just all about division and feeling like a victim and wanting to hate his opponents and get retribution.’”

#4 – Trump posts tawdry videos of Democratic Leaders Schumer and Jeffries after he met with them and ahead of the government shutdown

Kit Maher reports on this for CNN (https://cnn.com/2025/09/29/politics/trump-ai-generated-video-schumer-jeffries-shutdown). Here is some of what Maher writes.

“As the US government barrels toward a shutdown, President Donald Trump shared a racist video on social media, which appears to be AI-generated, depicting House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries wearing a sombrero and a mustache and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaking in a fake voice.

“Jeffries and Schumer met with Trump just hours before at the White House to discuss the looming shutdown.

In the video, Schumer is depicted as arguing for undocumented immigrants to get ‘free healthcare’ because minority voters hate Democrats and they could use the votes in the next election.

“As mariachi music plays in the background of the video, the fake Schumer voice says, ‘There’s no way to sugar coat it: Nobody likes Democrats anymore.’

“The fake voice goes on to echo false GOP claims about Democratic policies and slam liberal leaders as ‘woke.’”

“The video was posted on Trump’s X account as well his official Truth Social account.”

Responses

“Shortly after Trump posted the video, Jeffries wrote on X, ‘Bigotry will get you nowhere. Cancel the Cuts. Lower the Cost. Save Healthcare. We are NOT backing down.’”

“Schumer followed moments later, commenting on X, ‘If you think your shutdown is a joke, it just proves what we all know: You can’t negotiate. You can only throw tantrums.’”

“‘More than 20 million Americans are on the brink of experiencing dramatically increased premiums, co-pays and deductibles because of the Republican refusal to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits which benefit working class Americans,’ Jeffries said. ‘Working-class Americans, their health care, that’s what we’re fighting to preserve, to defend and to strengthen.’”

#5 – Trump is particularly focused on punishing Democratic cities and states  

White House Uses Shutdown to Maximize Pain and Punish Political Foes

By Tony Romm, New York Times, Oct 1, 2025

(https://nytimes.com/2025/10/01/us/politics/white-house-shutdown-punishment.html). Tony Romm is a reporter covering economic policy and the Trump administration for The Times, based in Washington.

Here are excerpts from the article.

“The Trump administration took steps on Wednesday to maximize the pain of the government shutdown, halting billions of dollars in funds for Democratic-led states while readying a plan to lay off potentially droves of civil servants imminently.

“The moves by the White House appeared both unprecedented and punitive, underscoring the risks of a fiscal stalemate that had no end in sight. It also evinced how President Trump might try to leverage the government-wide closure to achieve his agenda, slash the budget and exact revenge on his political enemies.

“In a series of social media posts, Russell T. Vought, the White House budget director, said the administration had paused or moved to cancel the delivery of about $26 billion in previously approved funds across a range of programs, describing the money as wasteful or in need of further review.

Here’s one of Romm’s examples. “The timing seemed to be no mere coincidence, nor were Mr. Vought’s choices of location. He said the administration was terminating one tranche of funds, totaling about $8 billion, because it was ‘Green New Scam funding to fuel the Left’s climate agenda,’ a move that affected projects in 16 states, most of which are led by Democrats.”

Romm continues. “In a second instance, the Trump administration paused about $18 billion in approved infrastructure funding for two major transportation projects primarily in New York City, whose state delegation includes Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, and Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader. The two men have been frequent targets of Mr. Trump’s personal attacks, and the Transportation Department said the money would be held pending further review.

“Mr. Vought’s budget maneuvers marked an attempt to formalize Mr. Trump’s threat from a day earlier, when he described a shutdown as a ‘good’ opportunity to cut federal agencies, programs and benefits he disfavors in ways that would harm Democrats. He said at the time that it could include another round of mass layoffs targeting ‘a lot’ of government workers.”

Thus, “many federal employees are now furloughed, while others, including military service members and airport baggage screeners, are forced to report for work without pay. While those employees will eventually get back pay, there is no clear indication of when that might happen. Scores of critical government services are also halted or reduced significantly.”

Hours after Mr. Vought pledged to revoke some climate-related funding, the Energy Department offered scant details about its cuts. The agency said it had terminated 321 awards for more than 223 projects, claiming the investments did not ‘advance the nation’s energy needs’ and were not economically viable.’”

“Overall, the government is already expected to employ 300,000 fewer workers by December than it did in January. The substantial decline reflects a series of firings, layoffs and induced resignations that date back to the start of the president’s term, and the work of the cost-cutting campaign orchestrated by the Department of Government Efficiency.”

Concluding thoughts

In a March article for The Atlantic, Peter Wehner writes that “Trump’s Appetite for Revenge Is Insatiable” and he is doing what he can to satisfy this morally twisted urge (https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/01/us/politics/white-house-shutdown-punishment.html). Wehner reminds us that “No one can say they didn’t know.” Indeed, “During his first official campaign rally for the 2024 Republican nomination, held in Waco, Texas, Donald Trump vowed retribution against those he perceives as his enemies.”

Wehner notes, “Last Friday, in the Great Hall of the Justice Department, the president described his adversaries as ‘scum,’ ‘savages,’ and ‘Marxists,’ as well as ‘deranged, ‘thugs,’ ‘violent vicious lawyers,’ and ‘a corrupt group of hacks and radicals within the ranks of the American government.’”

“The threat this poses to American democracy is obvious,” Wehner writes. He continues. “A president and an administration with a Mafia mentality can create a Mafia state. They can target innocent people, shut down dissent, intimidate critics into silence, violate democratic norms, act without any statutory authority, sweep away checks and balances, spread disinformation and conspiracy theories, ignore court orders, and even declare martial law.”

An alternative

Later in the article, Wehner refers to a book by Václav Havel, “written as president of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic,—a playwright, human-rights activist, and dissident whose words shook the foundations of the Soviet empire—meditated on politics, morality, and civility. He emphasized, again and again, ‘the moral origins of all genuine politics.’

“Some people considered him naive, a hopeless idealist, but he pushed back. ‘Evil will remain with us,’ Havel wrote, ‘no one will ever eliminate human suffering, the political arena will always attract irresponsible and ambitious adventurers and charlatans. And man will not stop destroying the world. In this regard, I have no illusions.”

“Havel went on: “Neither I nor anyone else will ever win this war once and for all. At the very most, we can win a battle or two—and not even that is certain. Yet I still think it makes sense to wage this war persistently. It has been waged for centuries, and it will continue to be waged—we hope—for centuries to come. This must be done on principle, because it is the right thing to do.”

Havel later wrote:

“So anyone who claims that I am a dreamer who expects to transform hell into heaven is wrong. I have few illusions. But I feel a responsibility to work towards the things I consider good and right. I don’t know whether I’ll be able to change certain things for the better, or not at all. Both outcomes are possible….

Our republic and its ideals are supremely good causes. We should strive to protect them, which begins by speaking out for them, and by trying to do, in whatever circumstances we find ourselves, what Havel did during his ennobling and consequential life: to once again give depth and dimension to notions such as love, friendship, compassion, humility, and forgiveness. To refuse to live within the lie. And to awaken the goodwill that is slumbering within our society.”

An anti-worker administration

Bob Sheak Sept 12, 2025

The economy is not doing well for the majority

Brad Bannon nails it in his Sept. 10 report: “Jobs are down, prices are up and Trump is in trouble (https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/5494559-trump-broken-promises-inflation). Brad Bannon is a national Democratic strategist and CEO of Bannon Communications Research which polls for Democrats, labor unions and progressive issue groups. He hosts the popular progressive podcast on power, politics and policy, Deadline D.C. with Brad Bannon.    

Bannon refers to a new jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that “paint an astonishingly bleak picture of the Trump economy.” He continues. “The nation created few jobs in August, and BLS added to the grim portrait by taking off the board almost a million jobs that had supposedly been created over the last year.”

And the economy is still affected by inflation. On this, Bannon points out that

Prices in July were up by 2.7 percent over the year prior, and employers predict a big increase in the cost of health insurance.” A recent national survey of registered voters for The Economist by YouGov.com finds that “Inflation was the problem that the most voters worried about and Republicans were even more concerned about the high cost of living than Democrats.” He adds, “Less than 40 percent of voters approved of Trump’s handling of high prices.” Further, Trump’s “stiff taxes [tariffs] on imports and his deportation of immigrant farm and construction workers have placed a severe burden on hard working and financially hard-pressed American families.” 

———-

Stagflation concerns rise with rising inflation and jobless claims

Andrew Ackerman and Lauren Kaori Gurley report on this issue for the  Washington Post (https://washingtonpost.com/business/2025/09/11/august-inflation-trump-tariffs). Andrew covers the way Washington oversees Wall Street. follow on X@amacker. Lauren is the labor reporter for The Washington Post. She previously covered labor and tech for Vice for three years. follow on X@laurenkgurley

Inflation

“Inflation heated up in August at a 2.9 percent annual rate — a faster pace than in June and July as higher housing and food prices weighed on consumers’ wallets, according to the Labor Department.” On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.4 percent — a bit hotter than expectations, according to the agency’s consumer price index. Higher shelter costs was the largest factor in the monthly rise, though food prices also jumped 0.5 percent. The hotter figures are well above a low set in April.

“Earlier this summer, consumer prices began rising across a broader range of goods and services. June data pointed to notable increases in imports such as cosmetics, shoes and toys, as well as medical care. In July, furniture prices — heavily exposed to tariffs — jumped 0.9 percent, while tomato prices, hit by duties on Mexican imports, surged 3.3 percent.”

“Last month, apparel prices rose 0.5 percent and used car and truck prices rose 1 percent. And new vehicle prices ticked higher after four straight months of price declines or no changes.”

Unemployment

“In the labor market, fresh revisions to government data show U.S. employers added far fewer jobs over the summer than initially reported, underscoring a loss of momentum in hiring. The Labor Department said Tuesday that businesses created 911,000 fewer jobs from April 2024 through March 2025 than earlier estimates suggested — evidence the slowdown was already underway even before Trump’s sweeping new tariffs and immigration policies began squeezing business costs.”

“Separately, new applications for weekly unemployment benefits jumped to 263,000 last week, the highest level since October 2021, according to a separate report released Thursday by the Labor Department.”

———-

Anti-Union

Brad Reed writes on Trump’s attacks on unions for Common Dreams, Sept 01, 2025 (https://commondreams.org/news/trump-labor-day-unions).

“Although US President Donald Trump’s administration likes to boast that he puts ‘American workers first,’ several news reports published on Monday [Sept. 1] document the president’s attacks on the rights of working people and labor unions.”

Reed quotes the longtime labor reporter Steven Greenhouse who explained in The Guardian that “Trump throughout his second term has ‘taken dozens of actions that hurt workers, often by cutting their pay or making their jobs more dangerous.’” He gives these examples. 

“Trump’s decision to halt a regulation intended to protect coal miners from lung disease, as well as his decision to strip a million federal workers of their collective bargaining rights.” He quotes Liz Shuler, president of the AFL-CIO,

“‘His attacks on unions are coming fast and furious,’ she said. “He talks a good game of being for working people, but he’s doing the absolute opposite. This is a government that is by, and for, the CEOs and billionaires.”

Reed continues.

“Heidi Shierholz, president of the Economic Policy Institute, similarly told Greenhouse that Trump has been ‘absolutely, brazenly anti-worker,’ and she cited him ripping away an increase in the minimum wage for federal contractors that had been enacted by former President Joe Biden as a prime example.”

“NPR published its own Labor Day report that zeroed in on how the president is ‘decimating” federal employee unions by issuing March and August executive orders stripping them of the power to collectively bargain for better working conditions.’”

He continues. “So far, nine federal agencies have canceled their union contracts as a result of the orders, which are based on a provision in federal law that gives the president the power to terminate collective bargaining at agencies that are primarily involved with national security.

“The Trump administration has embraced a maximalist interpretation of this power and has demanded the end of collective bargaining at departments that aren’t primarily known as national security agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Weather Service.”

“The administration has weakened the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) so that even when workers successfully join or start a union, they may no longer get their grievances heard.” Moreover, the president is now able to fire NLRB administrative judges at will.

———-

The most anti-union president ever

Harold Meyerson argues that Trump is the most anti-union president ever

(https://prospect.org/labor/2025-09-01-trump-celebrates-labor-day-as-most-anti-union-president). Harold Meyerson is editor at large of The American Prospect.

Here are excerpts.

Donald Trump “chose to celebrate this year’s Labor Day by announcing last Thursday his unilateral abrogation of the federal government’s contracts with the unions that represent the scientists, engineers, and other staffers at NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (which includes the National Weather Service), the Patent Office, and the International Trade Administration. This follows his earlier contract terminations with the unions that represented 400,000 employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs, as well as those at the Department of Health and Human Services, and other major departments.”

According to a study from the Center for American Progress (CAP), these Trump-imposed contract nullifications have cost 81.8 percent of civilian federal workers their right to collectively bargain—and that study came out before last Thursday’s new round of government fuck-you’s to its workers. The total number of workers whose contracts Trump has trashed now exceeds one million, which comes to approximately one-fifteenth of American workers covered by a union contract. Georgetown University labor historian Joe McCartin terms this ‘by far the largest single action of union busting in American history.’”

“What’s behind Trump’s union busting? At one level, he wants to destroy unions simply because they oppose him; opposition is all it takes for Trump to order a hit. At a deeper level, unions are a voice from below, and their autonomy poses a threat to autocrats. Even enfeebled unions have the potential to reawaken and join a battle to thwart despots. It’s no accident that every Western democracy has had—at one time, at least—a powerful union movement; just as it’s no accident that no autocracy—and no aspiring autocrat like Trump—can tolerate one. A core part of Hitler’s seizure of total power was the utter destruction of the German labor movement.”

“That said, labor has retained and even enhanced one form of strength: Today, in this populist age, unions are the only American institution whose popularity has been steadily rising, winning 68 percent approval ratings in Gallup’s polling. The gap between that level of approval and the 6 percent unionized share of private-sector workers, however, illustrates how completely the rickety remains of labor law have failed to enable a pro-labor workforce to go union—despite the best, though short-lived, efforts of Biden’s NLRB, and even before the havoc that second-term Trump has inflicted on unions. The 2026 elections may afford unions an opportunity to arrest some of Trump’s attacks; the 2028 elections, an opportunity to reverse them. Even then, the road to re-establishing workers’ rights will be steep.

———-

Concluding thoughts

In short, as documented, Trump has little concern for ordinary workers or the unions representing a minority of these workers. This is one important aspect of an unfolding autocracy.

Donald Trump demonstrates over and over again how he wants to transform the federal government away from one that reflects the Constitution and the law to one that  he can lawlessly dominate – to be a “king” or “dictator.”  If he is successful,

workers will become even less secure than now, with lower wages and job benefits, and with the demise of ever-more restraints on Trump’s power. For further information on such a future, check out Thomas B. Edsall’s column, “What Can’t Trump wreck? (https://nytimes.com/2025/09/09/opinion/trump-maga-government-future.html).