Politics
Democrats Seek ICE Accountability, Oppose Funding After Renee Good’s Death
Democratic progressives are calling for investigations into ICE and DHS following Renee Nicole Good’s death, demanding reforms and a halt to federal immigration enforcement funding.
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In Photos: Protesters walk out of work over Trump’s first year in office
Protesters in Washington joined a nationwide walkout on Jan. 20, marking one year since President Donald Trump returned to office for a second term.
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New protest installation of Epstein birthday card marks Trump’s one year in office
On 3rd Street between Madison and Jefferson Drive, a 10-foot tall recreation of the birthday card Trump allegedly sent to Epstein invites pedestrian signatures.
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Free America Walkout draws hundreds on Trump’s inauguration anniversary
As part of a nationwide movement called “Free America Walkout,” demonstrators gather at Pershing Park to protest the anniversary of President Trump’s inauguration.
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Supreme Court hears arguments, deciding whether to uphold Hawaii’s ‘Vampire Rule’ gun law
The court is deciding if Hawaii can bar concealed‑carry permit holders from carrying guns on public‑facing private property without the owner’s consent.
read moreIn Photos: MLK Day Peace Walk Honors Civil Rights Leader as the Trump Administration Reviews U.S. History
WASHINGTON – Sandra Moreland and Carl Grady finally visited the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture on Friday, after a previous visit was thwarted by the government shutdown.
The couple traveled from Detroit for a second time in a few months to examine the history of Black Americans. As an interracial couple, they said understanding how diverse groups support one another is a personal priority. However, Grady noted that he was troubled by how the current administration was affecting the representation of history.
The couple’s visit to Washington coincided with Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend and pressure from the federal government to align exhibits at the Smithsonian with Trump’s historic views.
In March 2025, President Trump issued the executive order “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History,” criticizing the government-funded Smithsonian Institution for being “under the influence of divisive, race-centered ideology” and “promoting narratives that portray American and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive.” White House warned the institution, which receives more than 60% of its funding from the federal government, in a Dec. 18 letter that federal funds would only flow if the institute followed Trump’s mandates.
The couple worried that the Trump administration would alter the history represented at the museum.
“Slavery existed here as part of our history. As ugly and horrible as it might be, and guilt producing as it might feel, I don’t like eliminating it,” said Moreland. “It’s the truth.”

Sandra Moreland and Carl Grady attending an exhibit at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. (Dasha Dubinina/MNS)
Last week marked the deadline for the Smithsonian to submit documentation regarding current and upcoming exhibitions for review. Employees at the National Museum of African American History and Culture declined to comment on whether the audit has altered current displays.
“It bothers me that this administration has anything to do with how culture is presented,” Grady said.

Visitors explore exhibits at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. (Dasha Dubinina/MNS)
The tension over cultural policy was underscored Monday when the White House initially failed to issue a formal Martin Luther King Jr. Day proclamation. Following sharp criticism from lawmakers and civil rights leaders, the administration published a statement late Monday evening, “As President, I am steadfastly committed to ensuring that our country will always be guided by the same principles that Dr. King defended.”
Despite the delayed White House recognition, hundreds of demonstrators joined the 21st annual demonstration in Southeast Washington. Participants marched two miles along Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue under the theme, “The Struggle is Real! The Fight is Still!” Groups called for community empowerment and the protection of civil rights.
The rally featured performances and discussions regarding King’s legacy, though the tone was sharply political. Demonstrators chanted, “No more kings!” and “Get ICE out of our community!” Others shouted, “Let’s protect the history they’re trying to erase!”
The event emphasized the representation of young people in the public sphere.
Emma P. Ward, the 2011 Miss Senior District of Columbia, said she was fighting for a place on the stage to represent the interests of seniors. She said it’s important to connect generations through the event.
“Overall, it [the holiday] means everything to me in the sense that it helps me go back and reflect from the past and hope for the future,” said Ward.
The commemorations served as a dual celebration of King’s legacy and the early start of Black History Month. This Friday, the MLK Library opened its flagship exhibition, “Freedom and Resistance,” which portrays the historical connections between the lived experiences of Black Americans and ideals of liberty.
The three-section exhibition features artwork from the “1619 Project,” curated by The New York Times Magazine, alongside interpretations of freedom created by young Washington residents.

“Freedom and Resistance: An Exhibition” on display at MLK library in Washington. (Dasha Dubinina/MNS)

Attendees gathered for the opening of “Freedom and Resistance: An Exhibition” at MLK library. (Dasha Dubinina/MNS)
For attendee Barbara Franklin, observing the art pieces of the younger generation provided a necessary perspective.
“We should think about what these children are thinking about,” Franklin said. “As they’re the future.”
Watch: Federal workers rally at Capitol, urge Senate to pass Protect America’s Workforce Act
WASHINGTON — Federal workers from across the country gathered outside the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, calling on the Senate to take up the Protect America’s Workforce Act — legislation they say is essential to restoring union rights stripped away under a recent executive order.
The rally brought together employees from multiple federal agencies who argued the order reclassified large numbers of workers, limiting their ability to unionize and bargain over pay, working conditions, and job protections. Supporters of the bill say those changes are already affecting workplaces and public services, and they are pressing Senate leaders to schedule a vote.
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Dems, GOP split over Jan 6. pipe bomb probe as suspect charged
WASHINGTON – House Republicans and Democrats clashed Wednesday on who to blame for the investigation into the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection during a hearing on the effectiveness of the FBI’s investigation into the pipe bombs planted outside of the Democratic and Republican National Committees.
The hearing comes as the alleged pipe bomber, Brian Cole Jr., was indicted last Wednesday on federal charges of interstate transportation of explosives and malicious attempt to use explosives following a nearly five-year-long FBI investigation.
Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga, the chairman of the subcommittee, set the stage with opening remarks that focused on scrutinizing the lack of progress on finding the suspected pipe bomber by former President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice, despite apprehending hundreds of rioters who assaulted Capitol police and trespassed on the Capitol that day.
Loudermilk cited FBI director Kash Patel’s designated Red Team, a group of cybersecurity experts, which he said “within six weeks of its creation” identified Brian Cole Jr. as a suspect in the pipe bomber case.
“Why did it take a team of non-FBI personnel who re-examined the evidence to develop Cole as a suspect?” asked Loudermilk.
Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, D-Md., followed Loudermilk’s remarks by noting the prosecution of Cole is ongoing and advised that this hearing “does nothing to recklessly endanger” that investigation.
However, he emphasized that “the pipe bomber was motivated by the same lies,” as the other rioters “who followed Donald Trump’s order on that day.”
“Nothing will ever whitewash the indelible facts of that day,” said Raskin.
The hearing included testimony from former FBI special agents Chris Piehota and John Nantz as well as Thomas Speciale, a former senior adviser for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Speciale, who participated in the Jan. 6th riots, said that during his time at the FBI, he was “labeled as a domestic extremist” and was fired because of his open support for the Trump administration. He then denounced the FBI for focusing on impeaching President Trump and silencing his supporters, instead of pursuing the pipe bomber.
After the announcement of the new formal inquiry, Democrats have expressed concerns over Republican lawmakers’ efforts to change the narrative surrounding Jan. 6th.
In a press release responding to the panel, Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., a member of the subcommittee, stated that his Republican counterparts have “found a new target: the events of January 6” in their “campaign of distraction.”
Echoing those concerns are extremism experts, worried about the possible divisive implications of driving new inquiries into the Capitol attack.
In an interview with the Medill News Service, Jonathon Lewis, a research fellow with a specialty in domestic terrorism at George Washington University, questioned the intent behind the subcommittee’s creation. “It’s certainly an open question of: is this designed to find some truth or is it designed to find a target for the next sort of online rage machine?” Lewis asked.
In Photos: Transgender athletes cases draw hundreds to Supreme Court steps
WASHINGTON – Over 200 demonstrators stood outside the Supreme Court Tuesday morning, watching guest speakers, performances and lawmakers speak to their respective sides.

To the right of the center barricade, demonstrators against transgender athletes gathered. (Cayla Labgold-Carroll/MNS)
Split down the center of the Supreme Court, a barrier divided the opposing sides of the rally. To the left, supporters gathered by the ACLU, Lambda Legal, GSA Network and the Transgender Law Center, among other groups, held signs and trans flags.
Activist Raquel Willis welcomed the crowd and spoke to them about why they were gathered.
“These are trans girls who deserve to play with their friends in sports. They deserve to walk with their heads held high. And they deserve to know that we are not going to let anyone come for them and their future,” said Willis.
The court heard oral arguments for two cases Tuesday morning that will determine the future of athletic participation for transgender students.
Among trans youth activists and legal representative speakers, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., and Rep. Julie Johnson, D-Texas, addressed the crowd.

Rep. Julie Johnson, D-Texas, the first openly LGBTQ+ person elected to Congress from the South addressed the crowd.(Cayla Labgold-Carroll/MNS)
Rep. Johnson, the first openly LGBTQ+ person elected to Congress from the South, said, “When the government targets transgender kids, it doesn’t make anyone safer, it simply makes life harder and more dangerous for kids who are already vulnerable.”
On the other side of the barrier, the “Save Women’s Sports” rally welcomed speakers and politicians, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., Education Secretary Linda McMahon and conservative activist Riley Gaines.
Speaker Johnson expressed his desired outcome for the case.
“House Republicans will always stand for American women and girls, and we hope and pray that this Supreme Court will do exactly the same,” said Johnson.
Johnson spoke about his daughters and said he was proud to fight to protect “female-only” spaces.
Capitol police stood watch as the demonstrators gathered for hours, arguing across the barrier and leading chants of “Save women’s sports” and “Trans rights are human rights.”
Cheer DC volunteers performed in front of the left side of the crowd, leading chants as they performed cheerleading stunts.
Near the end of the rally, Advocates for Youth activist Marlin spoke about his high school experience as a young trans man.
“I was once so scared of rejection and judgment that I couldn’t participate in any extracurricular activities. Even opportunities I desperately wanted to pursue felt impossible because I knew that my accomplishments wouldn’t be credited to a name I could truly call my own.”

Youth activist Marlin spoke about his high school experience as a transgender student. (Cayla Labgold-Carroll/MNS)

Organizers of the left side of the barricade rally offered ASL and Spanish language accessibility translation.(Cayla Labgold-Carroll/MNS)
This year, Marlin said he is celebrating the third anniversary of coming out as himself.
The rallies began to disperse around 1 p.m. The court is expected to announce its decision by summer.
Supreme Court seems likely to uphold laws barring transgender athletes
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared poised to uphold state laws barring transgender athletes from competing in women’s and girls’ sports after hearing oral arguments in two cases Tuesday.
The cases, Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., challenge Idaho’s Fairness in Women’s Sports Act and West Virginia’s Save Women’s Sports Act, respectively. Idaho’s law places a flat ban on the participation of transgender women and girls in female-designated sports teams in public schools at all levels. West Virginia’s law bars participation only in public secondary schools and colleges.
Both states’ laws cite “biological differences” between the sexes as justification for separating athletic competition by natural-born sex.
Challenger Lindsay Hecox, a transgender woman, sued Idaho Gov. Bradley Little, along with Boise State University, after seeking to try out for the university’s women’s track and cross-country teams. Heather Jackson, the mother of challenger Becky Pepper-Jackson, a now 15-year-old high school student, sued West Virginia on her daughter’s behalf upon learning that the state’s law barred her from competing with the middle school’s girls’ track and cross-country teams.
“West Virginia argues that to protect these opportunities for cisgender girls, it has to deny them to B.P.J.,” said Joshua Block, Pepper-Jackson’s counsel. “But Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause protect everyone.”
In February, President Donald Trump issued an executive order directing the federal government to revoke funds from schools that allow transgender women and girls to compete on teams that match their gender identity. Quickly after, the National Collegiate Athletic Association changed its policies to limit competition in women’s sports to athletes who were assigned female at birth.
Today, 27 states have laws barring transgender athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports. The NCAA told a Senate panel that as of December 2024, there are fewer than 10 transgender athletes who compete in college sports. Pepper-Jackson is the only known high school-age transgender athlete in West Virginia.
The challengers in both cases allege that the state laws violate the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment by discriminating against them based on sex. Pepper-Jackson also argues that the West Virginia law violates Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in education programs and activities receiving federal funding.
The Supreme Court has ruled against multiple LGBTQ+ protections in recent years. In June, the court upheld state bans on gender transition care for minors and allowed parents to opt their children out of school lessons dealing with LGBTQ+-themed topics. The court’s conservative majority Tuesday appeared skeptical of the 14th Amendment and Title IX arguments against the state laws restricting transgender athletes.
Some of the justices appeared weary of where to draw the line between when and where state laws can treat boys and girls differently in schools. They asked a series of hypothetical questions about the differences between separating boys and girls in areas like a calculus class, a chess club and athletics.
“I think it opens a huge can of worms that maybe we don’t need to get into here,” Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett said.
The court’s conservative front has not always ruled against gay and transgender protections. Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch provided a key swing vote in 2020’s Bostock v. Clayton County decision, which upheld laws that ban employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
Some legal experts were focused on Gorsuch’s questions in Tuesday’s arguments. He appeared warm to the idea of upholding the state laws.
The conservative justice seemed receptive to some of the challengers’ arguments. He indicated that further litigation could help decide whether medical treatments could eliminate some of the biological athletic advantages transgender girls and women have.
“There is a healthy scientific dispute about the efficacy of these treatments. And that’s understandable,” Gorsuch said.
The appellate courts in both cases struck down the state laws, finding that they violated equal protection.
According to a Pew Research Center study, the Fourth and Ninth Circuit courts’ holdings part with the views of the majority of Americans. The 2025 study found that 66% of U.S. adults support policies requiring transgender athletes to compete with members of the sex they were assigned at birth.
Some LGBTQ+ activists worry that athletic policies similar to the laws in question create a dangerous and invasive environment, especially for minors. In 2022, a high school in Utah put together a secret coalition to investigate whether a female student athlete was transgender after she won a competition.
“Inviting that level of scrutiny into high school athletics is going to ensure that not only transgender students but cisgender students are facing a more hostile athletic environment,” said Director Brian Dittmeier, the director of LGBTQI+ equality at the National Women’s Law Center.
The Center filed an amicus curiae brief in support of the athletes in both cases.
The Court is expected to release a decision by summer.
Digital footprints are affecting this new generation of politicians, but do voters care?
WASHINGTON — In 2022, Jay Jones sent text messages to a former colleague about a senior state Republican in Virginia getting “two bullets to the head.”
When the texts were shared by his colleague a month before the Virginia general election, Jones, the Democratic candidate for attorney general, was slammed for the violent rhetoric. Winsome Earle-Sears, the Republican candidate for governor, called for Jones to withdraw from the race.
Despite the scandal, Jones won, defeating incumbent Jason Miyares with 52.9% of the vote.
Some voters were concerned about Jones’ comments. Others said the texts did not affect their vote.
For Imani Moore, a 25-year-old Dumfries resident who identifies as a non-binary lesbian, Jones’ comments did not matter.
“I can see how it would change someone’s mind,” Moore said. “But for me, I don’t really care.”
Kaira Sullivan, 25 and Moore’s wife, is a transgender woman who works in the military.
“I definitely think the comments probably went a bit too far, but compared to Republican comments in the past, it’s nothing,” Sullivan said.
Scandals involving digital footprints such as Jones’ are not isolated. In October alone, several political scandals were revealed because of digital footprints.
When Jones’ texts went public, hateful messages from a group chat featuring Young Republican leaders were leaked as well. Later that month, footage of Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner dancing shirtless revealed a chest tattoo resembling a Nazi skull and crossbones. Platner has since apologized and covered up the tattoo. Shortly after, Paul Ingrassia withdrew from consideration to lead the U.S. Office of Special Counsel after racist and anti-Semitic texts surfaced where Ingrassia claimed to have a “Nazi streak.”
‘Digital footprints didn’t really exist before’
As candidates running get younger, digital footprints are becoming a focal point for opposition research and attacks.
Jen Psaki, who served as White House press secretary for President Joe Biden and as communications director for President Barack Obama, said digital footprints are unique to our time.
“This is new, because digital footprints didn’t really exist before, what, 20 years ago, 15 years ago, 10 years ago,” Psaki said. “I guess it’s something — if you’re working on a campaign or thinking you may ever run for office — then you got to be mindful of that.”
Lis Smith was the senior advisor for Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 presidential campaign and the director of rapid response for Obama’s 2012 campaign.
“The average age of voters continues to go down. There are a lot more people who have digital footprints, who have a long Twitter, Instagram, Reddit history,” Smith said. “And so I think we’re adapting with that.”
Smith said voters recognizing their own shortcomings is why public tolerance is evolving.
“That’s why a lot of people understand like, ‘Man, there’s a time in my past where I posted something dumb online,” Smith said. “‘I don’t want to be judged for the rest of my life by the worst thing I send in a text or the worst thing I said online.’”
Chris Hinman is the chief executive officer at TheBestReputation, an online reputation and crisis management firm that recently focused on political figures and people who might run for office.
“I think this is the first generation of candidates where they’ve grown up with an online persona,” Hinman said. “Whether it’s like chat rooms or things that they’ve again posted on Facebook or Twitter back in the day, to any mistakes or gaffes they may have made along the way.”
‘The devolution of standards in politics’
Political scandals are not new. What is changing is voter tolerance and the ability to forgive past transgressions.
Daron Shaw is a professor of political science at the University of Texas, Austin, and an advisory board member for the Pew Elections Performance Index. He said the public’s willingness to forgive candidates’ pasts dates back to the 1990s.
“If you’re going to take a look at the — I guess you say the devolution of standards in politics — Bill Clinton is an obvious focal point,” Shaw said. “You had a candidate who was accused of things that would have been disqualifying even 10 years prior.”
In the past, harsher penalties were imposed for less severe actions. Michael Dukakis, the 1988 Democratic presidential candidate, was photographed in a tank for a campaign photo. The photo backfired, drawing criticism for appearing awkward, and paving the way for George H.W. Bush to secure the presidency. Howard Dean, a 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, became the first viral political meme for his “Dean Scream.”
Shaw says polarization plays a role in how voters view candidates and politicians in office.
“Because polarization is so intense these days, people on your side will simply convince themselves that it’s not relevant and it’s better than having somebody from the other side,” Shaw said. “And I’ll be darned, in purely crass political terms, I think that’s right.”
Psaki said the broad scope of digital footprints results in “a lot of information competing at the same time.”
“But I think what we’ve learned from all of this is that scandals may not matter as much as they did years ago, ” Psaki said.
Tim Miller served as a spokesperson for the Republican National Committee and the communications director for Jeb Bush’s 2016 presidential campaign.
Miller said President Donald Trump changed the political landscape, particularly regarding opposition research, the practice of collecting information on a political opponent to discredit them.
“I’m not saying that oppo doesn’t matter anymore, but I’m just thinking that most Trump-era things are very different,” Miller said. “When I was doing oppo research in the 2010s, one video of somebody saying something mean about farmers could hurt their Iowa Senate race. I just, I don’t think we’re in that place anymore.”
‘Just be open, don’t be defensive’
Hinman said a common misconception is that digital content can be removed entirely. Hinman’s firm prepares for any digital footprint scandals in advance.
“That content often can’t be removed; it is going to be found,” Hinman said. “Rather than working to remove it, we work to rectify or correct it if we can.”
For Psaki, transparency is key in response.
“If you’re advising a candidate who has things come out, you want to get it all out, as much of it out at the same time,” Psaki said. “And then the candidate has to speak to it — this was true even before digital footprints were a thing.”
When something does come out, Smith said accountability is what connects with voters.
“We need to have a little bit more openness and permissive attitude to this stuff, because the next crop of candidates is coming up, all their entire adulthood will be spent online,” Smith said. “Just be open, don’t be defensive.”
In the case of Platner, Miller and Smith said it is possible that Platner will come back from these incidents.
“I think the way Graham Platner has handled it has been smart,” Smith said. “Politicians don’t need to be these perfect people who, from the second they came out of the womb, were thinking about running for office, and never posting anything online.”
According to the latest polling, Platner currently has a 20-point lead over Governor Janet Mills in Maine’s U.S. Senate Democratic primary race.
“Look, I think people can overcome their digital footprint a lot more easily than in the past,” Miller said. “You’ve seen a backlash effect to the Platner oppo in a big way, you know, with a lot of people who are like, ‘You know, this kind of makes me like him more… in a way that he’s being honest about his past.”
Psaki pointed to this year’s Virginia attorney general race as a harbinger.
“Jay Jones is now going to be the attorney general in Virginia,” Psaki said. “His texts were terrible, but people voted for him for other reasons, right?”
For other young candidates like Platner or Jack Schlossberg, a social media personality of Kennedy lineage running for Congress, these upcoming elections will be a litmus test of where the line is for voters today.
“Partisans will find a way to justify voting in a partisan manner,” Shaw said.
Watch: US Veteran helps lead DC protest against the Trump administration
WASHINGTON — Rig Madden, an Army Veteran who retired as a master sergeant in 2016, is one of five founders of Remember Your Oath, a group that protests the Trump administration’s military and domestic policies both in person and online.
“I warned for years that if you let someone as corrupt as Trump back in office, you will have to make a choice,” Madden said. “You can either choose him or democracy; you don’t get to keep both.”
Madden was deployed overseas five times. To Cuba in 1995, Bosnia in 1996, Kosovo in 1999, Iraq in 2008, and Afghanistan in 2013. He now shares his over 20 years of military experience online as an activist and has amassed over 170 thousand followers on Instagram under the handle @USArmyOverlord.
On August 25, the group responded to President Donald Trump’s deployment of the National Guard by establishing a veterans’ rally point in Columbus Circle outside Union Station. It is here that they set up a hub for community outreach and protest activity.
“I’m not really here to debate Confederate lovers,” Madden said. “I’m here to defeat them, and so I defeat them by rallying to our people, and rallying to people who still want to fight for democracy and gather them together.”
After over one hundred days of resistance at the Veterans’ Rally Point, their tents were forcibly removed on December 10. Madden says they are still unwavering in their efforts.
Watch the video report here:
Democrats respond to Trump’s disparaging remarks about Somali immigrants
WASHINGTON — Democrats in Congress condemned President Donald Trump’s statements about the Somali population in Minnesota last week, claiming Trump is stoking bigotry through xenophobic comments.
Reflecting on fraud convictions in Minnesota during the COVID-19 pandemic, the president blamed Somali immigrants in a Cabinet meeting last Tuesday, commenting that they had “destroyed Minnesota.” He also referred to Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) — a Somali American representing Minneapolis — as “garbage” and labeled the state of Minnesota “a hellhole right now.”
“The Somalians should be out of here. They’ve destroyed our country. And all they do is complain, complain, complain,” he said.
Trump’s comments drew swift backlash from Somali Americans and prompted criticism from Democrats.
Aligning with the president’s tough-on-crime approach toward blue states, Trump voiced concern over fraud convictions in Minnesota. The state experienced a wave of fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic, primarily centered on the charitable organization Feeding Our Future but also included Housing Stabilization Services and autism programs. Among those charged with fraud in the Feeding Our Future case, most are of Somali descent, while the group’s founder, Aimee Bock, is white.
Omar told Medill News Service that xenophobic comments like those directed by Trump against her imply potential danger.
“When you use dehumanizing language like that, there is always the risk that the people who follow the president will act to harm either me or the Somali person that they might encounter. And so it’s really dangerous rhetoric for him to continue to utilize,” she said.
Countering Trump’s claims that Somali immigrants are harming the state, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) said the work of Somali Americans is embedded in the Minnesota community.
“The 80,000 Somali-Americans in our state work in our schools, care for our seniors, and serve our community…the President has now chosen to attack 80,000 Somali-Americans, calling them ‘garbage.’ These hateful attacks must stop,” Klobuchar said in a statement last week.
It is not out of character for Trump to make denigrating remarks about an immigrant group. After the shooting of two National Guard troops in late November, Trump said there were “a lot of problems with Afghans.” He also said during his reelection campaign that nearly 100% of jobs created during the Biden administration were filled by “illegal aliens,” a claim widely debunked by the press.
“Many of these people are criminals,” he said of Somali Minnesotans. He also posted on Truth Social that night that he would “permanently” stop migration from “third world” nations.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) told Medill News Service that Trump’s words should be met with political consequences.
“Trump has shown himself to be incapable of apology, and so the best way that we can do [consequences] is by continuing the rejection of the broader Republican Party,” she said.
Ocasio-Cortez also called out what she described as the Republican Party’s “co-signing” of Trump’s language.
Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) expressed worry about how these comments will impact the safety of Somali Americans in her state. She said the community has faced threats in recent days.
“My message to Minnesotans of Somali dissent is: be careful. Don’t hesitate to call 911, if you need help,” she told Medill News Service.
A Cinnabon employee was fired in Wisconsin last week for making derogatory comments about Somali customers, which were captured on a viral video and picked up by numerous news outlets. She called the customers “evil” and used the N-word repeatedly. In response to her firing, a GoFundMe was started after angry supporters objected to her termination. Her campaign has raised nearly $300,000.
A comment on her fund page posted Wednesday morning read, “Crystal, I am so proud of you for being a proud White Woman. You did nothing wrong.”
Republican senators such as Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) said they do not accept Democrats’ claims that the president is xenophobic. When asked about whether the president is a xenophobe, Hawley said “no” but declined to elaborate.
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) told reporters he was worried about crime in Minnesota, condemning “fraud, fraud and more fraud.” He specifically blamed Democratic Minnesota Governor Tim Walz for the fraud, and did not mention the state’s Somali residents.
“It seems like every day there is a new discovery of stolen taxpayer dollars in my home state of Minnesota, and who is smack dab in the middle of it, the self-acknowledged liar, incompetent, failed governor and failed vice presidential candidate Tim Walz,” Emmer said.
Smith said that the backlash to Trump’s comments was accompanied by appreciation for Minnesota as a state that protects immigrants.
“Folks are surrounding and appreciating the Somali community for the many contributions that it makes to our state, whether they are people serving in law enforcement or emergency response or teachers or doctors or nurses,” Smith told Medill News Service.
Representative Sarah McBride (D-Del.), who has often been the target of negative rhetoric due to being trans, said Trump’s remarks are fueled by hatred.
“Donald Trump seems to hate a lot of Americans,” she told Medill News Service. “I think the president should be a unifying figure who respects and values every single American, regardless of who they are or where they come from.
McBride said that her colleagues are united in objecting to the president’s remarks about Somali immigrants. She also said that members of the GOP may also oppose the president’s targeted comments about ethnic groups.
“I think a lot of Republicans understand that too in Congress, but they’re too chicken shit to actually say something,” she added.
Omar said that f being targeted by Trump has strengthened her admiration for her Somali community.
Commenting on the values of fellow Somali Americans, Omar said the community would remain strong.
“I’m proud of them as much as they’re proud of me. We are a very strong, brave, resilient people, and we will continue to stand tall,” she said.
Exclusive: Rep. Jasmine Crockett discusses entry into race for Senate seat in Texas
WASHINGTON — Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) announced her candidacy Monday for the United States Senate, taking on long-serving incumbent John Cornyn (R-Texas).
Crockett, a progressive lawmaker in her sophomore term, has already secured significant support from her constituents after an exploratory poll commissioned by her team found that she would be the leading Democratic candidate.
The representative spoke with Medill News Service for a wide-ranging interview that covered her thoughts on President Donald Trump’s attacks on her character and insights into a perceived underrepresented Democratic electorate in Texas.
“I feel like I made the right decision,” she said, adding she is confident that her high-profile status will be integral to her campaign, and quoting the Beyoncé lyric “you know you that [expletive] when you cause all this conversation.”
Before announcing her candidacy, one of Crockett’s primary rivals, Colin Allred, announced he would end his Senate campaign and run to represent a new district in Texas following the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the state’s redistricting plan. Allred was the Democratic nominee for the Senate in 2024, losing to incumbent Ted Cruz (R-Texas). He cited a “friendly” conversation with Crockett before she mounted her campaign.
Crockett’s race is expected to be an uphill battle, as Texas has not had a Democratic senator since Senator Robert C. Krueger left office in 1995.
Despite serving in Congress since only 2023, Crockett has risen to prominence for her sharp criticisms of the Trump administration and clashes with Republicans like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) In May 2024, Crockett went viral after labeling Greene, a fellow member of the Oversight Committee, as having a “bleach blond, bad built, butch body,” after Taylor Greene made fun of her “fake eyelashes.”
Crockett is framing her campaign as a collective effort to promote Democratic leaders throughout the state, saying building a strong coalition of Texas Democrats is a priority.
“I want to do everything I can to impact the down-ballot races with my candidacy,” she said.
“One of the things I wanted to do was really make sure we can maximize having the strongest team,” she told Medill News Service. “It’s a state of 30 million people, and it’s vast…I want to do everything that I can to make sure that we have a really good apparatus that everyone can benefit from,” she added.
Crockett’s colleague in the House Oversight Committee, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), immediately endorsed her in a social media video Monday evening.
“I believe Jasmine will stand up to the lawlessness of this administration and fight for every Texan in the United States Senate,” Khanna said, citing a bill he worked on with Crockett to “hold ICE accountable.”
“I’ve had a friendship and working relationship with [Crockett] so that was a no-brainer for me,” Khanna told Medill News Service.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) did not commit to endorsing Crockett but praised her work ethic at a press conference Tuesday afternoon.
“I haven’t talked to Jasmine this week when she made the final decision to move forward, but she’s an incredibly talented individual, a hard worker and a fighter. She’s going to be a very formidable candidate,” he said.
Jeffries added that his focus remains on flipping the House’s Republican majority, saying he is not currently prioritizing endorsements in Senate races.
“We’re still in the process of working through the House battlefield, so I have no visibility into what we might do at any point in the future relative to the Senate. At the moment, we’ll leave that to Chuck Schumer,” he added.
House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) told Medill News Service that Crockett will be missed in the House.
“I am always disappointed to see incredible members like Jasmine leave the house, but we wish her the very best of luck…I am so focused on House races, but I think Jasmine can do just about anything,” Clark said.
On the opposing side, Cornyn has repeatedly said he is not intimidated by Crockett’s candidacy, telling reporters Monday evening that she is the “worst” possible candidate. On Tuesday, he said that he didn’t understand why Crockett was polling well.
If elected, Crockett would become one of three Black women in the Senate, a historic high.
Though Crockett is competing with a long-tenured opponent — Cornyn was first elected in 2002 — she said she does not “buy into this idea that Texas is red.”
“I think that there is a lot of voter suppression, I think that there is a little voter apathy, and I think that it’s been very difficult to get our message out to voters in Texas…the entire country has been experiencing a wave that won’t be any different in Texas,” she said.

Poster advertising Crockett’s campaign rests on a pole adjacent to the Cannon House Office Building. Gabe Hawkins/MNS
Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.), one of two Black women currently serving in the Senate,) said she is enthusiastic about Crockett’s candidacy.
“I’m really proud of Jasmine,” Alsobrooks told Medill News Service.
“I think it takes so much courage to jump into that race. She’s obviously a really talented legislator, and I’m really proud and happy to see her,” she added.
Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), who is also a Black woman, quickly endorsed Crockett, posting a photo Monday evening with the congresswoman at a Black leadership event.
Pressley captioned the post by describing Crockett as a “relentless fighter and a brilliant legal mind.”
“She is exactly the kind of authentic, bold, effective leader this moment demands, the people deserve, and the Senate needs,” she added.
When asked about Crockett’s campaign, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) grinned and said he was eager for her to enter the race. He called her a “star” of the Democratic Party but said he expected she would not succeed in her bid.
“I think it’s one of the greatest things that’s happened to the Republican party in a long, long time,” Johnson said.
“I want her to have the largest, loudest microphone she can every day, and we look forward to having that election down there…Texas is a red state. People in Texas are common-sense Americans and what Jasmine is trying to sell will not be purchased by the people of Texas,” he added.
Crockett said she has experienced a degree of hate from members of the public who oppose her politically. She said her older constituents have expressed concern that her Senate run could put her safety at risk.
“They see how much security I normally have to have when I’m out of DC. They see even the security I have to have when I’m in DC. They know, but they don’t know, they see the hate online, but I refuse to give those people a platform. I refuse to make those people a part of my story,” she said.
Crockett said she looks forward to rallying support around her campaign.
“We’re gonna make this a big national thing where everyone is going to help out because it matters, not just for Texas but the entire nation,” she said.
Listen: Diaspora-led medical organizations are rebuilding care in Palestine and Sudan
WASHINGTON — Diaspora-led medical organizations operate in conflict zones with local knowledge, long-term commitment and trusted networks. Their work spans direct care, training, local funding, and infrastructure support — offering an alternative approach to international aid models.
In this episode, we look at the Palestinian American Medical Association and the Sudanese American Medical Association, and the impact their different approaches are having on the ground.
SUPREME COURT CONSIDERS POTENTIAL EXPANSION OF PRESIDENTIAL POWER
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices seemed likely to expand presidential ability to fire the heads of independent, multi-member federal agencies during oral arguments Monday.
The case centers around President Donald Trump’s firing of Rebecca Slaughter from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in March. Slaughter challenged this action by pointing to Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, a 1935 Supreme Court case outlining the FTC’s removal provision.
Humphrey’s Executor states that an FTC Commissioner “may be removed by the President for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.” Since Trump had declared only that Slaughter’s continued seat on the commission would be “inconsistent with [the] Administration’s priorities,” lawyers for Slaughter asserted that Trump had not relied on any of the legal grounds for removal in terminating her.
Before Trump v. Slaughter reached the Supreme Court, the lower court ruled in favor of Slaughter, upholding the precedent of Humphrey’s Executor and ordering the Trump administration to reinstate her. Furthermore, when the Trump administration asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to put the ruling on hold while it appealed, the court of appeals rejected that request.
However, things appeared to go a different direction during the oral arguments at the Supreme Court on Monday.
Solicitor General D. John Sauer, arguing for the government, urged the Court to overrule a nearly century-old precedent, declaring that Humphrey’s Executor “stands as an indefensible outlier.” He added that the decision “must be overruled” because it rests on a theory that no longer “withstood the test of time,” describing it as “a decaying husk … [which] continues to generate confusion in the lower courts.”
He argued that any for-cause restrictions on the president’s ability to remove principal officers are impermissible. When asked by Justice Clarence Thomas whether there is “one example […] of a permissible restriction on the authority to remove a principal officer,” Sauer replied simply, “We don’t believe there are permissible restrictions on principal officers […] who exercise the executive power.”
Several conservative justices signaled openness to narrowing or overturning Humphrey’s Executor. Chief Justice John Roberts observed that many federal agencies now combine executive, legislative and adjudicative powers — making it “hard to parse whether it’s an executive function […] or a legislative function” when the Court assesses removal protections.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh likewise appeared receptive, pressing Slaughter’s lawyer, Amit Agarwal, on the potential implications of his legal theory, suggesting that it would essentially mean that “a subordinate could ignore the president’s supervision and direction without fear and the president could do nothing about it.”
But several of the Court’s liberal members pushed back. Justice Sonia Sotomayor warned that ruling for the government would undercut the independence built into certain agencies by Congress. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson also raised alarms about the political consequences of erasing bipartisan, expert-led commissions.
“Independent agencies exist because Congress has decided that some issues, some matters, some areas should be handled in this way by nonpartisan experts,” Jackson said. “So having a president come in and fire all the scientists and the doctors and the economists and the Ph.D.s and replacing them with loyalists and people who don’t know anything is actually not in the best interest of the citizens of the United States.”
The court’s eventual ruling could determine whether Congress can limit not only the president’s ability to fire members of the FTC but also his ability to terminate other heads of multimember independent agencies. Trump has also already fired members of the NLRB, MSPB and CPSC.
In this case, if the Court sides with the administration, Slaughter’s removal may stand — and the decision could erode statutory protections for leaders of more than two dozen independent federal agencies created by Congress. The case could reshape the federal administrative state and transform how future presidents wield control over executive-branch regulators.
The Supreme Court is expected to decide the case by summer 2026.
Supreme Court considers slashing campaign spending restrictions for political parties
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court appeared set to further loosen limits on campaign finance, despite opposition from liberal justices during oral arguments Tuesday.
The case challenges limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with candidates, most of which goes toward advertisements. It would overturn a 2001 precedent known as Colorado II that upheld longstanding coordinated expenditure limits.
In recent years, the Court has struck down many such restrictions — most notably in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission in 2010, which gave rise to numerous political action committees by allowing corporations to spend unlimited amounts in elections.
And this latest case, National Republican Senatorial Committee v. FEC, could continue the trend.
“NRSC is just one of a long chain of cases that have all chipped away at or taken a blow at campaign finance law,” said Tara Malloy, senior litigation strategist at Campaign Legal Center, which filed an amicus brief on behalf of the respondents.
The plaintiffs include the NRSC as well as the National Republican Congressional Committee, former Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) and then-Ohio Senator and current Vice President JD Vance. They sued the FEC in 2022, arguing coordinated expenditure limits violated the First Amendment.
Noel Francisco, arguing for the petitioners, said the changed campaign landscape since Colorado II has weakened political parties relative to PACs. He told justices due to coordinated expenditure limits on political parties, donors give money to PACs instead.
“That actually has many dangers to our democracy,” Francisco said. “Political parties serve a moderating influence by forcing, essentially, compromises within a party in order to put forward a platform and to put forward candidates, whereas PACs and super PACs can often be focused on narrower issues.”
That sentiment received support from conservative voices on the bench, especially Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who said the discrepancy was a “real concern. “
Yet Francisco faced resistance from the three liberal justices. Sonia Sotomayor echoed the respondent’s primary argument that unlimited campaign expenditures lead to quid pro quo corruption.
“Once we take off this coordinated expenditure limit, then what’s left?” Sotomayor said. “What’s left is nothing. No control whatsoever.”
Francisco said even without coordinated expenditure restrictions, other guardrails would remain to prevent quid pro quo corruption.
Roman Martinez, the court-appointed amicus who argued for the respondents, called the petitioners’ challenge a “bait-and-switch” aimed at loosening campaign purse strings as a whole.
“They’re going to keep litigating to knock down every single one of the restrictions,” Martinez said.
But Associate Justice Samuel Alito dismissed those concerns.
“I did not hear Mr. Francisco say that he has a plan to attack other provisions,” Alito said. “Maybe he does. Maybe it’s predictable that he would, but we have one provision before us today, right, so don’t we have to decide this case and not speculate about what might come later?”
A ruling in the petitioners’ favor wouldn’t come as a surprise to Institute for Free Speech senior attorney Brett Nolan, who co-authored the IFS’ amicus brief in support of the petitioners.
“I don’t think that this is a court that, on these kinds of issues, is afraid of overruling precedent,” Nolan said.
The court is expected to rule on the case by summer 2026.
















