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My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



May 14, 2026

Called them fucking stupid dicks...

Ex-DOJ official goes public with blistering criticism of his former bosses

Tom Dreisbach

A former political appointee at the Trump Justice Department has emerged as one of its most outspoken critics, accusing his former bosses, particularly acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, of "very sloppy" work, "sabotage," careerism and betrayal of the Trump agenda.

Attorney Jonathan Gross is also revealing new information about the inner workings of the department's "Weaponization Working Group," an internal effort launched by former Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate claims that federal law enforcement was politicized under the Biden administration.

His public break with the department comes at a delicate time for the Trump administration. As the president gears up for the midterm elections some members of the MAGA base have expressed frustration at what they see as a failure to deliver on promises of accountability.

The Justice Department did not respond to NPR's request for comment.

Gross joined the Justice Department's civil rights division last summer after representing defendants charged in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Before taking on those cases, the rabbi-turned-lawyer had no criminal defense experience. He nonetheless became a strident critic of the prosecution effort, at one point comparing it to the Holocaust. His work on Jan. 6 cases helped raise his profile among Trump allies, drawing the attention of former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene and, ultimately, senior Trump-appointed officials at the Justice Department.

"We're lucky to have you on the team," wrote Leo Terrell, a former Fox News contributor and current DOJ official, announcing Gross' appointment in June 2025. "A great day for justice!"

Gross, as NPR first reported last year, soon began working with the newly-formed "Weaponization Working Group."

The small working group also included Jared Wise, a former FBI agent who was also criminally charged for his actions on Jan. 6. Wise entered the Capitol building during the riot and was captured on police bodycam video urging rioters to "kill" police officers defending the building. He pleaded not guilty to all charges and his case was dismissed when Trump returned to office. Like Gross, Wise joined the administration a few months later.

Both men expected the working group to expose what they considered grave abuses by the FBI agents and prosecutors involved in the Jan. 6 investigation, the largest in the department's history.

Those expectations quickly faded.

'They just don't care.'

The working group had "no budget, no staff" and "didn't meet as much as you would think," Gross told conservative activist and former Jan. 6 defendant Brandon Straka in an interview posted on YouTube this week. Gross did not respond to NPR's interview requests.

The group's work has largely unfolded in secret, but, as NPR previously reported, both Gross and Wise participated in discussions about drafting a report on alleged abuses of Jan. 6 defendants by the Justice Department under President Biden.

Prosecutors who worked on the massive Jan. 6 investigation have denied all wrongdoing. They have argued that the "Weaponization Working Group" is a partisan effort to punish officials for prosecuting Trump supporters and effectively rewrite the history of the violent attack, which injured 140 police officers and threatened the democratic process.

More than a year later, however, the department has released no report or findings on the Jan. 6 prosecutions. Both Gross and Wise, who also recently left the administration, have indicated that the "Weaponization Working Group" is no longer working on investigating the people who handled the Capitol riot cases.

"This DOJ and FBI don't comprehend the damage they're doing to J6 defendants and their families by refusing to investigate the abuses of the Biden DOJ and FBI," Wise posted on X.

"They comprehend," Gross responded. "They just don't care."

A source familiar with the activities of the "Weaponization Working Group" told NPR that the group is currently focused on reports of alleged anti-Christian bias and "targeting" of people who protested local school board meetings.

The lack of action on the Jan. 6 inquiry has frustrated many former riot defendants. They continue to press for what some call the three Rs: "reparations," in the form of financial settlements; "revenge" against prosecutors and judges; and "revelations," they believe would validate conspiracy theories that the Capitol riot was a "setup" by the federal government.

Earlier this month, Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, posted a video praising efforts to rescue 1,500 dogs allegedly mistreated at an animal testing research facility.

"Pirro is concerned about dogs, but completely ignores the 1500+ J6ers that her office was weaponized against," former Jan. 6 defendant Will Pope responded on X. "Aren't my constitutional rights more important than a beagle?"

'You can't do this.'

Gross says his short tenure at the Justice Department unraveled because of his advocacy for Jan. 6 defendants and others he believed had been targeted by a politicized justice system.

He told Straka that he repeatedly emailed superiors about cases he thought deserved renewed scrutiny.

"I never got a response to any of those emails until I was told to stop," Gross said.

The final straw, he said, was when he brought former Jan. 6 defendants into Justice Department headquarters.

Gross did not identify specific people he escorted into the building, but suggested their presence raised eyebrows in the building.

"They have security measures to make sure that I'm not bringing in real terrorists," Gross said. "But I brought in people who have been designated as terrorists, that's for sure."

Gross said he took his guests around the building so they could talk to Trump officials about their cases.

"But at a certain point, I guess, I went too far or did [it] too many times or maybe went into the wrong person's office," Gross said.

Eventually, Gross said, his boss, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon, called him in for a meeting.

"She called me in and she said, 'You can't do this,'" Gross said. "And I said, 'These people are victims of weaponization. This is what I'm here for.'"

At that point, according to Gross, he was placed on paid leave, moved to a different office, and "basically demoted" and assigned "menial" tasks, before he eventually left the Justice Department altogether.

'Don't be fooled'

Since leaving the administration, Gross has leveled his sharpest criticism at Todd Blanche, who was the department's No. 2 official before becoming acting attorney general after Pam Bondi's ouster.

In the top job, Blanche has overseen a burst of activity at the department, including the indictment of the nonprofit civil rights group the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) over its use of paid confidential informants in extremist groups, as well as the indictment of former FBI director James Comey over his Instagram post of seashells in the shape of the numbers "8647." The department alleges the post constituted a criminal threat against Trump. Comey has denied all wrongdoing.

"Todd Blanche was in charge for over a year and sabotaged Pam Bondi so he could swoop in and take her job," Gross posted on X. "Nothing stopped Blanche from dropping these indictments while Bondi was there."

"He's auditioning for AG. Don't be fooled. We need to go in a different direction," Gross wrote in another post.

Blanche has denied the allegation.

"I don't audition for this job," Blanche told CBS News last month. "I've been the deputy attorney general for over a year, OK? This is not an audition."

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks alongside Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Kash Patel a news conference last month to announce charges against to the Southern Poverty Law Center. They allege the group funneled over $3 million into the pockets of white supremacist and extremists groups.

Gross has also criticized the merits of the SPLC case.

"This is a very sloppy job," Gross told the conservative network Real America's Voice, predicting that the charges would ultimately be thrown out. The SPLC has said it will "vigorously defend" itself against the charges.

Even as he continues his public campaign against Blanche, Gross has said he also fears that his former colleagues may retaliate against him.

"I just think it would be very ironic if they came after me," Gross told Straka. "But I'm willing to do it."

Baboon shows he is a stupid baboon....

China's Xi wants a "constructive, strategic, stable relationship." What does that mean?

Analysis by Sylvie Zhuang in Hong Kong

In his meeting with US President Donald Trump today, China’s leader Xi Jinping uttered four words he said he hoped would define the US-China ties of the future: “Constructive, strategic, stable relationship.”

What does this phrase mean?

According to Chinese experts, it reflects Beijing’s underlying premise that the US-China relationship is a relatively difficult one to manage.

“Because the US is not a partner, and certainly not an ally, that said, we don’t want it to become an enemy, nor do we want conflict to arise because of this,” said Da Wei, an international relations scholar at Tsinghua University in Beijing.

Da said by putting forward this term, Beijing is saying it wants to avoid things spinning out of control into a war or decoupling, and that it wants a stable base upon which to build ties with the US.

But according to Shi Yinhong, an international relations scholar at the Renmin University of China, the phrase is only “cheap rhetoric” until both sides answer the question on what mutual concessions they will make and what mechanisms will be in place to guide their relations.

Pulls down pants and bends over, then turns around on knees and cleans dick....

Trump does not respond to reporter questions about Taiwan during photo op

By Simone McCarthy

US President Donald Trump did not respond to questions from reporters about whether he and Chinese leader Xi Jinping talked about Taiwan during their meeting Thursday.

Footage captured by CNN shows the president being asked twice about whether Taiwan was discussed, while he posed for a picture with Xi during their tour of the Temple of Heaven.

Trump, who typically open and conversational with media, stood shoulder to shoulder with the Chinese leader for the photo op and did not respond while two separate reporters asked the question.

Trump and Xi toured the UNESCO Heritage Site following roughly two hours of talks Thursday morning.

According to China’s Foreign Ministry, Taiwan – the self-ruling democracy that Beijing claims as its territory – did feature in talks.

Xi emphasized that “the Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations” and warned that relations can stay stable if the issue is “handled properly,” but risk entering into conflict if not, the Foreign Ministry readout said.

Still a threat? I thought baboon destroyed everything????

Iran still threatens Strait of Hormuz

Tehran’s ability to scare off commercial ships continues to give it leverage in any peace negotiation with the U.S.

By Leo Shane III

A top Pentagon official conceded Thursday that Iran remains a threat in the Strait of Hormuz despite the Trump administration’s insistence it has devastated the country’s military capabilities.

Adm. Brad Cooper, who leads the operations in the region, told lawmakers that Iran’s warnings continue to scare off commercial ships — despite U.S. military dominance in the region. The dichotomy underscores the biggest White House challenge to resolving the conflict: Tehran can use the stranglehold over the strait as leverage in peace negotiations with the United States.

“The Iranian capability to stop commerce has been dramatically depleted through the strait, but their voice is very loud,” Cooper told the Senate Armed Services Committee. “And those threats are clearly heard by the merchant industry and insurance industry.”

Cooper, in his first public testimony since the start of the Iran war, said the American military assault on Iran has “significantly degraded” the country’s military abilities and “they no longer threaten regional partners or the United States in ways that they were able to do before.”

But he acknowledged that the Iranian military still poses a threat to regional neighbors. “They are a very large country, and they retain some military capability,” he said.

Cooper pushed back on reports that Iran retains about 70 percent of its mobile launchers and prewar missile stockpile, saying that those numbers “are not accurate.” He said that Iran missile levels will take years to replenish, and their naval forces might not be restored “for a generation.”

Senators received a classified briefing ahead of Thursday’s public hearing on U.S. force levels and challenges in the region. But Cooper repeatedly avoided revealing specifics during the open session, to the frustration of committee Democrats.

“It may be diminished power, but if the United States military is not physically opening the strait right now, it’s because the Iranians do have the real capability to [send] drone strikes into Gulf countries, affecting their oil infrastructure and sending the price of oil worldwide even higher,” said Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.).

About a fifth of the world’s oil travels through the critical strait.

Cooper did say that U.S. naval forces are prepared to resume Project Freedom — the short-lived mission to clear the strait for civilian vessels — if the White House gives the order. That effort was paused by President Donald Trump less than 48 hours after it began because, he said, of a request from mediators working on a peace deal between the countries.

Trump, in a letter to Congress on May 1, declared the Iran war “terminated” due to a ceasefire between the two nations. But he declined to start drawing down forces stationed throughout the Middle East. He has suggested in social media posts that strikes could begin again if peace talks don’t progress.

Cooper did not offer any timeline for when American troops might begin withdrawing from the region.

But other officials hinted Thursday that the war was taking a toll on the military. Adm. Daryl Caudle, the Chief of Naval Operations, warned lawmakers that the service might need to curtail training, recruitment and other efforts this summer without additional funding.

Caudle told the House Armed Services Committee that the existing budget “didn’t bake in” the Iran war that began in February. It’s the latest indication that the conflict, which administration officials have dubbed Epic Fury, is running up a significant tab.

“Without supplemental funding, I do fear that I’ll have to start making decisions in the July time frame on how I do force generation,” Caudle said. “That can make differences between how I do exercises, how I do routine operations, in order to make sure that I ... have the funds necessary to continue the war effort for Epic Fury.”

The comments also come after Pentagon officials informed lawmakers this week that the war has cost $29 billion — up from $25 billion last month — and as the American public becomes increasingly frustrated with rising gas prices.

Should go to prison...

Border Patrol chief Michael Banks resigns his position

By Priscilla Alvarez, Michael Williams

US Border Patrol Chief Michael Banks told CNN Thursday he was stepping down from his post, effective immediately, marking the latest senior immigration official to leave the Department of Homeland Security since Secretary Markwayne Mullin stepped into the top job.

In a statement, Banks said he was “proud” of his time at Border Patrol and was leaving it now “as the most secure border” in the nation’s history.

“After almost 37 years of public service now is my time to enjoy family and life,” he said.

Banks was appointed to Border Patrol’s top position in January 2025. He was a long time Border Patrol agent who previously served as Texas’ border czar.

CNN has reached out to CBP and DHS for comment.

Have no fucking idea what the baboon will do to fuck it up....

America’s angry voters are the X factor in Trump’s high-stakes meeting with Xi

Analysis by David Goldman, John Liu

President Donald Trump would seem to have a distinct advantage going into his upcoming negotiations with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

Economy: America’s economy is growing strong, boosted by AI and consumer spending. China’s overall growth remains robust, but its economy is struggling with challenges stemming from its housing collapse five years ago. ✔️ USA
Jobs: US companies are hiring, and unemployment remains low. China’s real estate crisis slammed the brakes on residential construction, evaporating jobs. ✔️ USA
Spending and inflation: American consumers keep spending, even as inflation rebounds (but nowhere close to where it was four years ago). Consumer spending in China is still running soft, and prices are only starting to bounce back from prolonged deflation, a worrisome economic trend that sends prices and paychecks falling. ✔️ USA
Energy prices: The United States, with its vast oil and gas resources, is much more insulated from the economic effects of the Iran war than most countries. As a major energy importer, China is more vulnerable to oil price shocks even with a healthy buffer of crude stockpiles. ✔️ USA
Trump is winning across the board. But America’s president is going to China with significantly less leverage than you’d expect.

Consumers from both countries grew fed up with their economies in 2022, and those sentiment reports have remained downtrodden.

Trump and his Republican party could suffer in the November midterm elections for that. But Xi maintains ultimate control of his party and economy. He can afford to prioritize long-term strategy over weak consumer sentiment as long as he can keep overall growth from stalling outright – even if his citizens pay a near-term price.

✔️ China.

And that last checkmark may be the only one that counts: Trump’s low support in an election year is hurting his ability to maximize his leverage with China.

America’s short-term problem

Trump is facing something of a revolt at home.

Consumer sentiment was near record lows before the war with Iran began. Last week, it fell to a record low – in a survey that dates back to the 1950s – as gas prices continued to surge.

American consumers haven’t yet adjusted to the massive price spikes from the 2022 inflation crisis. Meanwhile, the housing market has been frozen for years, locking away access to America’s wealth engine for would-be homebuyers. Prices of necessities like childcare, groceries, education and electricity all rose faster than overall inflation this decade.

Adding a gas price shock on top of that has compounded Americans’ deep uncertainty about the economy and sent Trump’s favorability ratings to the lowest of either of his terms. High gas prices hit American wallets immediately, and big signs with $4 gas plastered all over town serve as a constant reminder about how much folks have to shell out for fuel.

Neutering Trump’s leverage

With the looming midterms, Republicans are scrambling for answers. That limits Trump’s tools to force the trade issue with Xi.

“Xi is well aware of the fact that Trump has very little leverage,” said Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University who served on former President Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers. “Xi knows that Trump’s threatening rhetoric and imposition of sanctions and tariffs are not playing well with American voters.”

Trump will almost certainly ask Xi for help pressuring Iran, ramping up exports of rare-earth minerals and increasing purchases of US goods – all while threatening to raise tariffs on China. It remains to be seen much Xi will give in to Trump, as Beijing will certainly understand the political problems the American president faces at home.

“If tariffs lift prices, hit markets or disrupt supply chains, voters feel it quickly,” said Nigel Green, CEO of deVere, a financial advisory firm. “Low economic sentiment at home will likely limit how aggressively he pushes.”

For the same reason, Trump has resisted resuming attacks on Iran, despite dragged-out peace negotiations and a locked-down Strait of Hormuz that threatens still-higher energy prices. He knows the war is playing poorly at home, and more bombing worsens his chances of exiting the damaging conflict.

Meanwhile, Trump and his lieutenants continue to heap praise on the economy (correct, if tone deaf). US GDP grew at an annualized rate of 2% in the first quarter – robust growth for America’s $32 trillion economy. Consumer spending and retail sales rose relatively strong last month, even when stripping out gas prices and inflation.

But the divide between America strong economy and voters’ weak sentiment can have serious political consequences.

Just ask former President Joe Biden.

China cranks up the pressure

Meanwhile, Xi has exerted ever more pressure on the United States – particularly by curtailing exports of rare earths that the Trump administration will need to rebuild weapon stockpiles after the Iran war.

Xi and senior Chinese officials view rare earths as critical to their ability to push back against any new US demands, noted Paul Triolo, a China and tech expert at consulting firm Albright Stonebridge.

China has built up its arsenal of US countermeasures in recent years. Earlier this month, it dusted off a 2021 statute – never before used – to block Chinese citizens and enterprises from complying with US sanctions.

“China is relatively confident in its position even if talks fail,” said Joe Mazur, senior analyst at consultancy Trivium China, pointing to Beijing’s “highly effective” playbook from last year, including reciprocal tariffs.

China’s long-term advantage

Xi has more wiggle room because he has the luxury of a long-term view of the economy (that’s what an un-democratic, single-party government affords you).

It’s not that China’s domestic economic challenges matter less than America’s. Xi is just working on a different timescale than Trump.

Chinese citizens continue to face financial strains: A large segment of the population remains unemployed, and youth joblessness has hovered above 16% over the past couple of months. Consumer confidence tumbled after 2021 because of a real estate crisis and heavy-handed pandemic-era lockdowns. Sentiment has remained subdued ever since. Signs of a gradual recovery have begun to appear only in the past several months.

But Xi’s power has limits.

China’s relatively weak growth has added urgency to the government’s push to reshape the economy. China’s shifts to prioritize AI and high-tech industries have sparked a boom in some sectors, but the gains have yet to spread widely enough to make up for the jobs lost over the past decade.

And China wants help from the United States, too: Xi will probably ask Trump to extend a pause on harsh tariffs. He’ll want fewer restrictions on US technology for Chinese companies and greater access to US markets. Taiwan and Iran are sure to be major topics as well.

It’s not clear how much Trump will give in to any of that. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have identified China’s robotics and AI ambitions as a national security threat and have little desire to give China any more access to critical US technologies.

Nevertheless, Xi comes into negotiations with the upper hand. Because Xi has something Trump doesn’t have: time.

Trees

The Solution to Urban Heat Is Actually Amazingly Simple

Trees, people. Trees. And the right kind.

Matt Simon

Johnny Appleseed was ahead of his time. Not because he fed so many people by planting apple trees (really, he got them drunk instead, as his real goal was encouraging the production of cider) but because he created so much shade to enjoy on hot days. More than two centuries later, American cities are wishing they had better followed Appleseed’s lead, as rising temperatures and a lack of tree cover combine to make urban life increasingly stifling.

Two new studies show how simply planting more trees can provide huge temperature benefits, not to mention how the additional plant life would boost biodiversity and improve mental health for urbanites. The first finds that tree cover can cancel half of the heat island effect, in which the urban jungle gets much hotter than the surrounding countryside. The second compares neighborhoods in 65 American cities, finding that canopy-deprived areas suffer up to 40 percent more excess heat than heavily greened spots.

Places like New York and Atlanta and Los Angeles, then, don’t just have to foster and maintain their “gray” infrastructure—roads and sidewalks and such—but their living infrastructure as well. “Heat is already a major public health threat. It kills 350,000 people a year by some estimates, and it’s worse in cities,” said Robert McDonald, the Nature Conservancy’s lead scientist for nature-based solutions and the Europe region, who spearheaded the first paper. “The urban heat island effect would be about double what it is now if world cities didn’t have trees.”

By increasing their canopies, metropolises dress themselves like their more comfortable rural counterparts. A vegetated area cools itself both because plants “sweat” by releasing moisture from their leaves, and because trees provide shade. By contrast, concrete absorbs the sun’s energy, driving temperatures up, and releases it throughout the night. That beats back the cooling typically experienced in the evening, meaning urbanites without air conditioning don’t get respite. This is especially dangerous for vulnerable groups like the elderly, and it’s one reason heat kills more Americans every year than all other extreme weather events combined.

Such conditions are especially dangerous for those living in lower-income neighborhoods, which tend to have significantly less tree canopy than richer areas. In industrialized areas, for example, vast stretches of concrete absorb and radiate heat. In urban centers, policymakers may have prioritized building dense housing without incorporating ample tree cover. Compare that to the suburbs, which have plenty of parks, curbside trees, and yards to cool things down.

The differences in greenery between neighborhoods translates into striking differences in temperatures. The second study calculated this “cooling dividend,” or the difference in the average urban heat island in areas with low and high canopy cover. It found gaps reaching almost 4 degrees Fahrenheit. If you’re lucky enough to live where there’s lots of trees, you might experience 20 to 40 percent less excess heat. The report found that this is playing out regularly across the US.

I think what maybe was surprising is that there was a dramatic amount of consistency,” said Steve Whitesell, executive editor at the Healthy Green Spaces Coalition, which authored the report. “In other words, they were all showing an impact.”

The trick is not just planting enough trees, but planting the right kind. The biggest species provide the most shade, of course. But more cryptically, some provide more evaporative cooling than others—drought-adapted trees, for instance, try to retain as much water as they can. A neighborhood might also want to prioritize food production, opting for trees that create both shade and fruit. Favoring native varieties will also help support native animal life, like birds and pollinating insects. 

Climate change, though, is complicating these calculations. Even in rural areas, without the added temperatures of the urban heat island effect, some places are getting so hot that native plants are moving north in search of cooler climes. Within cities, they are blasted with still more heat—and temperatures will only climb from here. So urban arborists aren’t just planting species that will thrive today, but will survive the climate of tomorrow. “I think that for us to use trees as a type of living infrastructure, that can counter those increased temperatures, is paramount,” said Edith de Guzman, a cooperative extension researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies urban heat but wasn’t involved in either study. “I think it’s pretty much the most important thing we can do.”

But trees alone can’t save urbanites. McDonald’s study found that even if cities planted as many as possible, it would only offset 20 percent of the potential running up of temperatures due to climate change. Designers will have to deploy other techniques, like reflective rooftops, to manage the heat. That’s especially important in poorer nations, whose cities are rapidly growing but have much less tree cover than richer countries, the study found. “It’s just to say that climate change is a big enough challenge that while planting more tree cover helps with temperatures, it won’t do the job by itself,” McDonald said. 

Urban areas have been here before, McDonald added. As the Industrial Revolution kicked in, people in overpopulated metropolises would have to travel to the countryside to glimpse greenery. An exception was London, with its many publicly available green spaces, which Paris took as inspiration when it essentially rebuilt itself in the 1800s and made room for massive parks. Today, planners are similarly bringing some of the country back into the city, blurring the lines between rural and urban. “We know how to increase tree cover, if we put our minds to it,” McDonald said. “But it takes effort and time.”

This is crazy.........

Mergers, Choking Hazards, Energy Prices—Does the Roberts Court Really Want Trump in Charge of All That?

An upcoming ruling is expected to put independent regulators under presidential control.

Pema Levy

In his second term, President Donald Trump demands a loyal bureaucracy that will defend his political well-being. No one better represents this reimagining of the work of government experts than Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. Created by Congress in 1934 to oversee radio licensing and telecommunications, Carr has turned the FCC into a political weapon to silence media voices deemed unfriendly to the administration. It’s Exhibit A of what can happen when an independent agency is hijacked by partisan apparatchiks. Little wonder Trump has praised him as “outstanding,” a “patriot,” and “a very tough guy.”

Carr’s record is frighteningly impressive. Verizon and T-Mobile both ditched diversity, equity, and inclusion practices in exchange for merger approvals from his FCC. Paramount, parent-company of CBS, created an ombudsman at the network to ensure a “diversity of viewpoints” to win Carr’s approval for its merger with Skydance, in effect letting Carr sway news content. Carr also successfully leaned on Paramount to pay Trump off in a suit over a 60 Minutes episode Trump didn’t like. Stephen Colbert called that a “big fat bribe,” after which CBS canceled his Late Show. Then, after all this capitulation, Carr approved the merger. Perhaps most infamously, after ABC late night host Jimmy Kimmel made a joke that Trump didn’t like, Carr threatened that parent company Disney would face the FCC’s retribution if it didn’t fire Kimmel. “We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” Carr warned. It’s hard to imagine a more blatant abuse of government power: Punishing private individuals for their speech. Carr, who just a few years ago tweeted that censoring “late-night comedians…would represent a serious threat to our freedoms,” began a review of ABC broadcast licenses the day after Trump called on Disney to fire Kimmel. After months of bullying, Disney has been pushed to defend its affiliates.

And yet, in a case the Supreme Court is expected to rule on in the coming weeks, the Republican-appointed majority is likely to decide, in effect, more of this, please.

The FCC has traditionally been considered an independent agency. Independent agencies are typically run by a bipartisan board of commissioners who serve fixed-year terms and can only be removed by the president for cause—a setup designed by Congress to insulate them from White House political pressure. Carr is a case in point of the risk. When Trump made him chair, he called him “a warrior for free speech.” What he got was an enemy of a free press—but a warrior for Trump. 

Despite this history, the Roberts Court has signaled that it is ready to declare at least some independent agencies unconstitutional. During Trump’s first few months in office, the court’s GOP-appointed majority, against the dissents of their colleagues tapped by Democrats, used their emergency docket to wave through the firings of Democratic commissioners on the National Labor Relations Board, the Federal Trade Commission, the Merit Systems Protection Board, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission. These decisions flew in the face of a seminal 1935 opinion, Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, in which a unanimous Supreme Court had ruled that the Constitution permitted creating independent agencies whose commissioners can only be fired for cause. The court heard oral arguments over Trump’s firing of FTC commissioner Rebecca Slaughter in December, and the GOP appointees appear ready to jettison this 90-year-old precedent upon which much of the modern regulatory state was built. 

Independent agencies serve critical functions. Several, including the FTC, the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) hold significant sway over the economy. The Fed, in particular, sets interest rates, can print infinite money, loan funds to anyone on any terms, and restrict access to the banking system. It’s obvious that opening the Fed to presidential control by allowing him to fire commissioners without good reason is a dangerous proposition. In fact, the possibility is so threatening to the stability of the economy that the Supreme Court seems intent on keeping the Fed independent, despite its apparent openness to ditching independence at most or all other agencies. 

Trump’s second term has highlighted both why compromising independence is harmful—and how current independence is often less than Congress initially hoped. For example, the CFTC, where the president has left four of five commissioner spots empty, has apparently stopped investigating cryptocurrency scams and is refusing to scrutinize betting sites Kalshi and Polymarket, two fraud-fueled industries that have the president’s backing. But Trump’s return to power has also underscored how easy it is to compromise agencies without even a technical promise of independence. Take the country’s health regulators, where it’s all too clear that personal whim, rather than scientific evidence, is guiding new vaccine policies.

Trump’s aspiration to weaponize both independent agencies and executive departments is being implemented by a Supreme Court similarly intent on neutering the administrative state. The Roberts Court has embraced the unitary executive theory, a once fringe argument that the president must control all functions of the executive branch, which should operate as an extension of the president’s will. The theory has justified a fundamental reordering of the Constitution’s separation of powers under the current court, shifting authority away from Congress and to the president and the justices themselves. In a series of opinions, Chief Justice John Roberts has explained his embrace of a unitary executive as a move toward democratic accountability, writing in 2021 that executive power “acquires its legitimacy and accountability to the public through ‘a clear and effective chain of command’ down from the President, on whom all the people vote.” But the Carr-ification of independent agencies is the opposite of democratic.

While the court is likely to overturn Humphrey’s Executor, we don’t yet know whether their forthcoming decision will permit any agencies to maintain the independence Congress designed. Any new rule on the question would create a cascade of litigation over various agencies’ independent status. But we can imagine what could happen if independence gives way to political weaponization and corruption. Amicus curiae, or friend of the court, briefs submitted in Trump v. Slaughter point to the important work independent agencies have done—and how bringing them under direct presidential control risks disaster.

The FTC, the agency whose independence was at issue in both Humphrey’s Executor and the current Slaughter case, fought for cigarette warning labels in the 1960s, stood up to the finance industry by protecting borrowers’ legal rights in the 1970s, and led the way on child digital privacy in the 1990s. But a brief filed by 40 consumer and fair market groups highlights the agency’s capitulation to political pressure since Trump removed its Democratic members last year. Now, the brief explains, “the FTC has failed to take any significant action” on a pending case concerning whether Meta “failed to comply with an existing FTC consent order and misled parents about key privacy settings for children.” To protect children, the FTC has instead prioritized investigating the provision of gender-affirming care for minors.

At the Consumer Product Safety Commission, Trump’s firing of Democratic members has likewise stymied the agency. Dedicated to protecting the public, it once played a key role in banning lead-based paint despite industry pressure. “Given that much of the CPSC’s regulatory activities concern infants and toddlers, politicizing that agency jeopardizes the health and safety of American children,” the consumer groups’ brief says. As at the FTC, the filing continues, “the risk is not theoretical: since the current administration fired three commissioners, the CPSC has delayed long-planned, critical safety rules for water bead toys—rules to address poisoning and choking hazards.” 

One area of government where presidential control seems particularly anti-democratic is elections. “A politicized” Election Assistance Commission could, according to a brief submitted by a group of independent agency board members and legal scholars, “certify or decertify voting system hardware and software not based on the quality and security of those systems but based on the political contributions of system vendors” or “vote to add unnecessary and draconian requirements to the federal mail voter registration application form.”

Similarly, the Federal Election Commission administers campaign finance laws, investigates potential violations, and imposes civil fines. A presidentially-controlled FEC could launch investigations into donors to the opposition party, or refuse to enforce campaign finance rules against the president’s party. In fact, the country has already had a taste of this problem, as the FEC has for years been a prime example of a dysfunctional independent agency. For nearly a decade starting in 2010, the agency was deadlocked along partisan lines, resulting in a broad failure to enforce campaign finance rules against illegal conduct and dark money. This was followed by a period in which the agency frequently lacked a quorum, similarly stymieing its ability to function. While those failures broadly undermined the rules governing money in politics, a targeted and weaponized FEC would be even worse.

Early in his term, the Supreme Court allowed Trump to remove the head of the Merit Systems Protection Board, which adjudicates employment disputes between federal workers and their agencies, including allegations of improper political influence in personnel decisions. “A politically compromised MSPB could effectively result in the return of a political patronage system,” the same board members’ brief states, “characterized by ‘not only incompetence, but also graft, corruption and outright theft.’” If the MSPB lacks independence, the entire project of a nonpartisan and expert civil service is at risk.

The interstate transmission of oil, natural gas, and electricity is regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which must approve proposals for pipelines and other energy infrastructure. Though most Americans have likely not heard of the agency, it regulates some $1 trillion worth of energy transmitted around the country according to FERC-set rates. Politicizing this work would give the president incredible financial power. “The President would secure vast direct control over the economy,” an amicus brief from former FERC commissioners warns. “Price-setting power would allow the President to increase profits of favored companies at the expense of consumers who would face higher prices.” Further, “the President could also punish companies that oppose his policies or even raise energy prices in states that support his political rivals.” Even if a president withheld from corrupt interventions, without the promise of a steady market, the ex-commissioners caution that companies likely wouldn’t invest in new infrastructure, causing long-term planning to unravel and imperiling the grid’s future.

The independence of other economic regulators is also at stake, including those that oversee interest rates, consumer prices, and market integrity and volatility. So preserving the Fed, as the Supreme Court appears likely to contort itself to do, won’t fully prevent further presidential manipulation of the economy. The Fed isn’t even the only independent agency that affects interest rates. The National Credit Union Administration regulates credit unions like the Fed regulates banks. A NCUA with a partisan agenda could lend aggressively to credit unions, whose assets exceed $2.3 trillion, or lower the amount of money they must keep in reserve. This would increase the money supply, which could bring down interest rates. In that way, a president could use the NCUA to circumvent the Fed and juice the economy ahead of elections. 

The Supreme Court already introduced a new level of politicization into financial regulation with its unitary executive-inspired 2020 decision in Seila Law, which ended for-cause removal protections for the single director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Because the bureau’s director is also a member of the FDIC board, the partisan majority on the FDIC now changes whenever party control of the White House flips. The Seila Law ruling guarantees that both the CFPB and the FDIC, key bank regulators, are controlled by members of the president’s party.

It must be noted that the Supreme Court’s move to increase presidential control over the agencies that oversee so many aspects of Americans’ lives comes at the same time that the justices have increasingly allowed uber-wealthy donors to spend millions in elections. Thanks to the Supreme Court, billionaires accounted for nearly 20 percent of all campaign spending in 2024. That includes Elon Musk, whose nearly $300 million spree on behalf of Trump netted him a job of seemingly limitless power inside the White House. This very term, the justices are considering whether to lift limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with politicians’ campaigns, which would effectively allow wealthy donors to increase the amounts they can give candidates by routing it through the party apparatus. Thus, the president is gaining control over decisions large and small—from approving major mergers to whether a toy is a choking hazard—at the same time that wealthy Americans have a direct line to the president (and members of Congress) through large political donations.

Trump, whose own wealth has grown by at least $1.4 billion since he returned to the White House, clearly seeks self-enrichment in many forms. Without independence, it’s easy to see decision-making shifting from independent commissioners to well-connected people who enter into a business deal with Trump or dine frequently at Mar-a-Lago. 

Independent agencies aren’t perfect, nor are they entirely insulated from presidential control. Congress has allowed the president to designate the chair of many independent agencies, finding it desirable that these agencies should generally work in concert with administration priorities. But removal authority would take that coordination to a new level. Independent agencies are also not immune from corporate capture. One example would be the SEC which, in 2004, under leadership appointed by George W. Bush, made oversight of the largest banks voluntary. The agency later acknowledged this rollback contributed to the financial crisis that took place four years later. In an era of increasing executive authority, presidential self-enrichment, and billionaire-fueled campaigns, the need for independent leadership remains just—if not more—important. 

Carr once actually defended FCC independence. But last December, he testified before the Senate that it is not formally independent, citing the 1934 Communications Act which did not protect its members from for-cause removal. This is surely because the Act predates Humphrey’s Executor, and was passed at a time Congress thought removal restrictions had been banned by a previous Supreme Court decision. While Congress added for-cause removal restrictions for Fed governors after Humphrey’s Executor, it never did that for the FCC. Regardless, the FCC has long been considered independent. Its own website long declared it so until, it appears, the day Carr testified that it was not.

These agencies don’t have boundless power; even commissioners under the president’s thumb and working in his service are limited by their agency’s governing statutes and the Constitution’s restraints. As Carr’s critics argue, many of his attempts to silence the media and punish disfavored speech would fail in court. This is a critical point. His ability to suppress dissent and coerce media companies into settling Trump’s specious lawsuits is based on the unwillingness of companies to stand up to the administration when they can pay him off instead. “The goal is to get the companies to capitulate in advance, to the point where the FCC or the administration doesn’t even need to speak,” FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, the agency’s only Democratic appointee, told Politico last fall. “It’s the threats that are the point.” This is why the weaponization of independent agencies—indeed, all agencies—is so dangerous. To do their jobs properly, agencies must carefully follow the law. But to wingman an authoritarian president, threats alone can do a lot of damage.

Under the unitary executive theory pushed by the Supreme Court, every four years, Americans elect someone who can make virtually all decisions for the entire executive branch. The Slaughter case highlights that theory’s truly undesirable consequences. Should the president decide whether paint contains lead? And if he does, will he make the call because of the science or a political donation? Should the president set energy prices, and have the power to punish certain states with higher electric bills, or to win over voters in others by lowering them? Should the president personally approve major mergers and acquisitions among America’s biggest businesses? And if he does, will decisions be based on what’s best for consumers or his donors? What if the president simply outsources them to a donor, like Elon Musk, whom he’s appointed to some constitutionally dubious advisory role?

At a roundtable of independent agency commissioners in November, Slaughter, the ousted FTC commissioner, explained the importance of independence by invoking a single image. “The image I’m talking about is the one from the inauguration where you saw President Trump not surrounded by heads of state, not by public servants, but by the CEOs of the largest companies in the United States,” she explained. “I looked at that picture and thought, ‘Wow. The FTC is in active litigation against almost every single one of those companies right now.” 

“What I think all Americans want and need is to believe that the law—the laws of the United States—will be administered without fear or favor,” she continued. “Specifically, without fear of getting fired for failure to do a favor for the president’s political allies and donors.”

Is that too much to ask?

We call people that lie like that a dweeb....

Should Trump Get $10 Billion in Apology Money? Mike Johnson Hasn’t Thought About It.

The House Speaker may or may not look into this “congressional oversight” thing.

Alex Nguyen

Mike Johnson is sitting in a chair at a table and looks forward. President Donald Trump is sitting to his left and is speaking into a microphone. They are both wearing suits.
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson looks on as President Trump speaks at a Kennedy Center meeting in the White House, March 16, 2026. Aaron Schwartz/Pool/CNP/Zuma

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Apparently House Speaker Mike Johnson doesn’t believe that Congress needs any oversight of President Trump’s actions.

During a Tuesday press conference honoring law enforcement officers as part of Police Week, Johnson dismissed a question about the Justice Department potentially settling Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service—essentially the federal government handing a $10 billion ransom in taxpayer dollars directly to the president.

“One of the things that is not in my purview is the Department of Justice, okay?” Johnson said, asked whether a settlement with Trump by an agency he runs represents a conflict of interest. “I haven’t thought about that or read into it.” 

“Go ask the executive branch about it, alright?” Johnson concluded, before reminding everyone to celebrate Police Week. 

The speaker’s response was yet another instance of his perennial shrugging off of legislative responsibility to appease Trump. Johnson had a key role in passing cuts to essential health and food assistance programs—in large part due to accusations of “fraud and abuse”—but appears more than willing to let Trump raid government coffers on a multibillion-dollar scale.

$10 billion payout for Trump from the IRS.

The President May Settle His Own Lawsuit With Your Money

The DOJ—led by Trump’s former personal defense attorney—is reportedly negotiating a $10 billion payout for Trump from the IRS.

Sophie Hurwitz

The DOJ is considering settling Donald Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, which could send about $10 billion taxpayer dollars directly into the President’s pockets, the New York Times reported Tuesday, citing three sources familiar with the matter.

In January, Trump and two of his sons sued the IRS, alleging that it failed to stop the unauthorized release of his tax documents by a government contractor who shared them with news outlets.

Trump oversees the IRS, the agency he is suing. (This, the Times delicately pointed out, raises some questions as to the validity of the lawsuit: “For a lawsuit to be valid, the two parties must actually be on opposite sides, otherwise the judge can throw out the case.”) The conflicts of interest don’t end there: the DOJ is led by the President’s former personal criminal defense lawyer.

If a settlement is reached, it could make it much harder for Trump’s finances to be investigated in the future: beyond the $10 billion taxpayer-fleecing operation, one of the settlement terms under review would require the IRS to drop any and all audits of Trump, his family, and his businesses.

Last month, Democratic lawmakers introduced a bill to prevent the President, the Vice President, and their families from collecting settlement money from the government. “While American families are getting flattened by skyrocketing costs, Donald Trump is trying to snatch up billions of taxpayer dollars to line his own pockets and settle personal scores,” Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Ma.) wrote.

And this isn’t the first time Trump has tried to use the Justice Department to profit. In October of 2025, he was reportedly seeking $230 million in damages from the Justice Department over the time federal agents seized classified documents he’d unlawfully brought to Mar-a-Lago and an earlier probe into his campaign’s ties to Russia.

“It’s awfully strange,” Trump said at the time, “To make a decision where I’m paying myself.”