Politics
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Michigan’s political landscape may help predict national trends, experts say
The aftermath of the 2024 election revealed trends within Michigan politics that experts said reflect the national sentiment.
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Photo gallery: Hundreds rally in Washington on President’s Day
Hundreds of people descended on the Capitol Reflecting Pool Monday for a President’s Day protest against policies of the second Trump administration.
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Lawmakers disagree on USAID funding
Republicans, Democrats and experts debated the role of USAID after a pause in funding on Thursday.
read more
Trump begins peace conversations with Putin and Zelenskyy, U.S. rejects Ukraine NATO membership
The Vice President will continue discussions with Ukraine President Friday
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With a divided House, food courts unite House interns
With a divided House, food courts unite House interns
read moreWatch: Federal workers, lawmakers and demonstrators protest USAID shutdown
WASHINGTON — In response to the announcement Tuesday evening that nearly all employees of the U.S. Agency for International Development would be put on leave, thousands gathered in front of the Capitol building to protest.
Former USAID employees, elected officials, and other federal employees concerned with job security opposed the overstep of power they claimed the president took that could negatively impact the nation’s security.
“It’s clear to me that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle have no idea how foreign aid works. And you know how I know this? Because I literally had to do a video teaching Nancy Mace why what USAID does prevents terrorism,” Rep. Sara Jacobs (D – Calif.) said.
Watch the video report here:
Flamethrowing over wildfire aid: lawmakers clash over conditional aid to California
WASHINGTON – Discussions about the role overregulation played in the January wildfires that tore through Los Angeles quickly devolved into partisan flamethrowing as Republicans and several witnesses blamed Democrats for the devastating event.
“This was a man-made disaster; more precisely, a Democrat-made disaster,” witness Steve Hilton, the founder of Golden Together, a California-based think tank, and Fox News contributor said in his opening statement. Throughout the tense hearing, he clashed with Democratic lawmakers and other witnesses.
Even the name of the Thursday morning hearing, held before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Administrative State, Regulatory Reform, and Antitrust, was a point of contention.
“‘California Fires and the Consequences of Overregulation’ is a gross title misnomer,” Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Calif.) said.
Republican lawmakers used the hearing to criticize what they saw as California’s failure to prevent the wildfires by neglecting to clear brush and conduct controlled burns.
“This is not about climate change, this is not about global warming, this is about bad land use decisions (and) bad policies,” said Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.). She called for strings to be attached to federal wildfire aid.
Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) shot back, giving an impassioned statement.
“Shame on anyone who is exploiting the pain and suffering of disaster victims to jam through partisan ideological policies,” he said. “We should get disaster aid to these disaster victims now, without conditions, just like we treat every other disaster victim across America.”
Blue states aren’t the only ones affected by natural disasters, Democrats warned, reiterating that recent aid to red states has not been conditional, as is being proposed for aid to California.
Later in the hearing, Democrats slammed Trump’s recent statements in which he floated the idea of doing away with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA. Trump has also signed an executive order establishing a council to assess FEMA.
Democratic lawmakers also pushed back on the idea that diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives were related to the catastrophe.
“Do you believe that people in L.A. died because the fire chief is a lesbian?” Rep. Becca Balint (D-Vt.) asked witnesses. “All this talk of DEI is a complete and utter distraction from the fact that we need a plan, an actual plan, to help the people of California,” she added.
Lawmakers of both parties repeatedly ceded their time to their colleagues from California. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), who recently toured the disaster zone, called for bipartisanship.
“‘They just want the government to help them.’ That’s what a woman told me when she stood on a pile of ashes in the Palisades,” Swalwell said. “So I just ask my colleagues: let’s work together on this. Let’s be in the solutions business.”
Lawmakers consider measures to combat fentanyl and illicit drug production
WASHINGTON — Testifying about near-death experiences and losing loved ones to fentanyl, witnesses emphasized their concerns about the drug epidemic during a hearing on Capitol Hill Thursday.
“Someone intentionally laced that cocaine with fentanyl,” said Raymond Cullen, whose son died of the narcotic. “Our son did not accidentally overdose. He was poisoned. There is a difference. Actually, we personally feel that he was murdered.”
Democrats and Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee aligned on the dire need to curb fentanyl production and distribution, as well as increase access to naloxone, an antidote commonly referred to as Narcan that counteracts an overdose before it becomes fatal. Many representatives emphasized their own fears of their children dying of a drug overdose or poisoning.
Witnesses spoke about the need for an “all of the above” approach to addressing the threat of illegal drugs. Some of these measures include breaking international chains of drug commerce, enacting legislation to hinder supply and demand and providing treatment programs for people with addiction. All five speakers stressed the importance of bolstering education and prevention efforts for adolescents, parents and medical professionals.
Democrats repeatedly emphasized that many of the programs currently in place are now at risk following President Donald Trump’s federal funding freeze that was temporarily rescinded.
Despite two judges calling for a pause on the freeze, Yale research professor and physician scientist Deepa Camenga said she heard accounts of treatment programs already operating less effectively with fewer resources after Trump pulled back funding.
Among the many organizations that could lose significant resources to curb and combat drug threats, Medicaid, the National Institutes of Health and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration are at risk, along with various research initiatives.
“If Medicaid were significantly reduced, more people would die of overdoses,” said Georgetown Law professor Regina LaBelle.
Rep. Troy Carter (D–La.) underscored such concerns. “My fear is that there may be another attempt or another approach used to slow, reduce or cut resources that would aid in the slowing and hopeful elimination of these uses of fentanyl,” he said.
Multiple witnesses and representatives emphasized the importance of labeling fentanyl as a Schedule I drug, rather than maintaining its current Schedule II status. A ratchet up in drug categorization would make fentanyl illegal for both recreational and medical use, unlike its current classification, which only bars recreational use.
“Many of the victims of fentanyl distribution, drug distribution, themselves become incarcerated while many of the upstream distributors go off scott-free,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) warned. Lebelle added that the risk of overdosing is more than ten times greater for people who are released from prison than for the general public, according to the NIH.
The Committee’s hearing comes after Trump designated drug cartels as foreign terrorists, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau did the same, appointing a “fentanyl czar.” Trump also negotiated with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to deploy 10,000 Mexican National Guard officers to the border to curb migrants and drugs from entering the U.S.
The CDC’s estimate of approximately 80,000 deaths from overdoses, primarily fentanyl, in 2023 demonstrates a decrease in deaths from opioids.
“We are encouraged that we are making progress, and that is important,” Committee Chairman Buddy Carter (R–Ga.) said. “However, we can’t stop. We can’t stop until we completely eradicate this.”
Watch: Lawmakers debate paths to ‘American Energy Dominance’
WASHINGTON – House Energy Subcommittee members considered the future of American energy production and trade during a meeting on Wednesday. President Donald Trump has set “American Energy Dominance” as a top administration priority, aiming to reduce reliance on other countries for resources.
Republicans viewed increasing domestic fossil fuel consumption as a way to reduce consumer costs and protect national security. Democrats, however, highlighted the importance of relationships with energy trade partners like Canada and the cost benefits of renewable energy.
Watch the video report here:
Photo Gallery: Hundreds rally in Washington against Trump Policies
WASHINGTON — Hundreds of people gathered on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to protest the policies introduced by the new administration. The demonstration was part of a global action called #50501 which called for people across all 50 states to rally at their state capitols to oppose the new policies and decisions made by President Donald Trump.
One of the key issues protesters were concerned about was the new administration’s decision to dismantle USAID. One protester held a sign reading, “The whole world is watching,” highlighting America’s significant influence on the rest of the world.
Vera, who refused to give her last name due to security concerns, spent 25 years working on USAID’s global health program. On Wednesday, she came to Capitol Hill to fight against its dismantling.
“I’ve seen firsthand how it saves lives, how it makes people want to be allies with America, how it makes people believe in the goodness of America and want to be like America,” said Vera, explaining why USAID is so important to her. Dismantling USAID is her number one concern right now.
Nicky Sundt has worked as a climate change expert for decades, including for the government under President Obama’s administration. Yet, she joined the protest to fight for transgender rights. As a trans woman, she said, “This administration is more concerned with my gender identity than with climate change.”
“It just starts with us. Who’s next? They’re already going after immigrants. Anybody who is relatively powerless or has less power to resist are the ones they are targeting. Create fear and go after these people rather than dealing with real issues,” said Sundt.
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A man walks with an upside-down U.S. flag, a symbol of emergency and distress. (Sofia Sorochinskaia/MNS)
Several lawmakers also attended the protest. One of them was Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), who promised that the Senate would resist the Trump administration.
“The first thing we’re going to do in the Senate is not cooperate with the illegal and unconstitutional acts they’re trying to impose. The second thing we’re going to do is fight them legally in every way we can,” said Booker.
The crowd cheered in support, but some people also shouted, “What have you been doing for two weeks?” and “Why only now?”
“Black History is American History”: House Democrats Introduce the Rosa Parks Day Act
WASHINGTON – House Democrats introduced the Rosa Parks Day Act on Tuesday, which would have been Rosa Parks’s 112th birthday. The bill was reintroduced by Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Ala.) and, if passed, will designate December 1st as the first federal holiday honoring a woman.
“This effort is very personal to me. I get to stand here as Alabama’s first black Congresswoman because amazing freedom fighters like Rosa Parks were unafraid to challenge the status quo,” she said at a press conference on Wednesday.
Coinciding with Black History Month, the introduction of this bill commemorates Rosa Parks’s historic arrest in Montgomery, Alabama, on Dec. 1, 1955, which led to the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Congress members emphasized the importance of continuing Rosa Parks’s legacy through this holiday.
“It’s not just a day off, it’s a day to teach, to reflect and to encourage that every child in America knows Rosa Parks, understands her impact and carries forward her call to justice,” said Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio).
Beatty said this bill comes at a crucial time with President Trump’s diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) order.
“I think this is so important at this critical time, because it allows our young people, black, white and brown, to have a part of American history to be celebrated,” she said. “It’s time for Congress to act. Let’s pass the Rosa Parks Day Act and let’s give this American hero, no this American shero, the national recognition that she deserves.”
Sewell said she hopes for bipartisan support on this bill, which currently has 57 co-sponsors, and will seek that support in both the House and the Senate.
“We in the Congressional Black Caucus, we in the Alabama delegation, will work tirelessly to make this bill a reality,” she said.
White House underscores Trump’s proposal for U.S. control of Gaza, backpedals on permanently displacing Palestinians
WASHINGTON — The White House reaffirmed President Donald Trump’s proposal for the U.S. to control Gaza during a Wednesday press briefing stating that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu knew about the plan before Trump’s announcement.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Palestinians would be removed from Gaza “temporarily so that we can rebuild their home,” a shift from Trump’s comment on Tuesday about looking to “resettle people permanently.”
When asked if Palestinians could remain in Gaza if they wished, Leavitt did not provide a clear answer, instead emphasizing Trump’s dedication to restoring the land that has now faced severe destruction as a result of the Israel-Hamas war.
“The President, again, is committed to rebuilding the region for all people who want to return to it once it is no longer a demolition site,” Leavitt said. “And it’s a place where people can actually live and thrive in harmony.”
Despite continuously stating Trump’s commitment to rebuilding Gaza, Leavitt also said the U.S. would not pay for such a project.
In Tuesday’s joint press conference, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said “it’s worthwhile really pursuing” Trump’s proposition.
When asked in Tuesday’s press conference with the Prime Minister if the U.S. will send troops into Gaza, President Donald Trump said, “if it’s necessary, we’ll do that.”
Declaring Trump the “peace-maker-in-chief,” Leavitt repeatedly stated that the President has not yet committed to putting U.S. “boots on the ground” in Gaza, but the option is not off the table and may be used as leverage for further negotiations.
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President Donald J. Trump chooses a reporter to ask a question at joint news conference at the White House with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on February 4, 2025. This is Trump’s first joint news conference with a foreign leader in his second term. (Joshua Sukoff/Medill News Service)
This is not the first time Trump has called on Egypt and Jordan to take in large numbers of Palestinians, but the two Arab nations have consistently rebuffed such suggestions. Jordan’s King Abdullah II immediately rejected Trump’s most recent pitch involving U.S. control of Gaza and Palestinian resettlement in Arab countries.
When asked if Trump is considering granting concessions to Arab nations to further this arrangement Leavitt said, “He expects these nations in the region to step up and to accept Palestinian refugees.” Leavitt cited Trump’s recent foreign negotiations with Mexico, Canada and various Latin American countries as proof that the President can strike deals no other leaders thought possible, adding that Trump will meet with King Abdullah II next week.
“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results,” Leavitt said. “President Trump is an outside-of-the-box thinker and a visionary leader who solves problems that many others, especially in this city, claim are unsolvable.”
Parents, lawmakers and experts debate the fentanyl crisis and Trump’s tariffs
WASHINGTON – The Senate Judiciary Committee met Tuesday to tackle the fentanyl epidemic and the persistently high opioid-related U.S. death rate as the Trump administration introduced trade measures targeting illegal drug trafficking networks in Mexico, Canada and China.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said the Trump administration framed the tariffs as an anti-fentanyl measure, not a trade policy. He said China is under pressure to curb precursor chemical exports, which often reach Mexico, where drug cartels design them into counterfeit pills.
President Donald Trump planned to impose a 25% tariff on imports from Mexico and Canada but has delayed the tariff hike by one month after negotiating with leaders of both countries on Monday.
On Tuesday, a 10% hike on Chinese imports took effect at midnight, with Trump saying the move would “protect Americans” against fentanyl production and trafficking.
The committee debated reclassifying fentanyl from a Schedule II to a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act. The change would place fentanyl in the most restrictive drug category.
“I believe that [re-scheduling] will increase penalties for trafficking and distribution. It also streamlines prosecution by removing the burden of proving whether a particular fentanyl analog is harmful. It would be illegal by default, and it would give authorities greater flexibility as well to target emerging fentanyl analogs before they flood the market,” said Jaime Puerta, President and Co-Founder of Victims of Illicit Drugs.
Overdose deaths linked to synthetic opioids, primarily illicit fentanyl, accounted for an estimated 74,702 deaths in 2023, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The committee heard testimony from parents who have lost their children to fentanyl overdoses.
“My son Daniel’s death is one of countless tragedies,” said Puerta, who lost his 16-year-old son in 2020. “His story is a call to action. He made a mistake, and the price was his life.”
Senators on both sides of the aisle said tackling the issue requires bipartisan action.
“I’m sick and tired of excuses being made, and people dying as a result, and I think it’s time for us, on a bipartisan basis, to find things we agree with,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said.
Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) asked Cecilia Farfán, an expert on organized crime, if Mexico is doing enough to curb fentanyl production and trafficking.
“There’s definitely more that can be done by Mexico,” she said. “I think working closer with U.S. counterparts and also having these diagnoses of the connection between … arms trafficking and drug trafficking [will] really benefit communities on both sides of the border.”
She also emphasized that addressing the fentanyl crisis requires not only targeting its supply but also scrutinizing the firearms industry in the U.S.
Lawmakers pointed out how firearms trafficking fuels cartel operations, further complicating U.S.-Mexico cooperation on fentanyl enforcement.
Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) said that Mexico has “one legal gun store” and “according to [The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives] data, up to 500,000 U.S.-sourced firearms are trafficked into Mexico every year.”
Farfán told Medill News Service that these “are challenging times in the bilateral relationship,” and she understands that not everyone shares her point of view. But she said she was there to emphasize that if “you are serious about saving lives, you need cooperation.”
“The fentanyl market is not an isolated illicit market, it’s very much linked to the firearms trafficking market,” Farfán said. “If the crime is transnational, shouldn’t the solution also be transnational?”
Chinese influence on American college campuses concerns lawmakers despite decreasing numbers of Chinese students
WASHINGTON – The Senate Foreign Relations Committee met on Thursday to discuss China’s influence at home and abroad with committee Chairman James Risch (R-Idaho) calling the country, “the greatest, long-term threat to the United States.”
Both lawmakers and experts raised concerns about the U.S. government’s negligence and failure to keep pace with China politically, economically and militarily.
One specific topic of concern was China’s influence in American colleges and universities, with around 290,000 Chinese students studying in the U.S. in 2023, according to the Open Doors Report on International Educational Exchange.
“Colleges and universities are a really target-rich place for the Chinese. They show up with money, and, as pointed out here, colleges and universities respond to money,” said Risch.
Jeffrey Stoff, founder of the Center for Research Security and Integrity said that universities have financial incentives and operations that are at odds with U.S. national and economic interests. According to his testimony, the primary goal of academia is “attracting sustaining revenue sources from anywhere and anyone,” which has enabled China to exploit the open systems of U.S. research institutions.
However, Joshua Kurlantzick, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, told the Medill News Service that is not the case. “I don’t think universities are accepting anyone from anywhere. Each university has certain standards of who they’ll accept, whether Americans or non-Americans.” he said.
Sarah Spreitzer, Vice President and Chief of Staff for Government Relations at the American Council for Education said she would “strongly disagree with the idea that [American institutions] are only in search of revenue.” She said institutions of higher education have been engaging with policymakers and federal security agencies to better understand these threats.
“I think higher education is very aware of some of these issues. We continue to work with our policymakers to balance those national security concerns while also allowing qualified, interested international students come to the United States to study at our institutions,” she said.
During the hearing, Risch said all Chinese students are “agent[s] of the Chinese Communist Party” because they return to China upon graduation. In fact, many students return to China because their student visa status requires them to leave the U.S.
“Once they finish their program of study, they only have a set number of days that they can remain in the U.S. before they’re required to return to their home country,” Spreitzer said.
Factors such as consular and visa barriers, rising U.S. crime statistics and a feeling of unwantedness in the U.S. have contributed to a decrease in the number of Chinese students in the U.S by more than 20 percent since 2019, according to the Washington Post.
Spreitzer said countries like Australia and Canada may provide alternatives with better bridges between getting a student visa and working after graduation.
Dr. Melanie Hart, Senior Director of the Global China Hub at the Atlantic Council said keeping the “student pipeline open” is in U.S. national interest and the government should support American students studying in China to “fill gaps in needed U.S. government China expertise.”
“We need a scalpel for this, not a sledgehammer,” she said.
Kurlantzick saw an additional benefit. “There are pros and cons of having Chinese students but a pro would be they get to see the U.S. for themselves and not how the CCP portrays it,” he said.
Dartmouth College Associate Professor Dr. Jennifer Lind further cautioned that U.S. policymakers should ensure that their responses to China uphold U.S. values, as she highlighted the millions of Chinese American citizens who are negatively impacted.
“As we get frustrated that an authoritarian society is exploiting our free one, while we protect ourselves against Chinese influence operations in the ways recommended here, we must also honor our own values,” she said. “As we formulate our responses to Chinese malign influence operations, U.S. leaders should be thinking not only about this negotiation with Beijing, but also about whether our responses uphold our own values.”
Senate confirms Duffy
Sean Duffy will be the next Transportation Secretary. He was confirmed 77-22 by the full U.S. Senate on Jan. 28. Duffy will focus on his stated priorities: improving safety and expanding access to public transportation. Jeremy Fredricks reports.
Duffy confirmation moves on
Senate committee moves Duffy nomination forward: The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee voted 28-0 to send Sean Duffy’s nomination as Transportation Secretary to the full Senate for a vote. Jeremy Fredricks reports.
Photo Gallery: Passenger Jet, Helicopter Collision at Reagan National Airport
WASHINGTON — On Wednesday at 8:48 p.m., American Airlines flight 5342, which was en route from Wichita, Kansas, collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter during the passenger jet’s final approach to Reagan National Airport.
A U.S. Park Police helicopter circles the crash site, shining a spotlight into the debris. Multiple choppers were deployed within minutes of the incident. (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
Dozens of ambulances line the DCA tarmac near a boat launch point. Rescue motorboats shuttle across the Potomac, routinely between this point and the crash site, but the ambulances remain stationary. (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
The icy Potomac River reflects the lights of ambulances, fire trucks and police vehicles stationed on the tarmac. The water is so cold, reported to be around 35ºF, that the rescue window is at most 90 minutes.(Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
The following morning, President Donald Trump closes his eyes after inviting reporters to share a moment of silence for the victims and their families. Twenty seconds later, he opens his eyes and, with a heavy breath, recaps last night’s event. “Sadly, there are no survivors,” Trump confirms to the nation within the first minute of his prepared speech. “On behalf of the first lady, myself and 340 Americans, our hearts are shattered alongside yours and our prayers are with you.” (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
The James S. Brady Press Briefing Room lectern is adorned with the presidential seal. (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
Trump attributes last night’s incident to the government’s increased focus on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in hiring practices, asserting that his administration will have a higher standard of air traffic controllers based on “brain power” and “psychological quality.” “It doesn’t matter what they look like, how they speak, who they are,” Trump says. “It matters intellect, talent–– the word talent. You have to be talented, naturally talented geniuses. You can’t have regular people doing that job.” (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
Sean Duffy, the newly-confirmed Secretary of Transportation, dons a jacket patched with the Federal Aviation Administration’s logo and embroidered text reading “accident investigations.” “We will not accept passing the buck,” Duffy says. “We’re gonna take responsibility at the Department of Transportation and the FAA to make sure we have the reforms that have been dictated by Trump in place to make sure that these mistakes do not happen again” This incident occurs on the heel of a series of near encounters within the Washington D.C. airspace. There were at least eight near-midair collisions at Reagan National Airport in 2024, according to Federal Aviation Administration reports. (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
Trump’s new Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, awaits his turn to speak. He shares that the Black Hawk helicopter was on a routine “retraining” for night flying , and that there was an “elevation issue.” Hegseth later echoes Trump’s sentiments, proclaiming that “the era of DEI is gone at the Defense Department.” (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)
Trump concludes the press briefing with a round of questions from reporters. Many probed into his baseless claims that DEI practices led to the aircraft incident –– others asked if it is safe for Americans to fly. The incident is still under investigation and no official cause has been determined. (Joshua Sukoff/MNS)