Thursday, July 02, 2026

Bryan Adams, Lionel Richie, Diana Ross, Steve Miller Band, Madonna

Some interesting news.  Etan Vlessing (HOLLYWOOD REPORTER) notes:


Bryan Adams has released a Donald Trump protest song, "51st State," timed for Canada Day, the nation's birthday on July 1.

The single, released to YouTube and other social media platforms by the legendary Canadian rocker, celebrates unity among Canadians in the face of  the U.S. president making repeated taunts about Canada becoming a 51st U.S. state and launching a cross-border tariff war.
[. . .]
Elsewhere, former Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau mocked Trump's 2024 "governor" trash talk in the documentary, Rivals: 4 Nations Face-Off, about the historic 2025 international hockey tournament between teams for Canada and the U.S.A.. Additionally, comedian Mike Myers wore a "Never 51" jersey in a TV ad alongside Canadian prime minister Mark Carney and mocked the idea of Canada joining the United States on an appearance on Saturday Night Live.

Good for Bryan.  He was part of Northern Lights along with Joni Mitchell, Cory Hart, Neil Young and others.  They were for Canada what USA for Africa was for the United States.  USA for Africa was Diana Ross, Bruce Springsteen, Tina Turner, Stevie Wonder, Dionne Warwick, Cyndi Lauper, Ray Charles and others were as the supergroup recording "We Are The World."  Northern Lights recorded the charity single "Tears Are Not Enough." I'm thinking a Northern Lights type project needs to be done again, an anthem telling Chump to back the hell off with his talk about turning Canada into a US state.  Make a huge message.  As it is, Bryan's started the ball rolling and good for him for doing that. 

Meanwhile Taijuan Moorman (USA TODAY) provides an update on Lionel Richie:

Lionel Richie is back on stage after a health scare.

The Grammy-winning singer made his return in Pittsburgh on his Sing a Song All Night Long Tour with Earth, Wind & Fire on Tuesday, June 30, in better spirits after cutting his tour opener short in Minnesota and postponing two concerts in Chicago and Columbus, Ohio.
Videos posted by fans on YouTube showed the "All Night Long" singer up and about. While playing his hit "Dancing on the Ceiling" – which he had previously performed while sitting on a step on stage – the 77-year-old singer walked across the stage and told the crowd, "When your vitamin pill kicks in, you're going to dance on the ceiling!" He performed the entire song standing.
Richie's return comes after the singer admitted to "feeling dizzy" halfway through his set on June 24 in St. Paul, Minnesota, per the Minnesota Star Tribune. "When you're feeling dizzy, sit your ass down," he said, adding he'd never performed his 1986 hit "Dancing on the Ceiling" seated.

That is good news.  I'm happy he's back on tour and doing well.  And Lionel was, of course, part of USA for Africa -- and co-wrote "We Are The World."  

Lionel's biggest hit was the duet "Endless Love" with Diana Ross.  Diana's noted in press release:

TJ Maxx has unveiled its new brand platform and integrated campaign, ‘Never Uniform, Always You’, helmed by four iconic women, Diana Ross, Mindy Kaling, Ilona Maher, and Chloe Flower, each styled head-to-toe in TJ Maxx looks that spotlight their originality.

At a time when fashion can feel uniform or prescribed, TJ Maxx is celebrating women who lead with self-assured originality in every part of their lives, using fashion as one of many ways to show the world who they are. This campaign inspires confidence, magnetism, and style, showcasing the power of originality to encourage viewers to do the same. TJ Maxx ensures that originality is always within reach with high-quality fashion at a great value.

Developed in partnership with Ogilvy, the campaign is supported by a multi-channel media strategy across linear TV, streaming /digital video, and social.

Mindy Kaling said, “I’ve been most successful when I take creative risks and try to do things that are true to me and really original to my voice. I'm proud to be part of TJ Maxx's 'Never Uniform. Always You.' campaign, it celebrates the confidence to stay true to yourself instead of following the crowd."

Ilona Maher said, "I've definitely felt pressure to tone it down or fit into one box, but I've learned that's not where the magic happens. That's what I love about TJ Maxx's 'Never Uniform. Always You.' It's about celebrating individuality in a culture that can make us feel like we're all supposed to be the same.

Chloe Flower said, “You can only go so far as an artist trying to conform to something. You have to be true to yourself. That's why partnering with TJ Maxx feels so meaningful to me. 'Never Uniform. Always You.' resonates deeply because originality comes from having the courage to create your own path."

Diana Ross said, “It’s fun to find something that feels authentically you! Always intend to be an original.”



The Steve Miller Band is behind some of the biggest rock hits in music. Take, for example, “Jet Airliner,” “Fly Like an Eagle,” “The Joker,” and “Take the Money and Run.” But, it was “Abracadabra,” released in May of 1982, that almost didn’t make the band’s impressive catalog had it not been for a chance encounter with the one and only, Diana Ross
Before the band recorded the psychedelic song, Steve Miller, who wrote the “Abracadabra” lyrics by himself, experienced a bit of writer’s block, according to American Songwriter. The outlet, which sourced Vulture, shared that Miller described the original layout of the song as having a gypsy-blues style arrangement set to “bad lyrics.” 
However, all that changed when he ran into Ross on a ski slope in Sun Valley, Idaho, which sparked a memory for him. The moment found him recalling the time the Steve Miller Band performed on the once-popular variety show Hullabaloo, on the same night as Ross and her musical group, The Supremes
“Abracadabra” was this piece of music that I wrote on this classical guitar. It was just something I’d sit and pick up the guitar ….I wrote the worst lyrics in the world…,” Miller further explained during an interview with AXS TV. “I went home, and I said to myself, ‘How would The Supremes do this song?’ And, I wrote ‘Abracadabra’ in 12 minutes. I just sat down, and it just all came together. I was thinking about that old black magic, and I went ‘Abracadabra’ and [I thought about] how The Supremes would go,’ I want to reach out and grab ya.’”



Singer, actress, and entertainment icon Diana Ross will bring her celebrated catalog to the Santa Barbara Bowl on Thursday, August 27, for an evening spanning more than six decades of music history. Tickets go on sale Friday, June 5, at 10 a.m.

From her early years as the voice of The Supremes to her chart-dominating solo career, Ross has helped define the sound of popular music with hits including “Baby Love,” “Stop! In the Name of Love,” “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” “I’m Coming Out,” and “Endless Love.”

A Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee as a member of The Supremes, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, and Presidential Medal of Freedom honoree, she has influenced generations of artists while remaining a commanding live performer known for her elegance, charisma, and unmistakable voice.

At 82, Ross continues to tour internationally, drawing audiences eager to revisit the Motown classics and solo favorites that have become woven into the fabric of American music. Her Santa Barbara Bowl appearance promises a career-spanning set filled with nostalgia, powerhouse vocals, and the kind of star presence that few artists can match. For more information, see sbbowl.com



At BILLBOARD, Katie Bain ranks the 12 tracks on Madonna's new album (due out in a few hours). 


Closing with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Thursday, July 2, 2026.  Chump's greed is on full display as Americans struggle with the economy he broke, Republicans struggle for voters, Democrats struggle to explain some basics, and much more. 





"The American people realize how badly this administration is screwing them over," Ben notes on this morning's MEIDASTOUCH.

Let's note two things we noted at the top of yesterday's snapshot because they warrant continued attention.   Ben Protess, Andrea Fuller, Eric Lipton and David Yaffe-Bellany (NEW YORK TIMES) report:

President Trump reaped a stunning windfall in his first year back in the White House, including about $1.4 billion from his family’s cryptocurrency businesses, a new filing shows.

All told, the president pulled in at least $2.2 billion, a figure that includes other parts of his vast holdings, such as his real estate assets. That compares to a minimum of $622 million his enterprises pulled in for all of 2024, before he returned to the presidency.

One of his biggest hauls in 2025 came when an investment firm tied to the United Arab Emirates bought nearly half of the Trump family’s main crypto company, World Liberty Financial, a transaction that blurred the line between foreign policy and private enterprise.



President Lyndon B. Johnson’s wife owned a profitable radio station. George W. Bush was on the board of an oil company while his father was in the White House. And Hunter Biden was paid by a Ukrainian natural gas company while his father was vice president.

But never before in American history has there been anything like Donald J. Trump, a president who in his first year back in office has collected about $1.4 billion in new revenues from cryptocurrency businesses that directly benefited from his actions as president, a financial disclosure report made public on Tuesday shows.

Overall, Mr. Trump’s revenue in 2025 jumped to at least $2.2 billion, compared with a minimum of $622 million in 2024 before he returned to office.

“It is completely unprecedented,” said Megan Gorman, a tax attorney and the author of a recent book, “All the Presidents’ Money,” that studied the history of presidential wealth dating back 250 years.

Generally, throughout history, Ms. Gorman and other historians said, American presidents have taken actions to try to separate themselves from corporate entanglements that might create conflicts.

“Public office, if anything, was a source of debt, not a source of revenue,” said Lindsay M. Chervinsky, a historian and the executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon.

Mr. Trump and his family have done the opposite, creating new business ventures that are profiting from actions Mr. Trump has taken since he returned to the White House.

Those include the pardon Mr. Trump issued in October to Changpeng Zhao, the richest man in crypto, who founded the company Binance, which has been a critical business partner to the Trump family’s own crypto venture. They also include legislation that Mr. Trump signed last July to promote a form of cryptocurrency called stablecoins, four months after his family-backed firm introduced its own stablecoin.









On his gilded and grifted ways,  Farrah Tomazin (DAILY BEAST) reports

Donald Trump has taken a maiden flight on his new Qatari-gifted luxury jet while brushing aside questions about how much taxpayers spent converting the Boeing 747 into the new Air Force One.
The president showed off the new plane before boarding it to North Dakota for his latest America 250 celebration at the dedication of the Theodore Roosevelt Library.
However, when asked directly about the cost to American taxpayers, Trump avoided offering a figure, insisting the cost was “very little relative to what it would cost if we did it a different way” while emphasizing that the aircraft itself had been “a gift.”
[. . .]
The Air Force has previously said it spent less than $400 million modifying the plane for presidential use, including installing secure communications and defensive systems, though officials have declined to provide a full public accounting of the classified security upgrades. Critics have argued the true long-term cost could be significantly higher.

This is all enough to make a person nervous.  And Ed Mazza (HUFFINGTON POST) argues it's made Chump very nervous:
 
President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced a first-ever “midterm convention” for the Republican Party, which will be held in September in Dallas. 
But critics on social media said it sounded like a desperate move given his plunging popularity in the polls and growing signs that the GOP will lose their majorities in the House and possibly even the Senate
Even states once considered safe red territory now appear to be in play, with a New York Times/Siena poll this week showing the race for a U.S. Senate seat in Texas is a dead heat. Democratic candidate James Talarico and Trump’s hand-picked Republican candidate, scandal-plagued state Attorney General Ken Paxton are both at 47%. 



Chump and his planners have been woefully out of touch with the country.  And with midterms in November, minutes away, that's not a good sign.  What else isn't a good sign?  GOP reps in Congress who live to appear out of touch.  Max Rego (THE HILL) reports

Despite a sizeable number of Americans expressing financial concerns, Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) boasted Tuesday of his plans to eat lobster tails and rib-eye steak this Fourth of July weekend. 
“Affordability — what are you talking about?” Nehls told reporter Pablo ManrĂ­quez on the Capitol steps, when the latter asked him how House Republicans can convince their constituents they are fighting to make life more affordable.
“Over the fourth, I’m going to get me a couple of big lobster tails, I’m going to get me some nice rib-eyes. I’m going to sit in my backyard with my family [and] my neighbors, and we’re going to be enjoying the fourth, celebrating 250 years, the birthday [of America],” the Texas Republican added.
[. . .]
When another reporter asked him whether Americans living “paycheck to paycheck” can afford to eat the same food he plans to, Nehls wondered if those people “work as hard as I do.”

Don't worry about voting him out of office, he's not seeking re-election.  For obvious reasons. And Chump's there helping to tank his own party as well.  Stephanie Kaloi (MEDIAITE) reports:


Former White House spokesperson Sarah Matthews, who worked for President Donald Trump from June 2020 to January 2021, says it “seems” her former employer “is doing everything in his power to tank Republican chances in the midterms.”
In a segment on MS NOW, Matthews explained to correspondent Antonia Hylton that Trump’s fixation on the SAVE America Act could cost him, and the Republican Party, dearly this fall.
“I think that if President Trump was doing everything in his power to tank Republicans’ chances in the midterms, he wouldn’t be doing anything differently,” she said. “That’s what it seems like. It seems like he does not care about the party, which he never has, to be fair. He has never cared about what is good for the betterment of the Republican Party. He has only ever cared about himself and accumulating as much power as possible.”


And, you could argue, he's never cared about the American people, only about himself.  That would explain a new poll. Anna Commander (NEWSWEEK) reports

A majority of Americans say President Donald Trump has not paid attention to the issues that matter most to them, according to a new poll from The Economist/YouGov released Tuesday, as the president promoted a new Republican midterm convention aimed at energizing GOP supporters ahead of the 2026 elections.
On Tuesday, Trump announced on Truth Social that Republicans will hold what he called the party’s first-ever national midterm convention in Dallas on September 9 and 10. He described the gathering as a “truly Historic Event” celebrating the “Great American Comeback” and said it would showcase achievements under the America First agenda, while promising “lots of Great Entertainment” and “a RALLY like none other!”
Meanwhile, the survey released on Tuesday found that 60 percent of respondents believe Trump “hasn’t paid attention to the most important problems” facing the country, underscoring persistent concerns about his priorities as his administration pushes ahead with a slate of initiatives, including foreign affairs decisions amid turmoil with Iran and as the country prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary.
The findings come as Trump has drawn criticism this week for seemingly dismissing the nation’s housing bill. Speaking to reporters Monday, the president brushed aside legislation aimed at addressing soaring housing costs, calling it “a big yawn.”

And yesterday's NEW YORK TIMES report by  about the 2.2 billion Chump's raked in throughout 2025 via grifting and corruption isn't helping people see him as a friend who understands their economic struggles.  Marco Margaritoff (HUFFINGTON POST) notes some criticism of Chump over that grifting:

Former Trump White House attorney Ty Cobb on Tuesday called out President Donald Trump over his $1.2 billion in earnings from cryptocurrency ventures since returning to the White House in 2025, calling it “the greatest onslaught of corruption in the history of mankind.”

Cobb appeared on CNN following the release of a financial disclosure document showing Trump earned $594,263,944 from his family’s World Liberty Financial cryptocurrency firm and $635,068,835 from the CIC Digital LLC company that marketed his $TRUMP meme coin.
“I don’t believe so,” Cobb told “OutFront” host Erin Burnett when asked if he thinks it’s legal.

He continued, “Certainly, I don’t think it was contemplated by the Founders when they created the emoluments clause. I do think that one of the line items, of course, is the commemorative coins, several hundred million dollars of income related to those coins.”

Cobb went on to ponder how this could be “anything other than trading on his image and likeness,” noting this violates the 1787 clause designed to prevent federal officials from being corrupted, influenced or enriched from external entities, and calling crypto a “slimy industry.”


Americans under Chump are starving for the truth -- one of the many things Chump cannot provide.  That's among the reasons why  REGIME CHANGE is a huge hit.  Bill Barrow (AP) reports 


It turns out readers still want to learn more about President Donald Trump after all.
“Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump,” the latest book on the Trump presidency, written by political journalists Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, has sold more than 300,000 copies in its opening week, according to publisher Simon & Schuster.
They’re the kind of sales that numerous works about Trump reached during his first term, but had been rare during his second term. Publishers had speculated that the public had tired of Trump books, believing there was little left to know.
The total figures include preorders, print book sales, ebooks, and e-audiobooks and orders that have yet to be fulfilled because of demand, the publishing house said. Simon & Schuster said the book is into its third hard copy printing, with 200,000 copies on order, after it sold out quickly in bookstores and on Amazon. It's the best first-week clip of any hardcover nonfiction book in 2026.


Andrew Stanton (NEWSWEEK) reports on Democrats' chances to take over the Senate in the midterms:

Democrats and Republicans are engaged in a close race for control of the Senate in the 2026 midterm elections, according to a new poll from The New York Times, which showed single-digit races in six GOP-held states Democrats must win in November to flip the chamber.
Historically, the party in the White House loses seats in the midterms, so Democrats are optimistic about their chances of reclaiming a House majority. But their Senate map is tougher. Republicans currently hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate, and Democrats have few easy targets this year and must win seats in states that backed President Donald Trump by double digits to flip the Senate.
The poll from the Times, Siena University and the Portland Press Herald suggested that several key Senate races are close, about four months out from the election. Other polls and prediction markets similarly show a tight race.

Ed Kilgore (THE INTELLIGENCER) reports:

Last month, there was immense excitement on the left when outspoken progressives (two of them members of the Democratic Socialists of America) won three congressional primaries and a host of down-ballot races in New York. Losers included two entrenched incumbents, one of them the chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and their backers, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and AIPAC-aligned donors. While some activists immediately leaped to predictions that the uprising would go national, others noted New York’s unique political culture and emphasized the local influence of Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who is a national celebrity but not yet a national power broker.
But after Colorado’s June 30 primaries, there’s evidence that the ideological and generational ferment that was so evident in New York is bubbling up elsewhere. Most strikingly, 29-year-old DSA member Melat Kiros knocked off 15-term incumbent congresswoman Diana DeGuette in Denver’s deep-blue First Congressional District. Kiros first received national attention in 2023 when a law firm fired her for publishing an open letter questioning Israel’s legitimacy as a Zionist state. She overcame heavy late spending on DeGuette’s behalf by AIPAC-funded and Silicon Valley groups. The incumbent wasn’t exactly a “centrist”; she’s a long-time co-sponsor of Medicare for All legislation and is best known for her fiery defense of reproductive rights. So to some extent, Kiros’s win represented a generic “change” sentiment; she wasn’t even born when DeGuette first went to Congress. But at her victory celebration, where celebrity socialist influencer Hasan Piker appeared, Kiros was quick to claim affiliation with a national movement, PBS reported:
“We are winning from coast to coast,” Kiros said to an ecstatic audience and the blast of air horns. “We are taking back our party and our country!”
Though it was clearly a less ideological contest, Colorado progressives also cheered state attorney general Phil Weiser’s landslide win over three-term U.S. Senator Michael Bennet in the state’s gubernatorial primary (incumbent Democrat Jared Polis was term-limited). Weiser shrewdly played the anti-Trump resistance card, citing his many lawsuits against the Trump administration in contrast to Bennet’s relatively conciliatory record in the Senate, as NBC News noted:
Weiser, who is in his second term as attorney general, gained traction as the two candidates traded attacks over their anti-Trump credentials in a race in which there was little daylight between them on policy. Both have pushed affordability, housing and environmental issues as top priorities, as well as fighting Trump’s immigration agenda.
Weiser has attacked Bennet for having voted to confirm several of Trump’s Cabinet nominees as a member of the Senate and has cast him as a Washington insider.


Notice, though, where the left won and where it did not.

Every one of those victories came in a safe Democratic seat, where the November election is likely a formality.

The one genuinely competitive race on the board—Colorado’s 8th, the state’s only toss-up—went to Manny Rutinel, a more conventional Democrat backed by Latino-outreach groups and tech donors.

That seat has flipped in each of its two elections; a Democrat won it by around 1,600 votes in 2022, and Republican Gabe Evans took it by fewer than 2,500 in 2024.

It is exactly the kind of district that decides House majorities, and it did not reward a factional candidate.

The progressive left has proved it can beat Democratic incumbents. The open question is whether it can produce politicians who become national figures, their reach and reputation growing beyond the districts that elected them.





Attorney General Phil Weiser won comfortably in the gubernatorial primary over Bennet, who had been considered the heavy frontrunner until recently. Weiser isn’t much more liberal than Bennet but positioned himself as more anti-Trump. He hammered Bennet for his votes to confirm several of Trump’s executive branch nominees last year and won the backing of the state’s Indivisible chapter.
It’s normal to have multiple candidates seeking an open governorship (incumbent Jared Polis is term-limited), so Weiser’s decision to take on Bennet wasn’t unusual or surprising. But House Democratic incumbents rarely face strong primary challenges, and Democratic senators almost never do. And it’s not as if Hickenlooper or DeGette are Joe Manchin–style centrists. They strongly backed Joe Biden’s agenda and have opposed most of Trump’s. DeGette is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. While neither of them has been a leading critic of Israel, they haven’t been vocally pro-Israel like Representative Dan Goldman, who was defeated last week in New York.
So why did DeGette and Hickenlooper get primary challengers, and why were those challenges so popular with voters? How did a man (Bennet) who has voted against nearly all of Trump’s proposals in Washington lose a contest over who would be the most anti-Trump?
For the same reasons Mamdani won the Democratic primary in New York last year, Graham Platner won in Maine earlier this year, Abdul El-Sayed has surged in Michigan Senate polls, and other progressive candidates are gaining ground and winning around the country. Democratic voters are mad at party leaders for not defeating Trump in 2024 and then last year having to be coaxed by the base into aggressively opposing him. They are also curious if newer politicians will do a better job than those from the party establishment in fighting MAGA. Those two factors provide an opening for challenges to incumbents and frontrunners, even those with fairly liberal voting records.

Perry writes that. He appears to forget that Janet Mills repeatedly stood up to Chump -- even to his face.




You can't just throw junk together in an essay and ignore facts and expect anyone to be impressed with your 'hot' take.  Enough on thought pieces that are half-thought out -- if that.  Eric Garcia (INDEPENDENT) puts some actual thought into the election results:

There are plenty of parallels to that era and today, and not just because Kiros, a barista and attorney, beat a long-time entrenched incumbent in much the same way that AOC, a democratic socialist and bartender, took out the chairman of the House Democratic caucus in 2018.

She came to Washington flanked by Reps. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), who formed what would become “the Squad” of progressives in Congress.

And just like back then, Republicans hope to paint Democrats in swing districts with the same socialist brush from these deep-blue districts.

Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.), chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, told The Independent that the most important quality for any race is candidate quality and whether someone fits their district.

“And that's why we have the advantage, because we have really good candidates that fit their districts, and the Democrats have had these crazy primaries where they've all tried to out-Mamdani each other, and they’ve ended up with extreme candidates,” he said.





The race, however, has broader implications for the future of left-wing politics in the U.S., with Kiros’ victory putting to rest any notion that the progressive wave sweeping across the country might be limited to New York City.
The progressive victory in Denver, however, also means that a potential Democratic majority in the House is likely to feature a majority-making coalition of left-wing progressives. As it stands, there are two DSA-endorsed members of Congress, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-NY, and Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich. After this year’s election, there is almost certain to be five, due to the wins in Colorado and New York alone. The coalition on the Democratic Party’s left wing, however, will be significantly larger, though its exact size depends on how the group is counted.



We've noted that Socialist doesn't need to be treated like a dirty word.  We've noted that if AOC has any hope of a presidential campaign in the Democratic Party primary in 2028, people need to stop hiding.  Ave and I called out the very bad book by which refused to note Socialists.  On the right, it could and did name Libertarians and MAGAs and GOPers and you name it.  But everyone on the left was a Democrat or else not noted.  It's like how Amy Goodman brought on all those Democratic Socialists to trash Kamala Harris when Kamala was running for the presidency but never noted that these guests weren't Democrats, they were the word that the left would not mention back then . . . socialists. 


Ava and I noted this silence -- from our side (the left) -- on Socialists in February of last year with "Media: OWNED finds Eoin Higgins owned by bad journalism:"



There are all these characters in the book which is another problem.  


You encounter Republicans and Libertarians and MAGA and even the Tea Party.  


And then?  


And then you have the left.  Such as, on page 134, when he writes of being part of "a group of lefty writers."  Socialists.  That's what he's talking about on that page.  He notes a left "environmentalist" in the book -- a Socialist.  He writes of the genocide in Gaza insisting that the "left" was all basically on the same side ("The left was more or less opposed to the war, but the conflict quickly exposed a split on the right.") 


Is that what he heard in the echo chamber bubble he lives in?  For the record, we are opposed to the ongoing genocide and have been throughout.  But we're not so stupid that we think that is the uniform opinion on our side.  For example, October 30th -- days before the US presidential election -- Linley Sanders (AP) reported on the latest AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll:


But there’s a big partisan split on whether the Israeli government bears “a lot” of responsibility for the war’s escalation. About 6 in 10 Democrats say they do — similar to the share of Democrats who say Hamas bears “a lot” of responsibility — while only about one-quarter of Republicans say the Israeli government bears “a lot” of responsibility.


Six in ten is not 100%, it's barely over half.  


But damned if the media ecosystem that Eoin hails from -- FAIR, THE NATION, COMMON DREAMS, etc, etc -- hasn't misled everyone on that reality.  


In a really poorly written section about leftists brought on FOX "NEWS" (made even worse by his desperation to name check another friend), he notes that the network brings on two types -- the ineffectual (think Alan Colmes) who is seen as ridiculous and then the Glenn Greenwald types who are there to insult the left.


We wish it would have been better written book  but we also wish he had the nerve to go beyond finger pointing at the other side.  What he's describing -- the fake assery of FOX "NEWS" when it comes to the left --  is what the media eco-system he hails from does over and over.  In fact, that's what DEMOCRACY NOW! did every day from the start of August through October 30th when covering Kamala Harris.


They brought on Socialists to lie and attack.  And the biggest lie there was that they were Democrats.  Even Democrats don't like Kamala, they insisted with their coverage thereby achieving Amy Goodman's intent to suppress turnout for Kamala.


That lie also helped them attack Kamala constantly regarding Gaza.  Again, the lie was -- and continues to be in Higgins' book -- that the left was of one mind on Gaza.  But, as polling demonstrated, that was never the case for the Democratic Party's members.  Kamala had to navigate a tight rope but that reality was ignored as Amy Goodman repeatedly brought on Uncommitted to tell their lies -- frequently, the biggest one being that they were Democrats.  They were, in fact, Socialists (and one Communist).  Long before Eoin finished his book, we were pointing out here that DN! was using the FOX "NEWS" model. 


It takes a lot of nerve and a lot of hypocrisy to rightly attack Glenn Greenwald for his lies, distortions and FOX-ification while you not only refuse to do the same with your own peers but, in fact, also applaud them in the book -- Naomi Klein (a Socialist whose pro-Kamala message on DN! was hold your nose and vote for her -- again, the messaging from DN! was that even Democrats did not support Kamala), Adam H. Johnson, Branko Marcetic and so many more Socialists. 


We don't like Glenn, we have called him out here for years.  But when the left does what we call out in Glenn, we call out the left.  And when we say that we call out the left, we mean we call out Democrats, we call out Socialists, we call out Communists and we call out Greens.


Not only does Eoin refuse to do that, he can't even type the word "Socialist."  Political closets run deep.  And political closet cases worked overtime to defeat Kamala so we're in no mood to play and pretend this is some deep and important book.


It's trite and superficial.  The scope is beyond the page length.  It's 'finding' are generic and self-fulfilling.  Doesn't make them necessarily wrong but does reduce this allegedly important book to nothing more than a basic primer good only for someone brand new to the topic.

There are all these characters in the book which is another problem.  


You encounter Republicans and Libertarians and MAGA and even the Tea Party.  


And then?  


And then you have the left.  Such as, on page 134, when he writes of being part of "a group of lefty writers."  Socialists.  That's what he's talking about on that page.  He notes a left "environmentalist" in the book -- a Socialist.  He writes of the genocide in Gaza insisting that the "left" was all basically on the same side ("The left was more or less opposed to the war, but the conflict quickly exposed a split on the right.") 


Is that what he heard in the echo chamber bubble he lives in?  For the record, we are opposed to the ongoing genocide and have been throughout.  But we're not so stupid that we think that is the uniform opinion on our side.  For example, October 30th -- days before the US presidential election -- Linley Sanders (AP) reported on the latest AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll:


But there’s a big partisan split on whether the Israeli government bears “a lot” of responsibility for the war’s escalation. About 6 in 10 Democrats say they do — similar to the share of Democrats who say Hamas bears “a lot” of responsibility — while only about one-quarter of Republicans say the Israeli government bears “a lot” of responsibility.


Six in ten is not 100%, it's barely over half.  


But damned if the media ecosystem that Eoin hails from -- FAIR, THE NATION, COMMON DREAMS, etc, etc -- hasn't misled everyone on that reality.  


In a really poorly written section about leftists brought on FOX "NEWS" (made even worse by his desperation to name check another friend), he notes that the network brings on two types -- the ineffectual (think Alan Colmes) who is seen as ridiculous and then the Glenn Greenwald types who are there to insult the left.


We wish it would have been better written book  but we also wish he had the nerve to go beyond finger pointing at the other side.  What he's describing -- the fake assery of FOX "NEWS" when it comes to the left --  is what the media eco-system he hails from does over and over.  In fact, that's what DEMOCRACY NOW! did every day from the start of August through October 30th when covering Kamala Harris.


They brought on Socialists to lie and attack.  And the biggest lie there was that they were Democrats.  Even Democrats don't like Kamala, they insisted with their coverage thereby achieving Amy Goodman's intent to suppress turnout for Kamala.


That lie also helped them attack Kamala constantly regarding Gaza.  Again, the lie was -- and continues to be in Higgins' book -- that the left was of one mind on Gaza.  But, as polling demonstrated, that was never the case for the Democratic Party's members.  Kamala had to navigate a tight rope but that reality was ignored as Amy Goodman repeatedly brought on Uncommitted to tell their lies -- frequently, the biggest one being that they were Democrats.  They were, in fact, Socialists (and one Communist).  Long before Eoin finished his book, we were pointing out here that DN! was using the FOX "NEWS" model. 


It takes a lot of nerve and a lot of hypocrisy to rightly attack Glenn Greenwald for his lies, distortions and FOX-ification while you not only refuse to do the same with your own peers but, in fact, also applaud them in the book -- Naomi Klein (a Socialist whose pro-Kamala message on DN! was hold your nose and vote for her -- again, the messaging from DN! was that even Democrats did not support Kamala), Adam H. Johnson, Branko Marcetic and so many more Socialists. 


We don't like Glenn, we have called him out here for years.  But when the left does what we call out in Glenn, we call out the left.  And when we say that we call out the left, we mean we call out Democrats, we call out Socialists, we call out Communists and we call out Greens.


Not only does Eoin refuse to do that, he can't even type the word "Socialist."  Political closets run deep.  And political closet cases worked overtime to defeat Kamala so we're in no mood to play and pretend this is some deep and important book.


It's trite and superficial.  The scope is beyond the page length.  It's 'finding' are generic and self-fulfilling.  Doesn't make them necessarily wrong but does reduce this allegedly important book to nothing more than a basic primer good only for someone brand new to the topic.

It's a year later and the MSM can now use the term "Socialist."  However, lefty media remains skittish.  More to the point, the point we made repeatedly was that AOC may run for president.  If she does, we should have a working knowledge of Democratic Socialism in place before she announces her run.  To educate the country on DS and AOC at the same time is expecting a bit much.

But where are the articles from the left about Democratic Socialism?  

It's left to the MSM to cover this topic.  For example, Eliza Collins and James Fanelli (WALL STREET JOURNAL) explain:

The nationwide group consists of chapters in all 50 states and counts more than 100,000 members. The group, which is often referred to as the DSA, says that it thinks “working people should run both the economy and society democratically to meet human needs, not to make profits for a few.” It describes itself as a political and activist organization, but not a party.

The DSA’s origins date to the 1970s, but its membership grew by the thousands when the group mobilized around the 2016 presidential campaign of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. While Sanders lost that campaign and a subsequent 2020 bid, his movement was the first warning sign to a Democratic establishment that voters were looking for change.
Over the past decade, the DSA has continued to gain members to varying degrees around the country, though its biggest strides have been in urban areas. The New York City chapter has been one of the most successful in growing membership and cultivating viable candidates.

After Kiros’s victory Tuesday, chants of, “DSA, DSA!” could be heard at her watch party.
While Sanders has long called himself a Democratic socialist and in many ways is seen as the leader of the new progressive movement, he isn’t an actual member of DSA, according to a spokesman.

Sanders spent much of his career as a gadfly within the Democratic Party, which he caucuses with despite being an independent. But following his 2016 bid, the progressive movement has grown—taking along many who consider themselves Democratic socialists, for whom Sanders has become a philosophical chieftain.
In 2019, Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, both Democratic socialists, were part of a small group of progressives who came into Congress with much fanfare, while also triggering panic from Democratic leadership. Both had been inspired by Sanders. In the next Congress, the group of socialists or progressives who are ideologically aligned is expected to be much bigger.
Many of its candidates have called for or Palestinian self-determination, pushed for increased taxes on the wealthy and universal healthcare.

Mamdani focused his mayoral run on the high cost of living in New York City, saying he wanted to expand free universal child care, make city buses free and freeze rents for cash-strapped New Yorkers. After taking office, he urged state lawmakers to increase tax rates on high-income earners and businesses. While he didn’t get those levies, his advocacy had an impact: Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and the state legislature recently approved a pied-Ă -terre tax on luxury second homes in New York City.
In the recent primaries, DSA candidates have also attacked incumbents over their ties to the powerful pro-Israel lobbying group the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a strategy that resonated with voters who have grown disaffected by the war in Gaza.

Are we going to do our job and address Democratic Socialism or not?  If AOC is the nominee in 2028, that's going to be a little late to start addressing the topic.  

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

Cloud of corruption surrounds Trump’s fundraising for library, ballroom, and other projects

Softbank reportedly made largest publicly disclosed contribution to Trump Presidential Library just before President Trump weakened an executive order regulating the AI industry

Text of Letter (PDF)

Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), along with Representative Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), opened an investigation into reports that Softbank Group’s (Softbank) recently donated $50 million to the Trump Presidential Library — the largest publicly disclosed contribution to the Library and a possible attempt to curry political favor. 

“The Trump Administration is the most corrupt in the nation’s history, and one apparent nexus of that corruption has been tens of millions of dollars that have been given by corporate interests to the President’s pet projects including his gold-encrusted ballroom,” wrote the lawmakers. 

On May 22, 2026, Politico reported that SoftBank Group had donated $50 million to President Trump’s Presidential Library project, making it the largest publicly reported contribution to the Library. The donation followed a December 2024 Softbank announcement that it would invest $100 billion in the United States during President Trump’s second term. On March 11, 2026, the Federal Trade Commission also greenlit Softbank’s $4 billion acquisition of DigitalBridge, a data center investment firm. 

The $50 million donation came before President Trump weakened an executive order regulating the AI industry. Softbank is “one of the largest AI investors in the world,” raising questions as to whether the donation was an attempt to buy political favors. The reported donation is the largest publicly disclosed contribution to the Trump Presidential Library to date. 

Softbank has previously contributed to the Presidential Libraries of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, but only after the Presidents had left office. This time, reports indicated that Softbank quietly made the contribution while President Trump is in office, and before any presidential library has been constructed.  

“These circumstances [under which the donation was made] raise concerns about the potential for bribery and whether donors are seeking favorable treatment from the Trump Administration through contributions that personally benefit a sitting President,” wrote the lawmakers. 

The lawmakers asked the Softbank CEO, Mr. Masayoshi Son, to explain the company’s decision to contribute and whether it was made in exchange for any promises by the Trump administration. 

Senator Warren has led the fight to prevent the Trump family from using the Trump Presidential Library for corrupt pay-to-play deals: 

  • In April 2026, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Blumenthal (D-Conn.), along with Representative Stansbury (D-N.M.), released new responses from Big Tech CEOs indicating that they have no public explanation for where as much as $63 million in settlement money to Donald Trump’s now-dissolved Presidential Library fund has gone. The lawmakers followed up with a new letter to President Donald Trump pressing for answers to solve the ongoing mystery of the missing millions.
  • In March 2026, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Blumenthal (D-Conn.), along with Representative Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), pressed ABC, Meta, X, and Paramount on their settlements with President Donald Trump, in which the companies promised to donate as much as $63 million to President Trump’s future Presidential Library.
  • In July 2025, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Blumenthal (D-Conn.), along with Representatives Moskowitz (D-Fla.), Raskin (D-Md.), and Stansbury (D-N.M.) unveiled the Presidential Library Anti-Corruption Act to close loopholes that allow presidential libraries to be used as tools for corruption and bribery.
  • In July 2025, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) released a new report exposing how companies, special interests, and foreign governments may be pledging donations to President Trump’s future Presidential Library as a corrupt tool to secure favorable outcomes from his administration.

###








Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Lizzo, the Rolling Stones, Patti Labelle, Madonna


Lizzo is addressing the reception to her latest album, Bitch, which made headlines this month after failing to chart on the Billboard 200 despite her previous album, Special, debuting at Number Two with 69,000 equivalent album units earned in 2022.

[,. . .]

When asked how she felt following the album’s release, Hourihane requested a “real answer, not a PR line.”

“I’m not going to rush you. There’s no rush for you to fall in love with the music, honey. I’ve never been that girl. I think right now — this is the non-PR — I hurt my own feelings,” Lizzo replied. “I was really stressed and I was really sad for a few days. Because I was like wait a minute, this is some of my best stuff. I want people to find it. I had to come to terms with the fact that not only is the music industry different, in the last three years — and we need to talk about that and we need to talk about the radio aspect that I got my ass chewed out for, but it’s happening and it’s true — but also my relationship and my connection musically with the world is different.”
[. . .]

Elsewhere in the conversation, Lizzo and Hourihane discussed the “Khia Asylum” — a controversial term used online to refer to formerly successful pop stars who have faded from the spotlight. The phrase has been criticized for being misogynistic in nature, as mainly female pop stars are targeted by the term. “First of all, I was so shocked when people kept saying Khia because it’s about Khia, the rapper, ‘My Neck, My Back.’ We still talk about her, her record,” Lizzo said. “I think that is even backhanded in itself to name it after this extremely talented, incredible pillar in the Black community and in Black rap music. Then it’s this weapon that targets only women, and a lot of Black women.”

“I think it’s a tool to bully artists and have power over them. It probably used to mean something but now I think it’s nonsense,” Lizzo continued. “I feel like I can’t be in the Khia Asylum. I have Grammys and world records in music. I have Number Ones. I have a diamond record. I am a successful artist.”

Meanwhile, Corinne Johnson (COLLIDER) focuses on the Stones:

By 1973, The Rolling Stones were already much bigger than the average rock band. They had become cultural icons that had a reputation that often overshadowed their actual music. The band’s image was built on controversy, excess and an endless amount of unforgettable hits that changed rock music forever. With albums like 'Exile on Main St.', 'Let It Bleed', 'Beggars Banquet', and 'Sticky Fingers' had cemented the band as one of the most important musical acts in rock history, and they did not have anything left to prove.
The Rolling Stones have always had an arsenal of iconic songs that have become staples in the rock music world. Songs such as "Gimme Shelter," "(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction," and "Jumpin' Jack Flash" are typically chosen when anyone wants to discuss their greatest songs. However, that could easily explain why one of their greatest songs ever recorded and released has been forgotten. On August 31, 1973, The Rolling Stones released their album 'Goats Head Soup', which featured their greatest song that has been forgotten, "Winter." Despite this song including everything that made The Rolling Stones special, it remains one of their most overlooked tracks.
Unlike their other songs that helped define their reputation, "Winter" delivered a different side to Mick Jagger. When you listen to the track, the song feels emotionally vulnerable and reflective despite their rebellious image. It showed listeners that the band was more than their image. The song features a gentle acoustic guitar and one of Mick Jagger’s most underrated vocal performances. In the song, he sounds lonely and more like he’s reflecting as he sings about distance, longing, and emotional isolation. The song almost ends up feeling more like a cinematic ballad than a traditional Rolling Stones song.


Here's the song.



Turning to Patti Labelle, Jahaura Michelle (GRIO)  reports:


Labelle was honored with a proclamation before treating fans to decades of R&B and soul classics.

Patti Labelle, known as “The Godmother of Soul,” returned to Brooklyn Friday night as the headliner for the annual BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Benefit Concert, where music, community and culture took center stage.
The event was held at the Lena Horne Bandshell in Prospect Park to celebrate the nonprofit’s 47th season serving communities across New York City. Ahead of her performance, LaBelle, 82, was presented with a special honor recognizing her contributions to music and culture.
The Philadelphia native opened her set with the 1991 gospel-R&B classic “When You’ve Been Blessed” before transitioning into fan favorites including “If You Asked Me To,” “Somebody Loves You” and “If Only You Knew.” Throughout the performance, audience members stood, sang along and danced as LaBelle performed hits spanning decades of her career.
 
 
Any poptimist could tell you that we’re living in an era of musical abundance—what with the continued success of stalwart superstars like BeyoncĂ© and Taylor Swift, alongside the crop of newer names who have taken the charts by storm, from Chappell Roan to Sabrina Carpenter. Even in such a packed market though, the past couple of months have seen one legendary name steal the spotlight once again: the Queen of Pop, Madonna.
This July, the Material Girl will release her 15th studio album, Confessions II, a sequel to her Grammy-winning 2005 album Confessions on a Dance Floor, which spawned hits such as “Hung Up” and “Sorry” all the way back in the early aughts.

With the marketing for this album, Madonna has been getting quite creative, giving herself a profile on the Grindr dating app, teasing a new track with Absolut, and hosting a surprise performance in the heart of New York’s Times Square. But, perhaps the greatest maneuver has been her effort to revive the fashion that defined her original Confessions era.


Closing with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Wednesday, July 1, 2026.  Chump's grift brings in over two billion dollas for himself, the wr in Irn continues, Chump's state fair continues to be n embarrassment, Clarence Thomas attacks trns people, and much more. 



Ben (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes how Chump has enriched himself while being president.  Ben Protess, Andrea Fuller, Eric Lipton and David Yaffe-Bellany (NEW YORK TIMES) report:

President Trump reaped a stunning windfall in his first year back in the White House, including about $1.4 billion from his family’s cryptocurrency businesses, a new filing shows.

All told, the president pulled in at least $2.2 billion, a figure that includes other parts of his vast holdings, such as his real estate assets. That compares to a minimum of $622 million his enterprises pulled in for all of 2024, before he returned to the presidency.

One of his biggest hauls in 2025 came when an investment firm tied to the United Arab Emirates bought nearly half of the Trump family’s main crypto company, World Liberty Financial, a transaction that blurred the line between foreign policy and private enterprise.



President Lyndon B. Johnson’s wife owned a profitable radio station. George W. Bush was on the board of an oil company while his father was in the White House. And Hunter Biden was paid by a Ukrainian natural gas company while his father was vice president.

But never before in American history has there been anything like Donald J. Trump, a president who in his first year back in office has collected about $1.4 billion in new revenues from cryptocurrency businesses that directly benefited from his actions as president, a financial disclosure report made public on Tuesday shows.

Overall, Mr. Trump’s revenue in 2025 jumped to at least $2.2 billion, compared with a minimum of $622 million in 2024 before he returned to office.

“It is completely unprecedented,” said Megan Gorman, a tax attorney and the author of a recent book, “All the Presidents’ Money,” that studied the history of presidential wealth dating back 250 years.

Generally, throughout history, Ms. Gorman and other historians said, American presidents have taken actions to try to separate themselves from corporate entanglements that might create conflicts.

“Public office, if anything, was a source of debt, not a source of revenue,” said Lindsay M. Chervinsky, a historian and the executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon.

Mr. Trump and his family have done the opposite, creating new business ventures that are profiting from actions Mr. Trump has taken since he returned to the White House.

Those include the pardon Mr. Trump issued in October to Changpeng Zhao, the richest man in crypto, who founded the company Binance, which has been a critical business partner to the Trump family’s own crypto venture. They also include legislation that Mr. Trump signed last July to promote a form of cryptocurrency called stablecoins, four months after his family-backed firm introduced its own stablecoin.


Let's move over to the ongoing war in Iran.  Brandon Weichert (NATIONAL SECURITY JOURNAL) notes:

The Strait of Hormuz is without a doubt one of the world’s most important waterways. Nearly 20 percent of the world’s oil flows through there, another nearly 20 percent of the world’s natural gas, one-third of the world’s agricultural goods, and countless critical industrial inputs that make the modern world work every day.
Since US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu started their regime change war of choice against the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Strait has been closed. Each day–every hour–that the Strait remains obstructed due to the war, the world comes closer to economic ruin.
There have, throughout the more than 120-day war, been instances where the Iranians allowed ships to pass through the Strait.

The United States and Iran have attempted to create some off-ramps to the war in the form of temporary ceasefires. But those ceasefires have been fleeting.
Because of the untenable nature of those ceasefires, the Iranians have generally kept the flow of ships and their goods tamped down well below the prewar average of trade through the Strait.
Contrary to what many believe, this reality does not harm the Iranians as much as it hurts the United States and the rest of the world. After all, Iran is one of the most heavily sanctioned countries in the world. Due to this, the Iranians have been made to become increasingly self-reliant–and to establish alternative modes of trade (via Chinese-run Belt-and-Road railways and Russian routes in the Caspian Sea).

Meanwhile, ironically, it is the Americans and their allies globally who are disproportionately suffering through the lockdown.
[. . .]
Even if we do somehow succeed in maintaining the MoU ceasefire, there will be serious second-order inflationary effects. Whereas before the war began, roughly 120 to 140 ships passed through the Strait per day, little more than 100 have been allowed to pass since the MoU was signed a week ago. There has simply been too much time that has been allowed to pass since the volume of the flow of goods was far greater than what it is now.
In other words, inflation is coming. And with inflation will necessarily come increased interest rates. That will, in turn, lead to a deteriorating economic situation. If we’re lucky and the ceasefire holds beyond what it has so far, the Iranians might let more ships out, and we can ameliorate this crisis over time.
At this rate, though, it does look as though the US president cannot accept the conditions of a longer-term ceasefire with Iran, and Iran fully understands how vulnerable the Americans are to the disruptions occurring in the Strait.


Fear of a big energy market disruption, when daily oil demand increasingly exceeds available supply, was a main reason Trump surrendered to Iran in the first place. At the G7 summit on June 17, Trump said, “We run out of reserves at about four weeks.” That would put the deadline in mid-July.

Maybe it’s more like August or September, but whatever the deadline, big economic problems will come if oil reserves run out and ships from the Gulf aren’t on the way bringing more. The markets did react positively when shipping began to pick up after the MOU, with oil futures dropping to around pre-war levels. But that won’t last if conditions stagnate or worsen.

Either way, Trump messed up this war so badly that the U.S. aim now is just to get back to something like the pre-war status quo. And at this point, even that looks unachievable.


Oman has proposed a joint mechanism with Iran to collect fees from ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, opening a new chapter in negotiations over one of the world's most strategically important waterways.

According to The New York Times report, Oman submitted a formal proposal to the US and other Western partners outlining a framework under which Iran and Oman would jointly collect payments from ships using the Strait of Hormuz.
Before the conflict, commercial vessels transited the strait without paying any charges. That changed after Iran effectively blockaded the route during the war, sending crude oil prices sharply higher and disrupting global shipping.

Since then, Iranian officials have repeatedly signalled that they intend to introduce a payment mechanism for ships using the passage.

Diplomatic sources cited in the report say Oman's proposal attempts to create a structured arrangement rather than allowing unilateral Iranian action.

Sasha Rogelberg (FORTUNE) explains the impact this is having on Americans:


A summer travel paradox has emerged: Even though international flights use considerably more jet fuel than domestic travel, the cost to fly within the U.S. has skyrocketed at rates far beyond that of flying abroad.

According to data from airfare search engine Skiplagged, domestic flight price growth has increased 23.2% from March 2025 to this month, while international flight costs have increased 11.5% in the same time period. This summer marks the highest domestic passenger prices for the season since 2022.
Compared to international flights, which consume 15,000 to 30,000 gallons of fuel—about 1,500 to 3,000 per hour as a result of larger aircraft and long-haul routes—domestic flights use about 1,800 to 2,7000 gallons per trip, or about 750 to 900 gallons per hour.

Jet fuel costs nearly doubled during the Iran war, with supplies dwindling in some parts of the world as a result of halted traffic at the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint through which 20% of global oil usually flows. Rising fuel costs caused panic in the airline industry: Willie Walsh, the outgoing director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), warned this month the global airline industry’s profits would be cut in half as a result of tepid demand, culminating in the worst financial year for aviation since the pandemic.

The anxieties, however, did not meaningfully materialize. Instead, the rising airfare costs indicate high demand for summer travel, combined with airlines successfully making a series of moves that effectively protected them from supply chain uncertainty from the war, such as leaning into premiumization and slashing certain routes. 
“It’s kind of a glass half full kind of scenario, where I think the outcome was not as bad as many predicted,” Christopher Anderson, a Cornell University professor of services management who studies the airline industry, told Fortune. “Because it wasn’t as bad, and the capacity is not there…we’re seeing elevated prices.”

The resilience is good news for the airline industry—but the pattern of increased prices ahead of a busy summer travel season also exposes the large portion of the American population who is now facing high travel costs, even to fly within the country. It’s yet another example of the K-shaped economy in action, where the wealthy can splurge on expensive airfare while most other households weigh tough travel decisions.

“Here in the U.S., we have a very bifurcated economy,” Anderson said. “And a lot of this turmoil that we’re seeing is the effects more on one segment of that economy than the other.”


While Chump's corruption brought him 2.2 billion last year, Aimee Picchi (CBS NEWS)  notes the average worker is doing worse in 2026 than they did in 2025:

American workers' share of the economic pie has fallen to its lowest level since at least 1947, when the federal government began tracking the data, according to an analysis by Federal Reserve economists. 

The measure, known as "labor share of income," tracks how much of the nation's economic output flows to workers in the form of wages and salaries, as opposed to the share that goes to investors and corporations through profits, dividends and other capital income. A shrinking labor share of income indicates that more economic gains are flowing to shareholders and business owners, rather than to workers.

As of early 2026, American workers received 54.1% of national income, according to research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. By comparison, that figure topped 65% almost 80 years ago, when the government began tracking the data following World War II. In early 2020, it stood at 57.7%, indicating that workers have continued to lose ground since the pandemic. 

Roughly 48% of Americans said their financial situation was worse in May than a year ago, the highest share since January 2023, according to a recent survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Three-quarters of Americans said their incomes aren't keeping up with inflation, according to a May CBS News poll. Roughly 29% of respondents said the economy was in good shape.





Meanwhile Chump's American state fair remains a failure.  John Casey (DAILY BEAST) notes:


A 110-foot Ferris wheel is the centerpiece of the Great American State Fair currently come to town in our nation’s capital, which is not a state the last time I checked. It is the brainchild of Freedom 250, an organization overseeing—or, rather, botching—the president’s $60 million marquee celebration of America’s 250th birthday.
On opening day, the Ferris wheel stalled. It lurched. It stopped. It started. Then stopped again. Freedom 250’s spokesperson Julia Friedland called it a “power hiccup.”

She didn’t know how right she was.

You could not have planned this level of epic and symbolic failure if you tried.
On opening night, Trump told another truly Trumpian whopper, claiming the fair drew 45,000 people. He also said everybody stayed until the end of his speech and “loved hearing about a truly successful America,” even as photographs showed dozens of attendees walking out while he was still talking.
Independent estimates placed opening night attendance at somewhere just north of 1,000, and days later, even the most frothy MAGA-loyal coverage from the scene couldn’t obscure the fact that crowds simply have not materialized.

When critical coverage rolled in, Trump did what Trump does: He woke up at 6:27 a.m. (likely, earlier still; it’ll surely take some time to massage those bruised sausage fingers into a state ready to rage-tweet) and fired off a Truth Social meltdown. “Do you think people appreciate what a fantastic job we did in building and operating the Great American State Fair at the National Mall, packed with happy people, and everybody loving it?” he wrote, before questioning, in full caps, whether Obama or Biden could have pulled it off.

The answer, Donald, is that they probably could have kept the lights on.
Because, you see, there has been dairy drama. On the fair’s first full operating day, its food hall lost power. Must have been another hiccup? Vendors stood in the dark. The entire ice cream supply melted. Would this have been an issue with raw milk? Raw milk from Melania the cow, perhaps? Well, it was MAHA day at the fair yesterday, so maybe RFK found out.
Workers were still waiting for a replacement shipment of the sweet treat the following morning. This is not a minor logistical calamity since ice cream, along with butter sculptures and dunk tanks, is at the heart of state fairs nationwide. Has anyone signed up for the Natalie Harp butter sculpture contest? And has anyone confirmed what hours the Don Jr. dunk tank will be operating?



Donald Chump and Jeffrey Epstein were best buddies from the late 80s going forward.  They were two of a kind.  Which is why Ewan Palmer's reporting for THE DAILY BEAST isn't surprising:

A woman who alleges she was sexually assaulted by Donald Trump when she was 13 years old has gone into hiding over fears of retaliation.

A family member of the woman, identified only as Jane Doe 4, told The Guardian that she is “staying off the grid” and away from the Trump administration amid the fallout from allegations that resurfaced in the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Jane Doe 4 alleges she was abused and trafficked by Epstein, and that the disgraced financier took her to New York or New Jersey and introduced her to Trump when she was about 13 years old in 1984. The White House has described the allegations as “total baselessness,” a view it says is supported by the fact that the Biden administration was aware of the claims but did “nothing with them.”


A federal judge has put the Justice Department on a deadline in the latest fight over the Epstein files, ordering the agency to release unredacted records tied to FBI interviews with a woman who accused Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her when she was 13, or explain why the documents should remain withheld.
U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan sided with investigative journalist Katie Phang, who sued acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and accused him of violating the Epstein Files Transparency Act by failing to publish all government-held documents related to Jeffrey Epstein and by improperly redacting released material.

The order gives the DOJ until July 2 to comply.
Sullivan’s decision covers FBI notes from interviews with a South Carolina woman who said Epstein introduced her to Trump in 1984, when she was about 13, and that Trump forced her to perform a sexual act. Trump has denied the allegation, and the White House has denied the woman’s story.

The woman’s claims surfaced in documents released as part of the DOJ’s Epstein files disclosure, including redacted FBI interview summaries, but dozens of pages related to the interviews have reportedly not yet been released.





Mayukh Saha (HEARTY SOUL) notes a recent witness who appeared before the House Oversight Committee:

Lesley Groff’s name appears more than 160,000 times in the Epstein files released by the Justice Department. For comparison, most people who crossed Epstein’s social orbit show up in tens of thousands of mentions, if at all. Groff shows up everywhere because for 18 years, she was everywhere. She booked the calls, scheduled the massages, and kept the calendar of one of the most prolific sex offenders in modern American history.
On June 9, 2026, that woman sat down for a transcribed interview behind closed doors before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime assistant said she personally arranged multiple phone calls between the disgraced financier and Donald Trump in the years before he became president. According to a transcript released by the House Oversight Committee, Groff told lawmakers she set up phone calls between her boss and President Donald Trump several times a year for at least a decade.

The Epstein Trump secretary connection raised immediate questions on Capitol Hill – and put a specific, calendar-level detail onto a relationship the White House has consistently described as brief and long-dead.
Groff, who worked for Epstein in New York for more than 18 years, was previously described by her boss as an “extension of my brain.” She appeared voluntarily for the June 9 interview, which was not under oath and not recorded. It marked the first time she faced questions since speaking to the FBI in New York in 2021, two years after Epstein’s death.


The Supreme Court revealed decisions yesterday and on Monday.  Of the really bad ones, one of the worst is the attack on transgender people.  At THE CUT, Becky Pepper-Jackson tells her story:


I first realized my participation in athletics as a trans girl was a question when I was going into sixth grade, at 11 years old. I was getting ready to sign up for my first season of track when my mom told me a West Virginia bill could mean I wouldn’t be allowed to play. I’m from a family of runners, but in junior high, my track coach encouraged me to try shot put and discus. She brought me over to the practice area and everybody was just super-friendly. It felt like a really nice community.
It’s very hard to learn that some people think it’s wrong for you to do the things you love. When the legislation passed, I instantly wanted to know what I could do. I wanted to keep playing, so it was a relief when we decided to take legal action. Now, I’ve been a part of this case for five years, and there have been some definite lows and highs. Ahead of my seventh-grade season, the initial injunction that let me play was dissolved by a district court. At that time, track was starting in two weeks. I was worried. I couldn’t miss tryouts, or I wouldn’t be on the team. Luckily, an emergency appeal was granted. When I found out, my mom and I hugged, and I gave my three dogs some love. We celebrated with mint chocolate-chip ice cream and rainbow sprinkles. I was ecstatic because I knew I could play with my friends again.
The 2024 Harrison County Middle School Championship was also a tough moment. Some girls from another school protested my participation in the event by scratching, or refusing to throw the shot put. It felt weird to know that people I’ve never met, who are my age, are protesting me when all I’m trying to do is have fun with my teammates — to be a kid like them. It feels targeted, because it is. My teammates were what helped me that day. They wanted to make sure it didn’t get to my head and affect my throwing or affect me on a deeper level. Everybody is really supportive; we want to see each other succeed. All the throwers stay close. At practice, we share tips. On the bus, we’ll double up in the seats. We’ll try to keep each other’s spirits up and beat the nerves. We talk and talk to take our minds off of the competition.




Yesterday's ruling attacks her rights.  And Tom Boggioni (RAW STORY notes that (In)Justice Clarence Thomas howled one filthy attack on trans people after another in his concurrence and that Thomas was being (rightly) called out:


According to Balls & Strikes Editor in Chief Jay Willis, Thomas' comments are reprehensible.

The legal analyst wrote on Bluesky, “Clarence Thomas's concurring opinion in the trans sports ban case in West Virginia contains some of the ugliest transphobic stuff I have ever seen in a legal opinion. Straight-up gleeful. Vile man.”

“Thomas simply couldn't join the opinion, this corrupt, misanthropic bigot had to throw in his two cents and put his bigotry into the record,” New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie concurred.

He elaborated, “… also this is a great example of how Clarence Thomas's self-satisfaction cannot hide the fact that he is not that bright. ‘man and woman,’ ‘boy and girl’ are social terms that categorize gender presentation, not descriptions of ‘biological’ sex. nor are they binary! this guy has spent the last 30 years of his life huffing his own farts and being surrounded by people who tell him that his farts smell like chanel #5 and it shows.”



The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld state bans on transgender girls and women competing in girls’ and women’s school sports, delivering a major victory to Republican-led states and a devastating defeat to trans students who had asked the justices to let them participate in public school life as themselves.

In a 6-3 decision written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, the court ruled that Idaho and West Virginia’s laws do not violate the Equal Protection Clause or Title IX. The cases, Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., centered on two transgender students: Lindsay Hecox, who sought to run track and cross country at Boise State University, and Becky Pepper-Jackson, a West Virginia girl who wanted to compete on girls’ teams at school.

For years, conservative lawmakers have positioned transgender girls’ participation in sports as an emergency, even as the number of students affected remains small. But the legal campaign was never only about who gets to run a race or join a team. It was about whether transgender people can be carved out of public life by category.

The majority rejected arguments that the laws discriminate against transgender students, relying on the court’s recent decision in United States v. Skrmetti to say the bans classify students by sex, not by gender identity or transgender status. Writing for the majority, Kavanaugh said the court would not require states or schools to make athlete-by-athlete determinations about whether a transgender girl who has taken puberty blockers or hormones has retained any athletic advantage.

“Particularly in the sports context, determining the effects of the puberty blockers and hormones taken by transgender athletes — and then comparing each of those transgender athletes’ abilities to those of other individual biological males and individual biological females in the relevant sport — would be an almost impossible task for a judge to perform on an equitable basis,” Kavanaugh wrote.




Let's note the sexism that's been involved in this issue from day one.  "Protect girls and women!"  From?  Males?  No.  That's not it at all.  Read the decisions from the Court which reflect the narrow and perverse stance of transphobes.  A trans girl born male is the transgressor.  And that's because society disowns and attacks males who do not live up to the notion of manly.   There's no concern about protecting those born girls who are trans boys.  No where in the ruling am I seeing anything about that.  'It's unfair!' I hear that from transphobes -- unfair for girls to compete against trans girls.  But no where in the verdicts did I see anything about trans boys -- born female -- being not allowed to compete on boys teams. 
 
Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:


As part of Trump Admin’s push to shut down the Department of Education, Trump is illegally kicking out special education programs, civil rights enforcement from Department

Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee; Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations; and Bernie Sanders, Ranking Member on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, led the entire Senate Democratic Caucus in demanding the Trump administration put students first, follow the law, and immediately reverse course on transferring special education programs and civil rights enforcement out of the Department of Education (ED). These latest moves are part of the Trump administration’s explicit effort to dismantle ED, threatening key funding, support and services for students, schools, and families nationwide.

“The administration’s latest attempts to dismantle the Department of Education through the four Interagency Agreements (IAA) announced June 16, 2026 are outrageous and put the educational outcomes of students and their rights in the classroom at risk,” wrote the senators in a letter to Education Secretary McMahon.

On June 16, 2026, the Trump administration announced four Interagency Agreements (IAA) that would illegally move the administration of special education programs under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), and vocational rehabilitation programs authorized under the Rehabilitation Act from the ED to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). They also transfer fundamental civil rights enforcement responsibility away from ED to the Department of Justice (DOJ). In their letter to ED Secretary Linda McMahon, Senators Murray, Baldwin, and Sanders demand that the Trump administration follow the law in which Congress authorized these programs to be carried out by ED, including most recently in annual bipartisan funding legislation for Fiscal Year 2026. 

Despite announcing this illegal transfer of programs, this Administration has refused to provide information regarding what office within HHS will carry out special education programs, leaving teachers, students, and families with even greater uncertainty about where to turn to ensure their rights are protected. Burying special education programs in a sprawling HHS with significant other responsibilities, instead of at a Department of Education a fraction of the size solely focused on education, will jeopardize outcomes for students with disabilities.

The most recent reauthorization of IDEA passed by Congress reiterates that the responsibility for administering the law is clearly vested with ED, along with various duties vested in the Secretary of Education, including allotting funds to States and carrying out oversight among other activities. However, the law does not contain any provisions that would permit ED to offload its responsibilities for special education or vocational rehabilitation programs to another agency.

“Special education and vocational rehabilitation are education programs. Any attempt to move these programs to HHS would fundamentally alter the purposes of these services, upending fifty years of work that took place at the federal, state, and local level to improve educational and employment outcomes for people with disabilities,” wrote the senators. “It appears the administration values its backward goal of dismantling ED over the faithful execution of the law and improving opportunities and outcomes for children, youth, and students with disabilities.”

These transfers come as the administration has successfully worked to undermine core functions and statutory responsibilities of ED, following sweeping and unlawful firings, workforce reductions, and reorganization last year that have already undermined the very goals of the Education Department. At the same time, ED moved almost all programs supporting elementary and secondary education to multiple agencies with limited capacity and expertise administering similar programs. Wasting time and resources to scatter education programs all over the federal government does nothing to help children and families while only making it more complicated for states and school districts to administer important federal funding. Further, isolating special education programs away from all other federal K-12 programs risks isolating students with disabilities themselves.

Meanwhile, the transfer of the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) out of ED also comes as the Trump Administration has failed to uphold the federal government’s obligations to protect students from unlawful discrimination. In 2025, ED’s OCR reached the fewest resolution agreements in over 12 years and failed to reach a single resolution agreement related to sexual harassment, sexual violence, racial harassment, discriminatory school discipline, or the seclusion and restraint of children with disabilities, with over 12,000 pending cases that were under investigation by OCR at the start of this Administration.

Despite this backlog, the administration is attempting to illegally transfer OCR’s functions to the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division (CRT), which has lost an estimated 75% of its civil rights staff attorneys since January 2025, making it wholly unequipped to handle the over 23,000 complaints OCR receives and evaluates annually. The Senators also raised concerns that while OCR is currently required to evaluate every single complaint it receives, DOJ CRT can pick and choose the cases it takes to court. Under this IAA, students whose complaints are not prioritized by DOJ CRT may never see their rights vindicated.

The senators reiterated that Congress appropriates annual funding to ED to help States and local educational agencies carry out programs and ensure children, youth, students, and families are served in accordance with federal law. The annual bipartisan appropriation bills approved by Congress do not provide affirmative authority to ED to transfer special education funding or vocational rehabilitation services to HHS, nor ED’s civil rights enforcement responsibilities to DOJ CRT.

“We have a simple demand: follow our nation’s education and appropriations laws as Congress wrote them to protect students’ most basic right to a quality education. More than 80 education, disability, parent, and civil rights groups have vocally opposed the recent IAAs and other departmental changes. We call on this administration to immediately cease implementing these IAAs, fully implement IDEA and the Rehabilitation Act as Congressionally directed, and take immediate action to strengthen civil rights enforcement—instead of burying students’ cases behind more bureaucracy. Our students and their families deserve nothing less,” concluded the senators.

This letter was led by Senators Murray, Baldwin, and Sanders and co-signed by Senators Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Alex Padilla (D-CA), Jack Reed (D-RI), Angus King (I-ME), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Chris Coons (D-DE), John Hickenlooper (D-CO), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Ed Markey (D-MA), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Andy Kim (D-NJ), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), Mark Warner (D-VA), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Peter Welch (D-VT), Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Raphael Warnock (D-GA), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Brian Schatz (D-HI), Jon Ossoff (D-GA), Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), Tina Smith (D-MN), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Elissa Slotkin (D-MI), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), John Fetterman (D-PA), Gary Peters (D-MI), and Michael Bennet (D-CO).

The full letter is available HERE and below:

Dear Secretary McMahon:

The administration’s latest attempts to dismantle the Department of Education (“ED”) through the four Interagency Agreements (IAA) announced June 16, 2026 are outrageous and put the educational outcomes of students and their rights in the classroom at risk. These actions illegally move the administration of special education programs authorized under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), vocational rehabilitation programs authorized under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Rehabilitation Act), and the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) from ED to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). They also transfer fundamental civil rights enforcement responsibility away from ED’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) to the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division (DOJ CRT). Congress authorized these programs to be carried out by ED, and Congress annually appropriates funding to ED to carry out these authorized programs, including most recently in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026. The administration’s actions fly in the face of what Congress has required, directly undermine every child’s right to a quality public education in this country, and must be immediately reversed.

Since ED was established, Congress charged it with the responsibility of carrying out special education and vocational rehabilitation programs and authorized the administration of these programs under the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS). Similarly, Congress assigned civil rights enforcement responsibilities to the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights at OCR. The Department of Education Organization Act of 1979 explicitly prohibits the Secretary from abolishing any offices established under ED and from altering any assigned delegation of functions. You have also acknowledged in congressional testimony that only Congress can determine whether to dismantle ED and its programs. Make no mistake – the IAAs rolled out by this administration dismantle ED and illegally circumvent Congress. While ED’s purported position is that these are “proofs of concept” for Congress to codify, other statements from ED and White House staff contradict the alleged “temporary” nature of these moves. Last year, the White House even claimed that ED was “abolished.” ED has not been abolished, and it is not within the administration’s authority to move the administration of these programs to any other agency. In fact, Congress affirmed on a bipartisan, bicameral basis earlier this year, “that no authorities exist for the Department of Education to transfer its fundamental responsibilities under numerous authorizing and appropriations laws, including through procuring services from other Federal agencies…” and that these agreements will “create inefficiencies, result in additional costs to the American taxpayer, and cause delays and administration challenges in Federal funding reaching States, school districts, and schools.”

Special education and vocational rehabilitation are education programs. Any attempt to move these programs to HHS would fundamentally alter the purposes of these services, upending fifty years of work that took place at the federal, state, and local level to improve educational and employment outcomes for people with disabilities. It appears the administration values its backward goal of dismantling ED over the faithful execution of the law and improving opportunities and outcomes for children, youth, and students with disabilities. This administration has refused to provide information regarding what office within HHS will carry out these weighty responsibilities under this agreement because it has not been determined. This lack of forethought demonstrates how little concern it has for students with disabilities and their learning. The administration couldn’t possibly know that this will be in the best interest of children and families because it doesn’t even know where and how these programs will be administered in the future.

The most recent reauthorization of IDEA passed by Congress, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004, reiterates that the responsibility for administering the law is clearly vested with ED. The law also vests the Secretary of Education with various duties, including allotting funds to States; carrying out monitoring and oversight of States’ implementation; reviewing and approving State performance plans required under the law; subsequently reviewing and making annual determinations of State compliance under law; and furnishing technical assistance to States; among other activities. However, the law does not contain any provisions that would permit ED to offload its responsibilities to another agency.

Congress created a clear federal oversight role for ED because of our nation’s ugly history of denying children with disabilities a free appropriate public education. This critical federal enforcement has allowed ED to maintain accountability and find States in violation of IDEA, such as when Texas set an illegal cap on special education identification leading to a deliberate under-identification of children with disabilities and when New Mexico failed to maintain appropriate state special education funding. Clearly, federal oversight is a necessary component of our nation’s special education system. Without it, families and children with disabilities are left to fight alone to secure services they are entitled to when schools and states fail to meet their obligations.

Additionally, Congress authorized the Secretary of Education to carry out vocational rehabilitation programs in Titles I, III, V, and VI of the Rehabilitation Act. Congress directed the Secretary to undertake various responsibilities in administering the vocational rehabilitation programs, including awarding grants to designated State agencies; approving unified State plans; establishing performance standards and indicators required under the law; and supporting designated State agencies in the provision of preemployment transition services including highlighting best state practices and consulting with other federal agencies; among other activities. Unsurprisingly, the Rehabilitation Act does not contain any provisions that would permit ED to offload its responsibilities to another agency.

These important responsibilities support nearly ten million individuals with disabilities and their families throughout our nation. ED’s actions have already caused them significant harm and uncertainty. This arrangement is the latest callous attack on Americans with disabilities who need quality services and rely on federal support. It follows the sweeping and unlawful firing of 121 employees at OSERS during the government shutdown—an action Congress ultimately had to reverse. This administration’s workforce reductions and reorganization last year also eviscerated ED’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR), costing taxpayers up to $38 million, as mounting backlogs in OCR’s critical work left parents of students with disabilities in the dark about the status of their civil rights complaints. At the same time, ED moved almost all programs supporting elementary and secondary education to multiple agencies with limited capacity and expertise administering similar programs, segregating these programs from those supporting our youth with disabilities and compromising decades of progress toward inclusive education. Each of these actions has undermined ED’s ability to fulfill its obligations under IDEA and the Rehabilitation Act. ED is now illegally transferring responsibilities to HHS—an agency undergoing major disruptions and whose principal subagency charged with supporting individuals with disabilities was proposed for elimination by the administration—and DOJ—an agency that this administration is weaponizing against the American people. This is in addition to the responsibilities unlawfully assigned to other agencies through interagency agreements for which this administration still has not explained full costs, potential benefits, and operational details.

Under this administration, OCR has failed to uphold the federal government’s obligations to protect students from unlawful discrimination. ED’s decision to transfer fundamental civil rights enforcement responsibilities to DOJ CRT will only make things worse. In 2025, ED’s OCR reached the fewest resolution agreements in over 12 years and failed to reach a single resolution agreement related to sexual harassment, sexual violence, racial harassment, discriminatory school discipline, or the seclusion and restraint of children with disabilities. ED has repeatedly refused to answer basic questions regarding the status of over 12,000 pending cases that were under investigation by OCR at the start of this Administration.

Instead of correcting OCR’s disastrous track record under this administration and working to rebuild OCR after taking a hatchet to it, this administration has chosen to waste taxpayer funds attempting to illegally transfer OCR’s functions to DOJ CRT. Under this administration, DOJ CRT has lost an estimated 75% of its civil rights staff attorneys since January 2025. DOJ CRT is not equipped nor designed to handle the over 23,000 complaints OCR receives and evaluates annually. While OCR is required to evaluate every single complaint it receives, DOJ CRT uses prosecutorial discretion to pick and choose the cases it takes to court. Under this IAA, students whose complaints are not prioritized by DOJ CRT may never see their rights vindicated, meaning thousands of students facing discrimination are likely to be ignored by the federal government. This is an unacceptable outcome for the millions of students and families across the country.

Congress appropriates annual funding to ED to help States and local educational agencies carry out programs and ensure children, youth, students, and families are served in accordance with federal law. The annual bipartisan appropriation bills approved by Congress do not provide affirmative authority to ED to transfer special education funding or vocational rehabilitation services to HHS, nor ED’s civil rights enforcement responsibilities to DOJ CRT. In fact, the only transfer authority provided to ED by the annual appropriations bill is the authority to transfer one percent of discretionary funds between education appropriations accounts, so long as no such appropriation is increased by more than three percent by any such transfer. Such a limited transfer within ED is not what is contemplated here. Moreover, transfers of any other type, including the type contemplated by this IAA, are prohibited by section 512 of Division B of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, which states, “None of the funds made available in this Act may be transferred to any department, agency, or instrumentality of the United States Government, except pursuant to a transfer made by, or transfer authority provided in, this Act or any other appropriation Act.”

As with the authorizing statutes, the annual appropriations process clearly requires ED to carry out both IDEA and Rehabilitation Act programs and to operate OCR at ED. ED has the expertise in working with state educational agencies, state vocational rehabilitation agencies, and local school districts in the administration of special education and vocational rehabilitation programs and for resources and oversight in complying with federal civil rights laws. Schools in local communities and state educational agencies rely on the guidance and technical expertise from the educational experts at ED to carry out these programs. Congress recognizes the expertise that specific agencies provide and deliberately decides which agency to vest authority with when passing laws. Congress was clear when it vested ED with the authority to carry out special education programs in 2004, and vocational rehabilitation programs in 2014, and did not provide any mechanism in the law for ED to transfer that authority to another agency. The June 16th IAAs fly in the face of laws enacted by Congress, annual appropriations requirements, and practice in states.

We have a simple demand: follow our nation’s education and appropriations laws as Congress wrote them to protect students’ most basic right to a quality education. More than 80 education, disability, parent, and civil rights groups have vocally opposed the recent IAAs and other departmental changes. We call on this administration to immediately cease implementing these IAAs, fully implement IDEA and the Rehabilitation Act as Congressionally directed, and take immediate action to strengthen civil rights enforcement—instead of burying students’ cases behind more bureaucracy. Our students and their families deserve nothing less.

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