8/09/2025

no boy scout medals


The last time House Democrats held the majority, they made a sweeping package of good-government reforms — including an attempt to end partisan gerrymandering — a centerpiece of their legislative agenda.

“The people should choose their politicians,” then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in 2021, moments before the House passed the bill that would later die in the Senate. “Politicians should not be choosing their voters.”

Now, as President Donald Trump pushes Republicans in red states to redraw congressional district lines to their benefit, some Democrats are abandoning their past push for reforms. Instead, they're cheering on leaders like California Gov. Gavin Newsom who say their party must fight fire with fire.

Pelosi, in a statement to POLITICO, said she backs Newsom’s effort to overrule a bipartisan California map and counter GOP attempts to “rig the elections in their favor.”

Her U-turn is emblematic of the larger rethinking underway within the Democratic Party, where leaders who once embraced anti-gerrymandering initiatives and feared a race to the bottom in partisan warfare between red and blue states are now increasingly willing to set aside their lofty goals — at least temporarily.

It’s another facet of the dilemma that’s vexed Democrats since Trump first won the presidency. They’ve tried to present themselves to voters as “adults in the room” willing to set aside partisanship for the public good. But now that they’re being confronted with a potential existential threat to regaining power in 2026 or beyond, they’re entertaining bare-knuckle tactics.


good for nancy for being flexible.

i'm not a fan of gerry mandering.  but chump and his trash are trying to push it and doing so to avoid the consequences for their actions.  so you fight fire with fire.  that's the reality.  we have to save our country.  the nazis want to destroy democracy.  we have got to fight and fight hard.


Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez (R) announced on Thursday afternoon that he was putting together a Select Committee on Congressional Redistricting, officially beginning the process to try and further gerrymander the state, in an apparent effort to benefit the GOP in the 2026 midterms.
Perez made his announcement in a memo, which comes amid an ongoing battle in Texas’s state House to approve a new map that the GOP believes could net it 5 more seats in Congress. President Donald Trump urged Texas Republicans to further gerrymander the state in a bid to keep the House next November, saying Republicans are “entitled” to 5 more seats.

The Tampa Bay Times reported on Perez’s memo and noted, “It’s unclear if Florida will be able to pass a new map — as of last week, Florida Senate President Ben Albritton had declined to comment on whether or not the Senate would be open to redistricting.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) recently backed the idea of redrawing the Congressional map, which his office drafted and put in place in 2022. DeSantis called the highly unusual mid-decade redistricting “obviously something that we’re looking at very seriously” in a press conference last week.


there are no boy scout medals at stake here.  this is about our democracy and the gop continues to break the rules.  we've got to fight back.  and we've got to win.

let's close with c.i.'s 'The Snapshot:'


Friday, August 8, 2025.  As the Convicted Felon attempts to turn the country into Chump Land, every thing is at risk.


Let's start with this:

President Donald Trump hosted a ceremony for Purple Heart recipients at the White House on Thursday and told attendees that “it wasn’t that easy for me either.”

The Purple Heart is awarded to U.S. service members who are killed or wounded.


Well there you have it.  And Chump always carries a purse.  The draft dodger wants the country to know that pretending to have bone spurs to avoid serving in Vietnam was just as painful as if he'd been wounded while serving in Vietnam.  

The draft dodger didn't use his time protesting the war.  He just avoided the war because he was too 'good' to serve his country.  He felt that way then and he feels that way now.

His words were insulting and disgusting.


Convicted Felon Donald Chump suffered another setback this week.  Sonam Sheth (NEWSWEEK) reports:

A federal judge on Thursday ordered a temporary halt to construction at a detention center built in the middle of the Everglades in Florida that has been dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" by the Trump administration.
A federal judge on Thursday ordered a temporary halt to construction at a detention center built in the middle of the Everglades in Florida that has been dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz" by the Trump administration.
President Donald Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other administration officials have touted the facility—built by repurposing the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport in Ochopeé, Florida—as representing the White House's hard-line stance on immigration enforcement and border security.

Critics, meanwhile, have said detainees at the facility are forced to endure unsafe, unsanitary and inhumane living conditions and that Alligator Alcatraz runs afoul of environmental laws. The detention center was quickly created and holds an estimated 1,000 beds. The bunk beds are stacked together in wire-fenced cages.

Alligator Alcatraz is expected to cost Florida about $450 million annually to operate.


Malcolm Ferguson (THE NEW REPUBLIC) adds, "While temporary, this halts a pet project for Trump that has already received accusations of abuse and inhumane conditions for detained immigrants and workers alike."   Aaron Parnas (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes, "The case marks a significant flashpoint in the ongoing conflict between federal infrastructure projects and environmental protection efforts in Florida, particularly in the treasured Everglades region. A formal ruling on the preliminary injunction request is expected in the coming weeks."

There is nothing humane or normal about Donald Chump's war on immigrants.  And things are not going well.  Failed actor Dean Cain, pudgy, fat and over, has become a celebrity promoter of ICE and, who knows, maybe it'll be the thing that finally ends the rumors that Dean's gay?

Dating Brooke Shields didn't end the rumors.  No, people just pointed out that Michael Jackson and George Michael also dated Brooke.

Finally having a child -- one -- from out of nowhere didn't end the rumors.  People just pointed out that Ricky Martin and Sara Gilbert and Jodie Foster and many others were all parents before they came out of the closet.

But, who knows, maybe this will finally do the trick and stop the whispers.  I honestly think the weight gain has done more to destroy the whispers.  

But it won't revive Dean's career because there never was a career.  A teeny bop gets a hit show.  That does happen.  And then the show disappears and everyone wishes the man-boi would do so as well.  

Not really sure who Dean Cain's going to help ICE recruit?  Other life failures?  Who knows?  But Chump and his cronies are getting desperate.  Julianne McShane (MOTHER JONES) explains:


Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is apparently so desperate for staff that they are abolishing the agency’s age restrictions to allow any adult to apply to join the force.

On Wednesday, ICE announced that it would do away with its prior requirements that job applicants be at least 21 years old, no older than 37 to be considered for a criminal investigator role, and no older than 40 to be eligible to be a deportation officer, with few exceptions.

“In the wake of Biden’s open borders disaster, our country needs dedicated Americans to join ICE to remove the worst of the worst out of our country,” the agency’s announcement reads, under an Uncle Sam recruitment photo. In a social media post touting the change, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) wrote: “We’re taking father/son bonding to a whole new level,” alongside an illustration of both a younger and older man in camouflage tactical gear.

Recruits will still need to be at least 18 and go through medical and drug tests, and complete a physical fitness test. The Wednesday announcement also reiterated a slate of perks available to new ICE employees, including a signing bonus of up to $50,000, student loan repayment and forgiveness options, and “enhanced retirement benefits” after the passage of Trump’s so-called Big Beautiful Bill. The legislation allocated funding to hire 10,000 new ICE agents to join the 20,000 currently on staff to help meet the agency’s deportation goals.

The move to eliminate the age restriction comes as the Trump administration scrambles to fulfill his campaign promise to carry out mass deportations—specifically, a goal of one million deportations per year, according to an April report in the Washington Post. So far, the administration appears to have fallen far below that goal: Since February, the administration has deported an average of about 14,700 people per month, according to an NBC News report published last month. The administration’s efforts to bolster those numbers have included reviving old cases focused on immigrants who have since become citizens or died.



At THE AMERICAN PROSPECT, Rian Dundon has a photo essay of ICE in LA.  At the same site, Whitney Curry Wimbish details the way in which Donald's war is harming Americans in need of caregivers:

Nelly Prieto’s home care clients are already afraid. Who will take care of them if they lose her as a caregiver? What will replace the services she provides? The 18-year home care veteran, patient transporter, and immigrant advocate in Washington state said the answers break her heart: no one, and nothing.

For years, the direct care industry, which provides home and community-based services for the elderly and people with disabilities, has struggled to hire and retain workers, and drew heavily from documented and undocumented immigrants. But now, thanks to President Trump’s racist regime and mass deportations, that workforce will shrink even more, just as American society is rapidly aging. 

For the next five years, 10,000 people will turn 65 years old every day, according to AARP. By 2040, the number of people aged 80 to 85, who are the likeliest to need direct care, will reach 14 million, a 111 percent increase from 2022, according to federal data. If Trump’s deportation policies stand, there won’t be enough caregivers to meet the demand for help.
“A lot of clients really are going to lose their lives,” Prieto told the Prospect. She knows that firsthand. When one of Prieto’s clients could no longer use her services because of an insurance change, there was no one else to look after her. “They couldn’t get another provider and my client was left alone. And when she was finally found, she had been left alone for so many days that she was wrapped up in her clothes with her own feces,” Prieto said. The woman was rushed to the hospital. But by then, “she said she didn’t want to live anymore,” and shortly afterward died.

Prieto had cared for the woman for two years. Her voice broke while telling the story.

Advocates, workers, and researchers said the ripple effects of Trump’s deportation policies on the care industry are dire. People who need care but have no one to help them will suffer alone and struggle to maintain their quality of life; some will lose their homes and be driven onto the streets. Americans 50 years and older are the fastest-growing group of people experiencing homelessness, according to the National Alliance to End Homelessness. The number of Americans aged 50 or older who are experiencing homelessness is expected to triple in the next five years.


That's Chump Land.  A convicted felon works daily to destroy our country and our democracy.  

The Cato Institute is a right-wing think tank -- they're Libertarians -- and even they are alarmed by what Chump is doing.  David J. Bier writes:

Illegal profiling accounts for a substantial portion of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests in 2025. While ICE has other tactics to arrest peaceful immigrants—such as during immigration hearings, appointments, and check-ins—ICE agents are deliberately targeting workers in heavily Latino jobs and neighborhoods, sometimes based on its community tip line where residents claim to “see” illegal immigrants in their areas, but more often based on nothing at all.

This policy is a threat to the rights of all people in the United States.

ICE Is Arresting Thousands of People with No Reason to Target Them

New data obtained from ICE by the Deportation Data Project drives home how frequently Latino immigrants are arrested off the streets without any recent prior contact with law enforcement. The screenshot below shows what the data look like. Each row represents an individual arrest and provides details about the arrest method, criminal history, and citizenship status. The most notable aspect of the new data is that they provide the exact location of each person’s apprehension.

The key takeaway is that ICE is arresting thousands of people in random locations—what it calls “non-specific” or “general” areas—who had no prior contact with law enforcement: the telltale sign of illegal profiling. Normally, ICE makes arrests only after the suspect has been identified in some other way. For instance, they were arrested by local police and their name was checked against the government data, or they were going to an appointment related to their status, so ICE knew they would be there. But in these cases, ICE is arresting people who weren’t going to appointments or committing criminal offenses that would put them on ICE’s radar, as well as people who had not been ordered removed from the country, giving ICE a reason to seek them out.

Since January 20, ICE has conducted about 15,000 street arrests of immigrants who had no criminal convictions, charges, or removal orders. Incredibly, nearly half (7,000) occurred in the month of June alone: 90 percent of them were immigrants from Latin America.

Street arrests refer to arrests in non-specific locations and exclude anyone in jails, prisons, offices, courts, police departments, detention centers, facilities, or anyone otherwise in the custody of any agency. Because ICE rarely sends agents to specifically arrest noncriminal immigrants whom it cannot promptly remove, and because it is difficult to locate and identify people who have not committed crimes or gone through removal proceedings, this is the likely population of people ICE has targeted through illegal street profiling.


Repeating:

This policy is a threat to the rights of all people in the United States.


Cato's right-wing, I'm left-wing but we can both agree that, "This policy is a threat to the rights of all people in the United States."



Domingo Mendoza Méndez’s eyes fill with tears as he says he hasn't seen his family since July 10, when he went to an appointment with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and was detained.

“I’m in the process for a U visa and they detained me, but I don’t know why they’re detaining me. I’m following all their rules,” Mendoza Méndez, a 45-year-old Mexican immigrant, said in a video call with Noticias Telemundo from the Freeborn County Correctional Facility in Minnesota.

In 2013, Mendoza Méndez, who had crossed the border 13 years earlier, was the victim of a violent robbery in Minnesota, which was recorded and investigated by police. The type of assault he suffered is included in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services list of crimes that qualify for a U visa, a measure designed for victims of criminal acts in the U.S. who agree to help authorities investigate the crime.

However, as part of the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign, some immigrants who've applied and are in the process of waiting for a U visa have been detained.

“I feel sad. I’m trying to gather my strength, but there are so many things happening here. Many of us are having our rights violated,” said the married father of three children, adding that he's been in the process of obtaining a visa since 2021.

Magdalena Metelska, the immigration attorney handling Mendoza Méndez’s case, said that other administrations didn’t take coercive measures against victims applying for U visas, but that has changed with the second Trump administration.

Now, if someone has a visa pending and even been given a work permit notification, like Mendoza Méndez, "it doesn’t really matter because these people are also being arrested and detained,” she said. 



Last night on MSNBC's ALL IN, Ben Rhodes addressed the dangers of ICE.



He also noted that the idiot Tulsi Gabbard has discovered nothing despite her running around onstage without panties while screaming she's the new Christopher Columbus.

Every factoid that she fingers and molests was already known and addressed by the US Congress.  Marco Rubio was part of that process.  She lies because she's a cult member.  Don't put cult members into the US government.  She prays to guru Chris.  The forty-four year-old woman is on her second childless marriage and all she has in her life is Guru Chris.  Her healer and leader.  She worships him in the way a religious person might worship Jesus.    But Donald Chump thought this idiot was fit to serve as DNI head.  


 




Three weeks after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard tried to discredit Donald Trump’s Russia scandal and started throwing around words like “treason,” the conspiratorial DNI has certainly succeeded in generating some conversation.

On the one hand, Republicans and conservative media outlets have seized on Gabbard’s accusations as proof that the entire controversy surrounding the president and Russia’s efforts in support of his 2016 candidacy is a “hoax.” On the other hand, every independent analysis of Gabbard’s findings have pointed in the opposite direction: There was no “hoax”; the underlying scandal remains real; and the DNI’s claims are “ludicrous.”

Officials from Democratic and Republican administrations urged the public to recognize Gabbard’s conspiracy theories as obvious nonsense, while intelligence officials launched a behind-the-scenes effort to discourage the DNI from even releasing her discredited claims in the first place.

Gabbard appeared this week on Fox News — a network that has embraced her latest allegations with considerable enthusiasm — and was asked a straightforward question.

“Now, director, you said there was ‘irrefutable’ evidence that [Barack Obama] was the mastermind of this intelligence manipulation and the perpetuation of the Russia hoax,” host Laura Ingraham said. “What is that irrefutable evidence for our viewers tonight?”

Gabbard responded by pointing to a National Security Council meeting, held in December 2016 — after Trump was elected and during the presidential transition process — that Obama called to discuss Russia’s operation. As part of that meeting, the Democratic then-president made some standard directives to intelligence officials. Gabbard added:

If Gabbard was under the impression that this made sense and her on-air comments constituted persuasive and “irrefutable” evidence that justified her bizarre allegations of treason, she was mistaken.

For one thing, we’ve known about that National Security Council meeting for years. It was discussed in some detail in the Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee’s report, and as Media Matters’ Matt Gertz explained, the GOP-led panel didn’t find anything remarkable about Obama’s instructions.

On the contrary, the committee reviewed the assessment that Obama sought and concluded that it was “coherent and well-constructed,” featuring “proper analytic tradecraft,” and that its authors experienced “no politically motivated pressure to reach specific conclusions.”

But what about Gabbard’s claim that officials were told to put together an intelligence assessment that detailed “how,” not “if,” Russia targeted the election? That’s not scandalous either: By December 2016, U.S. intelligence agencies had already compiled voluminous evidence, collected over the course of months, documenting Moscow’s efforts.


As Ben Rhodes rightly noted last night on MSNBC, it's all an attempt to distract from Donald's relationship with the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. 


Tuesday, we noted the planned secret meeting where the administration would strategize on how to address the criminal issues arising from Donald's personal relationship with Epstein -- and, no, that's not a presidential issue and shouldn't have been handled by the administration.  Yesterday we noted that the meeting was called off.  It was not.  It took place -- despite lies from JD Vance and others -- on camera lies -- at a different location. 

Last night on MSNBC, Lawrence O'Donnell addressed the secret meeting.




As did Jen Psaki.


 

Kaitlyn Tiffany (THE ATLANTIC) writes:

Jeffrey Epstein’s “client list” is the conspiracy theory that may never die. A secret document detailing all of the elite clients that Epstein allegedly sex-trafficked minors to—it’s something of a grail for QAnon adherents, TMZ watchers, and serious news readers alike. There is no proof that such a thing exists.

Yet President Donald Trump himself suggested that it did during his campaign, and pledged to release it before a disastrous backtrack from the Department of Justice last month. Now, in a poll released Monday, nearly two-thirds of Americans said they believe that the Trump administration is hiding something, and 71 percent said they still believe that the list is real. Meanwhile, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has demanded that the list be released, Democrats are pushing the narrative that the Trump administration is orchestrating a cover-up, and yesterday the House subpoenaed the DOJ for additional files related to the case.

To be clear, many unanswered and valid questions remain about Epstein. Before his death, he was charged with trafficking and abusing, as it read in the indictment, “a vast network” of dozens of underage girls. Many still wonder why he was permitted to carry on with his crimes for so long, whether other people who were complicit in them have escaped justice, and how much President Trump may have known while the two were friends. Trump’s name reportedly appears in files that have been redacted by the FBI, though he has repeatedly denied personal knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and says their relationship ended in 2004.

The specific idea of a client list, though, has taken on a life of its own. No one can demonstrate that the list doesn’t exist, so people will continue to insist that it does—that it is being kept from them. There’s a certain logic to their belief, because a similar document has been seen already. In 2015, Gawker published Epstein’s address book, which was full of names of celebrities and politicians. He apparently kept meticulous records and liked putting all of his famous contacts together in one place. And so the idea of a client list feels plausible to many people because they’ve had a mental image of it for 10 years now.

Moreover, Trump has created a “where there’s smoke there’s fire” effect in the past several weeks. The president has vacillated among suggesting that he has no obligation to talk about Epstein, speculating that political foes may have fabricated parts of the Epstein file, attempting to placate his supporters by ordering the release of grand-jury testimony about the case (which cannot be unsealed, a federal judge ruled), and deflecting (“you ought to be talking about Bill Clinton”).

 

At CNN this moring, Stephen Collinson observes:

The women whom Jeffrey Epstein abused demand to be heard.

And their voices — long suppressed, but now emerging powerfully and with courage — could further fuel the maelstrom around President Donald Trump and aides who dig the scandal deeper each time they try to end it.

These are women who’ve been let down for years, at multiple levels, by a government that was supposed to keep them safe. Their families are victims, too, since abuse sows trauma through generations.

And it’s happening again as the Trump administration refuses to release files about Epstein’s life, which several of its members had promised to make public. CNN has reported that Attorney General Pam Bondi briefed Trump in May that his name was mentioned in the files, among those of other high-profile figures.

Trump has never been investigated or charged over anything to do with Epstein, whom he knew in the 1990s and early 2000s. The White House says Trump threw Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago because he was “a creep.”

But hardly anyone at the White House ever mentions the young women whom Epstein used and abused.

“What they really need is for it to go away,” Sky Roberts, the brother of one of Epstein’s most prominent victims, Virginia Giuffre, told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Thursday.

“There’s a lack of transparency here and what we are not hearing is … we are not hearing the survivors’ voices coming through,” Roberts said. “This is a human issue, and I think we need to bring that back because we are dehumanizing survivors by not bringing justice forward.” Giuffre took her own life in Australia, where she lived, earlier this year

In a sign of the administration’s political priorities, there were no Epstein survivors represented at a Wednesday night White House meeting that addressed the crisis, CNN reported. Those in attendance included Vice President JD Vance, Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel. The meeting was moved from the vice president’s residence amid a media storm.


Just as the administration has been unable to change the topic, they've been unable to come off above board on the Epstein issue.  Steven Bennen points out:

 A couple of weeks ago, Sen. Markwayne Mullin sat down with CNN’s Jake Tapper and did his best to try to deflect blame in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. The effort went quite badly, however, for an important reason: The Oklahoma Republican couldn’t quite remember who was president in 2008.

As the far-right senator tried to argue, Epstein received “a sweetheart plea deal” from prosecutors in the Obama administration, an arrangement that Mullin claimed “has not been exposed.” It fell to Tapper to remind his confused guest that the late millionaire pedophile did benefit from a generous deal, but it was in 2008, that Barack Obama wasn’t president in 2008, and that the agreement was exposed years ago.

The incident did, however, serve as a timely reminder that it was Alex Acosta who helped orchestrate Epstein’s deal — and it was Donald Trump who added Acosta to his White House Cabinet during the Republican’s first term.

It’s against this backdrop that NBC News reported:

The report added that victims of Epstein’s sexual abuse are unhappy that Acosta was not among those subpoenaed.

An attorney for one of his victims said, “How can any genuine investigation into the federal government’s sweetheart deal with Epstein (including the extraordinary grant of blanket immunity to all his named and unnamed co-conspirators) omit Alex Acosta?”

Given the circumstances, that’s hardly an unreasonable question.

As longtime readers might recall, Epstein ended up pleading guilty to a state charge of soliciting sex from a minor in 2008, which led to an 18-month sentence. He was released after 13 months — during which time he was permitted to leave the prison and go to work during much of the day — and he then went back to living the high life.

How in the world did Epstein get such a generous deal, given the number of his underage victims?



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


"Although Elon Musk has departed, his influence remains, as DOGE and its employees attempt to become a permanent part of the federal government"

Text of Letter (PDF)

Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), along with Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Representative Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), wrote to the Office of Personnel and Management (OPM) Director Scott Kupor and Office of Management and Budget Director Rusell Vought, demanding answers about the extent to which Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) employees have been appointed to key positions across government agencies and to help determine whether the conversion of these DOGE employees could be in violation of civil service laws.

In recent months, reports have emerged of DOGE employees converting into full-time federal workers at the Social Security Administration, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, and other agencies.

“Although Elon Musk has departed, his influence remains, as DOGE and its employees attempt to become a permanent part of the federal government, scattered across agencies where they can continue to sabotage key functions from within,” the lawmakers warned.

The conversion of DOGE appointees to career roles–even as most agencies remain under a hiring freeze–could violate laws that explicitly ban political considerations and loyalty tests in hiring. Additionally, it is unclear who newly embedded DOGE staff report to and if they truly serve within the chain of command of the agencies they work for.

“(T)he Trump Administration’s hiring of DOGE affiliates to career positions appears to be influenced by overtly political and loyalty-based considerations, putting the effectiveness of the federal government in jeopardy and raising questions about compliance with civil service laws,” wrote the lawmakers.

DOGE failed to lower costs for Americans–instead, it degraded public services and created more waste and inefficiency. The lawmakers reminded OPM and OMB of these failures, and sounded the alarm about the significant conflicts of interests that DOGE employees have with Musk’s companies, raising doubts about their ability to serve the American public’s interests.

“The embedding of DOGE employees is part of a larger, disturbing trend of corruption in the Trump Administration, with individuals and corporations that appear to have done political or financial favors for the President given special treatment, and the President and other executive branch officials—including Elon Musk and other DOGE appointees—serving in important policy positions despite having significant financial conflicts of interest.” wrote the lawmakers.

The lawmakers urged the agencies to implement accountability structures and halted the conversion of DOGE employees to permanent federal positions. They also requested answers about how these personnel decisions were made by August 20, 2025.

###




The following sites updated:


8/07/2025

chump will rot in hell with his supporters

jizzy

 


that's  Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS ''Greetings From Club Fed." 




Donald Trump is unable to hide his bald spots anymore, and it's only bringing attention to the age gap he shares with his wife, Melania Trump. Although Donald and Melania are no strangers to criticism surrounding their relationship, chitchat concerning their age gap continues to get louder every day. In case you didn't know, Donald is 79, while Melania is 55 (as of write time) which means they're about 24 years apart -- an undeniably scandalous gap that's not uncommon among public figures. In fact, many celebrities are in relationships with uncomfortable age gaps, and Donald and Melania are no different.


79 years old and just getting uglier with every day.  bald spots that even that ridiculous weave can no longer cover.

elderly, old, age spots, bald, fat.

and evil.

don't forget evil.

he's now showing the public who he really is as he works to make life easier for pedophile maxwell.

that's who he is.

not a supporter of women.  not a supporter of survivors.

he's just someone who embraces the pedophile.

probably because he's 1 himself.  

he is pure evil and he has exposed that evil publicly now.

that's why he will rot in hell.  and those of you idiots who have chosen to worship him, better understand that there will be a place in hell for you as well.  you're not allowed to have a false god.  chump is trash and you worshipping him sends you straight to hell.

that's on you, not on me. 




let's close with c.i.'s 'The Snapshot:'


Wednesday, August 6, 2025.  Chump still can't silence the Epstein story, survivors continue to speak out, his was on immigrants gets hammered by actual truths, and much more.




Last night, Jeffrey Epstein survivor Haley Robson spoke with BBC NEWSNIGHT's Matt Chorley  Haley was only 16 when Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell began exploiting her.  

Newsnight hears from a survivor of Jeffrey Epstein's abuse, Haley Robson, who delivers an emotional plea to Donald Trump. She also says convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell’s move to a minimum security prison is "a slap in the face" to all of Epstein’s victims. Interview by Matt Chorley.

As Convicted Felon Donald Chump moves pedophile and sex trafficker Maxwell to Club Fed and works on a sweetheart deal for her (and her silence), we need to remember that this isn't one girl who got victimized or two, it was hundreds.  It wasn't one day's activity, it was a crime spree that ran for years.  
 
Haley asks,  "To be clear, Ghislaine Maxwell’ is in prison for her counts of child exploitation and trafficking why would anyone give somebody like her who is a monster and a liar a time of day to explain anything?"


In other news, Farrah Tomazin files "Republicans Subpoena Everyone and Anyone Over Epstein -- Except Trump" for THE DAILY BEAST.  Pretty much says it all  -- well that and that the Congressional Republicans did not issue a subpoena for Alex Acosta -- Acosta who served in Chump's first administration and who got the original sweetheart deal for Jeffrey Epstein. 


In 2007–2008, as U.S. attorney, Acosta approved a plea deal that allowed child-trafficking ring-leader Jeffrey Epstein to plead guilty to a single state charge of solicitation, in exchange for a federal non-prosecution agreement.[2] After Epstein's arrest in July 2019 on sex trafficking charges, Acosta faced renewed and harsher criticism for his role in the 2008 non-prosecution agreement, as well as criticism and calls for his resignation as Secretary of Labor; he resigned on July 19 and was replaced by Eugene Scalia

[. . .]

In 2008, as U.S. Attorney, Acosta approved a federal non-prosecution agreement[2] with Jeffrey Epstein. That secret agreement, conducted without consulting the victims, was later ruled illegal by a federal judge for violating the Crime Victims' Rights Act.[26]

In March 2005, the Palm Beach Police Department began a 13-month undercover investigation of Epstein, including a search of his home, based on reports that he was involved with sex trafficking of minors.[27][28] Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation resulted in a 53-page indictment in June 2007.[27]

Acosta, then the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, agreed to a plea deal,[29] to grant immunity from all federal criminal charges to Epstein, along with four named co-conspirators and any unnamed "potential co-conspirators". That agreement "essentially shut down an ongoing FBI probe into whether there were more victims and other powerful people who took part in Epstein's sex crimes". At the time, this halted the investigation and sealed the indictment.

Renewed interest

In 2017, Acosta was nominated for Secretary of Labor. His handling of the Epstein case was discussed as part of his confirmation hearing.

On November 28, 2018, as rumors circulated that Acosta was being considered as a possible successor to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the Miami Herald published an investigation detailing Acosta's role in the Epstein case.[27] That story revealed the extent of collaboration between federal prosecutors and Epstein's attorneys in their efforts to keep victims from learning of the plea deal.

The Miami Herald describes an email from Epstein's attorney after his off-site meeting with Acosta: "'Thank you for the commitment you made to me during our Oct. 12 meeting,' Lefkowitz wrote in a letter to Acosta after their breakfast meeting in West Palm Beach. He added that he was hopeful that Acosta would abide by a promise to keep the deal confidential. 'You ... assured me that your office would not ... contact any of the identified individuals, potential witnesses or potential civil claimants and the respective counsel in this matter,' Lefkowitz wrote."

The Miami Herald article stated that certain aspects of Acosta's non-prosecution agreement violated federal law. "As part of the arrangement, Acosta agreed, despite a federal law to the contrary, that the deal would be kept from the victims. As a result, the non-prosecution agreement was sealed until after it was approved by the judge, thereby averting any chance that the girls — or anyone else — might show up in court and try to derail it." Victims, former prosecutors, and the retired Palm Beach police chief were among those quoted criticizing the agreement and Acosta's role in it.[30]

Victims' rights violation

After a lawsuit was filed in federal court, in 2019, a court ruled that the non-prosecution agreement was invalid and that prosecutors had violated the victim's rights with their non-prosecution agreement.

On February 21, 2019, a ruling in federal court returned Acosta's role in the Epstein case to the headlines.[31] The decision to keep the deal with Epstein secret until after it was finalized was found to be a violation of the Crime Victims' Rights Act of 2004 (CVRA), which requires notifying victims of the progress of federal criminal cases. The CVRA was new and relatively untested at the time of the Epstein non-prosecution agreement. In 2008, representatives for two of Epstein's victims filed a lawsuit in federal court aiming to vacate the federal non-prosecution agreement on the grounds that it violated the CVRA.[30] For more than a decade, the U.S. Attorney's office denied that it acted in violation of victims' rights laws and argued that the CVRA did not apply in the Epstein case.[32] The government's contention that the CVRA did not apply was based on questions of timing (whether or not CVRA applied prior to filing of federal charges), relevance (whether the CVRA applied to non-prosecution agreements), and jurisdiction (whether the case should be considered a federal case or a state case under the CVRA). The court rejected those arguments in the February 21, 2019 ruling, finding that the CVRA did in fact apply and that victims should have been notified of the Epstein non-prosecution agreement in advance of its signing, to afford them the opportunity to influence its terms. At the conclusion of his ruling, the federal judge in the case noted that he was "not ruling that the decision not to prosecute was improper", but was "simply ruling that, under the facts of this case, there was a violation of the victims rights [for reasonable, accurate, and timely notice] under the CVRA."[33]

Because the CVRA does not specify penalties for failure to meet victims notification requirements, the judge offered both parties opportunities to suggest remedies—Epstein's victims who were party to the suit asked for rescission of the federal non-prosecution agreement with Epstein, while the government suggested other approaches, maintaining that other victims were against rescinding the agreement due to privacy concerns and possible impacts to restitution paid under the agreement.[34] Following the Herald investigation and related news coverage, members of Congress submitted a formal request to the U.S. Department of Justice for review of Acosta's role in the Epstein deal,[35] and several editorials called for Acosta's resignation or termination from his then-current position as U.S. Labor Secretary.[36][37] In February 2019, the Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility notified Senator Ben Sasse that it had opened an investigation into Epstein's prosecution.[38][39]

Epstein's arrest and Acosta's resignation

On July 6, 2019, Epstein was arrested by the FBI-NYPD Crimes Against Children Task Force on sex trafficking charges stemming from activities alleged to have occurred in 2002–2005.[40]

Amid criticism of his mishandling of the Epstein case, Acosta resigned his role as Secretary of Labor effective July 19, 2019, after a public outcry.[41] An anonymous source claimed that when Acosta was vetted for his cabinet post in the Trump administration, he stated “I was told Epstein ‘belonged to intelligence’ and to leave it alone.”[42]

According to an internal review conducted by the Department of Justice's Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), which was released in November 2020, Acosta showed "poor judgment" in granting Epstein a non-prosecution agreement and failing to notify Epstein's alleged victims about this agreement.[43] In the report, Acosta denied that Epstein was an intelligence asset. The OPR report also stated that it found no evidence that Epstein was a cooperating witness or an intelligence asset.[44]


Seems to me if you're trying to find out what happened and how, you start with the man who gave the sweetheart deal that shut down the FBI investigation. 



Also speaking of Maxwell yesterday was Chump.  This is from MSNBC's THE LAST HOUR WITH STEPHANIE RUHLE.



No concern expressed over the victims from Chump's mouth.  





Two victims of sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein attacked President Donald Trump's administration in letters to the court where grand jury testimony in the case remains sealed, according to CNN.

The victims, who remained anonymous, both filed letters with the court Monday, "condemning the Justice Department’s request to unseal grand jury testimony" and citing a lack of respect toward them by Trump and the DOJ.
“Dear United States, I wish you would have handled and would handle the whole ‘Epstein Files’ with more respect towards and for the victims," one woman wrote. "I am not some pawn in your political warfare. What you have done and continue to do is eating at me day after day as you help to perpetuate this story indefinitely."
The other victim accused the administration of only caring about the “wealthy men” involved in the case.

“(I) feel like the DOJ’s and FBI’s priority is protecting the 'third-party', the wealthy men by focusing on scrubbing their names off the files of which the victims, 'know who they are,’'” she wrote.

One letter continued, “I appreciate your time reading my short thoughts and feeling and my anxiety and frustration is NOT aimed at you, obviously. It is aimed at the very government here, the ones asking to release these transcripts, exhibits, etc., of which the victims are not privy to while they have concluded that there is nothing more to see on the files they hold. Yet no one has seen them, but them," adding, "I am beside myself.”

The story is not going away.  Today, there's a big meet-up with Vice President JD Vance where they're going to try to figure out a way of addressing this topic and bringing it to a close.  That is just not happening.  Chump acts guilty in public and his actions are questionable. 

Lawrence O'Donnell covered many of the new issues that have arisen in the video below.




We keep getting told the story is over.  But it's not.  Ewan Palmer (DAILY BEAST) reports:

Donald Trump was warned about Jeffrey Epstein’s conduct around “younger girls” over a decade before he was exposed as a pedophile, said an author who has written extensively about the financier.

Barry Levine, author of The Spider: Inside the Criminal Web of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell and former executive editor at the National Enquirer, told CNN’s OutFront that Trump was cautioned back in 1992 not to host a party at which he and Epstein would be the only two men present.
“There was a 1992 party in which Donald Trump had 28 young women at a party at Mar-a-Lago, his only guest at that particular party was a man named Jeffrey Epstein,” Levine told OutFront host Erin Burnett.

“The Florida businessman who put this party together for the ‘calendar girls’ competition that took place at Trump casinos, specifically told Donald Trump… ‘I’m going to ban Jeffrey Epstein from events like this, I don’t like him going after younger girls.’ And he was very concerned about the party on this particular night.”

Levine was referencing a claim first made by The New York Times in July 2019 after Epstein’s arrest on federal sex trafficking charges. The article details how Trump and Epstein had been friends for years, but Trump insisted they hadn’t spoken for over 15 years following a reported falling out over a Palm Beach real estate deal.

The businessman in question was George Houraney, who organized the 1992 “calendar girl” competition party at Trump’s request.

Houraney told The Times how Trump dismissed his warning about Epstein after learning he would be at the Mar-a-Lago event.

“I said, ‘Look, Donald, I know Jeff really well, I can’t have him going after younger girls,’” Houraney told the Times in 2019. “He said, ‘Look I’m putting my name on this. I wouldn’t put my name on it and have a scandal.’”

Houraney added that Trump “didn’t care” and that he “pretty much had to ban” Epstein from his events.
Trump eventually barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago in late 2007, more than a year after Epstein was first accused of soliciting underage prostitutes. 


The media continues to discover new information daily.  This story is not over and the American people aren't buying what's been put out by Chump.   Oliver O'Connell (INDEPENDENT) reports:


A new poll on his performance has President Donald Trump underwater by 20 percentage points, with Americans disapproving of him on every major issue, including immigration.

Perhaps the biggest drag on the Trump presidency, according to the latest University of Massachusetts Amherst Poll, is Jeffrey Epstein and the handling of the evidence against the late sex trafficker.
Of those surveyed, 63 percent believe the administration is withholding information about the case and 81 percent specifically hold the president responsible.


Just as Donald ignores the suffering of Epstein's victims, he ignores the suffering of the immigrants whose lives he is destroying.  At HUFFINGTON POST, Ian Kumamoto notes:

The first time I learned of Donald Trump’s political aspirations was in 2015, when he announced his intent to run for president and made a speech claiming that Mexico was sending scores of violent criminals over the border

As an immigrant from Mexico, hearing him talk about my community in that way was jarring. But like many others, I didn’t think he could actually rise to power, given his political inexperience and, well, his personality. 

Ten years later and just a few months into his second presidential term, Trump is just as eager to purge the U.S. of its Latin American immigrants. This time around, he’s realizing it won’t be as easy as he thought. 

When he started his second presidential term, Trump was ambitious. White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller announced in May that Immigration and Customs Enforcement would seek to arrest at least 3,000 immigrants per day to reach the administration’s mass deportation goals, as several outlets reported

The number is outlandish; it’s assumed that he’s looking for people who have committed crimes, but those who are paying attention are seeing it play out differently.

In a court filing last week, Justice Department lawyers said the Department of Homeland Security had never actually set such a quota for arrests and deportations, The Guardian reported

This sudden amnesia about that lofty quota feels a bit suspect. Trump’s whole campaign was run on the premise of arresting and deporting as many undocumented people as possible. In his process of trying to get rid of them, it seems that Trump is learning how beautifully entwined immigrants are in the fabric of this country.

The backtracking on this 3K-a-day quota might boil down to the reality that there aren’t nearly as many undocumented criminals as the administration had hoped. ICE has resorted to arresting people who are leaving immigration courts, some of whom are in the middle of seeking legal asylum. Even when allegedly playing dirty, the administration has managed to deport only around 700 people per day. On top of that, 65% of the immigrants detained since last October have no criminal convictions, according to the Cato Institute.


People are noting the very real damage that ICE is doing.  They're talking about it to neighbors, they're protesting in the public square, they're writing letters to the editor.


California law targets ICE agents’ use of masks,” (sacbee.com, July 22) When ICE sweeps people off the streets without identifying themselves and holds them in detention without due process or contact with their families, it is acting as if this country were a repressive totalitarian government. Justifying this practice as a thinly veiled need to protect ICE officers’ safety and security is absurd. Other local, state or federal law enforcement officers who also face safety dangers carry out their duties without the need for masks. The purpose of this ICE practice is solely to intimidate and sow terror and fear in our communities. California Senate Bill 627 — as well as federal legislation — is needed to reject this horrendous policing practice. Shirlie Marymee North Highlands

 

 


Lives have been destroyed and lives are being destroyed.  David Dayen (TAP) notes that local economies have also been destroyed:

The absurd yet dangerous removal of the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics for the offense of reporting jobs figures as they are collected has overshadowed the reasons why U.S. employment is struggling. There’s the argument that tariff uncertainty has finally caught up to the real economy, and the argument that the country only produces AI data centers and sick people for the health care system to manage. But one important issue has been pushed off to the side: the predictable economic impact of ICE’s terror campaign against immigrant communities.

This will have long-term macroeconomic consequences. Net immigration, which provides a steady supply of available workers in key fields, is way down this year. Employers are scrambling to find substitute workers and worrying about productivity losses. Remittance payments to Mexico have plummeted, suggesting a decline in these workers’ economic contributions, not only to their relatives, but to industries like home care, agriculture, and construction. Recent drops in residential construction could result from a lack of available workers as well.



This story was originally published by Boyle Heights Beat on July 24, 2025.

By midday on a recent Monday, only a few customers had trickled into La Chispa de Oro, a once-busy Mexican eatery on Cesar Chavez Avenue in Boyle Heights.

Behind the counter, owner Melchor Moreno monitored the money in his till, counting the few hundred dollars in sales — about half a typical weekday.

He glanced at his staff, counting with his fingers how much he’d owe in wages that day. The math didn’t add up.

“It doesn’t help that there’s no foot traffic, too…. The streets are empty. It’s kind of scary,” Moreno said.

Since immigration raids began sweeping through Los Angeles neighborhoods, Eastside restaurants have been scraping by, as even longtime customers are keeping themselves and their dollars at home out of fear of potential immigration enforcement. While the full economic toll is still uncertain, many business owners already feel the squeeze.

Moreno has cut staff hours. He’s stepped in to wash dishes. With fewer customers, his staff goes home with fewer tips.

“They’ve noticed it. The waitresses are taking less money home every day,” he said. “I don’t know how much longer we can keep doing this.”

Moreno, who is still paying off electricity bill debt accumulated during the COVID-19 pandemic, estimates his restaurant has lost more than $7,000 since the raids began on June 6. To stay afloat, he’s now closing Tuesdays through the summer until fear stemming from the ICE raids fades, he hopes.


Other than terror and destruction, what is ICE accomplishing?  Blaise Malley (SALON) points out, "According to internal figures obtained by CBS News, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is holding roughly 59,000 people in detention, likely the highest number in American history. Nearly half have no criminal record."  B-b-b-but Chump said these were violent criminals!

Chump lies a lot.

These are not violent criminals.  These are not criminals.  These are people who go to work and school and try to make a difference in their families and their neighborhoods and they're being terrorized.  


And this is happening not just to immigrants, it's happening to American citizens as well.  Cerise Castle (TAP) notes:
 

Since federal agents descended onto Los Angeles streets in early June, several United States citizens have been detained and held in immigration detention centers. A Capital & Main review of local reporting, video and social media posts found at least nine citizens were taken into custody by agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or U.S. Customs and Border Protection after protesting near or observing immigration raids in the Los Angeles area since June 6. Two are currently facing federal charges. 

Job Garcia arrived at the Home Depot in Hollywood for his delivery gig for another company on the morning of June 19 expecting to have a regular day. But moments later, Garcia — a U.S. citizen — was tackled, arrested and detained by federal agents. 

Garcia said he spotted vans pulling into the store’s parking lot, and began filming as federal agents started breaking the window of a truck with a man sitting behind the wheel. Videos taken by Garcia and other bystanders show several masked men in green vests that read “POLICE” and “U.S. Border Patrol” approach Garcia and tackle him to the ground. 

“Give me your f**king hand! You want it, you got it,” one agent said. “You want to go to jail? You got it.” 

The agents took Garcia to Dodger Stadium, where he told Capital & Main he was held for hours before being transported to the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown L.A. The federal prison’s basement has been turned into a detention facility for people apprehended by federal immigration enforcement officers, where civil rights advocates say detainees are being kept in grossly overcrowded, dungeon-like conditions. One of the Border Patrol agents who detained Garcia is the same man who was subsequently arrested and charged with assaulting a Long Beach police officer and resisting arrest in a separate incident, according to Capital & Main’s review of the footage. “This matter is under investigation,” a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said in a statement to Capital & Main.

“This is a case of Border Patrol and ICE essentially punishing citizens for exercising their First Amendment rights. It goes against the values of this country,” said Ernest Herrera, an attorney at the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, who is representing Garcia in a claim against Customs and Border Protection, Border Patrol, and ICE. “It looks more like the behavior of a crackpot military dictatorship in a different country. But it’s here. This is happening right now in our country.” 

It’s unclear how many U.S. citizens federal agents have arrested since undertaking a series of immigration raids in Southern California starting in June. Federal officials did not answer Capital & Main’s questions about the detention of U.S. citizens.



Once you're in ICE custody, you're quickly disappeared.  And then the real abuse begins.  Héctor Ríos Morales (LATIN TIMES) reports:

Under the Trump administration's aggressive immigration crackdown, more women detained by immigration authorities are being exposed to sexual violence, mistreatment, and the denial of basic rights in detention centers across the United States, according to a new report.

Many women interviewed by the HuffPost said they were raped, denied medical care during their pregnancies, and subjected to other serious human rights violations while in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody.

Serious pregnancy complications, sexual assault allegations, and suicide attempts are among the most frequently reported issues in ICE detention facilities, the report added. These incidents accounted for 60 percent of 911 calls made from the 10 largest ICE centers nationwide, according to a WIRED investigation published in June.

As of late June, about 22,000 women were being held in ICE custody — nearly 40 percent of the agency's total detainee population — according to Detention Reports, a platform that analyzes publicly available data on immigration detention.

Advocates for women's rights told HuffPost that ICE's refusal to release gender-specific detention data is itself part of a broader pattern of rights violations and institutional opacity.

"They're creating this black box of impunity, where they're keeping women who are pregnant or who have advanced health needs," Zain Lakhani, director of migrant rights and justice at the Women's Refugee Commission, told the outlet. "There's no one watching for human rights abuses."


We are in a struggle to save democracy.  At THE BLACK COMMENTATOR, Jamala Rogers observes:

The current administration made sweeping mutilations of policies, institutions and programs which celebrated and protected diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). Cuts in Medicaid, veterans’ affairs, education for public institutions and housing directly impact Black people. Attacks on voting rights, LGBTQA+ rights and workers’ rights is about us. The rise of the police state targets us. Immigration and the travel ban restrictions include us. Black livelihoods and Black bodies are all in the crosshairs. To pretend that trump’s policies will not disproportionately affect poor and working-class people, especially Black folks, is disingenuous. Further, any effort to persuade Black folks against fighting for their survival and uniting with other groups of people with common cause, is counterrevolutionary.

We are in dangerous times and our people need more guidance and motivation to get organized, not less. This is not the first regime in history to consolidate state power, to silence the media, to dismantle internal checks on abuse of power, to legitimize the criminalization of sectors of society, to expand the police state and target dissidents. Let us recognize the period we are in, learn from the lessons of the not-so distant past, and prepare our communities for the battles ahead. One important lesson to highlight is that a passive or an unorganized response to fascism doesn’t end well for a democracy and its people.




Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:


Republicans just passed $1 trillion in health care cuts and are kicking roughly 15 million people off their health care; Republican bill bans Planned Parenthood from receiving federal Medicaid reimbursement funding—threatening to shutter clinics across the country

ICYMI on Friday: Senator Murray Statement on Trump Ripping Away Access to Abortion Care for Women Veterans Who Were Raped or Whose Health is in Danger

***WATCH FULL EVENT HERE; PHOTOS AND B-ROLL HERE***

Seattle, WA –  Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and a senior member and former chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, held a roundtable discussion with patient advocates and health care providers from Washington state and Idaho to discuss how recent moves by President Trump and Republicans in Congress to attack access to health care—especially reproductive health care—and slash Medicaid are harming people in Washington state and across the entire Pacific Northwest.

Joining Senator Murray for the event were; Rebecca Gibron, CEO, Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaiʻi, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky; Dr. Keemi Ereme, OB/GYN at UW Medicine and Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Dr. Caitlin Gustafson, family physician from rural Idaho and co-president of the Idaho Coalition for Safe Healthcare; Kayla Smith, a patient storyteller who traveled to Washington from Idaho for necessary abortion care and former plaintiff in Adkins v. State of Idaho; Emily Cuarenta, a patient storyteller and student at Eastern Washington University; and Heather Mullin, a patient storyteller and local advocate from the Seattle area.

“The horror stories caused by abortion bans have not stopped since Republicans ended the right to abortion, implemented cruel bans, and plunged this country into a full-blown health care crisis. And unfortunately, Republican attacks on abortion care have not stopped. Republicans passed devastating new attacks on health care and reproductive rights as part of their Big Ugly bill, which ‘defunds’ Planned Parenthood—a longtime dream for the far right and an absolute nightmare for everyone else. Clinics will close, putting abortion care, birth control services, cervical and breast cancer screenings, and other basic preventive care out of reach for millions of women,” said Senator Murray. “And let’s not forget all the other ways Trump and Republicans are attacking abortion. Trump ripped away protections ensuring women can get abortion care to save their lives. He put in place a near-total abortion ban for veterans and servicemembers at DoD and VA. He and Republicans are packing our courts with the most radical anti-abortion extremists. Meanwhile, Republicans are still trying to rip away access to safe medication abortion and advance dangerous ‘fetal personhood’ provisions, and they are still trying to ban abortion nationwide and put women and doctors in jail—blatantly overriding the will of the American people.”

“But we are still pushing back and fighting for reproductive rights in every way we can,” Senator Murray continued. “As Appropriations Vice Chair, I am working to reject Trump’s proposal to slash Title X and eliminate the Teen Pregnancy Prevention program, among other awful ideas. The funding bill we passed out of committee last week funds these programs. Democrats are pushing to reverse the damage from Trump’s Big Ugly Bill, so we can restore Planned Parenthood funds, save patients from losing care, and save hospitals. And we are keeping our spotlight on how Republicans’ anti-abortion extremism is hurting women every day. From abortion care to rural hospitals, health care is under attack here in America. The fight to change this is today and every day until we can reverse these cuts and keep making progress.”

Defunding Planned Parenthood puts at least 200 health centers across the country at risk of closure—90 percent of them in states where abortion is legal—and will rip away health care for more than 1.1 million people, many of whom might not be able to get care anywhere else. Every year, Planned Parenthood provides health care to more than two million people, including STI testing and treatment, cancer screenings, birth control, HPV vaccines, wellness exams and other critical services. Recent research from the Guttmacher Institute found that, contrary to Republicans’ claims, Federally Qualified Health Centers do not have the capacity to readily serve the millions of people who currently rely on Planned Parenthood for care. Defunding Planned Parenthood will cost an estimated $261 million over the next decade.

President Trump also has taken direct aim at reproductive health care in the first few months of his term through a multitude of executive actions—issuing anti-choice executive orders, pardoning violent anti-abortion extremists, and taking a host of other actions to roll back efforts to protect access to reproductive health care across the country. On Friday, the Trump administration moved to revoke women veterans’ ability to receive abortion care through the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) when their pregnancy is putting their health at risk, or is the result of rape or incest, which Senator Murray swiftly condemned as an attack on the reproductive rights of women veterans.

“In the fall of 2022, my husband and I found out we were pregnant again with our second child. And this was just after Roe was overturned,” Kayla Smith, a patient storyteller and former plaintiff in Adkins v. State of Idaho. Kayla was Senator Patty Murray’s State of the Union guest last year. “The only thing that we were concerned about was preeclampsia, because that was what I had dealt with before in my prior pregnancy. And then, the day after the trigger law went into effect to ban abortion in the State of Idaho, we found out that our son had several fatal fetal anomalies. And so our maternal fetal medicine specialist shared with us that, unfortunately, if we wanted to end this very wanted pregnancy, that she would no longer be able to help us in the state of Idaho… We had to take out a $16,000 personal loan to drive eight hours from Idaho here, actually to the University of Washington… It was the most tragic thing we ever had to deal with to make that decision, but then to also be forced to flee our state to have to go somewhere else to get care that we should have gotten was just devastating…  In that moment, I did not want an abortion, but I needed one. And I felt like my providers were not able to give me that standard of care that should be available to everyone… These abortion bans are not saving lives, they are actually putting more lives at risk.”

“Access to safe and legal abortion through Planned Parenthood saved my life,” said Heather Mullin, a patient storyteller and local advocate from the Seattle area. “I was the victim of a predator who was a respected person in our community and used his position of power and access to harm children. He once told me that he had noticed me when I was in the sixth grade, which makes me about 11 years old. I was repeatedly sexually assaulted from the age of 13 until I became pregnant when I was 15. And I knew that when I became pregnant at the time that I was not going to have the baby. I felt very afraid and alone, and I didn’t want my abuser’s baby to be my life sentence. So, I sought out a legal and safe abortion at Planned Parenthood. I took the bus during spring break of my freshman year of high school, when my parents thought I was at track practice. And I got an abortion, and nobody knew about it for a really long time—and I didn’t really talk about it publicly until the Dobbs decision. And I really felt it was important for people to know that all sorts of reasons there are for having an abortion, that you probably know someone who has had an abortion. And when I started talking about my story, I realized it was really a much more common experience than we sometimes think about and talk about. In our current state where we have outright abortion bans, including no exclusions for rape or incest, we’re talking about forcing children to give birth. And that’s the kind of thing that really keeps me up tonight, and why I’m here today to talk about the importance of funding abortion care and access to abortion. It’s disturbing to me that some of our government officials seem to be protecting predators instead of victims.”

“Before the ban on abortion care in the state, I was able to help my patients through deeply personal and often complicated decisions, in the privacy of an ER bay or exam room. Even our ability to do the jobs we were trained to do in time-sensitive and health-threatening emergencies, such as bleeding or infection or organ failure, put us in the crosshairs. Would we provide the stabilizing care they needed in their community healthcare system, with the providers they know and trust, and where their support system is in place for them, but risk going to jail for doing so?,” said Dr. Caitlin Gustafson, a family medicine obstetrician in rural Idaho for two decades and President of the Idaho Coalition for Safe Healthcare Foundation, representing over 1,500 Idaho healthcare professionals and concerned community members. “A maternal health care crisis has ensued. The longer Idahoans must travel out of state to get the care they need, not only will we face increasing maternal health complications, but also worsening physician shortages. By 15 months after the Dobbs decision and the Idaho trigger ban going into effect, nearly a quarter of my OBGYN colleagues and more than half of the maternal fetal medicine specialists I previously referred my patients with high-risk pregnancy conditions to stop practicing obstetrics in our state; and we have been unable to recruit physicians to replace them because of the chilling effect of these abortion bans. And it got worse after the initial exodus:  In a peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association last week by an Idaho colleague of mine, Idaho has suffered 35 percent net decline in OB/GYNs who practice obstetrics in Idaho since Idaho’s abortion bans went into effect. What this has meant is that Idaho continues to lose much needed medical professionals that are the cornerstones of women’s healthcare, not just during pregnancy, but across the entire lifespan. For example, I have patients suffering from post-menopausal bleeding who must wait months to get into an OBGYN to consult for the hysterectomy that they need.  The reduction in this workforce further threatens healthcare access, not just for women but for all Idahoans. With pending Medicaid cuts looming, our ability to do our jobs to keep our communities safe and healthy will become that much more difficult.”

 “Planned Parenthood affiliates in Washington provide high quality reproductive health care to more than 100,000 patients every year, including patients who come across state lines because their state has eliminated preventive care access and banned abortions entirely. But care in Washington is at risk like it is everywhere else: the Republican budget bill will eliminate health insurance for tens of thousands of Washingtonians, and will defund Planned Parenthood by banning us from Medicaid,” said Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawai’i, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky. “Without support from state and local governments to fill the gap, health centers in Washington will close and patients will lose access to care. We are thankful to Senator Murray for being the national leader on reproductive health and rights as she fights to restore funding and reverse the ban, and we are thankful for leaders in Washington who are committed to finding local revenue to keep our doors open.”

“My husband serves in the Air Force, and attacks on reproductive freedom and access to health care feel like a slap in the face. We worry about the hostility of the next state we are stationed in,” said Emily Cuarenta, a student at Eastern Washington University who lives with her husband on an Air Force base in Spokane. Emily spoke about the abortion care she received in Georgia prior to the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade, where she was forced to travel and undergo a waiting period, an ultrasound, and medically inaccurate counseling that misinformed her about the risks of having an abortion. “The Dobbs decision opened the floodgates to oppressive, medically inaccurate laws that endanger the lives of pregnant people. In addition to suffering poor maternal health outcomes, pregnant people now fear criminalization of their pregnancy outcomes.”

“This legislation strips people of their access to reproductive healthcare, their choices in family planning and their fundamental human right to health care. This legislation will lead to many preventable deaths, and that is simply unacceptable,” said Dr. Keemi Ereme, an OB/GYN at UW Medicine and Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Senator Murray has been the leading voice in the Senate speaking out and raising the alarm against Republicans’ efforts to defund Planned Parenthood through their One Big Beautiful Bill Act. She has held constant recent events—including multiple events in Washington state—to sound the alarm on the devastating cuts in Republicans’ reconciliation bill. As the Senate was considering the legislation, Senator Murray put forward an amendment to strike a provision of the legislation that achieves anti-abortion extremists’ long-sought goal of “defunding” Planned Parenthood; Republicans blocked the amendment. Recently, Senator Murray introduced legislation to reverse the massive health care cuts Republicans passed into law last month and restore federal Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood.

Senator Murray is a longtime leader in the fight to protect and expand access to reproductive health care and abortion rights, and she has led Congressional efforts to fight back after the Supreme Court’s disastrous decision overturning Roe v. Wade. Murray has introduced more than a dozen pieces of legislation to protect reproductive rights from further attacks, protect providers, and help ensure women get the care they need; Murray has led efforts to push for passage of these bills on the floor multiple times. Last January, on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Murray led her colleagues in hosting a “State of Abortion Rights” briefing with women who have suffered firsthand from Republican abortion bans, and last June, she chaired a HELP Committee hearing titled “The Assault on Women’s Freedoms: How Abortion Bans Have Created a Health Care Nightmare Across America.” Recently, Murray helped lead efforts to force Republicans on the record on votes to protect access to contraception and access to IVF (twice) last year, and she led her colleagues in raising the alarm about the threat a second Trump administration would pose to reproductive rights and abortion access in every state, as outlined in Project 2025. At a forum Senator Murray held this year on the anniversary of the Dobbs decision, Senator Murray spoke about Republicans’ plan to institute a backdoor nationwide abortion ban, including by defunding Planned Parenthood.

###


The following sites updated: