3/27/2026

general hospital

 

'general hosptial'?

marco's death has me wiped out on the show, honestly.  

marco and lucas were a great couple.  there was so much more that could have been done with them.  i mean drew is doing nothing but he survived.  

but marco had to die?


on the episode today, ava spoke to lucas about marco and told him not to blame himself.  sidwell went to dante to ask if they'd found his son's killer yet?  dante said no.  they really haven't done anything on it.  seriously, they haven't.  sidwell's convinced it was sonny.

lucas showed up at the police station because dante had called him in.  sidwell saw him and went over.  he told lucas that he was so grateful that marco had lucas and that lucas was family and to please consider staying on at his place.  

the big takeaway for lucas is that sidwell didn't kill his own son.  lucas had thought it might be sidwell.


so pascal has not been on yet.  is he going to tell sidwell that he called ross and told him that marco had taken 2 vials of the medication for britt?  if he does, sidwell will know ross killed marco.  and sidwell will know that pascal played a role in that murder.  

i don't think pascal wants that.

joslyn talked to britt - or talked at her.  just kept thinking, 'your uncle just lost his boyfriend and this is how you are?'  she kept saying that she and britt needed to be honest to help jason.  and i just thought, 'wow lucas - your uncle - lost the man of his life and you don't even care.'  britt was talking about how after ross  killed marco, he's not going to be stopped, he's going to come after everyone.

tracy went to alexis to talk about danny and alexis told her jason made her danny's guardian.  tracy wasn't happy about it.

lulu and nathan spoke.  she told him rocco told her that he shot ross and that ross had attacked britt and was about to kill her when jason showed up and knocked the gun out of ross' hand and then the 2 men were fighting and ross had some metal pole that he was going to attack jason with so rocco shot him. 


nathan said they couldn't tell any 1 the truth.  rocco would go away for a very long time.  and jason had asked britt to say that jason shot ross so they'd be going against what jason wanted. 

i can't believe that they killed marco. 


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


Thursday, March 26, 2026.  Did two of Epstein's employees perjure themselves in testimony to Congress,  during Chump's first term the Justice Department told New Mexico to cease their investigation into Epstein' ranch and, in the prison Epstein died in, personal papers were trashed -- this was while Bill Barr was AG and maybe it's time for Barr to testify in public, calls build for a special counsel to be assigned, Iran is a trap of Chump's own making (just like Epstein), Stephen Miller is getting on Chump's bad side, and much more. 



Let's start with Donald Chump's buddy Jeffrey Epstein.  The pedophile has been dead for six years but he remains in the news.  In fact, Chump was  talking about him in December.  Kevin Liptak (CNN) noted:

President Donald Trump bemoaned Monday the potential reputational damage inflicted on people who appear in photos released as part of the Jeffrey Epstein files, which he insisted were only made public because of an effort to distract from his accomplishments.
The comments mark the first time Trump has addressed the files since his Justice Department released hundreds of thousands of them on Friday pursuant to a new law compelling them to do so. The measure cleared both the House and Senate with support from all but one Republican and Trump signed it into law; his administration had previously said it did not plan to release any more Epstein materials after a thorough review.
“A lot of people are very angry that pictures are being released of other people that really had nothing to do with Epstein. But they’re in a picture with him because he was at a party, and you ruined a reputation of somebody,” Trump said during an event in the library at Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach club that he claims to have ejected Epstein from in the early 2000s.
“A lot of people are very angry that this continues. A lot of Republicans,” he said, claiming the issue was meant to “deflect against a tremendous success.”

That was in December.  When the press could still write sentences like : "Trump has long sought to downplay his own connection to Epstein – noting, as he did the two had a falling out years ago – and he has previously warned that releasing files might be unfairly damaging to those referenced in them."

Noting?

That would be claiming.

He's claimed that forever.  However, a week ago, we learned otherwise via US House Rep Dan Goldman.  Adam Nichols (RAW STORY) reported

An unredacted email appears to reveal testimony that contradicts President Donald Trump's longstanding narrative about Jeffrey Epstein's relationship to Mar-a-Lago. The 2009 correspondence from Epstein's attorney Jack Goldberger was substantially redacted in the Justice Department's initial Epstein files release.
Representative Dan Goldman displayed the complete email on the House floor Wednesday, exposing its contents. The correspondence documents a telephone conference involving Trump, his attorney Alan Garten, and a person presumed to be Brad Edwards, representing Epstein's victims.
According to Goldberger's summary, when asked whether Epstein was ever expelled from Mar-a-Lago, Garten stated, "No he was not a member. May have been his guest. Never asked to leave." A manager at the Florida estate confirmed to Edwards that Epstein was "never asked to leave Mar-a-Lago."

The email, reported on by The Daily Beast, documents Trump's responses regarding his relationship with Epstein. When questioned about flying on Epstein's plane, Trump stated, "I've been on a lot of planes. May have been on his plane. No young girls on plane." Regarding visits to Epstein's residence, Trump said, "I may have been there with my wife," adding, "May have been children of guests but that's it."
Trump has publicly maintained different positions. He stated he was not "friendly" with Epstein and was "never" on his plane. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt asserted, "President Trump did nothing wrong and he kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago for being a creep."
However, the new evidence contradicts these claims. Trump appears thousands of times throughout Epstein files. Photographs document Trump and Epstein socializing together from the 1980s through the 2000s. Flight logs place Trump on Epstein's aircraft. Membership documents indicate Epstein maintained Mar-a-Lago membership until October 2007, more than one year after his indictment for soliciting prostitution.


He hasn't been asked about that.  Nor has he commented on the other discovery this month -- the Jane Doe who came forward and spoke to the FBI four times.  The first time she mentioned being assaulted by Epstein and that document was released by Pam Bondi's Justice Department in January.  But three more documents -- where she goes into her assault at the hands of Donald Chump -- were not released.  It took NPR and MS NOW calling out the Justice Dept to get those three documents released.

Chump has insisted that he was "exonerated" by the release of the files.  There was no investigation so he couldn't have been exonerated of anything.  But the fact that at least one woman complained to the FBI about him -- and the FBI interviewed her three times about this alleged assault  means that the release of the files did not 'clear him.'  There does not appear to be much effort -- on the part of the US Justice Dept -- to do anything with regards to Epstein but cover up.



Police searched the offices of Swiss bank Edmond de Rothschild as part of an investigation into a French diplomat who used to work at the bank and was an associate of Jeffrey Epstein.

The raids took place Friday at Edmond de Rothschild’s offices in central Paris and a number of other locations, said Pascal Prache, the French financial prosecutor.

French authorities have been examining whether Fabrice Aidan, a diplomat and former employee of the bank, was involved in the corruption of a “foreign public official,” Prache said. The prosecutor didn’t disclose further details or name the official in question.

Files released by the U.S. Justice Department from its investigation into Epstein included hundreds of emails between Aidan and the sex offender. The disclosure sparked an uproar in France; the foreign minister called for an investigation, saying “the facts are extremely serious.”

Aidan, a longtime diplomat, was seconded to the United Nations from 2006 to 2013 and then worked for Edmond de Rothschild until 2016, when the bank dismissed him, and he returned to the French foreign ministry. He was working for the French energy company Engie until he was dismissed last month after the extent of his relationship with Epstein became public.

The Justice Dept does not do much of anything about Epstein under Chump.  That was true during Chump's first administration and it's true under his current administration.   OK notes:


Jeffrey Epstein's tragic death has prompted renewed scrutiny as a newly released report from the Department of Justice reveals unsettling details surrounding the conditions at the Metropolitan Correction Center.

Among the discoveries, investigators found that the disgraced financier had excessive bed linens in his jail cell, where he was found unresponsive on August 10, 2019. Epstein was awaiting trial on s-- trafficking charges at the time, and the city's medical examiner later ruled his death a suicide by hanging.
The 2023 Justice Department report outlines significant oversights by prison officials, contributing to a narrative of negligence. According to the findings, Epstein’s cell failed to undergo necessary safety checks, allowing multiple hazards to remain unaddressed. "A search of Epstein’s cell following his death revealed Epstein had excess prison blankets, linens, and clothing in his cell, and that some had been ripped to create nooses," the report stated.
Compounding these issues, the report indicates that Epstein was isolated in his cell and not adequately monitored, despite conflicting claims from the jail regarding his treatment. Notably, on August 9, 2019, the day before his death, Epstein's cellmate was transferred out, yet "no action was taken to ensure Epstein was assigned another cellmate," the report read.



A guard who was on duty at New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center when Jeffrey Epstein died is set to testify before the House Oversight Committee on Thursday.

Committee chair Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., issued a letter to Tova Noel on March 13 stating, “Due to public reporting, documents released by the Department of Justice, and documents obtained by the Committee, the Committee believes you have information that will assist in its investigation.”

Questions surround Epstein co-executors’ potential payment to ‘Jane Doe 4’
Noel, along with another guard, is accused of sleeping and browsing the internet instead of monitoring Epstein the night he died in August 2019.

The guards are also accused of falsifying prison records to make it appear they had conducted required security checks before Epstein was found dead in his cell.




Ari discussed these developments on MS NOW yesterday with THE MIAMI HERALD's Julie K. Brown.




Again, that would have been during Chump's first administration.  It was also during Chump's first administration that officials in New Mexico were told by the federal government to cease their investigation into Epstein's ranch in New Mexico.





Jeffrey Epstein's former attorney and co-executor Darren Indyke might have committed perjury in his testimony to Congress, legal expert Lisa Rubin told MS NOW's Alicia Menendez on Tuesday's edition of "Deadline: White House" — but it's unclear partly because the FBI never bothered to look at him as closely as they should have.
Indyke and another Epstein associate, his accountant Richard Kahn, spoke to Congress behind closed doors, with their testimony only now becoming available. They both claimed to have had no knowledge of the deceased financier and accused sex trafficker's crimes against children — but there are holes in their story, Rubin said.
"We discovered that at least two victims told the FBI specifically that Darren Indyke had instructed them not to talk to law enforcement, not that he said to them that it was their option and that a lawyer would be provided for them if they wanted one," said Rubin.

This pattern of alleged obstruction appeared to extend beyond victims.
"There was also a former personal chef of Jeffrey Epstein's, who also spoke to law enforcement and gave them a very similar narrative that he remembers an interaction with Darren Indyke, during which he was told, do not speak to law enforcement if you are approached," Rubin continued. "That was during a period of time where they were concerned that this particular gentleman might be served with papers and Darren Indyke, according to this man, the former personal chef, told him, if somebody tries to approach you with something, do not accept it."


Did they commit perjury?  Who knows.  But Alexander Willis (RAW STORY) notes:


During their testimony, both Kahn and Indyke revealed that at no time were they ever contacted by federal investigators, an admission that “raises questions about the depth of the Justice Department’s review of Epstein,” NBC News reporter Raquel Coronell Uribe wrote in a report Tuesday.

Last July, President Donald Trump’s Justice Department said in a memo that, after having conducted an “exhaustive” and “thorough” review of matters related to Epstein, no evidence existed to pursue criminal charges against any potential co-conspirators. The recent testimony from Epstein’s advisors, however, appears to suggest that the Justice Department’s (DOJ) investigation may not have been as “exhaustive” as claimed.

At no time were they ever contacted by federal investigators.  Sounds like Bill Barr, the US AG under Chump in 2019, needs to be called to testify.  He says he and Chump only spoke of Epstein twice -- once when Chump volunteered -- for no reason -- that he and Epstein were no longer friends and a second time when he called him to tell Chump that Epstein had died.  Barr was in charge when Epstein died.  And now that we have all of this information calling in the details of his death and circumstances into question, one wonders why Barr didn't know this?  Or did he know it all along?  We do know that, under Barr, the Justice Dept asked New Mexico investigators to stop their investigation into Epstein's ranch -- where it was rumored dead bodies were buried.  We don't know why.  But we do know that Barr's Justice Dept asked that the investigation be halted.  


US House Rep James Walkinshaw addressed these witnesses yesterday.


Congressional Democrats are losing patience and tired of the stonewalling.  Srimoyee Datta (INQUISITR) notes:


U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., recently posted on X seeking clarity about Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s relationship with financier Jeffrey Epstein. Documents suggest Lutnick maintained ties with Epstein as recently as 2018. The two were reportedly involved in business dealings even after Epstein had been charged. Despite emails and other records, Lutnick has said he had “limited interactions” with Epstein.
On Jan. 30, the Justice Department released more than three million pages of documents related to Epstein, including thousands of videos and images. The department said it would cooperate with legal authorities following public pressure. 

Emails between Lutnick and Epstein have drawn renewed attention. Records indicate they arranged calls, discussed meeting for drinks, and that Epstein made donations in Lutnick’s honor.
[. . .]

​Among the released materials are emails suggesting Lutnick discussed a potential family visit to Epstein’s private island. The emails are dated 2012, years after Lutnick had said he cut ties with Epstein. 

Documents from 2012 also show signatures from both Epstein and Lutnick on a contract related to the acquisition of an advertising technology company, Adfin. According to CBS News, Epstein signed on behalf of Southern Trust Co., while Lutnick signed for a limited liability company known as CVAFH I. 
Epstein invited Lutnick to lunch on Dec. 24, 2012. Afterward, Epstein’s assistant sent a message thanking Lutnick, writing, “It was nice seeing you.” 

In a 2018 email, Lutnick wrote to Epstein, “You should put in a letter. I’m sending a lawyer. Don’t ignore this,” referring to an expansion plan involving the nearby Frick Collection museum.



Two Democrat congressman, when asked by MeidasTouch reporter Pablo ManrĂ­quez, expressed support for appointing a special prosecutor over the Epstein files. Rep. Jim McGovern says he supports the idea of a special prosecutor to handle the, Epstein files, arguing the administration appears to be ignoring the law by not turning over documents Congress voted to release.
McGovern said he does not know the exact legal path to appoint one but suggested members of the Judiciary Committee, including Rep. Jamie Raskin, would be better positioned to outline next steps. He added that lawmakers believe the administration is stalling in hopes the issue will fade, but warned “it won’t go away.”
Rep. Robert Garcia also backed the idea of pursuing a special prosecutor and said Congress should use every available tool to force the release of the Epstein files. 



A special counsel would be the best move that could be made on the Epstein issue.  It could cut through the nonsense that Chump's previous Justice Dept threw up and the nonsense that Chump's current Justice Dept throws up.



This, of course, brings us to Donald Trump, whose first real collision with his own supporters came over the Epstein files. Here was a conspiracy theory he’d elevated during his campaign — transparency and accountability, the whole nine yards — only to appear to suppress it once he took office.

That’s the kind of reversal that makes people reach for explanations. And it didn’t help that the surrounding circumstances were even more suspicious.
Epstein gets a sweetheart deal from the Bush administration. He dies mysteriously in custody. Trump’s attorney general says she has the client list sitting on her desk, then says the client list doesn’t exist. Ghislaine Maxwell gets moved to a facility that sounds less like prison and more like a retirement villa.

None of this proves anything, of course — but it certainly looks curious.

From there, the imagination fills in the blanks with whatever narrative best justifies the confusion. In Epstein’s case, that meant whispers about intelligence agencies, Israeli kompromat and shadowy financial dealings.


It's amazing that Chump got away with using Epstein to portray others as guilty and untrustworthy for as long as he did.  After all, he was closer to Epstein than anyone else for decades.  And Epstein died in prison while Chump was president.  If there were these scary monsters in the shadows that Chump wanted to expose, why hadn't he exposed them in his first term as president?  But Chump's base was never all that bright to begin with.



Turning to Chump's war, TAG 24 NEWS reports:

Iran said on Wednesday it fired a volley of cruise missiles at a US aircraft carrier, as strikes rained down across the Middle East despite alleged back-channel diplomatic efforts to end the nearly four-week war.
Iran's military said its cruise missiles at the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier group had "forced it to change its position", warning of "powerful strikes" when the "hostile fleet" comes into range.

Meanwhile, Iranian newspapers on Wednesday ridiculed what they called President Donald Trump's "lies" about ongoing diplomatic discussions to end the war.
A caricature of Trump with an Pinocchio-style nose looming over a map of the Strait of Hormuz appeared on the front page of the conservative daily Javan, under the headline "The world's most pathetic and dishonorable liar."

On Monday, just hours before the expiry of an ultimatum he had set – threatening strikes on power plants if Iran did not reopen the strategic strait – Trump unexpectedly announced talks with Tehran. Iranian authorities have denied there are any negotiations, direct or indirect.

Javan accused Trump of lying to calm the markets and push down oil prices, which is exactly what happened in the minutes before the Republican's post about negotiations.


 Katherine Doyle, Courtney Kube and Dan De Luce (NBC NEWS) report on how Chump's shielded by those around him:

Each day since the start of the war in Iran, U.S. military officials compile a video update for President Donald Trump that shows video of the biggest, most successful strikes on Iranian targets over the previous 48 hours, three current U.S. officials and a former U.S. official said.
The daily montage typically runs for about two minutes, sometimes longer, the officials said. One described each daily video as a series of clips of “stuff blowing up.”

The highlight reel of U.S. Central Command bombing Iranian equipment and military sites isn’t the only briefing Trump gets about the war. He’s also updated through conversations with top military and intelligence advisers, foreign leaders and news reports, the officials said.
But the video briefing is fueling concerns among some of Trump’s allies that he may not be receiving — or absorbing — the complete picture of the war, now in its fourth week, two of the current officials and the former official said.

They said the videos are also driving Trump’s increasing frustration with news coverage of the war. Trump has pointed to the success depicted in the daily videos to privately question why his administration can’t better influence the public narrative, asking aides why the news media doesn’t emphasize what he’s seeing, one of the current U.S. officials and the former U.S. official said.
[. . .]
The current and former U.S. officials said the military can’t brief Trump on every strike — there are hundreds every day — and so the curated video, while it showcases U.S. capabilities, doesn’t reflect the full scope of the conflict.

“We can’t tell him every single thing that happens,” a current U.S. official said. The official noted that Trump’s briefings tend to draw better feedback from his aides when they focus on U.S. victories.

Overall, the official said, the information Trump gets about the war tends to emphasize U.S. successes, with comparatively little detail about Iranian actions.



Donald Trump’s top war goons are briefing the president with two-minute-long highlight reels showing frontline victories in the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, U.S. officials told NBC News.

Three current U.S. officials and a former official told the news outlet that the president is being fed a daily video mash-up summarizing the most successful strikes on Iranian targets over the previous 48 hours of the military operation in the Middle East, now in its fourth week.

The footage depicts “stuff blowing up”, one official revealed, while others said Trump’s allies are concerned that the clips may not fully capture the overall situation on the ground.


And Travis Gettys (RAW STORY) notes some reactions to the news NBC reported:

"Every day the Pentagon makes a video of cool explosions from Iran for the president of the United States to watch, so he can bounce up and down in his high chair, clap his little hands, and cry 'Yay! Make it go boom again!'" posted MS NOW's Paul Waldman.

"They are literally keeping Trump in a cocoon of ignorance in order to not upset him the same as you would do with any other elderly dementia patient," marveled Daniel Gilmore, a media studies and communications professor.

"'Last week Trump said that he called a top military general after he saw video of the USS Abraham Lincoln in flames and that the general told him Iran fabricated the video using artificial intelligence,'" said physics and astronomy professor Britt Lundgren, quoting from the report.

"Good job. We have a President who falls for AI propaganda first and asks questions later," added military historian Michael E. Carter.




For this, as ever, Trump can only blame himself (though that won’t stop him from offloading it if needs be and he’s already started subtly pulling Pete Hegseth into the role of scapegoat). First, it is his war of choice, and he has prosecuted it most likely in direct defiance of warnings from his military commanders and diplomats of the inevitable consequences on Gulf allies, other Western partners, the risks of casualties and getting drawn into an endless conflict, and the dangers to the world economy.

Trump knew best, as ever, and now he’s landed in a trap of his own making. He cannot easily escalate the war without inflicting further damage on the world, including America and his domestic standing, but the Iranians won’t allow him to declare victory and cut his losses. So long as they control the Strait of Hormuz, they control Trump.
Trump knows all this, but obviously cannot admit it. So he goes around declaring, “We’ve won this. This war has been won”, when it patently has not, and mumbles about some “very big present” the Iranians had gifted to him – “I’m not going to tell you what that present is, but it was a very significant prize, and they gave it to us. That meant one thing to me,” he added. “We’re dealing with the right people.” Obviously, this is easy for the Iranians to mock, and of the rest of the world to be, at best, puzzled by.


A trap of his own making?  Like The Epstein Files.  Or like sending ICE to the airports.  Amanda Marcotte (SALON) writes:

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have been deployed by the Trump administration to airports around the country, and the idea appears to have started during call-in segments on right-wing radio shows.

This is no exaggeration.

Journalists Ben Smith of Semafor and Brian Stelter of CNN traced the ICE-in-airports idea to “Linda from Arizona,” who called into a D-list conservative radio show hosted by Clay Travis and Buck Sexton on March 20. Both Linda and the hosts were blunt that the goal was not actually helping the Transportation Security Administration run more efficient checkpoints but to trigger the liberals.
“I think it would set their hair on fire,” Linda said, full of glee at the idea.

“Democrats would go absolutely insane,” agreed one of the hosts.

It’s unclear why Linda and Clay-and-Buck thought that annoying Democrats would pressure or persuade them to drop their opposition to funding the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE operations. DHS has been shut down since Feb. 14, when the GOP refused to meet Democrats’ demands for significant reforms following the fatal shootings of American citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis by federal immigration agents. Although Linda and Clay-and-Buck did try to argue that ICE agents would help TSA with security, their proposal makes little sense in practice. Shorter lines would actually relieve pressure to get a funding deal done by taking away a major pain point.

Liberals hate ICE, the logic went, so why not inflict ICE on liberals and make them squeal? But the MAGA coalition has not been known for its logic, and it’s clear from the conversation that no one involved was really thinking this through. Instead, the scheme was rooted in a childish — and sadistic — impulse to bully.
Donald Trump often seems composed of little more than sadistic impulses, and he has only gotten angrier with age. After the idea percolated up from Linda to Clay-and-Buck and then to Fox News, Trump thought it was a stroke of genius. Since he couldn’t admit that he got the idea from a random woman in Green Valley, Arizona, he took credit for it on Monday, comparing himself to the man who invented the paperclip in the process.

What is remarkable is that everyone involved — all of them, from Linda to Trump himself — are so consumed with the desire to trigger the liberals that no one stopped to wonder if the plan to put ICE in airports would backfire, as it appears to be doing.

Early reports show ICE is doing nothing to speed up security lines, many of which have hours-long waits due to Republicans’ refusal to pass a Democratic proposal to fund the TSA directly while still withholding DHS funding. The presence of ICE is instead ratcheting up tensions at the already stress-laden airports. Federal immigration officers can’t do the real work of screening passengers, but they can harass and manhandle people suspected of being immigrants.

Scapegoats, Chump needs a lot of them.  Because nothing is ever his fault -- not in his mind.  And with that let's note Stephen Miller.  Srijony Das (INQUISITR) reports:


Reports suggest Donald Trump is facing tensions with Stephen Miller. The President is reportedly concerned about Miller’s efforts that could undermine his time in the White House. However, it is also said that Trump is miles away from taking any concrete steps to avoid clash with Miller.
To put things in perspective, Trump is not on board with Stephen’s take on immigration policies. A Wall Street Journal report suggests that the 79-year-old doesn’t support a mass deportation agenda for anyone under suspicion. He wants the process to scale back instead of randomly snatching up undocumented people.



Stephen Miller's hard line on immigration policy is considered unsettling for voters, according to an internal document seen by The Wall Street Journal and noted by analyst Greg Sargent. The New Republic columnist suggested the president may have been swayed by Chief of Staff Susie Wiles to soften the admin's stance.
Sargent believes Trump is set to throw Miller "under the bus" as a result.

Sargent wrote, "Trump wants to 'lower the profile of his mass deportation effort,' the Journal reveals. He wants voters to think the targets of these deportations are 'bad guys,' not noncriminal undocumented residents.
"He wants less visibility for ICE raids in cities, fewer public confrontations with local officials, and less public talk about “mass deportations,” which, he now grasps, are hideously unpopular.

"Tellingly, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles now sees deportations as a liability for the midterms, per the report," Sargent wrote. "That Trump is siding with her on the politics here is a sign of political panic and a rebuke to Miller, who apparently delights in flaunting the administration’s vicious sadism and overt white nationalism — and seems certain that latent majorities are quietly cheering along.
In his report, Sargent wrote, “To be clear, this report deserves serious skepticism. It very much bears watching whether ICE will actually end up deprioritizing the removal of noncriminal immigrants. Trump mostly wants the appearance of a pivot: According to the Journal, he wants a focus on ‘criminals’ in GOP ‘messaging.’ But recalibrating the ‘messaging’ won’t address the public’s broad rejection of Trumpism’s deeper anti-immigrant project. And all signs are that this project is fully forging ahead.”
"To be clear, this report deserves serious skepticism. It very much bears watching whether ICE will actually end up deprioritizing the removal of noncriminal immigrants. Trump mostly wants the appearance of a pivot: According to the Journal, he wants a focus on 'criminals' in GOP 'messaging.'"



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

Senator Murray: “I don’t think we can ignore the immediate threat to Social Security. And that really is President Trump. Because seniors right now, today—are having a very hard time getting their benefits. Why? Because Social Security has pushed out—without any kind of plan—7,700 workers since Trump took office.”

Los Angeles Times: ‘It’s a shambles’: DOGE cuts bring chaos, long waits at Social Security for seniors

***WATCH: Senator Murray’s remarks and Q&A at the hearing***  

Washington, D.C. — Today, at a Senate Budget Committee hearing on Social Security, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, slammed the Trump administration’s cuts to the Social Security Administration (SSA) workforce and emphasized how it is making it harder for seniors to get the help they need to access their Social Security benefits. Senator Murray questioned witnesses on the very wealthiest Americans paying their fair share into Social Security and how to address SSA solvency—noting that tens of millions of hard-working Americans rely on Social Security for the majority of their income, and have paid their entire careers into Social Security—but could lose 24 percent of their benefits if Congress doesn’t act. Murray made clear there is no reason for working people to face drastic benefit cuts when the very wealthiest could simply pay their fair share.

In opening comments, Senator Muray said:

“Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman. We absolutely need do need to talk about how we protect Social Security. But in addition to the long-term solvency that people are focusing on here, I don’t think we can ignore the immediate threat to Social Security. And that really is President Trump.

“Because seniors right now, today—are having a very hard time getting their benefits. Why? Because Social Security has pushed out—without any kind of plan—7,700 workers since Trump took office. We now have just one field office representative per 4,000 Social Security beneficiaries, and there are at least [40] field offices that lost more than 25% of their staff.

“And that’s just the beginning. The Trump administration wants to cut field office visits in half. That would mean over 15 million people who were able to go to a desk and speak to a person last year—would be out of luck this year. This is really a slow moving trainwreck. Last summer the Social Security Administration moved 1,000 field office employees to the phone lines. At the end of the year it moved 500 more. In January—it moved nearly 800 more employees from the processing centers and the field office support and workload support—to phone duty—often with very little training.

“That’s trying to fix one problem they created—worsening telephone service—by creating new problems and backlogs everywhere. This is really hurting seniors—who can no longer get an SSA meeting close to home when they need it. It is hurting people with disabilities—as people who could be processing their claims, are now answering phones. And it’s burning out the hardworking staff Trump hasn’t pushed out.

“But this is all the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Trump’s Social Security sabotage. Because there was the attempt to punish a state by revoking contracts to report births and deaths. There was a proposal to end many of the phone services—an idea that was quickly reversed because it was so bad. And then there was the DOGE purge—which wrongly kicked seniors off Social Security—including a constituent of mine they incorrectly declared as dead!

“And mind you—that’s just the sabotage in the light of day. But thanks to a whistleblower report, and ongoing internal investigations, we know there was even more damage happening in the shadows. Like when Trump let Elon and DOGE muck around with highly sensitive, Social Security data. That is private, personally identifiable information on hundreds of millions of Americans.

“We are talking about potentially unprecedented data breaches here. Blatantly unqualified people getting practically unfettered access—even after court orders. Private data copied onto unauthorized third-party servers, or, according to reports even copied onto a thumb drive!

“Believe me: I want everyone to know; I’m watching this investigation closely and demanding accountability. If we want to protect Social Security for decades to come, yes, we do need to talk about solvency. But we also need to talk about the President who is gutting the Social Security Administration right now—today—and callously putting our seniors’ benefits, and their personal data—at risk.”

[BILLONAIRES PAYING THEIR FAIR SHARE]

Senator Murray began her questioning by asking Dr. Molly Dahl, Chief of Long-Term Analysis at the Congressional Budget Office, about who is and isn’t paying their fair share into Social Security, “Now with that, Dr. Dahl, I want to turn to you, I do have a few questions, particularly about who is and isn’t paying their fair share into Social Security, and I want to make sure I have a few numbers right. Is it right that those making under $184,500, their effective payroll tax rate is roughly 12.4 percent?”

“That’s right, the statutory rate is 6.2 percent, but consensus view is that the employee pays, basically the employer cost is passed onto the employee, so the employee basically faces a rate of 12.4 percent,” responded Dr. Dahl.

“12.4 percent, for anybody earning under $184, 500. What is the effective payroll tax for someone making a million dollars a year?” asked Senator Murray.

“So, they would pay the 12.4 percent on that first $185,00 roughly and then would not pay additional tax on the labored income above that amount, and so that math would work out to about 2.2 percent,” answered Dr. Dahl.

Senator Murray replied, “Ok so, 12.4 percent for someone under $184,500, a millionaire would be about 2.2, what if you’re a billionaire—like Trump or Musk—your Social Security tax would be effectively, on my understanding—”

“Very, very much smaller,” Dr. Dahl interjected.

“0.002 percent?” Senator Murray finished.

“Yes,” Dr. Dahl replied.

“That just doesn’t make sense to me. I mean when the richest people in the country have the smallest effective tax rate—that does not seem to me like a very fair system. Especially when we are now six years away from retired workers facing this 24 percent cut in their Social Security benefits, so I hope we all understand that and focus on that,” Senator Murray concluded.

Last year, Senator Murray released a new report featuring testimonials from Washington state residents—including employees at the Social Security Administration who were recently fired through no fault of their own—and detailing how the Trump administration’s wide-ranging attacks on SSA risk depriving Washingtonians of the Social Security benefits they have earned and deserve. More than 70 million Americans, including 1.4 million—or one in six—people in Washington state rely on Social Security benefits. Half of seniors nationwide rely on Social Security for most of their income, and a quarter of seniors rely on Social Security for at least 90 percent of their income. Senator Murray has an extensive record of protecting Social Security benefits and fighting to secure essential funding for the Social Security Administration—and she has been tirelessly raising the alarm about the threat Elon Musk’s DOGE poses to Americans’ hard-earned benefits. Last March, Senator Murray held a press conference to lift up the stories of SSA employees who are being pushed out by Elon Musk through no fault of their own and hear from Washington state residents who rely on Social Security. Last February, Murray released a fact sheet warning of the Trump administration’s plans to make it harder for Americans who’ve paid into Social Security to get the benefits they have earned.

Senator Murray has fought throughout her career—including as top Democrat on the HELP Committee from 2017-2022—to ensure a secure retirement for all Americans for decades. She was instrumental in establishing a special financial assistance program to the Central States Pension Fund in the American Rescue Plan, saving the pensions of over half a million workers and retirees in 2022. Murray has long held that we can protect and expand benefits for working Americans by responsibly rightsizing our tax system to ensure that giant corporations and billionaires simply pay their fair share.

###




The following sites updated:


3/26/2026

chump should have gone to prison - and marco died on general hospital today



President Donald Trump took classified documents related to his private business interests from the White House in 2021, according to materials the Justice Department apparently provided to the House Judiciary Committee. 

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), the committee’s top Democrat, suggested in a letter to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi that the new documents were handed over by mistake in a slapdash effort to discredit the dormant criminal case against Trump. 
“These new disclosures suggest that Donald Trump stole documents so sensitive that only six people in the entire U.S. government had access to them, that the documents President Trump stole pertained to his business interests, and that Susie Wiles, then the CEO of Donald Trump’s super PAC, witnessed President Trump showing off a classified map to passengers on his private plane,” Raskin said in the letter. 

Raskin asked Bondi to tell lawmakers in a classified setting who was on the plane, what the map showed and which of Trump’s various business interests were relevant to the documents. The letter includes an image of an aircraft manifest with a redacted passenger list from a 2022 flight from Florida to New York. 



Raskin said the information released by the Justice Department indicated Trump "apparently took classified documents on a flight to his golf club in Bedminster, NJ" in 2022. Quoting from the DOJ disclosures, the lawmaker wrote that prosecutors believed Trump might have shown a classified map to people on the plane, noting that they believed this was witnessed by Wiles, who is now the president's chief of staff.

Cannon, a Trump appointee, blocked the public release of Smith's report outside of the Justice Department earlier this year and specifically blocked it from being sent to Congress last year.

Raskin wrote that without access to Smith's report or other investigative materials, lawmakers did not have details about the classified map and other information disclosed by the DOJ.

"Without access to Volume II of the Special Counsel’s final report or the investigative files, we do not know what that classified map contained, nor can we determine from this memo the relationship between the classified documents President Trump stole and their pertinence to his 'business interests,'" Raskin wrote.

Raskin submitted a series of questions to Bondi, asking for further information about who Trump allegedly showed the classified map to, what the map detailed, and information about the document allegedly only accessible by six people. He also requested details about documents "improperly" retained by Trump that were "pertinent to his business interests."


chump should be behind bars in prison.  that's where he belongs.  that dumb idiot he put on the bench in florida ran interference for him and so did the idiot merrick garland.


he's a crook.  

'general hospital'?


where to start?


rocco told lulu what happened.  she was very supportive - didn't go off on britt or anything.  she did take im into the hospital to get his hand looked at - told elizabeth that he had cut it in the kitchen.  

danny and charlotte went to carly's to talk to her father.  carly made danny pick up the phone and speak to alexis.  this allowed danny to learn that jason was in police custody.  cassadine put on a brave face.  after danny and charlotte left, he told carly that the wsb was going to find jason guilty and disappear him.  he'd end up in prison in switzerland and, cassadine said, 'i have friends there.'  so, carly asked, he could help jason escape?  yes, cassadine said.

britt learned from portia that marcos had died but ross lived.  


that's right, marcos died.  


i couldn't believe it.

isaiah was closing a stab wound and then they'd find another and then another and marcos just bled out.  

when lucas got done with his surgery on ross, he immediately called marcos again and got his voice mail again.  he told him he loved him but he was worried about him.  

after that, elizabeth walked up to him and tried to get him to go to the break room with her but he wouldn't.  so she broke the news to him that marco had died.

lucas went to marco to say goodbye and tell him that he loved him and that he had pushed marcos and he felt responsible for what happened.


sidwell and ava were told marco had been taken to the hospital by chase.  they get there and sidwell is told marcos didn't make it.

he goes to his son and tells him he loves him and that he should have said that before.  he talked about how proud of marco he'd been.  he vowed to finish off sonny for marco's mother and to take care of whomever killed marco.


ava tried to talk to lucas but he told her he couldn't.  he said he knew that marco was gone but if he talked with her it would be admitting it and he wasn't ready for that yet. 


so danny had asked alexis when they were on the phone for her to go protect jason.  he said it's what he wanted and it's what his mother (alexis' daughter) would want as well.


so she went there and was talking to him when jack and 2 others with the wsb arrived.  they announced jason was leaving with them.


as jason was being hauled away, he told alexis she was danny's legal guardian and asked her to watch over him. 


britt arrived as they were taking jason away and she was crying and then danny (and charlotte) showed up and he was crying about his dad being taken away.  


it was a very rough episode to watch.


and i can't believe marco is dead.  

i really can't believe it. 

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


Wednesday, March 25, 2026.  Americans are not happy with the job market, or the economy, or Chump's war on Immigrants or on Chump's war on Iran, but Chump's lackey Stephen Miller is pushing against a Supreme Court ruling to overturn education for children in the United States. 


The mood in America?   Martha McHardy (DAILY BEAST) reports:

More Americans say they are struggling at their jobs rather than thriving, even as confidence in the job market has hit a new low, according to a poll.

The latest Gallup poll shows that for the first time since they began tracking U.S. workers’ life satisfaction, a larger share say they are struggling (49 percent) than thriving (46 percent).

A year ago, 47 percent said they were struggling, while 49 percent said they were thriving.

What happened?  Donald Chump.  Make America Great Again just meant bigger tax breaks for the rich.  It meant destroying federal agencies.  It meant destroying federal oversight -- protecting workers on the job, protecting our environment.  It meant putting a tag on everything and selling it off.  It meant lying to a bunch of uninformed people who will never be rich -- or even well off -- that the destruction of our public square was going to help them in some way.  


Trina covered this mood in "Matthew McConaughey's Tuna Salad in the Kitchen" last night.  

You can see the mood in the polls.   Sam Stevenson (NEWSWEEK) reports:

President Donald Trump is now underwater on every major issue tested, according to new polling, as economic anxiety and foreign policy tensions build ahead of the 2026 midterms.
[. . .]
Seven months from the midterms, sustained weakness across core issues threatens Republican prospects. 

Voters are juggling higher prices, economic unease and a widening war with Iran, and history suggests that kind of environment rarely favors the party in power.
Fresh polling shows Trump’s approval rating sitting underwater across every issue tested, with economic concerns driving some of the sharpest declines.

Data released Tuesday by polling analyst G. Elliott Morris from Verasight shows net approval-negative ratings on border security, immigration, the economy, foreign policy and inflation, among other issues. None of the categories tested produced a net positive result.

That's one poll. Sam Stevenson reports on another:

Trump’s approval rating has fallen to its lowest-ever level in a new survey from media outlet The Argument, which polled 1,519 registered voters nationwide between March 12 and March 17, 2026, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percent.

In its latest national survey, just 40 percent of registered voters said they approved of Trump’s performance, while 58 percent disapproved.
That produced a net approval rating of -18, the worst result for Trump in the history of The Argument’s polling series.

While Trump has long been a polarizing figure, this moment marks uncharted territory because, according to the outlet, no previous Trump-era poll it has fielded—across either presidency—has produced numbers this negative.


President Donald Trump's approval rating fell in recent days to its lowest point since he returned to the White House, hit by a surge in fuel prices and widespread disapproval of the war he launched on Iran, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.
The four-day poll, completed on Monday, showed 36% of Americans approve of Trump's job performance, down from 40% in a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted last week.

Americans' views on Trump soured significantly with regard to his stewardship over the economy and the cost of living, as gasoline prices have surged since the U.S. and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28. Just 25% of respondents approved of Trump's handling of the cost of living, an issue that was at the center of his 2024 presidential election campaign.

Only 29% of the country approves of Trump's economic stewardship, the lowest rating in either of Trump's presidential administrations and lower than any economic approval rating of his predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden.



That war with Iran?  Alex Griffing (MEDIAITE) reports:

President Donald Trump reportedly ordered 3,000 more U.S. troops to the Middle East this week, reported Fox News Chief National Security Correspondent Jennifer Griffin on Tuesday.

“Fox News has learned that the Commander of the 82nd Airborne Division Maj Gen Brandon Tegtmeier and his ‘command element,’ members of his headquarters staff, have been ordered to deploy to the Middle East as the Pentagon and White House weigh whether to send the 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East for possible land operations,” Griffin wrote on X.

The Wall Street Journal also confirmed the report, noting, “Officials cautioned that a decision to put boots on the ground in Iran hasn’t been made. But deploying the 82nd opens the door to President Trump for several strategic options.”

The Iranian officials have not negotiated with Chump or with his son-in-law.  Hannah Ellis-Petersen and Shah Meer Baloch (GUARDIAN) report that Iranian officials say they will speak with one official -- US Vice President JD Vance:

Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, says his country is ready to “facilitate meaningful and conclusive talks” to end the war in the Middle East amid attempts to push Islamabad as a possible venue for negotiations between the US and Iran.

Pakistani sources said the US vice-president, JD Vance, was being put forward as a probable chief negotiator from the US side if talks went ahead. Iranian sources have said they would refuse to sit down with Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, or Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, who led the nuclear negotiations with Iran before the war.

Officials in Pakistan said the US and Iran could meet for negotiations in Islamabad as early as this week to discuss an end to the war, which began almost a month ago.
[. . .]
The source said the Iranian side viewed Vance as a more acceptable interlocutor. Vance is widely viewed as a sceptic of the decision to entangle the US in a Middle East war and has largely kept quiet on the conflict. “If the negotiations are going to have any outcome, JD Vance should join,” they said. “With Witkoff and Kushner, nothing will come out of it. We have seen that in the past.”

JD.  

Not Chump.


JD.


When Joe Biden was elected president, he frequently asserted that “America was back” and collaborating with allies again. But the fact that the United States would elect Donald Trump once was enough to make the world skeptical of that claim, and as the New York Times columnist Carlos Lozada writes, not only was that mistrust “vindicated with Trump’s return to the White House, but his second term has marked the emergence of a “post-America world” from which there may be no recovery.
As evidence of this, Lozada cites the recent words of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, who warned, “The old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy.”

According to Lozada, the “Pax Americana, that U.S.-led system of alliances and institutions that promoted American interests and values and helped avoid major conflicts in the decades after World War II, is gone, and irretrievably so.” Trump’s presidency has shredded those alliances and diminished those institutions to the point where “it is clear by now that the United States has ceased to be the leader of the free world.”

Lozada uses the example of Trump’s war on Iran, which Trump launched after a year of steadily alienating allies before asking those very allies for help. When they refused, Trump responded with characteristic bluster, saying, “We don’t need anybody. We’re the strongest nation in the world. We have the strongest military by far in the world. We don’t need them.”

Chump's destroyed America's place in the world.  And now?  Iranian officials want to speak with . . . JD Vance.

Diminished and Diminishing Donald.  A lame duck.

And the lame duck quacks loudly.   Greg Sargent (THE NEW REPUBLIC) observes:


Donald Trump’s tirades about Iran are getting uglier. He let out one rant that positively relished U.S. military domination of Iran and seethed about the media’s refusal to acknowledge his greatness. He unleashed a second tirade that dripped with bizarre triumphalism, angrily declaring the war “won,” which raises questions about why it’s continuing. And Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivered a rant that was drenched in bloodlust. This comes as a new Strength in Numbers/Verasight poll finds Trump’s approval at 37 percent and underwater on every issue, with majorities questioning the war’s most basic premises. That mirrors other polls from CBS, Reuters and NBC showing him in trouble and a recent Quinnipiac poll finding his coalition fracturing over the war.



President Trump’s threat to “obliterate” power stations in Iran if its leaders failed to open the Strait of Hormuz suggests that the United States is willing to violate international humanitarian law as part of its military campaign, according to current and former human rights officials.

“If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!” Mr. Trump wrote on social media on Saturday.

He later extended the deadline to Friday.

The president’s threat appears to be part of his erratic messaging campaign, which is often construed as bluster or misdirection.

“Trump is openly threatening a war crime,” said Kenneth Roth, a former executive director of Human Rights Watch. “And people aren’t saying anything because they’re numb to it.”

By threatening to attack civilian infrastructure, Mr. Trump has once again pushed the United States into territory more familiar to its enemies than its allies.

In 2024, the International Criminal Court issued four arrest warrants to Russian military officers and officials charging them with war crimes for attacking “Ukrainian electric infrastructure.”

International law, specifically Article 52 of the first additional protocol of the Geneva Conventions, prohibits attacks on civilian objects. These laws are meant to protect civilians and those who can no longer fight, such as wounded soldiers, from the “barbarity of war.”


At MEIDASTOUCH NEWS this morning, Ben provides an overview of the ongoing war.



Last night on MS NOW, Lawrence O'Donnell took on the childish whines of Chump.



Today on MS NOW's MORNING JOE, they took on Pete Hegseth's immaturity and inexperience. 





As the war with Iran continues and gas prices rise, Paul Krugman notes Chump's attack on energy sources that aren't fossil fuel-based:

We are now in a global fossil fuel crisis. With oil and liquefied natural gas from the Persian Gulf unable to reach international markets due to Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, hydrocarbon prices have been soaring around the world and widespread shortages are emerging. Anyone who thought that the U.S. would be insulated from this dire picture thanks to its large domestic oil production has had a rude awakening: the average retail price of gasoline has risen more than $1 per gallon over the past month, while the price of diesel is up $1.60.

But the Trump administration hasn’t allowed these short-run distractions to divert it from its long-run goals: It remains deeply committed to killing renewable energy, especially wind power, and increasing America’s reliance on fossil fuels.

True, some of the administration’s attacks on wind power have failed: Its efforts to throttle offshore wind development by ordering developers to stop work on projects that are already underway have repeatedly been overruled by the courts. But the administration is continuing to block development of onshore wind and solar power by freezing the issuance of federal permits.

And on Monday the Interior Department unveiled a new tactic in its war on wind: It announced that it will pay TotalEnergies, a French energy giant, almost $1 billion to not produce energy — specifically to abandon its plans to build two large wind farms off the East Coast.

To understand the Trump administration’s motives in its campaign to kill renewable energy, one must realize that this campaign is both economically self-destructive and, despite the best efforts of the fossil fuel industry, deeply unpopular.



Immigration.  Former US Senator Markwayne Mullin on Monday was confirmed as the new Secretary of Homeland Security.  As a former legislator, maybe the law will matter to him in a way that it did not matter to Kristi Noem?   Claudia Boyd-Barrett, Renuka Rayasam, and Amanda Seitz (CNN) report:

Carlos arrived at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in New Mexico in December, believing he was one step closer to reuniting with his children. By that point, his 14-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter had been in a federal shelter in Texas for nearly a year after crossing the border to be with him.
“I feel like I’m suffocating inside this shelter, trapped with no way out,” Carlos’ son said, according to one of the teens’ attorneys, when asked to describe how he felt after months at the Houston-area facility. “Every day, the same routine. Every day, feeling stuck. It makes me feel hopeless and terrified.”

During daily video calls, Carlos, who had temporary protected status, urged the siblings to be patient, to trust the process. Federal officials had vetted Carlos before he could be granted custody and told him his case was complete. He believed he would soon be back with his children, who, like him, had sought refuge from political violence in Venezuela.

An immigration officer called Carlos on a Friday and asked him to attend a meeting at an ICE office the following Monday to discuss reunification with his children. Once Carlos arrived, officers tried to force him to sign documents he said he didn’t understand. When he refused, they stripped off his clothes, seized his ID and belongings, and chained him by the neck, waist, and legs.

“They tricked me,” Carlos said in a phone call from an immigration detention center in El Paso, Texas, where he was held for several months. “They used my children to grab me,” he said.

In reporting on the family’s story, KFF Health News reviewed court documents, spoke with the family’s immigration attorneys, interviewed Carlos, and reviewed statements from his children, translated from Spanish. Carlos is a pseudonym, being used at the request of attorneys concerned that speaking out could jeopardize Carlos’ immigration case or further delay his reunion with his family.
Since 2003, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement has cared for immigrant children under 18 who arrive in the country without their parents, often fleeing violence, abuse, or trafficking. The office, which in February had more than 2,300 children in shelters or with foster families across the country, is supposed to promptly release them to vetted caregivers, typically parents or other family members already living in the country.
Congress placed this responsibility with the health agency over 20 years ago to prioritize the well-being of unaccompanied children and separate their care from immigration enforcement priorities.

Now the second Trump administration is using migrant children held by the resettlement office to lure their parents, such as Carlos, whether or not they have a criminal record. A KFF Health News investigation found the resettlement office, headed by a former ICE official, coordinates with the Department of Homeland Security to arrest people seeking custody of migrant children.

As for the former head of Homeland Security?  She's garnering side eye and laughter.  Matthew Chapman (RAW STORY) reports:

Former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem may have been fired from that role following President Donald Trump's rage over her massive taxpayer expenditure on a commercial promoting herself, but she wasn't cast out of the Trump administration entirely — and her new assignment was met with widespread mockery as it was widely seen as a move to humiliate her.
Trump initially announced her firing as a new appointment as Special Envoy to the Shield of the Americas — a small, made-up role that was a clear downgrade to a Cabinet-level office. And on Tuesday, CBS News' Olivia Gazis reported that "In her capacity as Special Envoy to Shield of the Americas Kristi Noem will report directly to Deputy Secretary of State Chris Landau, per a State Department official."
This new development that her boss will be a deputy triggered a fresh wave of ridicule.

"Oof," wrote Politico diplomatic correspondent Felicia Schwartz.
"In March Madness terms, this is basically like getting kicked off the starting five and wounding up as the unlucky student who ensures the team mascot isn't being hassled by drunk frat boys," writer Charlotte Clymer posted.

Meanwhile, attention is turning elsewhere.   Shreshtha Chaudhary (SHOWBIZ CHEAT SHEET) notes:


Pam Bondi might have just “exposed” the real mastermind behind Donald Trump’s controversial policies, whom social media is hailing as the “shadow president” and someone who is actually pulling the strings. She revealed that it was none other than Stephen Miller who was the architect behind Trump’s plan to deploy the National Guard to the U.S. cities.
According to The Mirror, the President (79) was joined by top officials from his MAGA administration at a roundtable discussion about the Memphis Safe Task Force’s operations and successes on Monday, March 23, 2026, afternoon.
Reportedly, Bondi (60) was one of the pivotal figures and spoke about Trump’s decision to deploy the National Guard to the southern city. The Attorney General revealed with great pride that United States Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller (40) was the “real mastermind” behind the decision.​


Stephen Miller has been in the news of late.  For example, Ewan Palmer (DAILY BEAST) reports:

Stephen Miller was met with an “uncomfortable silence” when he tried to demand loyalty from Texas House Republicans during a closed-door meeting, according to reports.

The White House deputy chief of staff met with Texas lawmakers last week to try to push them to pass more hardline immigration policies in the red state.
The four-hour meeting got off to an embarrassing start for the top Donald Trump ally when Miller asked, “Do we have a RINO problem in Texas?”—using the insulting acronym for “Republican in name only” that MAGA supporters use against GOP lawmakers deemed too moderate or insufficiently loyal to the president’s ultra-conservative agenda.
“There was no answer—it was just uncomfortable silence,” State Rep. Tom Oliverson, the chairman of the Texas House Republican Caucus, told The New York Times.

Fellow state Rep. Charlie Geren also walked out of the room after becoming frustrated with Miller’s questions about “RINOs” in Texas, according to the conservative website Current Revolt, which first reported on the meeting.

And what was he telling Texas Republicans to do?  Harold Meyerson (TAP) explains:

Last week, Stephen Miller—Don Trump’s wartime consigliere—met with Texas’s Republican legislators and asked them why they hadn’t passed a bill that banned undocumented children from public schools.
At first glance, the answer to that question might be that in 1982, the Supreme Court ruled in Plyler v. Doe that states were legally required to pay for the elementary school education of children regardless of their immigration status. But, as Tom Oliverson, the chairman of the Texas House Republican Caucus, told The New York Times yesterday, “There’s a lot of people that believe that that ruling has some pretty faulty logic associated with it.”
Well, sure. The Supreme Court clearly had a bias in favor of a generally well-educated public, able to perform the range of jobs and tasks that a functioning nation tends to require. That a bias in favor of a well-educated public has seldom infected Texas Republicans, Fox News, the MAGA movement, or Stephen Miller and his Don goes without saying. Indeed, a well-educated public inherently poses a long-term threat to authoritarians and authoritarian wannabes, inasmuch as such a public may wish to have a say in many public policies.



As Mother Jones‘ Isabela Dias reported back in 2022, this isn’t the first time that Miller has attempted this. In 2019, during Trump’s first term, he reportedly led a similar push. One that, according to TIME, he’d been driving at since 2017.

In the decades since Plyler, there have been several unsuccessful attempts to upend the highest court’s ruling. The current one is buoyed by the Trump administration’s multi-pronged anti-immigration campaign that has come to define his second term. 

As Mother Jones‘ Isabela Dias reported back in 2022, this isn’t the first time that Miller has attempted this. In 2019, during Trump’s first term, he reportedly led a similar push. One that, according to TIME, he’d been driving at since 2017.

In the decades since Plyler, there have been several unsuccessful attempts to upend the highest court’s ruling. The current one is buoyed by the Trump administration’s multi-pronged anti-immigration campaign that has come to define his second term. 

Miller isn’t alone. Also this month, Rep. Chip Roy, a Republican from Texas, led a House hearing to discuss how Plyler “was wrongly decided and how it harms America’s schools and students,” according to his press office. 

During the meeting, Roy said in his opening statement: “It’s time for it to go.” Roy went on to criticize programs in schools that taught English to language learners and refugees. Roy is currently vying for Attorney General of Texas in a runoff election. 

Zeph Capo, president of the Texas American Federation of Teachers, cited Roy’s hopes in his response: “Toying with children’s futures to win a primary election is the tactic of a small, sad man.”

This enlivened push to restrict access to public education comes as scores of immigrant children are already afraid to go to school across the country as Immigration and Customs Enforcement have repeatedly been seen near schools or bus stops. (The Department of Homeland Security has said they do “NOT raid or target schools” despite “media force-feeding the public stories about parents and children being scared to return to school.”) 



While Miller was treated like an after thought or a non-thought by Texas lawmakers, he did register with others recently.  Pedro Camacho (LATIN TIMES) reports:


White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller ranks as the most unpopular political figure in the United States, according to a new polling average cited by Migrant Insider. Other high-profile figures including Rand Paul, Scott Bessent and Pam Bondi are next in line.

The Race to the White House polling average, which compiles multiple recent surveys of 27 prominent political figures, found that Miller had a net favorability of negative 36 points among voters who have formed an opinion about him.
According to analysis by Pablo Manriquez of Migrant Insider, 68% of respondents viewed him unfavorably, while only about 18% expressed a favorable opinion. The ranking places Miller below other figures in the survey, including Bondi, who registered a negative 32 rating, and other administration-aligned officials. By comparison, President Trump posted a negative 16 rating in the same dataset, while JD Vance stood at negative 12.

Former president Barack Obama led the poll with positive 18 points, followed by former First Lady Michelle Obama and Bernie Sanders.



Has Donald Trump finally figured out that Stephen Miller’s fascist cruelties have become a niggling political liability for him? Well, maybe. A striking report in The Wall Street Journal suggests Trump may be moving to marginalize Miller’s influence. But Trump appears to think the difficulty can be cured by a few optical tweaks, when the real culprit is a deeper ideological one.
Trump wants to “lower the profile of his mass deportation effort,” the Journal reveals. He wants voters to think the targets of these deportations are “bad guys,” not noncriminal undocumented residents. He wants less visibility for ICE raids in cities, fewer public confrontations with local officials, and less public talk about “mass deportations,” which, he now grasps, are hideously unpopular.

Tellingly, White House chief of staff Suzie Wiles now sees deportations as a liability for the midterms, per the report. That Trump is siding with her on the politics here is a sign of political panic and a rebuke to Miller, who apparently delights in flaunting the administration’s vicious sadism and overt white nationalism—and seems certain that latent majorities are quietly cheering along.


We'll note some video coverage of the ongoing Epstein scandal. 


The following sites updated: