Thursday, August 28, 2025

Chump needs to stop attacking the judiciary

From earlier tonight, Isaiah's latest THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Heidi Fleiss Explains It All." 


heidi


Well said.

As noted before, I am sick of Chump and his administration attacking judges.  Aaron Pellish (POLITICO) reports:


President Donald Trump attacked the Utah judge who ordered the state to redraw its congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterms — a decision that could result in less favorable districts for Republicans in the deeply red state.

Trump, who sparked a redistricting battle after demanding that Texas redraw its political boundaries to favor Republicans ahead of the midterms, called Monday's ruling “absolutely unconstitutional” and urged his party to preserve the state's four GOP-majority districts.
The president accused Judge Dianna Gibson of political bias for ruling that the state can no longer use its current maps and must draw new lines in compliance with an independent commission.

“How did such a wonderful Republican State like Utah, which I won in every Election, end up with so many Radical Left Judges?,” Trump wrote on social media. “All Citizens of Utah should be outraged at their activist Judiciary, which wants to take away our Congressional advantage, and will do everything possible to do so.”

Gibson was appointed to the district court by former Gov. Gary Herbert, a Republican, in 2018.


Can Chump just shut up?  Can he please stop attacking the judiciary?  His disrespect for the judiciary just reveals what trash he is.  He has no respect for our government or for anyone but himself.  His vanity has been on display more than enough.  

Here are two reactions to the article:


Rebel
5 minutes ago
Trump lashes out at Utah redistricting ruling --- Of course he does.

Gibson said in her ruling that the state must obey a 2018 ballot measure approved by Utah voters that required districts to be drawn by an independent commission. --- And completely ignored by the UT GOP supermajority.


Nonpartisan congressional maps could present an opportunity for Democrats to challenge for a seat in the Salt Lake City-area. --- Won by democrats in 3 out of 4 elections BEFORE 2020 redistricting took an almost 50/50 district to 60/40.


Trump’s comments echo the defense used by members of the state Legislature who argued the provisions of the 2018 ballot measure were unconstitutional. --- Of course, the UT GOP supermajority thought that way.


 In her ruling, Gibson said that ballot measures to reform Utah’s voting laws aren't prohibited by state law or the Constitution and are binding. --- Yet it took SEVEN years to come to that conclusion.



Grumpy Grampa
3 hours ago
I'm wondering how ANY person can actually listen to Trump, and NOT realize that not only is he suffering from Dementia, but is also not totally sane. Wanting to become president so he can mainly "Get Even" with anyone that he perceives did him wrong.




"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

Thursday, August 28, 2025.  Is Chump's dementia so bad that he can longer supervise his Cabinet, ask that as Tulsi Gabbard remains in her position after publicly exposing an undercover CIA agent, ask that as Chump's mind and body continues to decay, and let's drop back to March 22, 2017 when Senator Tim Kaine raised questions about Epstein's sweetheart deal during a Senate hearing.



Another day, another finger in the air checking the way the wind's blowing via Ben and MEIDASTOUCH NEWS.




As Convicted Felon Donald Chump struggles to walk in a straight line and as we see his flesh rotting before our eyes, the mind's going as well.  As Mike observed Tuesday night, "He's out of control and he now appears to be so far along in his dementia that he believes his own lies.  Think about that.  He's crazy.  His mind is going going gone.  And he's now believing his own lies.  And he's got the nuclear codes.  It's time to impeach."  Carl Gibson notes:


President Donald Trump may be too mentally compromised to hold the nation's highest office, according to one national security expert.

In a Tuesday post to her X account, journalist Juliette Kayyem — who is a CNN analyst and professor at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government — quote-posted a video of Trump's comments in the Oval Office about sending National Guard troops to Chicago, Illinois. In the video, Trump was asked about the legality of such a move, prompting him to respond that he had ultimate legal authority given his position.

"I would have much more respect for [Illinois Governor JB] Pritzker if he called me up and said 'I have a problem, can you help me fix it,' I would be so happy to do it," Trump said. "I have the right to do anything I want to do, I'm the president of the United States. If I think our country is in danger — and it is in danger in these cities — I can do it."

In her response to the video, Kayyem wrote that Trump was "incorrect" in his belief that he could do "anything" as president.

"He either believes it is true and is therefore unfit to be president or believes it is a lie and same," she tweeted. "The third option is that he is not of sound mind and body and all I can do is watch how he speaks and moves and it is a fair question to ask now."

The mind is gone.  You see it over and over.  He doesn't know where he is.  He doesn't know who is around him.  He's angry all the time and forever snapping -- someone opened the door to the Oval Office while he's in front of the press and he starts yelling.  These are serious danger signs.


I did not trash Jake Tapper for co-writing ORIGINAL SIN --  a book that's supposed to be about Joe Biden's decline.  I have no time to read it because we're dealing with a very dangerous person in the White House.  There's really no time to stop and consider the past at this moment when the future is so at risk -- the future of our country, the future of democracy.  I didn't attack him for promoting the book.  It would have been stupid not to promote it.  It would have made any publishing house think twice about signing him to write a book.  I will, however, fault his publisher (RANDOM HOUSE) for having no angle to sell the soft cover edition.  Instead, it was rushed out with the hardcover and Kindle release.  The way you intelligently market a book like this is with bonus information often in an afterword.  Had ORIGINAL SIN been handled correctly, the soft cover edition could be coming out this fall and include an afterword by the two authors where they grapple with whether or not similar or worse issues have come up with the president who replaced the one they wrote a book about.

But the whole supposed issue of the book and need for it was that Joe's decline was right there in plain sight and no one in the press covered it and sounded the alarms.


Now, I haven't read the book and am not going to. But warning signs for Joe go up in the debate and in the two weeks that follow.  


If indeed the press let the country down by ignoring a valid topic, why compound that mistake by doing it again.  And grasp, I say Joe declined in his last six months of his last year in office.  Chump hasn't even finished year one since he was sworn in and he's declining in front of our eyes and the media doesn't want to treat this as the very serious threat it is.  


This should be an issue on the broadcast evening news, it should be an issue on news magazines.  If it's being polled on by news organizations -- IF -- that's not getting any traction or coverage.


Nicole Duncan-Smith (ATLANTA BLACK STAR NEWS) notes -- as other outlets should:


President Donald Trump left observers scratching their heads during an Oval Office ceremony on Monday, Aug. 25, when he appeared to conjure up an entirely fictional governor named “Kristi Whitman.”

The 79-year-old commander in chief made the puzzling reference while signing an executive order and discussing his administration’s efforts to combat invasive Asian carp in the Great Lakes, creating a moment that quickly captured attention across social media platforms.

The bizarre episode unfolded as Trump was commenting on speculation about deploying National Guard troops to American cities before abruptly shifting to environmental policy.

“You know I did a favor for Kristi Whitman, ah Whitmer. A good favor, I think, with the fish, the carp, the China carp,” Trump said from behind the Resolute Desk.

The president seemed to catch himself mid-sentence, offering what appeared to be a correction, though he still referenced a nonexistent “Kristi Whitmer.”

Social media users wasted no time dissecting the verbal stumble, with many expressing concern about the president’s mental acuity.


A health expert is weighing in on a video of President Donald Trump from earlier this year, showing him on his dragging his foot after appearing to struggle to get out of his golf cart.

The video, posted by the grounds-keeping company that services Trump's Mar-A-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, appears to show the president struggling to get out of his golf cart and dragging his right leg.


Anthony Orrico writes for THE IRISH STAR.  Our major daily newspapers seem disinclined to address reality.  


Let's note a reality, Chump is not providing the needed oversight to his Cabinet. 


Three times.  


That's how many times Loose Lips Hegseth has paused/stop weapons supplies to Ukraine since being confirmed as Secretary of Defense on January 24th.  


Three times.


All supposedly without Chump's approval or his knowledge.


Three. 


Brett Forrest (THE WALL STREET JOURNAL) reports:

Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, surprised Central Intelligence Agency officials last week when she included an undercover senior CIA officer on a roster of 37 current and former officials she stripped of security clearances.

Most of the 37 people had either participated in intelligence assessments related to Russia’s attempt to influence the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidential election or had signed a 2019 letter calling for President Trump’s impeachment.

Gabbard didn’t know the CIA officer had been working undercover, according to a person familiar with the fallout from the list’s release. Three other people with knowledge of the situation said that Gabbard’s office didn’t meaningfully consult with the CIA before releasing the list.

Gabbard’s office delivered the list of 37 people to the CIA the evening before the list’s release, according to three people familiar with the communications and emails read to The Wall Street Journal.

The national intelligence office didn’t seek the CIA’s input about the composition of the list, and the CIA had no foreknowledge of Gabbard’s posting on X the following day that revealed the names, including that of the covered CIA officer, according to two of the people familiar with the events.


She's incompetent.  We all noted she was a member of a strange cult headed by Guru Chris which to me screams "SECURITY RISK!" but worse than that, she had no experience.  None at all.


And what she did was violate The Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982.  That doesn't apply to We The People.  That would be an illegal barrier to free speech.  But it does apply to government officials.  And she should know that act.  She should know that law.  And she should ensure that her Tweets -- her damn Tweets! -- are not outing undercover CIA agents.


She just exposed -- to the world -- an undercover CIA agent and the buffoon still has her job?



Does Chump even know what's going on?  How much is his Cabinet getting away with because Chump's dementia has gotten so bad.


The saying is you can run but you can't hide.  When it comes to Donald Chump, he can't run period -- we've seen the cankles and the inability to walk in a straight line -- and he can't hide from the Epstein scandal because he ran his big mouth about it over and over.  

 


He's tried repeatedly, but he can't escape the questioning and he can't divert attention.  Ailia Zehra reports:


Jack Scarola, attorney for victims of convicted child predator Jeffrey Epstein, said Epstein was "given an incredible sweetheart deal" during his 2008 prosecution by then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta (who later served as Trump's secretary of labor) and also "provided with a non-prosecution agreement that immunized named coconspirators and unnamed coconspirators from federal prosecution from any crime they may have committed."
During an appearance on CNN Tuesday evening, Scarola called this action a "totally unjustifiable concession to a criminal defendant that has never been explained."

He continued: "And I don't know how it could ever rationally be explained. In addition to that, the terms of that agreement were actively concealed from the victims, when federal law required them to be informed of the agreement and to have an opportunity to be heard about it. Those are questions that need to be explained."


I want to stop right there for a moment.  

February 16, 2017.

That's when Chump nominated Acosta to be Secretary of Labor.  

At that time, Chump declared, "Throughout his career, Alex Acosta has been a passionate advocate for equal opportunity for all Americans.  His extensive experience has tremendously impressed me and my team and makes us confident that he will lead the Department of Labor with the utmost competence and determination to support the American worker."  What really impressed Chump?  Did the two know each other personally?  Did they have a relationship of some sort?  Was Epstein the connecting glue?  

As far as I know, Chump didn't know him personally.  But Marco Rubio did.  In fact, Marco introduced him March 22, 2017 at his Senate confirmation hearing by noting that "I know him personally." And he vouched for Acosta's "sterling record of public service."  Marco vouched for "the cases" that Acosta had handled.  Now Marco was a Senator from Florida.  Know who else vouched for Acosta at that hearing?  Texas' Senator Ted Cruz who declared to the Committee, "It is a privilege to be before you today and have the opportunity to introduce my friend, Alex Acosta. I’ve known Alex for 25 years. He and I went to law school together. We’ve been friends a long time."


25 years.  Then what did Marco think of the sweetheart deal that Acosta did for Epstein?  It was known.

In fact, it popped up in that March 22, 2017 Senate hearing.

From the official transcript of that hearing:

Senator Tim Kaine: The committee needs to ask about, and you’re entitled to respond to, an article that appeared in the Washington Post online version last night and this morning, and I’m just going to read the opening to it. I’m going to ask you some questions because you deserve an opportunity to address it. ‘‘Labor nominee Acosta Cut Deal with Billionaire Guilty in Sex Abuse Case.’’ Just the first three paragraphs, and then I’ll introduce the article into the record. There was once a time before the investigations, before the sexual abuse conviction, when rich and famous men loved to hang around with Jeffrey Epstein, a billionaire money manager who loved to party. They visited his mansion in Palm Beach, FL. They flew on his jet to join him at his private estate on the Caribbean island of Little St. James. They even joked about his taste in younger women. President Trump called Epstein a terrific guy back in 2000, saying that ‘he’s a lot of fun to be with. It’s even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them were on the younger side.’ ’’ Now Trump is on a witness list in a Florida court battle over how Federal prosecutors handled allegations that Epstein, 64, sexually abused more than 40 minor girls, most of whom were between the ages of 13 and 17. The lawsuit questions why Trump’s nominee for Labor Secretary, former Miami U.S. attorney Alexander Acosta, whose confirmation hearing is scheduled to be on Wednesday, cut a non-prosecution deal with Epstein a decade ago rather than pursuing a Federal indictment that Acosta’s staff had advocated.’’ I’d like to introduce the article for the record, Mr. Chairman.

The CHAIRMAN. It will be introduced.


Senator KAINE. I’d like to ask you about this. First, a couple of questions. My understanding is that there is a pending civil lawsuit filed by a couple of the victims in that case seeking to argue that they should have been given notice prior to the plea deal being entered into. Is that your understanding as well?


Mr. ACOSTA. My understanding is that there is a pending civil lawsuit. The Department of Justice has defended the actions of the office in that matter under both President Bush and President Obama’s administrations.


Senator KAINE. The opening that I read suggests that you decided as U.S. attorney to cut a non-prosecution deal, that part of the decision was that that non-prosecution deal be held private, not appear in the public record, and there’s an allegation that I just read that you did not pursue a Federal indictment even though your staff had advocated that you do so. Is that accurate?


Mr. ACOSTA. That is not accurate. Let me address that one of the difficulties with matters before the Department of Justice is that the Department of Justice does not litigate in the public record or in the media and litigates in court. Let me set forth some facts. This matter was originally a State case. It was presented by the State attorney to the grand jury in Palm Beach County. The grand jury in Palm Beach County recommended a single count of solicitation not involving minors, I believe, and that would have resulted in zero jail time, zero registration as a sexual offender, and zero restitution for the victims in this case. The matter was then presented to the U.S. attorney’s office. It is highly unusual, and as I was speaking to some of your colleagues that have been involved in prosecutions, they mentioned that they don’t know of any cases personally where a U.S. attorney becomes involved in a matter after it has already gone to a grand jury at the State level. In this case we deemed it necessary to become involved, and we early on had discussions within the office, and we decided that a sentence or—how shall I put this—that Mr. Epstein should plead guilty to 2 years, register as a sex offender, and concede liability so the victims could get restitution. If that were done, the Federal interest would be satisfied and we would defer to the State. That was very early on in the case. I say that because the article goes on to talk about a view that the U.S. attorney’s office was not aggressive in this matter.


Senator KAINE. Can I read one other statement from the article,  "Federal prosecutors detailed their findings in an 82-page prosecution memo and a 53-page indictment, but Epstein was never indicted.’" And then there’s a quote, "The agreement you described will not be made part of any public record, the deal between Epstein and Acosta says." The document was unsealed as part of the civil suit in 2015.


The CHAIRMAN. I’m going to give you, Senator, time to ask your question and the nominee time to answer the question, even though it goes over the 5 minutes.


Senator KAINE. Thank you.


Mr ACOSTA. Senator, again to address your question, I can’t discuss the details of the case, but let me take it generally. It is pretty typical in a prosecution for an indictment, a draft indictment, to be written. That doesn’t necessarily mean that that draft indictment is filed because that draft indictment does not consider often the strength of the underlying case. As part of any plea, it is not unusual to have an indictment that says these are all the places we can go, yet at the end of the day, based on the evidence, professionals within a prosecutor’s office decide that a plea that guarantees that someone goes to jail, that guarantees that someone register generally, and that guarantees other outcomes is a good thing.


Senator KAINE. Was that a consensus decision in your office?


Mr. ACOSTA. It was a broadly held decision, yes.


Senator KAINE. I’m over my time, Mr. Chairman. I may come back to this in a second round. Thank you.


[. . .]


Senator KAINE. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Dean, I would like to close the loop on the previous discussion. I have a question about the Bureau of Labor Statistics. I asked you whether the agreement not to prosecute federally in exchange for an agreement on other matters was something that was a consensus within your office, and I think your testimony was that it was the generally held position of your office. I’ve not been a prosecutor, although I’ve practiced law.


The CHAIRMAN. It was broadly held——


Senator KAINE. Yes, broadly held position of the office. Thank you. I want to just read this. ‘‘In 2007, Acosta signed a non-prosecution deal in which he agreed not to pursue Federal charges against Epstein or for women who the government said procured girls for him. In exchange, Epstein agreed to plead guilty to a solicitation charge in State court, accept a 13-month sentence, register as a sex offender, and pay restitution to the victims identified in the Federal investigations. This agreement will not be made part of any public record’’—the deal between Epstein and Acosta says. What is the reason why a deal of this kind has the specification that it will not be made part of any public record?


Mr. ACOSTA. Senator, I wish I could respond to that. You’re asking for—I hesitate not because of concerns but because this is a matter that’s pending litigation. Let me try to answer your question——


Senator KAINE. Then maybe you can answer it generally. I understand.


Mr. ACOSTA [continuing]. In a different way. There are times when in negotiating an outcome, there are agreements that are made that are ancillary. What we sought and what we presented at the very beginning was 2-years plus registration, plus individuals being able, victims being able to——


Senator KAINE. Seek restitution.


Mr. ACOSTA [continuing]. Seek restitution. What was obtained was 18 months plus registration, plus individuals being able to——


Senator KAINE. This says 13 months.


Mr. ACOSTA. The agreement called for 18 months. As it was applied by the State of Florida, it ended up being 13 months, which is a separate issue. Ultimately, there are other provisions that are part of that, and that is part of the give and take of a negotiation.


Senator KAINE. I understand your concern since the matter is still pending, but as a general matter, if something is allowed to be part of the public record, then more people become aware of it. In this case there were allegations that, I guess eventually, somewhat more than three dozen women had been victimized by the individual. If something is allowed to be public, it informs the public and provides opportunities for people to come forward. If something is prohibited from being part of any public record, it has a way of making it more difficult for people to bring forward claims. Isn’t that accurate?


Mr. ACOSTA. Senator, something that I think has ch changed over time is trust of government, and that’s relevant to the issue that you raised because there was a time when keeping something— when having something confidential was less of an issue. The public expectation today is that things be very public. If there is something that I have learned or thought about it’s how careful someone should be when something is not made public, because often a very positive outcome—again, not talking about this case but generally—a very positive outcome can become a negative outcome not because of a change in the underlying substance but because by something not looking public it is looked at with suspicion.


Senator KAINE. This is a question. The U.S. attorney position is a position of great power, and you’re dealing with a lot of people who are in very vulnerable positions. The Secretary of Labor position is a position of great power, and you’ll also be responsible for situations when there are a lot of vulnerable people. This is why I’ve been asking this question. Let me ask one other one. During the campaign, President Trump often ridiculed the BLS unemployment numbers, calling them ‘‘phony’’ or ‘‘a hoax.’’ Will you commit to keeping the Bureau of Labor Statistics independent and maintain and defend the integrity of its conclusions and data?


Mr. ACOSTA. Senator, I’ll answer your question, but if I could circle back, I just want to make one final point.


Senator KAINE. Mm-hmm.


Mr. ACOSTA. At the end of this case, I received a telephone call from the special agent in charge of the FBI who had been part of this entire process and had been at the meetings and had been involved, and he called to just say congratulations, this was really hard fought and well won. I say that because this truly was a point of pride. There was a New York Times article that was written concurrent to this that said, ‘‘But then the United States Attorney’s Office in Miami became involved.’’ Initially, the Epstein team was elated Mr. Epstein would avoid prison. Then the U.S. Office became involved, and last summer Mr. Epstein got an ultimatum, ‘‘plead guilty to a charge that would require to register him as a sex offender, or the government would charge him with sexual tourism.’’


Senator KAINE. Since you’ve added on, then I want to add on. You are aware that Mr. Epstein served that 13 months, he was allowed out during the day. He had to sleep at a county jail, but he was basically allowed to move and go around the community and do whatever he wants, and then that became a subject of significant criticism.


Mr. ACOSTA. I am on record condemning that, and I think that was awful.


Senator KAINE. You would say that was a problem with the way the State administered the State sentence.


Mr. ACOSTA. Yes, and I think it was wrong. Senator KAINE. OK. How about on the Bureau of Labor Statistics? Mr. ACOSTA. On the Bureau of Labor Statistics, briefly, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has kept statistics for decades, and it has a procedure. It’s a transparent procedure that makes clear how they calculate, that publishes for public comment any changes that may take place, and that procedure is very important because BLS keeps data that is used not just for today but for the future, and that process is very important.


Senator KAINE. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.


The CHAIRMAN. Thanks, Senator Kaine


If, somehow, Chump was unaware of Acosta's sweet heart deal with pedophile and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein when Acosta was vetted for the position, he knew about it after the confirmation hearing.


And he continued to support Acosta.  It was only months later, when the reporting by THE MIAMI HERALD revealed even more problems with the deal Acosta gave Epstein and public outcry was mounting that Acosta was forced to resign from Chump's first administration.


How much did Chump know?  How close were Chump and Acosta?



MAGA lawmaker Mike Collins lobbed a political grenade into efforts from Team Trump to limit his exposure to fallout from the Epstein files.

Georgia Rep. Collins made a bombshell admission, that he believes Donald Trump’s name will be in the files, at a county GOP meeting, the Washington Examiner reported.

A constituent asked the MAGA lawmaker whether he believed Trump was in the files related to Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender who died by suicide while in federal custody in New York City in August 2019 as he awaited trial on new sex trafficking charges.

“Yeah, I’m sure he’s in there,” Collins said, without providing evidence, according to an audio clip of the exchange uploaded to YouTube, titled, “HOT MIC: Republican caught saying Trump IS IN THE EPSTEIN FILES!”


This morning, EMPTY WHEEL offers a deep dive into claims offered by Chump pal and convicted pedophile Ghislaine Maxwell:


When NYT first ran this story on August 5 — with the two earlier WSJ stories (July 17; July 24), the third story providing unprecedented details on the Epstein scandal during the period Trump has tried to bury his sex trafficking problem — I noted two things about it: The exceedingly weird treatment of Todd Blanche’s visit with Ghislaine Maxwell, in which NYT mentioned neither Blanche by name nor his title.

The White House had pledged to release details about the federal investigations into Mr. Epstein and his associates. But this summer the Trump administration backpedaled. The ensuing right-wing outrage has threatened to splinter the Make America Great Again movement — for whom Mr. Epstein is a central figure in conspiracy theories — and has put Mr. Trump on the defensive like few other issues.

Seeking to quell the backlash, the Justice Department dispatched a top official to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell, Mr. Epstein’s longtime associate who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking. On Friday, Ms. Maxwell was moved to a lower-security facility. [my emphasis]

The other remarkable aspect of the story is the absolute dearth of any source description for the photos from Jeffrey Epstein’s brownstone. None appears in the story or credited on the photos.

The refusal to provide any hints as to source carried over to the response that lead reporter David Enrich gave to a question about sourcing:

These are good questions, but I’m afraid there’s not a whole lot I can say because of the need to protect sources who provide us with information. The one thing I feel comfortable sharing is that we published this information as soon as we were able. This is not something we’ve been sitting on.

I fully recognize that it is frustrating as a reader not to have transparency about where/how journalists get information like this, but I hope you can also understand that protecting sources is paramount — people need to be able to trust that we will protect their confidentiality when they come to us with important information.

Viewed in the aftermath of the release of the Ghislaine Maxwell transcripts (July 24, July 25), however, something else sticks out.

First, there’s the number of people mentioned in the story also mentioned in Maxwell’s interview:

There are people mentioned in the story that Blanche did not ask about: Mortimer Zuckerman, Woody Allen, Steve Bannon, Mick Jagger, and Joi Ito.


There's so much to see and people are growing tired of the nonsense as Dan Abrams notes below.



Who's getting protected?

 


The following sites updated:




Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Chump still trying to be a dictator

 


"The Snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):

Wednesday, August 27, 2025.  Chump's going full on Hitler and Mussolini in his attempt to control business, his farce of protecting children continues to be exposed by the special treatment he gives to convicted pedophile and sex trafficker Jizzy Pants Maxwell, his cabinet is so stupid that they can't even pronounce world famous proper names, and much more.


Let's start with Ben and MEIDASTOUCH NEWS for a reading of the room this morning.



In the roundtable last night, Mike observed, "He may have the administration that he deserves but it's not one that this country deserves."

 

There is so much in the above video but I want to zoom in on one thing.  I hate stupid adults.  I had a trauma as a child and lost all memories and knowledge.  I had to relearn everything.  And I did.  And that may be why I actually have a thirst for knowledge and in my fantasies I'm living right off a college campus and taking one class after another year after year.  

To be a cabinet secretary in an administration and well over fifty, you should have to have some level of education.  But in Chump's administration, they're all idiots and liars -- not "or" but "and."  That's most obvious by the idiot who chose to bring up the Nobel Peace prize.  


As a general rule, if you don't know how to pronounce something, don't use the word.


But some people re so stupid that they don't grasp their own stupidity.


Which is how you got a cabinet secretary in the video above trying to kiss Chump's ass by bringing up the Noble Peace Prize and by mispronouncing it.  It is not No-bull.  Is is No-bell.  


The Nobel Peace Center created this video three years ago and it is aimed at children.


Alfred Nobel.  Can someone please educate our very ignorant administration on the pronunciation of Alfred Nobel's last name, the name given to the various prizes awarded each year including the Nobel peace prize.  And, again, if you don't know how to say a word, don't say it.  It's fine if you're a kid, it's even fine if you're a young adult.  But by the time you're in your fifties, getting something like this wrong just makes everyone wonder if you ever learned a damn thing.




Seems like only yesterday when warnings that Donald Trump qualified as a neo-fascist and that what he was selling qualified as neo-fascism guaranteed rolled eyes, dismissals that the warnings were hysterical, and cries of "Trump Derangement Syndrome," a neat little expression utilized by those who argued that the evidence in front of our faces wasn't there. Addressing a group of young people in 2019, Trump provided a civics lesson at sharp variance with what they had learned in school. "I have the right to do whatever I want as president," he told them. It wasn't the first time he'd claimed to have absolute power as president. "(The Constitution) allows me to do whatever I want," he'd told ABC News earlier. Fox host Sean Hannity tried to cajole Trump into walking back his repeated vows to be the "retribution president," encouraging him to promise "that you would never abuse power as retribution against anyone." Trump declined. "Except on day 1," he replied.
Day 1 has lasted well into Trump's second administration, and we ain't seen nothing yet. We were warned about this in no uncertain terms by those in a position to know, who bluntly described Trump as a "fascist." Just weeks before the 2024 election, Trump's first chief of staff, John Kelly, told The New York Times that the word "fascist" fit the bill. "Looking at the definition of fascism, it's a far-right authoritarian, ultranationalist political ideology and movement characterized by a dictatorial leader, centralized autocracy, militarism (and) forcible suppression of opposition," the retired four-star Marine general said, breaking his silence about the president whose clinical narcissism and addiction to falsehoods Kelly had attempted to manage. "So, certainly, in my experience, those are the kinds of things that he thinks would work better in terms of running America." It was a measure of how obvious this had become that scant attention was paid to the disclosure that Trump had complained that he "wanted generals like Adolf Hitler had."
Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley was even more direct, if possible. Trump, General Milley told The Washington Post's Bob Woodward, was "fascist to the core" and "a total fascist."

There's no longer any reason to tiptoe around the bush on this point. By April of this year, Americans had seen enough of the executive orders targeting law firms who'd dared to dispute Trump's fraudulent claims that he'd won the 2020 election and the mass purge of anyone in government not prepared to buy his con-artistry to reach their conclusion. A Public Religion Research Institute poll released that month found that 52% of Americans agreed that "President Trump is a dangerous dictator whose power should be limited before he destroys American democracy."


There is no reason to tiptoe around this.  The American people are right to be concerned.  Anyone paying attention is right to be concerned.  Chump is a thug and idiot that at that.  He's not fooling anyone.  He's certainly not fooling Dan Abrams.   Joe DePaolo (MEDIAITE) notes:


Dan Abrams slammed the FBI raid on John Bolton as an act of a weaponized Justice Department — and dismantled the claim that the Biden DOJ was politicized, which some on the right are arguing in order to justify the Bolton raid.

In a blistering opening monologue for his show on SiriusXM’s POTUS channel Monday, Abrams — the founder of Mediaite — called the weaponization of the Trump DOJ “disgusting” and argued that the evidence the FBI had against Bolton to justify a raid almost certainly “pale[s] in comparison” to the evidence against President Donald Trump ahead of the August 2022 raid on Mar-a-Lago.
“At this point, if anyone had lingering questions about the disgusting weaponization of this DOJ and intel leadership, they have been answered with the raid on John Bolton’s home,” Abrams said. “You had intelligence and DOJ working together to make some case against Bolton — likely based on a book he wrote in 2020 which was very critical of Trump. Maybe it’s based on something else. And heck, they got two judges to sign off on search warrants so there may be some violation. But I am confident that whatever they may have will pale in comparison to the documents case against Trump himself — where he and his team lied about having over 100 classified documents.”

Abrams then listed off a host of examples in support of his claim that the Trump DOJ is weaponized — from the firing of dozens of federal prosecutors who worked on Jan. 6 cases, to the investigations launched against those Trump feels have wronged him, such as former cybersecurity head Chris Krebs, who publicly stated that the 2020 election was fair.
“And yet when confronted about how absurdly political this all is,” Abrams said, “the response is the same. The Biden and Obama DOJ’s are the ones that started the politicization.”

And that claim — according to Abrams — is “BS.” The Mediate founder pointed out that one of the most compelling arguments knocking down the premise that the Biden DOJ was weaponized actually came from former FBI Director Chris Wray — who, like all of his predecessors in the job, was a Republican when he was appointed.

“At a senate hearing in 202, Wray pointed out that as a ‘lifelong republican,’ the idea that he was leading a politicized FBI made no sense,” Abrams said. “And in another hearing in 2022, he responded to one of the talking points that the FBI had been supposedly targeting pro-life protestors pointing out that more of their investigations were actually on the other side.


Here's the video, by the way.



We live in the age of hypocrisy as Dan notes above.  Chump is weaponizing the Dept of Justice.  And note the case Chris Brennan (USA TODAY) lays out:



Texas Gov. Greg Abbott expressed grave concerns about the president marching America's military into his state.

He wanted assurances that his state's residents' "safety, constitutional rights, private property rights and civil liberties will not be infringed." He sought to "ensure that Texas communities remain safe, secure and informed" well before the troops arrived.
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, said he understood why his constituents were reacting with "concern and uncertainty" because, in his view, "the federal government has not demonstrated itself to be trustworthy in this administration." People in Texas just couldn't trust what was happening, he said.
A national poll showed that 32% of primary voters thought the federal government was about to seize control of Texas, while 40% did not believe that and 28% were unsure.

Alex Jones, a far-right fount of conspiracy theories, called it an invasion and urged Texans to prepare. Russia's government, eager to accentuate the anxiety, used the internet to amplify it.

But none of this was about crime in American cities. And it wasn't an invasion. It wasn't even this year.
A decade ago, in the summer of 2015, the kind of conservative alarmists who were then congealing into President Donald Trump's MAGA base were howling not about him but about then-President Barack Obama.

And it was all because the U.S. Special Operations Command planned to conduct training across seven states ‒ Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida ‒ from July to September in an operation called "Jade Helm 15."

Among the outlandish Jade Helm conspiracy theories then was that the Federal Emergency Management Agency was building "death domes" to hold anyone who resisted, that closed Walmart locations would be used to process detainees, and that Russia would arm rebels in Texas for civil war.
That right-wing panic 10 years ago is instructive, because none of those freedom-loving voices are now calling out concerns about Trump really doing what they falsely accused Obama of doing with the military.
It has always been easier, of course, to play to the partisan base with conspiracy theories than it is to confront the titular head of your own political party as he leans hard into strongman tactics.
Trump, using crime as a pretext to menace American cities with our own military, isn't sending armed forces into Republican-controlled Texas, even though Houston and San Antonio rank in the top 10 for the highest total crime rates among the country's 30 largest cities.

Trump instead has invaded California with Marines and National Guard members.

He now has armed National Guard members wandering around Washington, DC, and he keeps talking about the next targets ‒ Chicago, New York, Baltimore.


Yet you have silence.  The people who wrongly accused Barack Obama of what Chump is actually doing now refuse to call out Chump's actions.  With their silence, they are destroying our democracy.  Robert Reich observes:


I’m old enough to remember when American politics was divided between those who wanted less government (they were called “conservatives,” or the Right) and those who wanted more social safety nets (called “progressives,” or the Left).

It’s hard to find Right or Left these days. Instead we have something no one has ever seen in America — a personal takeover of nearly all the institutions of government and, increasingly, the private sector, by a would-be dictator.

Trump is on the way to occupying Democratic-led cities with the Army, National Guard, and ICE — in what appears to be a dress rehearsal for the 2026 midterms.

He is telling Republican states to super-gerrymander in order to squeeze out more Republican seats in Congress, to help retain Republican control of the House after the 2026 midterm elections.

He is trying to silence criticism from universities, museums, law firms, and the media. And targeting critics for prosecution, such as Adam Schiff and John Bolton.

But that’s hardly all of it.

At the same time, Trump is taking personal control of the U.S. economy.

He’s trying to control the Federal Reserve Board, threatening Jerome Powell with unflattering stories about his expenditures on the Fed’s building and Fed governor Lisa Cook with stories about her home loan.

He’s imposing his will on key industries, from semi-conductors to steel.


Let's move over to THE 11TH HOUR WITH STEPHANIE RUHLE (MSNBC) and their report and then panel discussion on Chump's out of control power grabs.



We also need to note another segment of Stephanie's program from last night.



Stephanie Ruhle: Meanwhile the Commerce Secretary is saying that the US government may look to take stakes in defense companies.  That does not sound like any free markets capitalism I know. [. . .]  This is bananas and this is not how the US government works and this is not how capitalism works. 


Chump is a thug, a crook, a convicted crook, a con artist and, yes, a joke. 





GHISLAINE.  That sitcom really does portray the crimes of Maxwell and how she has manipulated Chump to get exactly what she wants because Chump can't stand up to a pedophile.  He won't.  Maybe she has a ton of dirt on him?  All the more reason to stand up to her.  But he refuses to do so.


Robert Davis reports:

The Trump administration just betrayed the victims of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking crimes, a legal expert said in a new report.

President Donald Trump recently released the transcripts of interviews Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche conducted with Epstein's accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell. The move was meant to placate the growing discontent within the MAGA base over the release of the Epstein files, but one expert suggests that it was really a betrayal of the victims.

"The games the administration is playing with re-releasing already public documents while withholding the Trump-Epstein files and other key information is another betrayal of survivors," former Amb. Norm Eisen, executive chair of Democracy Defenders Fund, told Axios.


On the Epstein and Maxwell crimes, Tom Boggioni notes:


The former U.S. attorney who helped engineer what has been described as a “sweetheart deal” for Jeffrey Epstein in 2008, which allowed him to walk away from sex crime accusations with a slap on the wrist, has agreed to talk to Congress.

That led a former Florida prosecutor to point out to lawmakers on both sides of the aisle that they have an obligation to question him on several major points that could clear up what legal maneuvering was agreed to that allowed Epstein to commit more crimes until his later arrest and eventual death in a prison cell

As NBC News reported, “[Alex] Acosta was the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida in 2008 when the office reached a secret non-prosecution agreement with Epstein, who wound up pleading guilty to state charges involving a single underage victim, protecting him from federal prosecution.”


Let's explore that further via James Zirin (THE HILL):


Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche went to the White House to warn Trump that his own name was in the Epstein documents. So he came up with a political stunt, pivoting to the grand jury minutes, which he must have known would be shrouded in secrecy under the law.

Disclosure of the minutes required a court order that he and Bondi knew he could never get. In federal procedure, you get an order by making a motion before the court — in this case before two courts. The government lawyers knew this would fail. What unfolded was a classic “Casey at the Bat,” except one where Casey wanted to strike out.

Naturally, Bondi began in Florida, where she and Trump knew the territory. In July, Florida District Judge Robin Rosenberg rejected the Justice Department’s submission. “Strike One,” Rosenberg said.

“Kill the umpire,” cried the MAGA fans, and likely they would have, had not the diverter-in-chief raised his hand.

Bondi then moved again, in the hated Southern District of New York, where Epstein and Maxwell had been indicted. Once more “the spheroid flew.” And on August 11, District Judge Paul Engelmayer said “Strike Two.” He denied the motion, finding that Maxwell’s grand jury records would reveal “next to nothing new” and also labeled Trump’s transparent ploy a “diversion.”

“Fraud!” cried the MAGAs. But “one scornful look” from the White House “and the audience was awed.”

District Judge Richard Berman’s ruling represented the third and final rejection of the administration’s requests to unseal the records.

“The government is the logical party to make comprehensive disclosure to the public of the Epstein Files,” wrote Berman. “By comparison, the instant grand jury motion appears to be a ‘diversion’ from the breadth and scope of the Epstein files in the government’s possession, The grand jury testimony is merely a hearsay snippet of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged conduct.’”

Berman quoted and agreed with Engelmayer’s findings. “The information contained in the Epstein grand jury transcripts pales in comparison to the Epstein investigation information and materials in the hands of the Department of Justice,” he wrote.

The Epstein grand jury, as with its counterpart in Maxwell’s case, consisted entirely of testimony by law enforcement officials, not victims. The same FBI agent who testified before Epstein’s grand jury also testified before Maxwell’s.

Berman noted: “The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) has recently stated that the [Justice Department] informed the Committee it will begin providing Epstein-related records ‘this week.’” But Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), the ranking member of the committee, stated that the overwhelming majority of the over 30,000 pages that the Justice Department produced had already been made public.

This is the appearance but not the reality of an investigation — with the conclusion of cover-up almost incontestable.


Chump thinks he can trick the American people on Epstein and Maxwell.  He can't.  He's wrong just as hes been wrong every week with his belief that this story would fade with the July 4th holiday.  It has not and it's not going to.  Discussing economic terms and theories?


Yes, that can be confusing for some.  


But we're talking about sex trafficking.  We're talking about pedophiles.  Americans very easily grasp the basics of this story.  They follow along with no need to for a slow walk-through.  And they get that Chump is on the wrong side of this issue.  They get that none of the survivors are being spoken to or, for that matter, being granted perks like convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.  


And too bad for Chump, the survivors are not going to be silenced.  Daniel Bates (THE I PAPER) reports:


The truth has a funny way of getting out, and in the case of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, it may well arrive in the most unexpected way. The news that the memoir of Virginia Giuffre – the woman who claims that the late paedophile trafficked her to Prince Andrew when she was 17 – will be published posthumously is no doubt chilling for the White House and causing deep anxiety for the Duke of York.
Ms Giuffre, a mother of two who was living in Australia, died by suicide in April, aged 41. However, come October, she may get her final opportunity to reveal all, including about her association with Prince Andrew. Ms Giuffre has claimed that Andrew had sex with her when she was under the legal age of consent, something he has denied. He paid what was reportedly millions to settle a civil sexual assault case with Giuffre in 2022, which accepted no liability of guilt. But she could also give her unvarnished opinions about Donald Trump, who knew Epstein, who hanged himself while awaiting trial in 2019, for years and once called him a “terrific guy”. 



Why it matters: The memoir arrives as Giuffre's family continues to speak out against Epstein and his associates, and as President Trump's handing of the Epstein files continues to face public scrutiny.
Giuffre, who died by suicide in April at age 41, had alleged in various lawsuits that she was a victim of sex trafficking and abuse by Epstein, his associate Ghislaine Maxwell and Prince Andrew.
Epstein, Maxwell and Prince Andrew all denied the allegations.
Her memoir, titled "Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice," is scheduled to be released on Oct. 21.

The book "offers an unsparing and definitive account of her time with Epstein and Maxwell," according to the book's description on Penguin Random House's website.
"Her story has never been told in full, in her own words — until now," the description reads.
Zoom in: The book will explore her "intimate, disturbing, and heartbreaking" experiences with Epstein and Maxwell, as well as her time "meeting politicians and CEOs," the publisher said.



Let's pull this from last night's roundtable:


Jim: What's been the biggest disappointment in the last 218 days?

Wally: Republicans in Congress.  They've always claimed to have ethics.  They have none.  They vote that Big Bulls**t Bill that destroys America -- for example, destroys medical insurance for so many Americans -- and then they make it worse by going into their districts and lying about what the bill will do.  And then they have a whiney fit when their constituents refuse to go along with them and their break from reality.  That's what the second Chump term is: A break from reality.  A psychotic break. 

Dona: Grace Hall (MIAMI HERALD) cites Pew's latest poll which found his job approval rating has fallen "to 38%" and it was 47% at the start of his second term in January 2025."  It would appear that a large number of Americans are tuned into what he's doing.

Marcia: Yes, but that's not registering with Republicans in Congress -- like Wally pointed out earlier.  And they control both houses of Congress.  So it's hard not to feel as though we're screwed for the rest of this year and next.


Betty: And we've got a corrupt Supreme Court.  Don't forget that.  And let's never forgive John Roberts, Chief Justice, for bringing us to this point.  He is part of the problem.  And he will be remembered in history for presiding over the Court that the American people lost faith in.  For decades, we had seen the Supreme Court as a trusted body.  Now we see it for a collective of right-wing partisan hacks. It doesn't represent the American people and it doesn't even attempt to pretend that it does.  This is a very sad and very risky moment in American history.  And I think we're seeing how little democracy means to a number of people -- some of whom hold elected office.
[. . .]

Elaine: Exactly.  He announces that he's got an executive order that now will put anyone burning a flag into prison for one year.  This despite the rulings of the Supreme Court that flag burning is a form of free speech.   Or his attempts to fire Lisa Cool from the Federal Reserve Board -- a move that a Supreme Court verdict earlier this year said he did not have the power to do. 


With that in mind, let's register another refusal by the Chump administration and its cronies to obey a court ruling.  Robert Davis notes:


A MAGA attorney general is openly defying a court order to close a federal immigration detention center in their state.

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier told a local news outlet that he plans to continue operating the facility, known as "Alligator Alcatraz." The facility is located in the Florida Everglades and was named because the property is surrounded by alligator nests and poisonous snakes.

"We’re going to continue operating the facility,” Uthmeier told news outlet WINK. “We believe that it’s a fully lawful facility. This is an effort by environmentalists, by the left, by Democrats and by honestly this judge, to stall our immigration enforcement efforts.”


Let's wind down with this from Senator Elizabeth Warren's office:

Senators allege that “ED is covering up its attempts to make FSA less responsive to millions of students, families, and borrowers.”

Investigation reveals ED’s efforts to intentionally hide the “Submit a Complaint” button on the Federal Student Aid website

Text of Letter (PDF)

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) led Senators Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) in sending a follow-up letter to Education Secretary Linda McMahon condemning the Department of Education (ED) for deliberately hiding the “Submit a Complaint” button on the Office of Federal Student Aid’s (FSA) website, firing employees responsible for providing customer service to borrowers and families, and misleading Congress about the scope of these firings.

“These findings suggest that ED is covering up its attempts to make FSA less responsive to millions of students, families, and borrowers who rely on the agency to lower the cost of attending college and protect them from loan servicer misconduct,” the senators wrote.

The senators initially wrote to Secretary McMahon in March 2025 regarding the Trump Administration’s decision to slash FSA’s capacity to handle student aid complaints and hide the “submit a complaint” button. ED’s response to the senators provided a misleading and incomplete explanation of the Department’s actions.

FSA’s complaint system allows students and borrowers to receive help with a range of issues, including servicer errors interfering with loan repayment and problems with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form.

In response to the senators’ concerns that FSA has made it more difficult for students and borrowers to submit complaints on FSA’s website, ED stated, “the button to submit a complaint has been moved from the top of the webpage to the footer and renamed ‘submit feedback.’”

But the senators’ investigation revealed that ED’s explanation only tells part of the story. Now, under Secretary McMahon, the complaint button can only be accessed by clicking a tiny “Site Feedback” button hidden at the bottom of the page and navigating through several additional menus. Reports of internal communications between Department personnel reveal that the explicit purpose of this change was to limit the number of complaints ED received.

The senators also raised concerns regarding ED’s choice to fire FSA employees responsible for reviewing financial aid complaints and demanded answers on how this would affect ED’s capacity to help parents and students navigate the federal student aid system. ED had claimed that “[n]o employees working on the core functions of FAFSA or student loan servicing were subject to the Reduction in Force (RIF).” Yet, the layoffs included a large number of staff at the Office of the Ombudsman, which is responsible for investigating and resolving complaints, and staff from FSA dedicated to resolving technical issues with the FAFSA.

“[U]nder your watch, ED has made it more difficult for borrowers to notify the Department of issues related to their financial aid and receive the help they are entitled to,” wrote the senators to Secretary McMahon. 

Senator Warren has led the fight to make our higher education system more affordable, cancel student loan debt, and hold student loan servicers accountable for incompetence and malfeasance. She also launched the Save Our Schools campaign in a coordinated effort to fight back against President Trump’s attempts to abolish the Department of Education:

  • On August 7, 2025, Senator Warren publicly released Secretary of Education Linda McMahon’s response to the senator’s 60+ questions and pressed for additional information. Senator Warren announced that she would refer certain matters where the Department has proved uncooperative to the Government Accountability Office and the Education Department’s Inspector General.

  • On August 4, 2025, Senator Warren led eight Senators in pressing major private student loan lenders on their plans to serve the incoming surge of borrowers who will be pushed to the industry because of Republicans’ recently passed “Big, Beautiful Bill.”

  • On July 17, 2025, Senator Warren released a new 23-page report, “Education At Risk: Frontline Impacts of Trump’s War on Students,” highlighting warnings from 11 major national education and civil rights organizations on the impact of the Trump Administration’s dismantling of the Department of Education (ED), slashing support to millions of American students, primary and secondary school teachers, administrators, parents, and student loan borrowers.

  • On July 15, 2025, Senators Warren and Sanders, along with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, sent a letter to Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, urging her to reverse the interest hike on student loan borrowers in the SAVE forbearance.

  • On July 14, 2025, Senator Warren joined a letter to the director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russ Vought, and Secretary of Education, Linda McMahon, demanding that the Department of Education stop blocking nearly $7 billion in funds for K-12 schools, including for afterschool programs.

  • On July 3, 2025, Senator Warren led her colleagues in submitting an amicus brief for NAACP v. US, arguing to the United States District Court District of Maryland that President Trump’s attempts to dismantle the Department of Education violate separation of powers and lack constitutional authority.

  • On June 10, 2025, Senator Warren met with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon and delivered over 1,000 letters to McMahon that the senator had received from people in all 50 states who were worried about the Secretary’s efforts to dismantle the Department of Education.

  • On June 9, 2025, Senator Warren led her colleagues in pushing the Acting Inspector General of the Department of Education to open an investigation into new information obtained by her office, revealing that DOGE may have gained access to two FSA internal systems, in addition to sensitive borrower data.

  • On May 20, 2025, Senator Warren and 27 other senators pushed for full funding for the Office of Federal Student Aid.

  • On May 14, 2025, Senator Warren led a Senate forum entitled “Stealing the American Dream: How Trump and Republicans Are Raising Education Costs for Families,” highlighting the consequences of Secretary Linda McMahon’s reckless dismantling of the Department of Education and President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” for working- and middle-class students and borrowers.

  • On May 13, 2025, Senator Warren agreed to meet with Education Secretary Linda McMahon and promised to bring questions and stories from Americans across the country to highlight how the Trump administration’s attacks on education are hurting American families.

  • On May 6, 2025, Senator Elizabeth Warren highlighted the consequences of President Trump and Secretary Linda McMahon’s reckless dismantling of the Department of Education for American families in a Senate forum.

  • On April 24, 2025, Senator Warren launched a new investigation into the harms of President Trump’s attacks on the Department of Education, seeking information on the impact of the Trump administration’s actions from the members of twelve leading organizations representing schools, parents, teachers, students, borrowers, and researchers.

  • On April 10, 2025, following a request led by Senator Warren, the Department of Education’s Acting Inspector General agreed to open an investigation into the Trump administration’s attempts to dismantle the Department of Education.

  • On April 2, 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Mazie Hirono, along with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, sent a letter to Secretary of Education Linda McMahon regarding the Department of Government Efficiency’s proposed plan to replace the Department of Education’s federal student aid call centers with generative artificial intelligence chatbots.

  • On April 2, 2025, Senator Elizabeth Warren launched the Save Our Schools campaign to fight back against the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle the Department of Education and highlight the consequences for every student and public school in America.

  • On March 27, 2025, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) led a letter to Acting Department of Education Inspector General René Rocque requesting they conduct an investigation of the Trump Administration’s attempts to dismantle the Department of Education.

  • On March 20, 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders led a letter to Secretary of Education Linda McMahon regarding the Trump Administration’s decision to slash the capacity of Federal Student Aid to handle student aid complaints.

  • On February 24, 2025, in a response to Senator Warren, Secretary McMahon gave her first public admission that she “wholeheartedly” agreed with Trump’s plans to abolish the Department of Education.

  • On February 11, 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Andy Kim sent Linda McMahon, Secretary-Designate for the U.S. Department of Education, a 12-page letter with 65 questions on McMahon's policy views in advance of her nomination hearing.

  • In February 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) wrote to the student loan servicer Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA) with continued concerns over its website’s Terms of Use, which appear to be written with the intent to relieve MOHELA of liability for severe misconduct and may infringe upon student loan borrowers’ legal rights.

  • In February 2025, during the Senate’s consideration of the Republican budget resolution, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) proposed an amendment to protect higher education funding in Massachusetts.

  • In February 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren, Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) led 32 Democratic senators in writing to President Donald Trump, demanding that he reject Congressional Republicans’ legislative plans to increase the cost of living, including education costs, for Americans after pledging to lower costs on “Day One” of his presidency.

  • In February 2025, following Elon Musk and DOGE forcing their way into the Department of Education, Senator Elizabeth Warren and Minority Leader Schumer (D-N.Y.) led a coalition of Democrats in demanding the Department of Education launch an investigation into Musk and DOGE’s access to federal student loan data.

  • In January 2025, Senator Elizabeth Warren sent Elon Musk, Chair of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a letter detailing over 30 proposals that would cut at least $2 trillion of wasteful government spending over the next decade, including through saving on education programs.

  • In December 2024, Senators Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) revealed the alarming findings of a Senate investigation into millions of consumer credit reporting errors that occurred during the transfer of student loan accounts from Nelnet to MOHELA in 2023. The senators urged the CFPB and ED to investigate these errors and use their supervisory and enforcement authority to hold the appropriate parties accountable.

  • In December 2024, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Congresswoman Madeleine Dean (D-PA) led 24 lawmakers in sending a bicameral letter to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra and Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, revealing the results of their investigation into Navient regarding its cancellation process for the predatory, for-profit student loans in its portfolio and urging the agencies to hold the student loan servicer accountable for any violations of federal law.

  • In November 2024, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) sent a letter blasting MOHELA for abusing borrowers with potentially illegal, exploitative terms of use.

  • In October 2024, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), and Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) sent a letter to the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Department of Education (ED) commending the agencies on their progress in helping borrowers who are struggling financially to discharge their student loans in bankruptcy and asking them to continue expanding awareness of the Biden-Harris administration’s new policy.

  • In October 2024, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) celebrated new federal student debt relief, bringing the total number of Americans who have had their debt canceled under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program during the Biden-Harris Administration to a historic 1 million people and counting.

  • In September 2024, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Merkley (D-Ore.) released a new report examining the impact of the Biden-Harris administration’s new Higher Education Act rule, finding that low- and middle-income borrowers, seniors, women, and Black borrowers will receive enormous benefits from the new rule.

  • In September 2024, Senator Elizabeth Warren and Representative Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) led 56 of their colleagues in a letter to the Department of Education (ED), calling on the Department to conduct an analysis as to whether the Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri (MOHELA) has adhered to its contracts with the federal government, and if not, to consider terminating those contracts.

  • In August 2024, Senator Warren joined Senators Jeff Merkley, Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) to launch an investigation into the reported mishandling of student loan transfers by MOHELA, Nelnet, and credit reporting agencies.

  • In August 2024, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) and Representative Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) led over 30 lawmakers in a letter urging student loan servicer Navient to reform its flawed process to cancel the private student loans of borrowers who attended fraudulent, for-profit colleges.

  • In July 2024, Senators Warren, Ron Wyden, Chris Van Hollen, and Bernie Sanders sent a letter to Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, cautioning the Department of Education on Federal Student Aid’s transition to the Unified Servicing and Data Solution system.

  • In July 2024, Senators Warren, Schumer, and Sanders released a joint statement on the American Federation of Teachers’ lawsuit against MOHELA for allegedly overcharging and misleading student loan borrowers.

  • In May 2024, Senators Warren and King led their colleagues in a letter to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, urging them to provide guidance and communication to borrowers as the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program transfers from MOHELA to the Department of Education.

  • In May 2024, Senator Warren led a growing coalition of senators in urging the Department of Education to hold student loan servicer MOHELA accountable for its failures.

  • In May 2024, Senator Warren and 24 members of the U.S. Senate sent a letter to Senator Tammy Baldwin, Chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, and Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Ranking Member of the Subcommittee, encouraging them to provide $2.7 billion in funding to the Office of Federal Student Aid (FSA) in fiscal year (FY) 2025.

  • In May 2024, Senators Warren, Carper, Kaine, and Representative Don Davis (D-N.C.) called on the Department of Defense (DoD) to release data on the Postsecondary Education Complaint System (PECS), a centralized database to track complaints against schools that participate in the Tuition Assistance (TA) and My Career Advancement Account Scholarship (MyCAA) programs.

  • In April 2024, Senator Warren led eight of her colleagues in sending a letter to David L. Yowan, President and Chief Executive Officer of student loan servicer Navient, urging the servicer to cancel decades-old private student loans pushed onto borrowers attending fraudulent, for-profit colleges.

  • In April 2024, Senators Warren, Blumenthal, Markey, and Van Hollen released a new report: Servicing Scandals: Student Loan Servicers’ Failures During Return to Repayment, which reveals a decades-long pattern of student loan servicer incompetence and misconduct that has affected millions of borrowers nationwide.

  • In April 2024, Senator Elizabeth Warren led a hearing on student loan servicer Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri (MOHELA) and its failures during borrowers’ return to repayment, including MOHELA’s mismanagement of the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.

  • In March 2024, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Chair of the Senate Finance Committee, along with U.S. Representatives Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.), and John Larson (D-Conn.), led their colleagues in calling on the Social Security Administration (SSA), the U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury), and the U.S. Department of Education to end the practice of offsetting Social Security benefits to pay off defaulted student loans.

  • In February 2024, Senator Warren, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), and Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) released a statement calling for an investigation into student loan mismanagement by MOHELA.

  • In January 2024, Senators Warren, Schumer, Sanders, Warnock, and Padilla, along with Representative Ayanna Pressley, Assistant Democratic Leader Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), Representative Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.), and Representative Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), led their colleagues in calling on the Secretary of Education, Miguel Cardona, to host a fourth session of the student debt negotiated rulemaking to consider relief for borrowers experiencing financial hardship.

  • In December 2023, U.S. Senators Warren, Richard Blumenthal, Ed Markey, and Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) sent follow-up letters to student loan servicers – MOHELA, EdFinancial, Nelnet, and Maximus – raising concerns about borrowers’ problems with return to repayment, requesting information about the borrower experience, and pushing back on the servicers’ claim that budget shortfalls limit their ability to provide quality customer service to millions of borrowers.

  • In December 2023, Senators Warren, Schumer, Sanders, Alex Padilla (D-CA) and Representatives Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), and Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.) sent a letter to the U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, urging him to leverage his existing and full authority under the Higher Education Act to provide expanded student debt relief to working- and middle-class borrowers.

  • In August 2023, Senator Warren, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Senators Alex Padilla and Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), and U.S. Representatives Ilhan Omar, Jim Clyburn, and Frederica Wilson led 79 other lawmakers in a letter to President Joe Biden, urging him to swiftly deliver on his promise to deliver student debt cancellation to working- and middle-class families by early 2024.

  • In October 2022, Senator Warren and Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) visited communities across Massachusetts to celebrate the Biden administration’s student debt cancellation plan and help residents sign up for student loan relief.

  • In March 2022, Senator Warren, along with Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Senator Brown, and Representatives Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Mark Takano (D-Calif.), urged Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona to swiftly discharge the loans of borrowers defrauded by predatory for-profit colleges and universities, including those operated by Corinthian College.

  • In January 2022, Senator Warren, along with Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Representatives Jayapal, Pressley, Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), and Katie Porter (D-Calif.), led more than 80 colleagues in a bicameral letter to the Department of Education calling for it to release the memo outlining the Biden administration’s legal authority to cancel federal student loan debt and immediately cancel up to $50,000 of debt for Federal student loan borrowers.

  • In April 2021, Senators Warren and Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) led a group of colleagues in a letter to Education Secretary Miguel Cardona urging the Department of Education to take swift action to automatically remove all federally held student loan borrowers from default.

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