The Crooked Court. It's so depressing. The Supreme Court
has been destroyed. Billionaires bribe the justices, they buy outcomes
from the justices. It's destroyed our democracy. Carl Gibson reports:
One
of the most conservative members of the Supreme Court of the United
States (SCOTUS) is now directly speaking out about President Donald
Trump's ever-expanding executive powers.
Newsweek
reported Monday that during a recent interview with Italian newspaper
Corriere della Serra, Justice Samuel Alito – who was appointed by former
President George W. Bush in 2006 — spoke with disdain about Trump
wielding executive power "very aggressively." The longtime conservative
jurist observed that Trump's actions have resulted in a significant
higher workload for him and his colleagues.
"[There
has been] an inclination by presidents to try to do more and more and
more, using their own power, or what they believe to be their own
power," Alito said.
"And now, under President
Trump, it's just gone on like this, and he's used his executive power
very aggressively," he continued. "And what we have seen since the
beginning of his second term, since January, is that so many of these
things that he has done are immediately challenged in court. We have 680
district court judges. A district judge says ‘it's unconstitutional, or
it's unlawful’, and then the case comes to us as an emergency matter."
So
they cave and give him all this power and then want to act like someone
else did it? Like they're victims? We see you, Alito.
The
Supreme Court views same-sex marriage rights in a different light than
abortion rights, Alito said in a new interview with Italian newspaper
Corielle Della Sera published on Monday.
“They
are different,” he said. “First of all, those cases decided
contraceptives 60 years ago. So it’s a settled matter. Same-sex marriage
was decided 10 years ago, but a lot has happened since then. A lot of
people of the same sex have gotten married and relied on the decision
and it is consistent with what polls show Americans think.”
He
added that many Americans believe life begins at conception, and that a
fetus would therefore deserve human rights. “There are people that
think that life begins at conception and believe that the fetus is
entitled to human rights, but in the case of contraception or same sex
marriage nobody thinks a being that has human rights is being
destroyed,” Alito said in part.
Well
maybe there's a heart in there somewhere after all, Alito. It's not
too late for you to start doing the right thing and go out in your last
years on the bench as one of the most humane judges. Don't think it
will happen but you could do it, Alito. And that would be your legacy.
The
Supreme Court on Tuesday rebuffed the Trump administration over its
plan to deploy National Guard troops in Illinois over the strenuous
objections of local officials.
The court in an
unsigned order turned away an emergency request made by the
administration, which said the troops are needed to protect federal
agents involved in immigration enforcement in the Chicago area.
In
doing so, the court at least provisionally rejected the Trump
administration’s view that the situation on the ground is so chaotic
that it justifies invoking a federal law that allows the president to
call National Guard troops into federal service in extreme situations.
Those
circumstances can include when “there is a rebellion or danger of a
rebellion” or “the president is unable with the regular forces to
execute the laws of the United States.”
They could turn their image around. They could be trusted again. But they would have to do their jobs.
Tuesday, December 23, 2025. Chump's latest war is on the VA, how
do you compel a Pam da Bimbo Bondi into following the law, why is it
that you have to compell the Attorney General to follow the law, Chump
creates the impression of another cover up yet again, and much more.
Starting with these press release from the Democrats on the House Oversight Committee:
Washington, D.C. — Today, Rep. Robert Garcia, Ranking Member of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, demanded
answers from Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. after the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
voted to remove the universal recommendation that all infants receive a
vaccine against hepatitis B at birth, changing the childhood vaccine
schedule without any scientific basis. The letter demands HHS provide
any data that was used to inform the vote, documentation on how the ACIP
meeting was influenced by conflicts of interest and anti-vaccine
activists, and documentation of the expected impacts on the health of
American children.
“I am deeply concerned by Secretary Kennedy’s radical takeover of the
Department of Health and Human Services, especially the most recent
decision to remove the recommendation that all babies receive the
hepatitis B vaccine at birth. It is clear this agency no longer
prioritizes the health of the American people, but instead prioritizes
uplifting conspiracy theorists and anti-vaxx propaganda. Secretary
Kennedy must prove why this decision was made by the ACIP before
children across the country face the consequences,” said Ranking Member Robert Garcia
In the letter, Ranking Member Robert Garcia wrote, “Removing
the universal recommendation for the hepatitis B vaccine fuels vaccine
skepticism by implying that receiving the vaccine may be dangerous for
infants, when the truth is that the universal dose of the hepatitis B
vaccine has saved tens of thousands of children’s lives. In light of
these deeply concerning changes and Secretary Kennedy’s history of
anti-vaccine activism, Committee Democrats have been conducting
oversight of HHS and its operating divisions.”
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi’s approval rating has declined by 47 points in 10 months, recent polls show.
According
to polling by AtlasIntel, the proportion of people who approve of Bondi
has dropped from net +6 percentage points in February to net -41 in
December.
The latest survey was conducted in
the week before Bondi’s Department of Justice (DOJ) released redacted
files associated with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
[. . .]
The
AtlasIntel polling of 2,315 respondents was conducted between December
15 and 19. It had a margin of error of +/- 2 percentage points.
It
found that her popularity peaked in February when 49 percent of people
approved of her and 43 percent disapproved. In the months to follow it
steadily declined and by August she had a net approval rating of -27
points, with 63 percent disapproving of her and 26 percent approving.
It's
shocking. To think that her polling was ever in the positive numbers,
it's shocking. Pam da Bimbo Bondi has been the worst Attorney General
the country has ever had.
On MS NOW's MORNING JOE today, they
discussed how "tens of thousands" of documents were posted yesterday on
the Justice Dept webpage . . . for a moment. It disappeared.
da
Bimbo is the Attorney General, she's over the Justice Dept. So this
reflects poorly on her. She was never qualified to practice law let
alone to be the Attorney General.
At
one point, you may remember, Pam claimed she had the Epstein files on
her desk and was about to release them. That was months ago. She never
did release them. Se's lied to the American people but mainly she's
just sported her lack of training and lack of skills. She's a joke. da
Bimbo is a joke.
Newly
released images from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate show women with eerie
messages inked on their skin – quotes taken from a controversial novel
centered on the sexualization of a young girl – exposing another layer
of control and exploitation within Epstein’s network.
As the Department of Justice approaches its deadline to publicly release the full Epstein files, a newly unsealed cache of photographs has revealed disturbing new details about the late financier’s alleged sex trafficking operation.
We
can't afford this kind of stupidity. The documents? "Approaches its
deadline"? Do the damn job or sit your tired ass down. Last Friday was
when everything was supposed to be released. Last Friday. The
deadline is not approaching, it has passed.
Not only has it passed
but on Friday politicians were calling Pm out for her inability to
follow the law. Here's the press release fro Senator Adam Schiff's
office
Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) joined MS
NOW’s Nicolle Wallace to discuss the Department of Justice’s (DOJ)
failure to follow the law by not releasing the full Epstein Files.
Schiff demanded Attorney General Pam Bondi testify under oath before the
Senate Judiciary Committee to explain the administration’s willful and
illegal delay of the full release of files in DOJ’s possession.
Schiff highlighted that all possible remedies should be explored, including litigation if necessary, and reiterated his request for
an independent audit into the DOJ’s handling of these files to ensure
accountability for the Trump administration’s continued stonewalling of
information.
Earlier this month, Schiff and Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Dick Durbin requested an independent review of
the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation’s
handling of the Epstein files to ensure they were not tampered with
ahead of their release.
On demanding Pam Bondi testify before the Senate Judiciary
Committee and requesting an independent audit into the handling of the
Epstein Files:
[…] I think we ought to bring Pam Bondi before the Senate Judiciary
Committee demand answers as to why the Department has violated the law.
It’s not just that they had 30 days to go through this, to do the
production they’ve had the whole year to do it. They promise to release
the files. They haven’t done it. They
could have been completely ready for this moment, and they’re not, or
they’re just simply, willfully withholding the materials. I think the
Judiciary Committee should do its real oversight and bring her in and
demand answers. I also think we need an Inspector General’s
investigation of what they’ve done, and to ride shotgun on this, to make
sure that they’re producing everything they’re required to. We should
consider other remedies, including litigation, if necessary, but there
needs to be accountability here.
On the administration’s continued stalling on releasing the full Epstein files:
[…] The only one they
really serve is Donald Trump, so they must see something in those files
that they don’t want to share with the American people. Now it may not
be evidence of criminality on Trump’s behalf, but it may be evidence
that embarrasses the president, reflects poorly on the president, and of
course, written into that legislation is very explicit prohibition on
withholding anything for reasons of reputational harm to any elected
official. So that is not a legal basis for them to withhold
information. But I wouldn’t be surprised if, as a practical matter, they
have promised the president they won’t release anything that makes him
look bad, even if it comes at the cost of the victims getting the full
information. And that’s just not going to cut it. If we’re going to do
serious oversight, frankly, unlike what we’ve done so far, you know, Bondi
needs to come in and actually answer questions, not just use her time
to try to insult or attack members of the committee, but we need this on
a bipartisan basis. The legislation passed on a bipartisan basis, both
parties ought to insist on answers, and if not, I think the public needs
to hold them accountable for this continuing cover up.
On the reasoning behind breaking of the law by the Trump Justice Department:
[…] I’m surprised by the
magnitude of it. I’m not surprised that they’re withholding information.
Part of this is a consequence, I think, frankly, of Chief Justice
Roberts giving the President absolutely, absolute immunity when it comes
to his instructions to the Justice Department so he can pretty much
order them to do what he wants, and knows that he will never be held, at
least criminally liable. So I’m not surprised that they’re
withholding, I am surprised at the magnitude of it, the audacity of it,
the plain statement by Blanche that they’re withholding hundreds of
thousands of documents, and indeed, that might be just the tip of the
iceberg. So yes, that does surprise me. It’s a kind of in your face. We
will ignore the law as we choose. We will go at our own pace. Whether we
provide things at all will be up to us. It’s a kind of arrogance, a
kind of drunkenness with power, that believes you can ignore the law
without any peril.
###
As we noted yesterday, Pam da Bimbo is not in
compliance with the law. And that's why people are considering other
actions to compel her to follow the law. Alexandra Marquez (NBC NEWS) notes:
Reps. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and Thomas Massie, R-Ky., on Sunday said they
are committed to holding Justice Department officials accountable for
their failure to release all eligible Epstein files by Friday’s
deadline, saying they're speaking with members of Congress about holding
Attorney General Pam Bondi in contempt.
"The quickest way, and I think most expeditious way, to get justice for
these victims, is to bring inherent contempt against Pam Bondi," Massie
told CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday when asked about how Congress can
force the Justice Department to release the rest of the files they have
related to Jeffrey Epstein.
His
comments come after Kaine, D-Va., on Sunday told NBC News' "Meet the
Press" that calls to impeach Justice Department officials for their
handling of the release of the Epstein files are "premature," after
Khanna, on Friday floated the possibility of impeachment.
On Sunday, Kaine pointed to other mechanisms Congress has for prompting the Trump administration to release certain information.
"We
have tools in appropriations bills and other tools to force compliance
if somebody is dragging their feet, and I'd rather focus on those tools
than get into discussions about contempt and impeachment," Kaine said.
Attorney
General Pam Bondi will be fined every day that the Justice Department
fails to release all the Jeffrey Epstein files if a bipartisan effort to
hold her in contempt of Congress proves successful.
Kentucky
GOP Rep. Thomas Massie and California Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna—who
authored the legislation forcing the DOJ to release all Epstein-related
files—say they plan to pursue legal action against Bondi for failing to
comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which was signed by
President Donald Trump.
After a 30-day grace period, she would face daily punishment under their plan.
While the DOJ did release a trove of documents on Friday, potentially hundreds of thousands of Epstein-related records remain
unreleased. Of the material made public, hundreds of pages were heavily
redacted, including documents tied to a grand jury investigation that
were entirely blacked out. The DOJ also removed at least 16 files that
had initially been available online, including one that featured photographs of Trump.
Jeffrey
Epstein’s victims have torched Attorney General Pam Bondi over her
handling of the Epstein files, accusing the justice department of
unlawfully keeping the public in the dark over the sex trafficker and
his powerful networks.
Days
after the department only partially released the information it holds
on Epstein and what the government did to stop his heinous crimes, a
group of 19 women abused by him have hit out at the department for
botching the issue and violating the law.
In a joint statement released on Monday, the women pointed to the litany
of missteps they say Bondi and her department have made, from failing
to release all the files by Friday’s deadline, to putting out swathes of
documents that were entirely blacked out while leaving some victims’
names un-redacted.
“We
are told that there are hundreds and thousands of pages of documents
still unreleased. These are clear-cut violations of an unambiguous law,”
their statement says.
“There
has been no communication with survivors or our representatives as to
what was withheld from release or why hundreds of thousands of documents
have not been disclosed by the legal deadline, or how the DOJ will
ensure that no more victims are wrongly disclosed.
“While
clearer communication would not change the fact that a law was broken,
its absence suggests an ongoing intent to keep survivors and the public
in the dark as much as possible and as long as possible.”
The
criticism is not dying down. The criticism is not going away. Donald
Chump and company have taken what was for them an embarrassing situation
and made it even worse. Now people are really wondering what's being
hidden? We've now got yet another cover-up and people are wondering. Taiyler S. Mitchell (HUFFINGTON POST) explains:
Rep.
Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) argued that the redactions in the Epstein files
released on Friday are nonsensical and most likely indicative of a
cover-up.
“If you read the statute,
the only things that are allowed to be redacting are related to child
*** abuse, physical abuse, ongoing investigations, which they say there
are none, and national security. So how can you block out an entire
document? It makes no sense,” Raskin told CNN’s Kasie Hunt on an episode
of “State of the Union” on Sunday.
“And, remember, Trump opposed the legislation up until the very end,
when he could read the writing on the wall. Then he said, ‘Oh, I’m for
it,’” Raskin said, reasoning that Trump’s switch-up came after Trump’s
followers decided that they would work to “obstruct the implementation
of the legislation.”
They supposedly want to move
on to a different topic but their actions necessitate that America
continues to focus on this issue.
Sen.
Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said on Sunday he thinks it’s a “big mistake” for the
Trump administration to release heavily redacted files on the convicted
sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, saying the issue could now “plague them
for months.”
“I
think it’s a big mistake,” Paul said in an interview on ABC News’s
“This Week,” when asked about concerns over the Justice Department’s
partial release of files on Friday.
“I
mean, look, the administration has struggled for months and months with
something they initially ginned up and then sort of tried to tamp down.
So, any evidence or any kind of indication that there’s not a full
reveal on this, this will just plague them for months and months more,”
he continued.
“So,
my suggestion would be: Give up all the information … be transparent
and release everything the law requires of you,” Paul added.
President
Donald Trump’s approval rating has dropped among the least educated
Americans over the past three months, according to the latest poll
released by Quantus Insights on Thursday.
It is yet more bad news for the president,
whose popularity has tanked in recent weeks as Americans grow more
concerned over the U.S. economy and more frustrated about the ongoing
affordability challenges they are facing.
A
new CBS News/YouGov poll found that less than 2 in 10 respondents
believe President Trump’s policies are improving their current financial
situation.
The poll, released Sunday, found
that 18 percent of respondents believe the president’s policies are
making them financially better off now, while 27 percent believe his
policies will improve their financial straits next year.
Meanwhile,
half of the respondents said Trump’s policies are making them worse off
right now, with 45 percent saying his policies will worsen their
financial situation in 2026.
Americans face reality -- the bulk of Americans -- as Chump's lies grow, like him, tired and old. Jennifer White (SACRAMENTO BEE) reports economists aren't falling for Chump and Propaganda Pig proclaiming 'economic turnaround' as they cite DoorDash as proof:
DoorDash
noted the data reflects real-time local trends across 100 cities.
Economists argued it likely fails to capture full household spending
patterns.
Economists have cautioned that
app-based datasets provide timely snapshots but cannot replace the
methodological rigor of the Consumer Price Index or Personal Consumption
Expenditures index.
American Institute for
Economic Research Director of Economics and Economic Freedom Dr. Peter
C. Earle said, “In a pinch, private-sector data like DoorDash’s can be a
handy real-time snapshot when official reports are delayed.” Earle
added, “Food-delivery prices represent a pretty-narrow part of household
spending—mostly higher-income, urban consumers ordering prepared meals.
That data doesn’t capture the full picture of inflation across housing,
energy, durable goods, and other services.”
We'll wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:
Senators: “At a
time when veterans are already facing widespread cuts in their access to
health care from H.R. 1, skyrocketing health insurance premiums from
expiring enhanced premium tax credits, and forced closures of rural
hospitals, VA needs to be expanding its capacity and staffing levels,
not reducing them.”
ICYMI: VIDEO FROM SENATOR MURRAY:
“Exactly zero veterans think the problem with the VA health care system
is that there are *too many* staff providing care. But Trump’s VA has
now decided it won’t fill thousands of open positions. We need answers
about what this will mean for veterans.”
Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA),
Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and a senior member
and former chair of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, joined
Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Ranking Member Richard Blumenthal
(D-CT), and 36 of their Senate Democratic colleagues in a letter
demanding answers about the Trump administration’s plans to eliminate
as many as 35,000 jobs at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). This
follows recent reporting
from The Washington Post detailing the Trump administration’s plans to
eliminate tens of thousands of unfilled mission-critical health care
positions at VA, including for doctors, nurses, and support staff.
“We write to express our concern following the December 13,
2025, Washington Post article ‘VA plans to abruptly eliminate tens of
thousands of health care jobs,’ which spotlights the Department’s plan
to cut as many as 35,000 vacant positions from its workforce rolls
before the end of the calendar year,” the senators wrote in a letter to VA Secretary Collins.
“Compounded by the exodus of more than 40,000 Department employees in
fiscal year (FY) 2025, any unjustified cuts to existing vacancies would
further disrupt a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) workforce that is
already stretched dangerously thin and under assault.”
The senators pushed back on Secretary Collins’ claims that cutting
these jobs will have “no impact” on VA health care, pointing to data
that even if cuts were focused on non-clinical and administrative
vacancies, VA would still have to cut 18,000 vacancies from essential,
veteran-facing positions to meet their 35,000 number. They pressed
Collins to provide additional information on VA’s plans to eliminate
these positions, including asking for the list of positions removed; the
names and titles of staff involved in making this decision; what
evidence VA used to support this removal of vacancies; and what data was
used to inform individual facility staffing baselines.
The senators concluded, emphasizing the gravity of this plan amid
Republicans’ health care-cutting agenda across the government: “Unfilled
positions are not reflective of unnecessary positions, and the length
of time a position is vacant is not a suitable data point for
determining need. At a time when veterans are already facing widespread
cuts in their access to health care from H.R. 1, skyrocketing health
insurance premiums from expiring enhanced premium tax credits, and
forced closures of rural hospitals, VA needs to be expanding its
capacity and staffing levels, not reducing them. Veterans deserve a VA
staffed according to their needs and a Secretary who works to fill
needed positions, not abolish them.”
VA already lost more than 40,000 employees between January and
September of this year as a result of President Trump and VA Secretary
Collins’ hiring freeze, deferred resignations, early retirements, and
the significant number of VA staff who have quit since the Trump
administration took office due to draconian workforce policies. In
addition, VA had at least 42,000 vacancies
across the Department as of March 31, 2025, and that number is
estimated to have grown significantly since then. The removal of these
positions would put VA at pre-PACT Act staffing levels. More than one million veterans newly enrolled in VA health care as a result of expanded eligibility under the PACT Act, and millions more have increased reliance on VA because of toxic exposure-related illnesses and injuries.
These continued cuts of VA health care follow widespread health care
cuts initiated by Republicans across the government. Senate Republicans
have failed to join Democratic efforts to extend Affordable Care Act (ACA) enhanced premium tax credits, which 267,000 veterans rely on
to afford health care. Coupled with Medicare and Medicaid cuts from the
“One Big Beautiful Bill” that go into effect next year, Americans,
including millions of veterans and veteran family members, are facing
skyrocketing premiums and a looming health care crisis.
In addition to Senators Murray and Blumenthal, the letter was signed
by U.S. Senators Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Michael
Bennet (D-CO), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE), Cory Booker (D-NJ),
Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), John Fetterman
(D-PA), Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Maggie Hassan
(D-NH), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), John Hickenlooper (D-CO), Mazie Hirono
(D-HI), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Andy Kim (D-NJ), Angus King
(I-ME), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), Ed Markey (D-MA),
Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Alex Padilla (D-CA), Gary Peters (D-MI), Jack Reed
(D-RI), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Bernard Sanders (I-VT), Brian Schatz (D-HI),
Adam Schiff (D-CA), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Elisa Slotkin (D-MI), Chris
Van Hollen (D-MD), Mark Warner (D-VA), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-RI), and Ron Wyden (D-OR).
Senator Murray was the first woman to join the Senate Veterans’
Affairs Committee and the first woman to chair the Committee—as the
daughter of a World War II veteran, supporting veterans and their
families has always been an important priority for her. Senator Murray
has been outspoken in standing up for veterans, VA employees, and VA
researchers against Trump and Elon Musk’s indiscriminate mass layoffs
that will undermine critical services our nation’s veterans rely on
every day. In January, Murray called on President Trump
to exempt all VA employees from the hiring freeze issued as part of his
Day One Executive Orders. Senator Murray, was among the first to raise
the alarm about the layoffs of VA researchers and called on President Trump to immediately reverse the firings. She pressed VA Deputy Secretary nominee Dr. Paul Lawrence on the firings of VA researchers at the hearing on his nomination, and held multiple press conferences with VA employees and veterans
in Washington state who were abruptly laid off for no reason as part of
the Trump administration’s mass firings at VA. Earlier this year,
Senator Murray forcefully denounced the Trump administration’s initial plan to fire 80,000 employees at VA.
Last week, Senator Murray released a video slamming the Trump administration’s plan not to fill thousands of open positions at VA, and demanding answers.
The lawmakers’ full letter is available HERE and below:
Dear Secretary Collins:
We write to express our concern following the December 13, 2025,
Washington Post article “VA plans to abruptly eliminate tens of
thousands of health care jobs,” which spotlights the Department’s plan
to cut as many as 35,000 vacant positions from its workforce rolls
before the end of the calendar year. Compounded by the exodus of more
than 40,000 Department employees in fiscal year (FY) 2025, any
unjustified cuts to existing vacancies would further disrupt a
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) workforce that is already stretched
dangerously thin and under assault.
Based on data mandated by Section 505 of Public Law 115-182, the VA
MISSION Act of 2018, as of quarter two of FY 2025, the Department had a
total of 42,518 vacancies. These vacant positions included 7,560 nurses,
4,400 schedulers, 2,800 physicians, 1,900 social workers, 1,650 nursing
assistants, 1,630 practical nurses, 1,230 pharmacists and pharmacy
technicians, 1,080 health technicians, 860 veterans claims examiners,
760 police, and 710 psychologists – totaling more than 24,500 of the
42,500 vacancies. If the Department cut every other vacancy outside of
these roles – which would still include cuts to various clinical and
veteran-facing roles – VA would still have to cut 18,000 vacancies from
essential, veteran-facing positions in order to meet the 35,000 number.
These cannot all be “COVID-era roles,” as VA has claimed, nor can these
cuts be downplayed because some have been vacant for longer than one
year.
We request the following information regarding VA’s elimination of these positions:
Please provide a list of vacant positions removed, disaggregated by facility and job series.
Please provide a list of positions removed, disaggregated by job
series and then by length of time since they were last encumbered or the
position was created based on these categories of time: less than 30
days, greater than 30 days, greater than 90 days, greater than 180 days,
greater than 365 days, and greater than 730 days.
Please provide the titles of VA Central Office staff and the offices or departments involved in making this decision.
VA already regularly adds and removes positions based on need as
part of its normal recruitment and budgeting processes. What evidence
was there to support this significantly larger removal of vacancies?
Memos from the Department planning for this removal of vacancies
reference a baseline number of positions used to inform individual
facility staffing numbers. What is that baseline, and how was that
number decided upon? How were individual facility baselines calculated
based on that number?
Why did the Department choose to use number of positions instead of
full-time equivalent (FTE) positions to establish these baselines? How
were positions that typically do not occupy one FTE for each individual
staff member, such as researchers, accounted for in the baseline and the
cuts?
Please detail the approval process for a facility or hiring manager
to request new vacancies, roles, or recruitment processes beyond the new
baseline.
Based on what criteria can a facility or hiring manager request a new position or vacancy above the baseline?
In VA’s FY 2026 budget request, the Department requested funding for
396,000 total FTE. As such, Congress provided $167 billion for the
treatment of 7.7 million patients and 162.6 million outpatient visits to
VA for FY 2026. Please provide an updated staffing and workload
projection for FY 2026 that accounts for these vacancy cuts.
How did the Department account for minimum staffing ratios when
making these cuts, especially those required for nursing, long-term
care, spinal cord injury and disorder teams, and mental health care?
Unfilled positions are not reflective of unnecessary positions, and
the length of time a position is vacant is not a suitable data point for
determining need. At a time when veterans are already facing widespread
cuts in their access to health care from H.R. 1, skyrocketing health
insurance premiums from expiring enhanced premium tax credits, and
forced closures of rural hospitals, VA needs to be expanding its
capacity and staffing levels, not reducing them. Veterans deserve a VA
staffed according to their needs and a Secretary who works to fill
needed positions, not abolish them.
In this morning's snapshot, C.I. noted Nenko Gantchev. He is one of four people who have recently died in ICE custody. Somaiyah Hafeez (THE MIRROR) reports:
"I
want people to know what happened to him, a man who lived 30 years
here, hardworking, paid taxes, and they treated him like an animal,"
Gantchev's wife, who asked for anonymity, told ABC7. "They are so rude
to him... They treated him like he was a murderer."
Another
friend said: "He had real estate here. He had a business here. He was
here a very long time," Anna told the I-Team. "He wanted very much to be
an American citizen. He was married to an American citizen."
Chicago
Congresswoman Delia Ramirez has called for an "immediate, transparent
investigation into the circumstances of Mr. Gantchev's death, including
an investigation into reports from other detainees that he asked for
medical assistance and did not receive it in time to save his life."
"We
are aware of at least 30 deaths at ICE detention centers this year,
making 2025 the deadliest year for immigrants in ICE custody," Ramirez
said in an online statement.
Gantchev and
hundreds of others were ordered released by a federal judge in Chicago
on bond last month. Federal officials did not consider Gantchev's
release a high risk to public safety.
His
wife said the order renewed their hope that Gantchev, a diabetic
patient, would be released and could seek further medical treatment.
However,
the order was blocked by the Circuit Appeals Court, the wife said,
leaving Gantchev with a difficult decision. Either voluntarily depart
back to Bulgaria, or stay in custody, hoping he would be eventually
released on bond.
The
worst of the worst? Remember that lie. That man was not harming
anyone but was in fact helping the community he lived in. He raised a
family, he ran a business, he helped his neighbors. I understand he was
diabetic -- I don't know if I read that or if I overheard someone
telling C.I. that this morning. When she's dictating a snapshot, she'll
call and ask for information. She tries to picture someone --
especially if they've passed away -- if she's covering them in the
snapshot and she immerses herself in all the details she can. The
details may not pop up in the snapshot but she just feels it's
necessary. She's that way if she's performing as well. If she's going to
be a character, she does a ton of work. You can even ask her, "How
would she brush her teeth?" and she'll answer you -- even though the
character doesn't have a scene brushing her teeth.
This
morning, she heard nothing but details about how kind and loved Nenko
was. At one point, not sure which detail it was, she started crying.
Someone
like Nenko, again, is a credit to any community they live in. History
is going to look at these people who died in detention and even the ones
who were put into it and realize that Donald Chump was a monster and a
War Criminal.
Officials
including U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez have called for an investigation into
Gantchev’s death, “including an investigation into reports from other
detainees that he asked for medical assistance and did not receive it in
time to save his life,” Ramirez’s office said.
“While
ICE claims he died of natural causes, the circumstances surrounding his
death are not yet clear, and we know there have been numerous
complaints from family members and advocates about inhumane conditions
and inadequate medical care at” the Michigan detention center.
Monday, December 22, 2025. Chump's war on the economy leaves few
survivors, his crowd size dwindles, ICE can't protect those in its
custody as evidenced by four recent deaths, Pam Bondi and others release
redacted photos of Diana Ross and Michael Jackson at a charity event
with former President Bill Clinton, and much more.
As he's
learned recently, Chump can no longer attract a crowd. Vendors left an
event early last week when the turnout was in the hundreds and not the
thousands. In fact, the big rallies these days are the protests against
his actions. For example, Minnesota Saturday.
Thousands rallied in south Minneapolis on Saturday to protest increased immigration enforcement in Minnesota.
The
Trump administration launched “Operation Metro Surge” on Dec. 1, a U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement effort in Minneapolis, following
President Donald Trump’s disparaging remarks about Somalis.
Protestors carried signs reading “ICE out MSP” to denounce the operation.
“Our
people are getting snatched every day from the streets. We have people
who are missing; we don’t know where they are,” said Nimco Ahmed, an
organizer with the Somali American Coalition Action Fund. “We’re here to
protect our community, our assets and everything that we stand for.”
Silvia
Ibanez, a Minneapolis teacher, said immigrants feel under attack. She
said many of her students are afraid and families are also concerned
about sending them to school.
On a frigid, blustery Saturday, Rick Vandendolder stepped outside to follow in his immigrant father’s footsteps.
“My
dad was with the Dutch resistance, and he helped hide Jews and others
who were fleeing Nazi persecution,” the 73-year-old said. “I met some of
the people that he saved, and I never dreamt that I’d be seeing the
same thing going on in this country.”
Thousands
descended on East Lake Street on Saturday to march against ongoing U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations in Minnesota.
“It’s
cold out, people are hungry, our economy is suffering. Those are things
we should be working on,” said Je’taylor Coylewright, 49. “But instead,
we’re coming out to have to fight against masked officers taking people
off the street. That’s horrible. What a waste of time.”
Groups on hand pushed back on the idea that ICE is detaining "the worst of the worst."
"Most of the immigrants here are working very hard," said Silvia
Ibanez of the Immigrant Defense Network. "They are here because they are
trying to find a better future for their family, and that's not a
crime."
Saturday's march ended at Karmel Mall, which organizers said was symbolic of the way the city's Latino and Somali communities have both been targets of the latest DHS enforcement.
The
gestapo snatches people off the street. Illegally. ICE doesn't
suddenly develop a code of ethics once they've snatched you. Which is
why the deaths in ICE custody are not at all surprising. Marianne LeVine and Doublas McMillan (WASHINGNTON POST) report,
"Four
people in immigration detention have died over a four-day period this
month, increasing concern among advocates and some members of Congress
over detention conditions. One
death took place Dec. 12, another two took place on Dec. 14 and the
fourth on Dec. 15, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
news releases." I'm sorry, wasn't the sanctimonious liar Todd Blanche
just on NBC'S MEET THE PRESS claiming it was his job to guarantee the
safety of those who were locked up?
All
right, a couple more and we're almost out of time. I do want to ask you
about Ghislaine Maxwell who was of course convicted in 2021 for her
role in helping Jeffrey Epstein traffic his victims. In July, you
interviewed her in Florida where she was serving a 20-year sentence in
federal prison. Just a week later, Maxwell was moved to a more
permissive prison camp in Texas. Why was she moved just days after you
interviewed her, Mr. Blanche?
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL TODD BLANCHE:
So that's a Bureau of Prison security issue that I will not talk about –
KRISTEN WELKER:
Did you have anything to do with it?
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL TODD BLANCHE:
– but I think it’s fair to say –
KRISTEN WELKER:
Did you have anything to do with it?
DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL TODD BLANCHE:
Let
me finish. First of all, I am responsible for the Bureau of Prisons. So
every decision that they make lands on my desk to the extent it needs
to. But just let me talk about the security issue. At the time that I
met Ms. Maxwell, there was a tremendous amount of scrutiny and publicity
towards her. And the institution she was in, she was suffering numerous
and numerous threats against her life. So the BOP is not only
responsible for putting people in jail and making sure they stay in
jail, but also for their safety. And so she was moved. She is in federal
prison. She was in federal prison before. And she's in federal prison
now. She's doing 20 years because she was convicted. And the fact that
she was moved, she might be moved to another institution tomorrow if
security requires it. And that's true of any federal inmate across this
country.
A convicted pedophile has more rights to
protection in US custody then someone's whose 'crime' was walking on a
US street. How telling and how sad.
A 41-year-old man from Haiti who had been
detained by immigration officials died last week after a medical
emergency, federal officials said, in what is believed to be the first
death linked to the troubled, privately run migrant detention facility
in Newark where he was held.
Mr.
Brutus was one of four men detained by ICE and facing deportation to
die in custody in the past week across the country. Deaths of migrant detainees
have spiked this year as ICE has ramped up its deportation campaign,
filling detention centers to record levels. The agency was holding more
than 65,700 people as of Nov. 30.
A
Bulgarian man from Chicago arrested during the recent fall immigration
enforcement 'blitz' has died while in the custody of U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at a Michigan private prison.
Nenko
Gantchev, 56, died Monday at the North Lake Correctional Facility in
Baldwin, MI, which is contracted by ICE to hold undocumented migrants.
After multiple inquiries from the ABC7 I-Team, a DHS statement published online said Gantchev's death is "suspected to be from natural causes," but "the official cause of death is still under investigation."
But
Gantchev's family and friends tell the I-Team questions are mounting
surrounding his deteriorating medical condition the past few months
while he was in custody at North Lake, leading up to what happened the
day he died.
Next topic . . .
The
release of the Epstein files is a joke. The administration is
non-compliant and breaking the law with the trickle they provided
starting Friday. The release included a photo having nothing to do with
Epstein -- but picturing Diana Ross, her son Evan and Michael Jackson
with two of his children as they met with Bill Clinton. Katie Francis (THE DAILY BEAST) explains:
The White House has been accused of “having no shame” after a redacted image of Diana Ross and Michael Jackson released in the latest Epstein files wave was found to be a photo of the duo with their own children.
In
the photo, which is publicly available unredacted, the iconic musicians
and longtime friends stand on either side of Bill Clinton alongside
their kids Evan Ross, Michael “Prince” Jackson Jr., and Paris Jackson.
The
shot was taken in Washington, D.C. on Dec. 19, 2003, by photographer
Jonathan Exley, who took multiple photos of Jackson throughout his
career.
Alongside
multiple online users identifying the image, Ross’s son Evan clarified
that the redactions were not hiding potential victims. “That’s me, not
unidentified women,” he commented on an Instagram post.
White
House Deputy Press Secretary Abigail Jackson was also corrected by a
community notice when she shared the redacted image on X on Friday.
“Per
the Epstein Files Transparency Act, DOJ was specifically instructed
only to redact the faces of victims and/or minors. Here is a picture of
Bill Clinton with his arm around Michael Jackson, and redacted
individuals,” she wrote alongside the photo.
What? Pam Bondi didn't have access to "We Are The World" footage? Next up, she releases footage from THE WIZ?
More than a dozen
photos — including one featuring President Trump — were removed without
explanation from the large collection of files connected to the
investigations of Jeffrey Epstein that the Justice Department released
on Friday.
A total of 16 photos were taken down at some point on Saturday from the website that the department created to house files
— among them, one of the few that contained Mr. Trump’s image. It was a
photo of a credenza in Mr. Epstein’s Manhattan home, with an open
drawer containing other photos, including at least one of Mr. Trump.
The
Justice Department did not explain on the site why the images had been
removed, and a department spokesman did not respond to a message seeking
comment.
Democrats on the House
Oversight Committee immediately seized on the missing photo of Mr.
Trump, reposting it on social media and asking Attorney General Pam
Bondi if it was true that the image had been removed.
Here's the photo Bondi apparently decided to remove.
Donald Trump's administration committed a "grave and indefensible
violation" with a mistake it made in the production of certain Epstein
files, according to a survivor of the deceased financier's abuse.
Lawyer
and journalist Aaron Parnas flagged the letter from the Epstein
survivor on social media. Parnas wrote, "Jane Doe Epstein Survivor, who
reported Epstein to the FBI in 2009, sent the following letter to the
Department of Justice today after it failed to redact her name in the
release of the files. I have confirmed her name is currently not
redacted in multiple public files."
The letter itself says in
part, "I am a survivor of Jeffrey Epstein. I write to place the
Department of Justice on formal notice of a grave and indefensible
violation arising from the December 19, 2025 release of records under
the Epstein Files Transparency Act."
The White House reduces it all to a political stunt. But there are some things in the release that are news worthy. Edith Olmsted (THE NEW REPUBIC) reports:
Surprise, surprise: President Donald Trump was in Jeffrey Epstein’s contact list.
Buried in the massive trove of documents released by the Department of Justice Friday was Epstein’s 90-page contact book filled with names of high-profile celebrities—including Donald Trump and his family members.
Contact information for “Trump, Donald,” now redacted, was kept
separately from the information on how to reach Trump’s daughter Ivanka,
his ex-wife Ivana, his brother Robert, and Robert’s wife, Blaine.
A handwritten note indicated the contact book was from Palm Beach, dated 2004–2005.
There
also appeared to be contact information for Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort,
where Epstein reportedly scouted young women to abuse and traffic, and
from where he was supposedly banned in October 2007.
The
whole family was connected to him. That's not a casual acquaintance.
Not at all. And this wasn't the release ordered. Ordered by an actual
act of Congress. "That's going to take an act of Congress." You may
have heard that before in your life. Well this had an actual act of
Congress and still the administration refused to comply and they got
Speaker of the Closet Mike Johnson to send the House home so that Chump
could try to escape the outrage of Congress. Will it work? MOTHER JONES' Clint Hendler notes:
According to Rep. Thomas Massie, the Kentucky Republican who broke
with his party to champion the Epstein Files Transparency Act, what the
government has so far provided “grossly fails to comply with both the
spirit and the letter of the law.”
Epstein’s victims have similar complaints. “They are proving
everything we have been saying about corruption and delayed justice,”
Jess Michaels told theNew York Times. “What are they protecting? The coverup continues.”
The release is being overseen by Deputy Attorney General Todd
Blanche, the president’s former personal defense attorney, who
represented him in the criminal case related to Trump’s attempt to
coverup his affair with Stormy Daniels,
the adult film star. Blanche has said that the Justice Department
remains at work preparing more files for disclosure in the “coming
weeks,” in apparent violation of Friday’s deadline.
Moving over to the economy . . .
Donald Chump keeps insisting he's save the economy when, in fact,
he's wrecked it. And all of his lies are not going to make people deny
what they see with their own eyes, the pain they feel in their own
pocketbooks. Making tamales this Christmas? Prepare to spend a lot
more this year. Rob McMillan KABC logo (ABC 7) notes,
"CNN recently reported that a pound of masa, on average, costs about
$1.99. That's up about 30 cents from this time last year. Plus, rising
business costs across the board aren't making it any easier." The
Mexican cuisine staple is consumed year round but, yes, tamales are a
Christmas tradition for many in the US. Chump thinks he can out argue
people who know what they're experiencing, people who are having to make
difficult choices when doing basic grocery shopping. Like that morning
coffee but not that morning coffee price? Well doesn't look like
coffee prices are going down anytime soon. NEWS.AZ explains, "US consumers — the world’s largest coffee drinkers — are expected to
face higher prices well into 2026, limiting the White House’s ability to
ease food inflation ahead of the November midterm elections." Nathan Layne and Aleksandra Michalska (REUTERS) notes,
"On
a recent snowy morning in a Trump-loving part of rural Michigan, three
dozen cars idled outside a firehouse-turned-food pantry. Inside,
volunteers packaged lettuce, apples and other household staples that
have surged or stayed high in price this year." Food pantries at
Christmas -- Donald Chump's America. They trusted him. He didn't
deliver. He didn't even try to deliver.
He
destroyed our economy. He destroyed us as a travel destination. What
foreign tourist wants to come to the US when his gestapo attacks
foreigners and perceived foreigners on the streets? No one. He's
destroyed the travel industry. Christine Chung (NEW YORK TIMES) reports:
The United States routinely tops the list
of foreign travelers’ dream destinations. They can’t seem to get enough
of Manhattan’s skyscrapers, the mountains of Vermont, the hedonistic
nightlife of Las Vegas, Hawaii’s pristine beaches and the dreamscapes of
Disney parks.
But that’s changing.
Steep new fees,
travel restrictions, visa hurdles, uncertainty at the border, and
President Trump’s aggressive language toward Canada and other countries
are all taking a toll.
Postpandemic
travel growth has stalled and 4.5 million fewer international visits are
expected this year compared with 2024, according to industry estimates.
He doesn't know what he's doing and he never has. Hannah Broughton (THE MIRROR) reports, "World-renowned whiskey brand Jim Beam has announced plans to pause
production in 2026, amid struggles in the face of the Trump
administration's trade wars. Operations at the company's Happy Hollow
distillery in Clermont will cease on January 1, while the visitor center
will remain open." Chump's destroyed the economy. He continues to believe he can lie about it and get away with it. Diccon Hyatt (INVESTOPEDIA) notes:
On
Wednesday evening, Trump took to the airways to defend his economic
policies, responding to criticism from Democrats and others that the
cost of living has risen too quickly under his administration, and has
been exacerbated by his tariff campaign. Trump said he is tackling
inflation, blamed his predecessor, Joe Biden, for the problem, and
singled out groceries as an example of his success.
"Democrat
[sic] politicians also sent the cost of groceries soaring, but we are
solving that too," Trump said. "The price of a Thanksgiving turkey was
down 33 percent compared to the Biden last year. The price of eggs is
down 82 percent since March and everything else is falling rapidly and
it's not done yet, but boy, are we making progress."
If you have noticed your groceries have gotten more expensive this year,
the government's consumer price surveys back up your gut feeling with
hard data.
Over
the weekend, the president posted to Truth Social that “tariffs have
made our Country Rich, Strong, Powerful, and Safe.” Later in his post,
he pressed the Supreme Court to rule in his favor relating to emergency
tariff powers. (1, 2)
But
governors across the country are reporting impacts that differ from the
White House’s assessment. Here’s what they’re saying.
[. . .]
But
prices aren’t down. The latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics showed an inflation rate of 3.0%. Some categories with
spiking costs include food, with food at home costing 2.7% more than
this time last year and food away from home costing 3.7% more than last
year. Electricity prices are also up 5.1% from last year. (7)
A
recent survey of Colorado businesses found that the effects of import
taxes have had negative financial impacts on their business.
Additionally, the governor of Michigan’s office recently found that the
state’s residents are facing higher grocery prices, more expensive
housing, and uncertain employment due to tariffs. (8, 9)
He
keeps lying. And we're supposed to ignore the prices when we go
grocery shopping and ignore all the news of closings and layoffs. PENNYWISE notes, "On
November 21, 2025, Tyson Foods announced it will close its Lexington,
Nebraska plant and cut Amarillo, Texas to one shift by January 20, 2026,
eliminating 4,900 jobs." PENNYGEM adds, "Under pressure Wendy’s shuts 300 restaurants—8,000 workers face layoffs." Ash Frost (PENNYWISE) has a report that begs the question of where was the federal oversight: :
Farmers across the Midwest and South faced a sudden financial crisis in
late October when payments for their harvested grain failed to arrive.
From Nebraska to Texas, producers who had delivered crops to a major
grain buyer found themselves waiting for checks that never came. Phone
calls to the company went unanswered, and as days passed, concern turned
to alarm. By early November, the scale of the problem became clear:
thousands of farmers and agribusinesses were owed millions, with no
explanation in sight.
When the creditor list finally surfaced, it revealed the breadth of the
disaster. Kansas alone had 128 unpaid creditors, Nebraska 87, and Texas
72. The list included both small family farms and agricultural
giants—Cargill was owed $2.6 million, while Viterra Canada awaited $4.7
million. Beyond the largest claims, there were dozens of pages of
smaller operations, all left in limbo after trusting the wrong buyer. In
total, court documents would later show liabilities between $100
million and $500 million, with as many as 5,000 creditors affected.