Chump is a garbage can fire always. And where to start is the question every day. Let's start with TV. Marni Rose McFall (NEWSWEEK) reports Chump's latest tantrum:
President Donald Trump has
called on NBC to fire Seth Meyers, after being made the subject of
multiple roasts on the host's late-night show.
Newsweek has
contacted a representative for Meyers via an online contact form and
NBC via email outside of regular working hours for comment.
Trump’s remarks come at a
pivotal moment for the late-night television landscape. Hosts Jimmy
Kimmel and Stephen Colbert have faced suspension and cancellation,
respectively, and the president has regularly made public criticisms
over what they say on their shows, including having called Meyers a “deranged lunatic.”
These
attacks have highlighted the increasingly fraught relationship between
politics and entertainment, and concerns about freedom of speech.
That fat ass said and did every disgusting thing you can do on stage in 2024 while campaigning. And now he wants to be offended? TV critic is not the role of the US President no matter who holds the office and he needs to stop threatening people's employment because it's an abuse of power and because it only reminds the entire country that Chump only knows how to destroy jobs, not how to create them. Making things worse, a lunatic on a board who thinks he serves Donald Chump and not the American people. Giana Levy (DEADLINE) reports:
Brendan Carr, the chairman of the FCC, reshared Donald Trump’s demand for Seth Meyers to be fired from NBC after being made the subject of his roasts on the host’s late-night show.
Trump posted on Truth Social
on Saturday, “NBC’s Seth Meyers is suffering from an incurable case of
Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS). He was viewed last night in an
uncontrollable rage, likely due to the fact that his ‘show’ is a Ratings
DISASTER. Aside from everything else, Meyers has no talent, and NBC
should fire him, IMMEDIATELY!”
It's past time a lawsuit was brought against Brendan Carr. He doesn't understand his job duties, clearly. He is abusing his position of power -- a position America did not vote him into. His moves continue to raise a mountain of ethical questions. He needs to be sued and he also needs to be called before Congress We are not supposed to have government censorship of the arts in this country.
Next up for Chump. All it took was diving poll numbers, former supporters going on Tik-Tok to burn their MAGA gear, members of Congress on both sides standing up to him and the public's growing suspicion that he's hiding something with regards to his best friend Jeffrey Epstein. That's all it took to put Chump in turnaround. Helen Sullivan (BBC NEWS) reports:
US
President Donald Trump has called on House Republicans to vote to
release the Epstein files, in a reversal from his previous position.
"House
Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files, because we have
nothing to hide," Trump wrote on Truth Social on Sunday night.
The
shift from days of Trump fighting the proposal comes as the House is
expected to hold a vote this week on legislation that would force the
Justice Department to release the files to the public.
Supporters
of the proposal appear to have enough votes to pass the House, though
it is unclear whether it would pass the Senate.
AP's Kevin Freking and Chris Megerian explain, "The president's
shift is an implicit acknowledgement that supporters of the measure have
enough votes to pass it the House, although it has an unclear future in
the Senate. It is a rare example of Trump backtracking because of opposition within the GOP." Ashley Ahn (NEW YORK TIMES) adds, "In a Sunday interview on ABC News, Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, who has helped lead congressional efforts
to release the files, suggested that “100 or more” House Republicans
could vote in favor of releasing the Epstein files this week despite
opposition from Mr. Trump. The House speaker also predicted a
significant number of G.O.P. votes."
Changing topics, ABC7 CHICAGO reports:
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has left its "Operation Midway Blitz" command center at Naval Station Great Lakes, city officials confirmed to ABC7 Chicago Sunday.
The development comes as 200 federalized Texas National Guard members also vacated the base this week, and Customs and Border Protection Cmdr. Greg Bovino also left the Chicago area, being seen during a new surge in immigration enforcement in Charlotte, North Carolina.
And they took the chaos with them to North Carolina. Another peaceful city destroyed by Chump's gestapo. Eduardo Medina and Sonia A. Rao (NEW YORK TIMES) report,
The Trump administration crackdown on
illegal immigrants arrived in Charlotte this weekend, resulting in 81
arrests on Saturday. It continued on Sunday, with Border Patrol agents
fanning out across the largest city in North Carolina.
An
immigrant rights group said the tally, reported by a senior Border
Patrol official on social media, was the largest number of immigrant
arrests in the state’s recent history.
The
presence of the agents, led by Gregory Bovino, who directed similar
operations in Chicago and Los Angeles this year, has startled people in
one of the fastest-growing cities in the country. Much of that growth
has been spurred by international migration, especially from Latin
America. The city is also home to large corporations in the retail,
banking and manufacturing sectors.
Nick Sullivan (CHARLOTTE OBSERVER) explains that every where in the city of Charlotte was a target -- even churches:
Congregants of an east Charlotte church scattered into the woods Saturday when masked federal agents arrived and detained one of their members, according to witnesses. About 15 to 20 church members were doing yard work on the property off Albemarle Road while their children played games and their spouses cooked meals. Agents parked just outside a closed gate leading to the church parking lot and ran into the yard, said the pastor, who did not want to identify himself or his church. The agents asked no questions and showed no identification before taking one man away, whose wife and child were inside at the time, the pastor said. They attempted to grab others, too.
The location didn't matter and citizenship didn't matter. Charlotte's WCNC reports:
As US Customs and Border Patrol began its operation in Charlotte on Nov. 15, 2025, a handful of encounters with agents were reported across the city. This included an encounter near a bar and grill on South Boulevard that a man said led to his truck's window being smashed.
Elsewhere in Charlotte, another encounter was captured on viral video. WCNC Charlotte
first brought the video live in a special edition of our Live Impact
News show on the WCNC+ platform. The location is unclear, but the video
shows agents confronting a woman holding a cell phone. She then stumbles
on a grassy area. Agents then proceed to handcuff her, and as she is
handcuffed as she says, "I'm a US citizen," and bystanders yell at
agents. Her phone is also confiscated during the encounter.
More storm trooper action from the lawless and feckless Chump administration. Over on the Democratic Party side, there are leadership issues as well. US House Rep Ro Khanna is only one of many who feels eight years of being the Democratic Party leader in the Senate is enough and Chuck Schumer needs to step down and let someone else lead. Cheyanne M. Daniels (POLITICO) notes:
Rep.
Ro Khanna is buckling down on criticisms of Sen. Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer, throwing his support behind bolder Democrats as he calls for a
change in Democratic leadership.
The
California Democrat told host Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press”
on Sunday that though Schumer was “terrific” under former President Joe
Biden, the New York lawmaker no longer inspires confidence in Democratic
voters.
“The
question is what is the future of Democratic leadership. Who is going
to be effective? And most Democrats around the country just don’t think
that person is Chuck Schumer,” Khanna said.
“I
mean, he doesn’t inspire confidence. He’s not bold. He’s out of touch
with the grassroots. He’s someone who cheer-led us into the war in Iraq.
He doesn’t have the moral clarity on Gaza. He couldn’t say [Zohran]
Mamdani’s name. And this was the final straw, where he was not strong on
fighting for health care.”
Some get it, some don't. Let's note another who gets it, Arwa Mahdawi (GUARDIAN):
Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, has a pair of very sweet imaginary friends. They’re a middle-class couple called Joe and Eileen Bailey and they live on Long Island. At one point the imaginary couple, who feature in Schumer’s 2007 book,
Positively American, were called the O’Reillys. According to the Hill,
one Schumer aide said the name then was changed because the publisher
thought O’Reilly was “too ethnic” for mass consumption. Another aide
said that claim was false, and Schumer just wanted a name that “sounded
more national”. Naming strategy aside, the key point here is that
Schumer has said he runs all his policy decisions by this completely
fictional couple. He’s referred to them hundreds of times throughout his political career.
With that in mind, you can probably thank the
Baileys for the latest Democratic disaster. The US government has just
emerged from the longest shutdown in history. About 700,000 federal employees worked without pay, desperately needed food benefits were disrupted, court cases were delayed, national parks closed and flights got cancelled.
All
this pain was supposed to be in service of a very specific gain. Senate
Democrats triggered the shutdown because they wanted to take a stand on
healthcare. The 24 million people
who get their health coverage through Affordable Care Act marketplaces
(commonly known as Obamacare) are going to see their premiums more than double
after an enhanced tax credit expires at the end of the year. The
Democrats want to extend the credits; the Republicans have refused to
commit to a vote on the issue.
You
can certainly argue that shutting down the government to force a vote
on Obamacare subsidies was the right thing to do. But it is very hard to
find any strategic sense in putting Americans through a world of pain
for 43 days only to shrug your shoulders and give up. Particularly as
Schumer himself said the subsidies were a “life or death” issue and
there was “no f**king way” the Democrats would cave on it.
[. . .]
Whatever Schumer does, I suggest he stop his conversations with the
Baileys stat. We don’t need you talking to your imaginary friends,
Chuck. We need you listening to the concerns of real people.
Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:
Washington, D.C. — Today, Senator Patty Murray
(D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee; Senator
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee; Senator Kirsten
Gillibrand (D-NY), Ranking Member of the Senate
Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban
Development, and Related Agencies; and Senator Tina Smith, Ranking
Member of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation,
and Community Development led a letter
alongside their Democratic colleagues to Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Scott Turner calling on him to
immediately halt reported plans to make drastic changes to the Continuum
of Care (CoC) program, which could result in nearly 200,000 Americans
being forced out of their housing and back into homelessness.
The 42 Senate Democrats call on
Secretary Turner to instead use the authorities that Congress already
gave him to expeditiously renew existing CoC grants for fiscal year 2025
to prevent massive disruption and frightening uncertainty for hundreds
of thousands of vulnerable Americans in the coming months.
“We write to express our deep concerns regarding the
instability the entire homeless support system could face if funding
delays, uncertainty, and rushed policy changes continue,” write the Senators. “HUD
must immediately reconsider these harmful and potentially illegal
changes that could result in nearly 200,000 older adults, chronically
homeless Americans with disabilities, veterans, and families being
forced back onto the streets. As Secretary, you have the authority to
avoid this worst-case scenario by carrying out the previously planned
and Congressionally authorized two-year NOFO, and we strongly urge you
to do so expeditiously.”
The lawmakers note that the reported and potentially illegal plans to
upend the program, which is the largest source of federal grant funding
to prevent homelessness, would cause sudden and significant shortfalls
and real pain across the country. Specifically, they write: “The
most troubling of these changes is a new, arbitrary cap on the amount
of funds that may be used for permanent housing. Currently, 87 percent
of CoC funds support permanent housing, but the new NOFO reportedly
limits the amount of funding for permanent housing to only 30 percent.
This appears to be in contravention of the McKinney-Vento Homeless
Assistance Act, undermines local decision-making authority, and ignores
decades of research that has proven that permanent supportive housing
and rapid rehousing are less costly and more likely to be successful in
providing long-term stability than other strategies, particularly for
chronically homeless people and families.”
“Each new administration can make policy changes when they take office,” they continue.“While
we may not always agree on those policy changes, we should never have
to question whether agency officials will faithfully follow the law and
work to minimize harm to our constituents and communities when
implementing those new policies. Reports of HUD intentionally blocking
staff from examining the legality of the fiscal year 2025 NOFO changes
with its own attorneys are deeply troubling.”
The Senators note that, since January 20, repeated, chaotic policy
changes affecting the program have created needless, costly uncertainty
for communities across the country—and the Department has failed to
communicate clearly with stakeholders and Congress about its plans. “For
months, our staffs have sent HUD countless questions about its intents
and actions around CoC funding that have remained unanswered,
undermining Congress’s ability to carry out its legislative and
oversight functions. Real people in every community across the country
rely on these funds to address homelessness. The funding competition
process for fiscal year 2025 has not begun, and with CoC project awards
beginning to expire in less than two months, HUD is simply out of time.”
“There is a better way forward,” they conclude. “HUD’s
current path risks causing a dangerous spike in street homelessness and
creating chaos in urban, suburban, and rural communities alike by
forcing nearly 200,000 chronically homeless Americans with disabilities
and families back onto the streets. We implore you to make the better
choice and expeditiously renew current CoC grants for fiscal year 2025
as authorized by Congress to protect communities and avoid displacing
thousands of our nation’s most vulnerable individuals.”
The full letter is available HERE and below:
The Honorable Scott Turner
Secretary
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
451 7th Street S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20410
Dear Secretary Turner:
We write to express our deep concerns regarding the instability
the entire homeless support system could face if funding delays,
uncertainty, and rushed policy changes continue. Reports indicate
that the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) intends to
issue a new fiscal year 2025 Continuum of Care (CoC) Notice of Funding
Opportunity (NOFO) and make substantial changes to how funds are
awarded. HUD must immediately reconsider these harmful and
potentially illegal changes that could result in nearly 200,000 older
adults, chronically homeless Americans with disabilities, veterans, and
families being forced back onto the streets. As Secretary, you have the
authority to avoid this worst-case scenario by carrying out the
previously planned and Congressionally authorized two-year NOFO[1], and we strongly urge you to do so expeditiously.
The Continuum of Care program is the largest source of Federal grant
funds for providing a wide range of housing and services for individuals
experiencing or at risk of homelessness that are responsive to local
community needs. On September 29, 2025, Politico reported that the
Department intends to make wholesale changes to the fiscal year 2025 CoC
NOFO.[2] The
most troubling of these changes is a new, arbitrary cap on the amount
of funds that may be used for permanent housing. Currently, 87 percent
of CoC funds support permanent housing, but the new NOFO reportedly
limits the amount of funding for permanent housing to only 30 percent.
This appears to be in contravention of the McKinney-Vento Homeless
Assistance Act[3],
undermines local decision-making authority, and ignores decades of
research that has proven that permanent supportive housing and rapid
rehousing are less costly and more likely to be successful in providing
long-term stability than other strategies, particularly for chronically
homeless people and families. Today, CoC funds serve over 750,000
Americans experiencing homelessness each year, and every community will
feel the impact of this dramatic cut. The cut will be largest for major
cities in absolute terms, but rural communities—who experienced a 12
percent increase in homelessness between 2023 and 2024[4] and are more reliant on Federal funding—are likely to feel the impacts most severely[5].
In your written testimony for the June 2025 Senate Appropriations
Committee hearing on HUD’s fiscal year 2026 budget request, you stated
that your budget aimed to “better serve the American people while
maintaining necessary assistance for the elderly and disabled.”[6]
However, seniors are the fastest-growing demographic among people
experiencing homelessness. The share of the homeless population aged 60
years and older in 2020 was 2.6 times higher than it was in 1990.[7]
By dramatically cutting funding for permanent housing, tens of
thousands of older adults and people with disabilities who currently
reside in CoC funded permanent supportive housing could soon lose their
homes and lose access to the supportive services they need to take care
of their physical and mental health needs.
Each new administration can make policy changes when they take
office. While we may not always agree on those policy changes, we should
never have to question whether agency officials will faithfully follow
the law and work to minimize harm to our constituents and communities
when implementing those new policies. Reports of HUD intentionally
blocking staff from examining the legality of the fiscal year 2025 NOFO
changes with its own attorneys are deeply troubling. We are also
concerned by HUD’s lack of communication with grantees, especially as
any new NOFO at this point in the year would not provide grantees with
adequate time or opportunity to plan for sweeping changes before some
projects begin to run out of CoC funds in January 2026. Over the past
decade, HUD has always issued the annual CoC NOFO by mid-August and
provided on average 82 days for CoCs to develop applications. Without a
NOFO published as of November 12, 2025, thousands of CoC project grants
that expire between January and June 2026 will be at risk of funding
disruptions or shuttering operations.
Further, HUD has taken several steps since January 20, 2025 to spark
chaos and disrupt grantee operations, including applying new and likely
illegal conditions to previously awarded CoC grants[8], repeatedly recompeting the fiscal year 2023 CoC Builds funding[9], proposing to eliminate the CoC program altogether[10],
repeating rhetoric used by the President to villainize homeless people,
and gutting the HUD workforce that implements the CoC and other
community development programs[11].
All these actions raise serious questions and concerns about whether
HUD is intentionally violating the law to prevent Congressionally
appropriated funds from reaching the people and communities they were
intended to support.
For months, we have heard from countless front-line workers,
faith-based and non-profit service providers, mayors, and governors who
have been frantically attempting to navigate HUD’s actions and anxiously
waiting for HUD to provide details around the fiscal year 2025 NOFO
changes. For months, our staffs have sent HUD countless questions
about its intents and actions around CoC funding that have remained
unanswered, undermining Congress’s ability to carry out its legislative
and oversight functions. Real people in every community across the
country rely on these funds to address homelessness. The funding
competition process for fiscal year 2025 has not begun, and with CoC
project awards beginning to expire in less than two months, HUD is
simply out of time.
There is a better way forward. Congress already authorized HUD to
compete CoC funds on a two-year basis for fiscal years 2024 and 2025,
and communities already went through a two-year planning process. The
shift to a two-year funding cycle had strong bipartisan support and
aimed to reduce the burden on communities and provide greater
predictability of funding, and members on both sides of the aisle
support this approach.[12]
HUD should make the responsible choice to renew current CoC grants,
proactively work with communities to promote other proven strategies
“based on research and after notice and public comment”[13], and work to ensure any policy changes meet all legal requirements to avoid more funding delays.
HUD’s current path risks causing a dangerous spike in street
homelessness and creating chaos in urban, suburban, and rural
communities alike by forcing nearly 200,000 chronically homeless
Americans with disabilities and families back onto the streets. We
implore you to make the better choice and expeditiously renew current
CoC grants for fiscal year 2025 as authorized by Congress to protect
communities and avoid displacing thousands of our nation’s most
vulnerable individuals.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
###
[1] Section 242 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024 (Public Law 118-42) provided: “For
fiscal years 2024 and 2025, the Secretary may issue a 2-year
notification of funding opportunity, including any alternative
procedures or requirements as may be necessary to allocate future
appropriations in the second year, for the award of amounts made
available for the continuum of care program under subtitle C of title IV
of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11381 et
seq.), notwithstanding any conflict with the requirements of the
continuum of care program.”
[2] Hapgood, Katherine. “Trump admin looks at deep cuts to homeless housing program.” Politico, September 29, 2025. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/29/trump-admin-looks-at-deep-cuts-to-homeless-housing-program-00585770?nid=0000014f-1646-d88f-a1cf-5f46b7bd0000&nname=playbook&nrid=029a6cb0-ce47-467b-b7ef-0a38ceb899fd.
[3] 42 U.S.C. § 11381 et seq.
[4] HUD. “The 2024 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress”. December 2024. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/sites/default/files/pdf/2024-AHAR-Part-1.pdf
[5]
National Alliance to End Homelessness. “Visualizing the Impact of the
Presidents’ FY2026 Budget: Returns to Homelessness and Major Setbacks
Could Be Ahead”. June 3, 2025. https://endhomelessness.org/resources/research-and-analysis/visualizing-the-impacts-of-the-presidents-fy2026-budget-returns-to-homelessness-and-major-setbacks-could-be-ahead/
[6]
Turner, E. Scott. Statement Before the Committee on Appropriations,
Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and
Related Agencies. June 11, 2025.
https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/secretary_scott_turner_testimony.pdf.
[7]
Byrne, Thomas. “Persistence of a Birth Cohort Effect in the US Among
the Adult Homeless Population.” December 26, 2024.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2828494
[8] King County v. Turner (2:25-cv-00814)
[9] National Alliance to End Homelessness v. Turner (1:25-cv-00447)
[10]
HUD. “Congressional Justifications for the FY2026 Budget, Office of
Community Planning and Development – Homeless Assistance – Emergency
Solutions Grants.” https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/CFO/documents/2026_CJ_Program_HAG.pdf.
[11]
According to data provided to the House and Senate Committees on
Appropriations, the Office of Community Planning and Development lost 37
percent of its workforce between January 2025 and June 2025.
[12]
Letter to Secretary Scott Turner from 22 Republican Members of the
House of Representatives. October 28, 2025.
https://endhomelessness.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/GOP-Letter-to-HUD-on-the-CoC-Grant-Final-w-Signatures-10.28.25.pdf
[13] 42 U.S.C. 11386b (d)(2).
The following sites updated: