Saturday, March 28, 2026

No Kings protests took place across the country

Across the United States today, people participated in No Kings protests.  Ernesto LondoƱo and Sonia A. Rao (NEW YORK TIMES) note

In big cities and small towns across the world, protesters gathered for thousands of rallies against President Trump and his policies and actions, with the self-stated goal of fighting dictatorship.

Demonstrators, including elected officials and community leaders, chanted defiant messages and carried homemade signs that condemned the war in Iran, threats against voting rights and the White House’s mass deportation push, among other topics. Organized by a coalition of activist groups under the banner “No Kings,” it was the third such countrywide protest in the past 10 months.

 

Lex McMenamin, Fabiola Cineas, Rachel Leingang and Amy Qin (GUARDIAN) explain, "More than 3,000 No Kings protests against the Trump administration were held nationwide and in more than a dozen countries on Saturday, according to a coalition of organizers that includes “anti-authoritarian” groups Indivisible and 50501, labor unions and other grassroots organizations."  NPR has a photo essay here

CNN notes, "Throughout the day, crowds gathered to march, sing, dance and wave signs in major cities, suburbs and small towns across red and blue states, with huge marches taking place in Los Angeles and New York. A marquee event in Minnesota featured a Bruce Springsteen performance and a slate of high-profile speakers."  Natalie Oganesyan and Ted Johnson (DEADLINE) add:


Robert De Niro, Jane Fonda, Bruce Springsteen, Joan Baez and many other famous figures led and attended the third round of No Kings protests, part of some 3,000 marches scheduled nationwide today.

In New York, the Heat actor was among those leading the procession, alongside Rev. Al Sharpton and Attorney General Letitia James. During his speech, he called the gatherings a “great rallying cry, and hugely successful as millions of us have answered the call.”

[. . .]

In St. Paul, Minn., Springsteen was also joined by Sen. Bernie Sanders, Rep. Ilhan Omar and Gov. Tim Walz at one of the largest rallies in the country, where he sang “Streets of Minneapolis,” the song he introduced after the ICE killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good.

“This past winter, federal troops brought death and terror to the streets of Minneapolis,” the heartland rock musician said. “Well, they picked the wrong city. The power and the solidarity of the people of Minneapolis, Minnesota was an inspiration to the entire country. Your strength and commitment told us that this is still America, and this reactionary nightmare and these invasions of American cities will not stand.” 

Fonda also appeared, and read a statement from Becca Good, the wife of Renee Good. “The world now knows that my wife sparkled with sunshine and shone with kindness that is unmatched,” Good said in the statement. “We were robbed of an incredible human. It has made people pause, and take a breath, and have to choose sides. We choose the side of love.”





Thousands of Americans plan to gather on Saturday for No Kings protests across the country. They have a simple message: People are tired of a government that protects the powerful and abandons ordinary Americans.

They are tired of fighting costly and illegal overseas wars while we face an affordability crisis at home. They are horrified by the Trump administration’s cover-up of the Epstein files and the lack of accountability for the rich and powerful who crossed lines. And they are sick of Immigration and Customs Enforcement terrorizing our communities.

As more Americans are sent to fight abroad and the survivors of abuse are silenced at home, people increasingly feel dispensable.

But we are not disposable. We are not dispensable. The American people are uniting to demand accountability.

For too long, Americans have seen our leaders fight harder for the Epstein class than for the working class. They have watched our system shield elites instead of delivering fundamentals such as affordable health care, housing and education.

The fight to release the Epstein files exposed not only a broken justice system, but also a deep economic and moral divide.

Jeffrey Epstein built a network of elite and powerful individuals, some of whom believed they could abuse young girls and women — many from working-class backgrounds — without consequences. Many survivors of Epstein’s abuses have courageously spoken out, and over the past year, sparked a moral reckoning in our country. They have exposed a two-tier system of justice that protects the wealthy and powerful and fails those who have been abused.

The administration’s failure to hold accountable those involved in Epstein’s abuses has fueled deep distrust in our government and its ability to deliver for the public good.

Rebuilding faith in our system requires transparency and accountability.

In every state, people turned out.  Let's hop around and note some of the protests across the US today.  Joshua Bowling and Julia Goldberg (SOURCE NEW MEXICO) report:


As a local grunge band played their final song of the morning, they set the tone for the rest of the day’s remarks at Saturday’s No Kings protest in Albuquerque’s Montgomery Park.

“Well maybe they’re the fascists, America,” the New Mexico band ShyGuy belted out, in a modified cover of Green Day’s 2004 anti Iraq-war hit “American Idiot.” “I’m not a part of the MAGA agenda.”

Protestors across the state flocked to the park in northeast Albuquerque to protest what they described as the Trump administration’s attacks on elections, the war in Iran and the Epstein files. The event played out as others did all across the country, with millions expected by day’s end. 

In Albuquerque, as the sun loomed overhead, attendees gathered to hear from Stacey Abrams, a Democrat who previously ran to be governor of Georgia and worked to boost statewide voter turnout in the 2020 election.

“Across this country, we have watched the devolution of democracy in real time,” she told a standing room-only crowd in Albuquerque. “You have someone who was elected president, but makes himself a dictator.” 

She took aim at the Trump administration’s attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives nationally and said that she viewed the effort as inherently anti-American.

“DEI is in our DNA in America,” she said. 



“Democracy has cost this country too much” to relinquish now, said Brian Doherty, a U.S. Army veteran from Fort Pierre who attended the Pierre demonstration. “I pray the people of this country go out and vote.”

Throughout the protest, he reminded people to check if they were registered to vote.

This was the third round of No Kings protests across the country. Previous protests in June and October drew crowds of thousands.

This was the largest crowd for a No Kings demonstration in Pierre, according to Dawson Lewis, Hughes County Democrats chairperson and organizer. About 20 people RSVP’d for the demonstration, he said, but nearly 200 showed up at its peak.

“Policies are at the whim of one man,” Lewis said. “Gas prices going up, food prices going up, fertilizer prices going up for the farmers. I think people are just getting tired of the chaos.”





Thousands of people gathered for a “No Kings” protest in front of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver on Saturday. The demonstration was one of more than 70 organized across the state. 

Taking place nationwide, these protests mark the third “No Kings” protest since President Donald Trump began his second term. 

Attendees protested the Trump administration’s policies, including recent actions to enter war with Iran and expand immigration enforcement actions by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). They also spoke out against the failure to reach a budget agreement for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), causing a partial government shutdown.

Protestors carried signs stating, “No Monarchs except butterflies” and “Hate will not make America great,” among others, as they walked around Lincoln Veterans Memorial Park in downtown Denver. Some stood along Broadway holding up their signs for cars to honk in support.

At 1:15 p.m., attendees walked to the corner of East Colfax Ave. and Lincoln St. to begin a three-mile march, ending back at the State Capitol. 

Eladio Jaramillo, 48, carried a sign honoring Alex Pretti, the intensive care nurse with ties to Colorado, killed by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis on January 24. He said he wanted to keep Pretti’s memory alive.

“Obviously, things aren't getting any better,” Jaramillo said. “I think the more numbers we can get out here to show that people are fed up with not just Trump, this whole administration, the better.”




Bob Sesek knows that protesting the Trump administration is a small, and likely ineffective, act in Alabama. But he went to Toomer’s Corner in Auburn Saturday with about 700 people doing just that Saturday morning.

“I feel like we’re at a point where if we don’t stand up, there will be no more chance to stand up. I really believe that,” Sesek said. “I know we’re in Alabama, and Alabama’s not going to flip, or switch, or do anything like that, but the rest of the county needs to see that even people in Alabama are fed up and know that this is wrong.”

[. , ,]

Jimmy Stirling, organizer of Calhoun County’s 50501 Movement, which hosted the protest, invited candidates running in the state’s primary elections to speak to the crowd.

“We as a group will not be voting for anybody with the letter R behind their name come November,” he said. “This is a coalition. We have got to make change come November, and it’s gonna take all of us, whether we’re Democrats, independents, whatever party or no party. “

Protesters in the crowd cheered and hollered as the candidates shared the changes they wanted to make. Pam Howard, a Democratic candidate for Alabama House District 40, told the crowd that she didn’t want to run “an ideological campaign.”

“Our government should not be telling us how to live. Our government should be creating an environment that gives us the opportunity to live our best lives.”


Kyle Pfannenstiel (IDAHO CAPITAL SUN) notes:


The protest came just a day after the Idaho Legislature passed what some advocates call the most extreme anti-transgender bathroom ban in the U.S. House Bill 572, which heads to Gov. Brad Little for final consideration, would create a felony crime for people who violate the bathroom ban twice within five years, punishable by up to five years in prison. 

Maxine Durand, a Democratic candidate for governor in Idaho, told the crowd she’d rather be talking about other policies — like Medicare for all, raising the minimum wage, and expanding the state’s public education system.

“Instead, I have to argue with old men about where I get to pee,” Durand told the crowd. 

Organizers with the American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho encouraged protestors to tell the governor to veto the bill. 

[. . .]

Terri Pickens, who is also running for Idaho governor as a Democrat, said Idahoans like the government to “stay out of our businesses.”

“We certainly want them to stay out of our bedrooms, our doctors offices, our schools and our libraries. But they can’t seem to get that right in Idaho,” Pickens said. 


 Emilia Otte, Theo Peck-Suzuki and Reginald David (CONNETICUT MIRROR) note:


Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., Attorney General William Tong and Gov. Ned Lamont spoke at a protest organized by Indivisible CT on Saturday morning. In the afternoon, more protesters gathered on the opposite side of the Capitol, where Rep. Josh Elliott, D-Hamden, who is challenging Lamont for the Democratic nomination for governor, spoke alongside labor leaders and representatives for the Connecticut for All Coalition. 

Lamont, Tong and Blumenthal focused on the actions taken in Connecticut to check some of the policies of the federal government. Tong said he had filed more than 50 lawsuits against the Trump administration, in response to the federal government’s attempts to cut health care and school funding, to block the Revolution Wind project and to institute broad tariffs.

Lamont criticized the SAVE America Act, which, if passed by congress, would require people to present proof of citizenship and a photo identification in order to vote. He also criticized the administration’s request for funds to continue the war in Iran. 

“ This is 250 years [after the U.S. was founded]. We’re not going backwards. We’re not going backwards in this country, and God, we’re not going backwards in the state of Connecticut. We’re going to stand up and fight,” Lamont said. 


Juan Salinas II and Cindy Gonzalez (NEBRASKA EXAMINER) report:


Hundreds of Nebraskans protested against the Trump administration Saturday along Nebraska Parkway in Lincoln, and thousands protested near Northwest Radial Highway in Omaha as part of No Kings demonstrations statewide.

[. . .]

“I don’t like what’s going on … I know it’s not the world I want to live in,” said Ford Kloepper, a 17-year-old Lincoln resident.

Kloepper said people his age are going to take the “brunt” of Trump’s “mistakes.” He pointed to the recent U.S. conflict in Iran as a motivator to protest for him, as he doesn’t want to get “drafted into a war in the Middle East for no reason at all.”

Many of the protesters, much like previous demonstrations, held anti-Trump signs with slogans like, “Trump lies” and “Stop Trump, save democracy.” Others held American flags and wore costumes. Volunteers from different groups gathered signatures for ballot initiatives and at least one candidate. One of the petitions sought to let voters decide on a state constitutional amendment requiring larger majorities to repeal or change any law passed by voters. Volunteers for nonpartisan U.S. Senate candidate Dan Osborn collected signatures to get him on the November ballot. 




Dalton Roberts of Des Moines, who marched with the crowd, said it was his first time coming to one of the demonstrations. “I’m being tired sitting around just complaining about it to myself and friends,” he said.

Roberts said he was frustrated by the lack of accountability and “checks and balances” reining in Trump’s actions on the federal level, and said the peaceful protest was a way to ensure those in power understand that many Americans do not agree with Trump’s actions and want to push back.
“The closest comparison I can think of is kind of like in the military — there’s a reason why everyone gets into the formation, gets into the those rows and everything,” Roberts, a veteran, said. “It’s kind of a show of power, or at the very least, it’s supposed to show some amount of agreement (that) what’s going on is wrong.

“I feel like it’s important to also show up, obviously, because if no one’s saying anything, then no one can complain,” he said. “They have reason to be like, ‘well, no one complained about it while it was happening.’ So showing that vehement disagreement with what’s going on is important.”
At the Capitol, thousands held signs and participated in chants and songs led by event organizers who rallied both against Trump and the actions of Iowa Republicans at the state level.
 





Thousands of people crossed the Broadway Bridge connecting Little Rock and North Little Rock Saturday as rallies and other events were held in Arkansas as part of the third “No Kings” demonstrations nationwide against the Trump administration.

Protesters sang and waved signs opposing the Iran war, mass deportations and other actions by President Donald Trump’s White House as they walked across the bridge spanning the Arkansas River. The event was among rallies in 19 cities around Arkansas.

“I believe in the cause that these people are standing for today, and [protesting] is such a little thing to do, but at age 86 that’s all I can do,” said Little Rock resident Mary Ruth Brown, who attended her third “No Kings” protest. Brown held a sign reading “Dump Trump” that she said a friend chose for her.

The People’s Protests and Marches of AR hosted the Little Rock rally, which  included a “Community Connect Fair” and several speakers on the North Little Rock side of the river. Indivisible LRCA, the League of Women Voters of Arkansas and 50501 Arkansas also hosted the Little Rock event. 



As of a week ago, the Helena rally would have looked and sounded quite different. The organizers were initially unable to obtain a permit for the weekend event after the Montana Department of Administration changed event permit rules in February, effectively prohibiting all weekend rallies that required setup. But after the shift prompted public outcry, the state reversed its guidelines on March 20.

Standing on the capitol’s nearly off-limits Flag Plaza, Democratic former Montana Gov. Steve Bullock critiqued Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte for initially creating an obstacle to the weekend event.

“When the current governor tried to silence your voices to make it so that you can not gather here on the steps of the people’s house, you stood up and said ‘No, that’s not who we are,’” he said. (The state initially said it changed the permitting to save money.)

Claudia Clifford, an organizer with Indivisible Helena, a local chapter of the national Indivisible group involved in organizing No Kings protests, praised the public, media and state Democrats for pushing to change the state permit rule. 

“The strength of our constitutional rights of free speech and assembly are seven days a week and that helped provide this venue today,” said Clifford to an audience which nearly filled the entire Capitol front lawn. 



In Gallatin, about 300 showed up to the No Kings protest on Main Street. A solo guitarist strummed and sang the late Tom Petty’s classic song, “I won’t back down”

Local residents Josh and April Mitchell said there isn’t enough poster board to hold all of their complaints about the president. Josh Mitchell held a sign saying “Only you can prevent fascism.”

They attended the protest “just to support everything that’s supposed to be right about humanity,” he said. Under the Trump administration people are being killed in the streets and deported illegally, he said.

Brian Sullivan with The Equality Project told the crowd it would be easy to get discouraged by the “full-on assault” on marriages and LGBTQ rights. “But you showed up,” he said. He pointed out that the Tennessee Legislature’s first bill passed this year attacked the LGBTQ community and alluded to a House-passed measure that pries into LGBTQ healthcare. Other measures were deferred “because you showed up,” he said.

Cole Shepherd, an Air Force veteran, also addressed those gathered in Gallatin, criticizing the president’s actions abroad: “We’re sending our young men and women into harm’s way for no reason,” he said.




At the march’s end, protesters met near the Tivoli Fountain on the capitol campus. Community organizations lined the diagonal streets, musical groups performed and speakers took the stage, urging attendees to remain peaceful. 
“In the face of oppression and authoritarianism, the people fight back,” executive director of Washington state American Civil Liberties Union Michele Storms said to the crowd. “When this administration grabs power for itself and destroys the values of justice for all, what do the people do?”

“The people fight back!” yelled the crowd. 


People spoke out and shared at the protests.  Trish Christakis (6 SOUTH FLORIDA) quotes Floridian Katy Yankie stating, "I've spent my life standing up for others, so this is a natural extension of that.  There are so many ways we can get involved and I encourage everybody before the rights are taken away to find somebody to get involved."  Lindsey Toomer (COLORADO NEWSLINE) quotes health care worker Sarah Williams who took part in the Denver protest, "I worry for the youth of our nation … I worry about women’s rights. I worry about our community. I worry about people of color.  I believe that we need to value all people and have the very simple kindergarten rules of just treat everybody with kindness and how you want to be treated."  Annie Knox (UTAH NEWS DISPATCH) quotes Mecha de U of U's Samantha Reagan speaking to the crowd in Salt Lake City, "We must fight for a future where the needs of working class people are put before racist deportation campaigns and endless wars."  Molly Rains, William Skipworth, Maya Mitchell and Dana Wormald (NEW HAMPSHIRE BULLETIN) quote Portsmouth’s Market Square participant Katie Jarvis stating, "I am alarmed, frightened, and embarrassed right now to be an American citizen.  I think the way rights, the rule of law has been tossed out, whether it's an immigrant or a citizen, that the administration is trying to intimidate people."  In Philadelphia, Emily Neil (WHYY) quotes college student Mark Laywhyee stating, "I come from an immigrant family, myself.  So to see DHS, and specifically ICE officers, in our airports and in our schools and hospitals and invading every part of our life, just to attack and persecute immigrants, the people that are the lifeblood of this country --  it's very disheartening to myself and my family."   Sterling Sewell (MISSOURI INDEPENDENT) quotes 14-year-old Leo stating, "I believe we should stop misusing ICE to deport innocent civilians."  Christine Condon and Rhiannon Evans (MARYLAND MATTERS) quote Baltimore's Kerry Bracy, "It's everything. It is the illegal wars, it is flouting laws. It is ignoring the fact that there are three coequal branches of government. The racism, the misogyny, cronyism, the oligarchy."  Alex Baumhardt, Shaanth Nanguneri and Robin Linares (OREGON CAPITAL CHRONICLE) quote Portland participant Grace Mitchell stating, "All of my outrage can’t fit on this sign. The way our education is being treated, the money that's being taken away from science and programs, those are all things that really hurt me."






Cousins Jennifer and Jackie Arteaga, of Mexican descent, said current events seemed almost surreal, keeping the American dream out of reach. They said they feared for family members who don’t have documentation. 

“It feels like our country is a joke … with a government that’s so unjust,” said Jennifer Arteaga, 25, who attended with her 3-year-old son. “It’s his future we’re talking about.”

Jackie Arteaga, 20, lives 20 minutes from the proposed detention facility, and said she worries about seeing ICE agents in her community. 

“It’s a scary feeling to know that I might be seeing them at the Wawa by my house,” said Jackie Arteaga. “What do I do?” 

Jennifer Arteaga criticized the use of the empty warehouse for ICE, saying that resources could be used to house homeless people in the area instead. Jackie Arteaga also worried about the impact of the facility on her area’s water and sewage system — which state officials cited as barriers in administrative orders earlier this month.



Protesters carried U.S. flags, some of them positioned upside down to signal dire distress. There were many signs critical of the Trump administration. 

Megan McKay, a Madison resident who grew up in the Chicago area, told the Wisconsin Examiner that immigration was the main issue that brought her out to protest for a third time since Trump took office, due to personal experience that has shaped her outlook. She said her father immigrated to the U.S. from Belfast, Northern Ireland when he was “wee” but received a deportation letter in 2019. She said they were lucky to be able to work through the system to allow him to stay.

“We, quote, unquote, look like we’re supposed to be here. We speak English. I feel like it’s completely unacceptable what this current administration is doing,” McKay said. “Our country was founded on immigrants. We are the land of opportunity, and we’ve completely lost sight of that.”

McKay said she thinks more people are having an “aha” moment about Trump, and she is confident there could be a blue wave in this year’s midterm elections. Wisconsin will have critical elections on the ballot for governor, the state Legislature and Congressional seats in November



In other news,  AP reports:

The number of American service members wounded in the Iran war has grown beyond 300, with more than two dozen troops injured this week from attacks on a Saudi air base.

Iran fired six ballistic missiles and 29 drones at Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan air base in an attack Friday that injured at least 15 troops, including five seriously, according to two people briefed on the matter. U.S. officials initially reported that at least 10 U.S. troops were injured, including two who were seriously wounded.



FBI Director Kash Patel is pressing to release a decade-old investigative file involving Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-California) and a suspected Chinese intelligence operative, recently dispatching agents in the bureau’s San Francisco office to quickly redact the files before they are released publicly despite no evidence of wrongdoing by Swalwell, according to three people familiar with the effort.

The potential release is part of the Trump administration’s aggressive push to investigate Swalwell, a vocal critic of President Donald Trump and a leading Democratic candidate for California governor, according to the people familiar with the effort. It is highly unusual for the FBI to release case files tied to a probe that did not result in criminal charges.

[. . .]

The lengths that Patel’s circle is going to in the bid to pursue a political foe of the president have raised alarms within the bureau, where some officials fear that releasing the files — even with redactions — could compromise law enforcement sources and investigatory methods, making it harder for the FBI to gain trust with potential witnesses.


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

Warren: “I'm all for older Americans working longer if they want to work longer. But let’s not confuse wanting to work with being forced to work because the Trump administration is taking a sledgehammer to Social Security”

Social Security Expert: Raising retirement age could lead to up to 50% benefits cut

Video of Exchange (YouTube)

Washington, D.C. — At a hearing of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questioned Dan Adcock of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare about Republicans’ plans to raise the retirement age.

Mr. Adcock explained that if the Trump administration were to raise the retirement age by one year, it would cost retirees $24,000 in missed benefits, which amounts to about a 7% benefit cut. If the administration were to raise the retirement age by three years, it would amount to a 20% benefit cut.

Mr. Adcock also highlighted that a cut would disproportionately hurt low-income individuals and people without a college degreee—who are more likely to work physically demanding jobs and have to retire early. He underscored that people who retire early out of need often live less on average, meaning that a combination of raising the retirement age on top of a shorter retirement would amount to an even steeper cut.

“I'm all for older Americans working longer if they want to work longer. But let’s not confuse wanting to work with being forced to work because the Trump administration is taking a sledgehammer to Social Security,” said Senator Warren.

“Social Security is not charity. It is a promise…that people have earned. The Trump administration is trying to strip away the promise, trying to chisel it, trying to shrink it up, and then rebrand it as an opportunity to work. Americans aren't buying it and we will keep fighting back,” Senator Warren concluded.

Senator Warren’s Social Security Emergency Inflation Relief Act would increase benefits by $200 a month for every senior and would protect the program long-term.

Last spring, Senator Warren launched the Social Security War Room, a coordinated effort for Democrats to fight Trump’s mishandling of the Social Security Administration. Through that effort, she has exposed inconsistencies in SSA’s customer service metrics under Commissioner Frank Bisigano and investigated the agency’s mishandling of customer service through staff cuts and reassignments.

Transcript: Hearing on Examining the Social Security Retirement Earnings Test
Senate Special Committee on Aging
March 25, 2026

Senator Elizabeth Warren: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. So, when he ran for President in 2024, Donald Trump repeatedly promised that he “wouldn’t touch” Social Security. And as soon as he took office, he immediately directed Elon Musk—who thinks Social Security is a “ponzi scheme”—to DOGE his way through the Social Security Administration. He slashed staff, he created new administrative hurdles that make it harder for Americans to get their checks—money that they earned. That is effectively a benefits cut.

Senate Democrats have fought back, and we have forced the Trump Administration to reverse course on some of their most harmful policies. But this fight is not over. The Social Security Administration is still facing a customer service crisis, and the Trump Administration and Republicans are still looking for ways to cut Social Security. So their current approach is: making Americans work until they drop dead.

So, just listen to what Trump’s appointees are saying: When asked about raising the retirement age, Social Security Administrator Frank Bisigano said: “everything’s being considered and will be considered.”

Mr. Adcock, you are a Social Security expert. How would raising the retirement age affect Americans’ benefits?

Dan Adcock, Director of Government Relations and Policy at the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare: Well, simply put, it’s a benefits cut. It doesn't matter whether you claim benefits at 62 or 70 or how long you live, it is a benefit cut any way you slice it. And so, for every year you decide that you’re going to raise the retirement age, you are losing $24,000 of income for every year.

In your future benefits, for every year it’s increased, you are losing about 7% of your benefits.

Senator Warren: So raising the retirement age on Social Security by one year costs $24,000 and, over your lifetime, is about a 7% benefit cut. Is that right?

Mr. Adcock: For each year.

Senator Warren: For each year?

Mr. Adcock: Yeah, that’s right. Some of the proposals being discussed would raise it from 67 to 69 or 67 to 70.

Senator Warren: So, if you go to 70 — if you do the math — how big is the cut?

Mr. Adcock: Well, it ends up being about a 20% future cut.

Senator Warren: 20% future cut. Okay. So, Frank Bisignano is not alone in this. After the Republicans blew trillions of dollars on the tax cut for their rich buddies in their Big Beautiful Bill, Dr. Oz said the way we dig out of the deficit is having, “the average American work a year later and not retire.”

Mr. Adcock, how many Americans without a college degree work in physically demanding jobs?

Mr. Adcock: In that category of people who don't have college educations, about 41% of them.

Senator Warren: So what does it mean to work an extra year?

Mr. Adcock: It means an extra year that you don't have benefits — and especially when we’re talking about this particular group of people who need to retire early — generally their longevity isn't as long. I think I have seen studies where when you take the bottom half of the income scale, they live about five years less than the people at the top of the income scale.

Senator Warren: Wow.

Mr. Adcock: And the other part of this is, if you do have a physically demanding job, you are likely to be from a community of color. In these situations it means that you’re going to need to claim benefits early. Today under current law, if you claim early at 62, you're taking about a 30% cut to your benefits, had you not waited until your full retirement age, which is currently at 67. But if you were to raise the retirement age to 70, we are talking about a 50% cut.

Senator Warren: Wow. And I just want to add in this, there are obviously also people who have college degrees who also have physically demanding jobs.

Am I right on that?

Mr. Adcock: Absolutely.

Senator Warren: My favorite example are kindergarten teachers. Try it sometime. But unsurprisingly, Dr. Oz is not thinking about the millions of Americans who work in manual labor and have physically demanding jobs, many of whom have ground their bodies for decades at construction sites, hauling boxes in warehouses, scrubbing bathroom floors and literally may not be capable of adding work.

Indeed, as you say, these are often people who have to retire early because they are just physically spent. And look, I'm all for older Americans working longer if they want to work longer. But let’s not confuse wanting to work with being forced to work because the Trump administration is taking a sledgehammer to Social Security.

Instead of hanging those workers out to dry, we should be expanding and protecting Social Security, especially when tariffs and war are now driving up prices for seniors, for everybody in the country.

So, Mr. Adcock, how could we pay for bigger Social Security benefits?

Mr. Adcock: Our preferred solution would be making the wealthy pay their fair share.

Senator Warren: Yeah, that seems right to me. Look, we’ve got to make sure the wealthiest Americans pay their fair share and not force seniors to work until they drop dead.

Right now a billionaire — Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Elon Musk — pays as much in Social Security taxes as someone who makes $175,000 a year. I have a bill to fix that and it would raise enough money to increase benefits by $200 per month for every senior, and help stabilize Social Security and make sure it is around for the long haul. Social Security is not charity. It is a promise. And it is a promise that people have earned. The Trump administration is trying to strip away the promise, trying to chisel it, trying to shrink it up, and then rebrand it as an opportunity to work.

Americans aren't buying it and we will keep fighting back. Thank you Mr. Chairman.

###


 Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Barron Does His Duty And Enlists" went up Friday and the following sites updated:  


 

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Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Barron Does His Duty And Enlists"

barron enlists

 


Isaiah's latest THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Barron Does His Duty And Enlists."  Dressed in his best M*A*S*H outfit, Barron stands before his father Donald Chump who declares, "Show us that Corporal Klinger grit that the men in our family have in abundance."    Isaiah archives his comics at THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS.   

The Snapshot

Friday, March 27, 2026.  Chump's illegal war of choice is harming the economy while exposing him as an idiot who has no idea what he's doing or how to fix it, Kristi's Corey got fired from the US government this week but, through March 31st, they can still travel on a private plane on the taxpayers' dime, Chump's friend Jeffrey Epstein continues to remain in the news cycle, and much more.



The war in Iran will lead to a surge in inflation this year, as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz pushes up prices for oil, gas and other commodities, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Thursday.

The inflation rate in the United States will average 4.2 percent this year, more than 1 percentage point higher than the group’s previous forecast, made late last year, the Paris-based organization said. Across the Group of 20 nations, inflation is forecast to average 4 percent this year, 1.2 percentage points higher than previously expected.


The war in the Middle East continued to weigh on the U.S. housing market, as mortgage rates climbed for the fourth week in a row, squeezing Americans already struggling with high housing costs.

The average 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage rate climbed to 6.38 percent, according to the mortgage-financing giant Freddie Mac, up from 6.22 percent the week before and the highest level since the first week of September.

That rate is still significantly below its peak of 7.79 percent in October 2023. Until the war started, rates had been gradually declining, falling below 6 percent in the last week of February. The drop in rates had offered hope that more prospective buyers would enter the market, but rates have since marched steadily higher.

Along with the financial cost, there's also the cost in human lives.   13 US service members have been killed and at least 200 injured.  At least 1500 Iranians have been killed as well.  Because there was no real planning for this war so many developments have arisen -- ones that should have been planned for if you're going to war.  That does include the concerns now on the part of the US government regarding the Strait of Hormuz.  (Malaysia states the Iranian government has given it permission to utilize the shipping lane.) 


The Iraqi government on Wednesday accused the United States of attacking a clinic on a military base in western Anbar province, killing seven members of the Iraqi military and injuring 13. The incident could strain relations between the two nations amid the war in neighboring Iran.
The airstrike constituted “heinous aggression,” to which Iraq reserved “the right to respond by all available means,” said Sabah al-Numan, a spokesman for the commander of Iraq’s armed forces. It “undermines the relationship between the peoples of Iraq and the United States of America,” he added.

The U.S. denied targeting a clinic but did not provide details. “We’re aware of the reports. U.S. forces did not target a medical clinic in Iraq,” Navy Capt. Tim Hawkins, a spokesman for Central Command, which oversees U.S. operations in the region, said Wednesday.

The incident may further complicate the dynamic between Washington and Baghdad. The U.S. military operates from installations within Iraq, including a strategic air base located northwest of where the strikes occurred. The Iraqi government has for years publicly said that it wanted U.S. forces to withdraw from the country, though it has relied on American troops in a shared fight against Islamic State militants in the region.

Jessie Williams (INDEPENDENT) notes, "Two people have been killed in Abu Dhabi after Iran launched a fresh barrage of missiles during its ongoing conflict with the US and Israel.  Another three people were injured in the attacks on the Emirati capital when debris from an intercepted missile fell, the emirate’s media office said."  


This morning, Ben (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes Chump's lies about negotiations.



Donald Chump did not make a case to the American people.  He did not address the American people.  He taped a video that he posted to his social media in the dead of night.  He has not made the case for this war.  Can he?  Apparently, he cannot and that's why he's refused to make the case.  


Senior Republicans have gone public with a stinging rebuke of the Trump administration for keeping Congress in the dark over its Iran war strategy.

The salvo from Rep. Mike Rogers, 67, of Alabama—chair of the House Armed Services Committee and one of Trump’s most stalwart congressional backers of the strikes on Iran—is the starkest indication yet of an emerging divide within the party over the now four-week conflict, as NOTUS reported.

“We want to know more about what’s going on, what the options are, and why they’re being considered,” Rogers told reporters on Wednesday. “And we’re just not getting enough answers on those questions.”
His comments came after a weekly behind-closed-doors session for senior House and Senate defense lawmakers on Wednesday.

Rogers said he was asking not for sensitive operational specifics—those he understood were off-limits—but for some basic sense of direction. “We just wanted them to tell us what’s the plan, and we didn’t get any answers,” he said.


Senator Lindsey Graham is said to have spoken to Benjamin Netanyahu, prime minister of Israel, and coached him on how to approach Chump to get him to go to war.  March 7th, David McAfee (RAW STORY) noted:


Republican U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has been exposed by the Wall Street Journal for "coaching" a foreign leader on how to influence Donald Trump.

The WSJ ahead of the weekend published a story called, "Lindsey Graham's Quest to Sell Trump on Striking Iran." In that piece, there is a nugget about the senator engaging in a campaign to help Netanyahu to persuade Trump to launch an Iran war.

"To help make the case on Iran, Graham traveled several times to Israel in recent weeks, meeting with members of the country's intelligence agency," the Journal reported Friday.

Graham is quoted in the article as saying, "They'll tell me things our own government won't tell me."

The report further states, "He spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, coaching him on how to lobby the president for action. Netanyahu showed the president intelligence that persuaded Trump to go ahead, Graham said."

McAfee quotes some people objecting to what Lindsey did and they're right to object, but let's be clear on what happened.  Lindsey is not a private citizen.  He is a US senator and has been one for 23 years and counting.  A member of the US government, who took an oath to the Constitution, collaborated with the leader of another nation on how to trick Donald Chump into going along with the foreign leader's plans to start a war.  Since the war started, Lindsey has become rabid and calling for killings.  There is some pushback against him from his own party.   Sophie Brams (THE HILL) notes:


Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) issued an indirect plea to President Trump on Wednesday to stop Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) from advising on the conflict with Iran, as the senator presses for a more aggressive approach to the war.

“I want President Trump to take Lindsey Graham out of the Situation Room,” Mace told CNN’s “Laura Coates Live.”
[. . .]
Mace argued that Graham has not “thought through or war gamed the consequences” of an operation on Kharg Island, which some have asserted would likely require putting American troops on the ground.

“Has he thought through what the Houthis are going to do? Has he thought through where Hezbollah is?” she said, also warning about Iranian retaliation that could further disrupt the economy.



Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.) suggested Wednesday that Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) should have less access to President Trump as the conflict with Iran persists.

“I absolutely think he should have his Oval Office credentials revoked,” Cammack told Migrant Insider’s Pablo ManrĆ­quez as she departed the Capitol.




My deepest sympathies lie with the Iranian people, whose hearts are torn in many directions. Many long for freedom and dignity, yet they remain wary of the long history of Western imperial intervention across the world, including their own country.

The Iranian people who took to the streets in recent years did not call for one form of domination to replace another. They demanded an end to oppression in all its forms, not the beginning of a new round under the Western thumb. Nor did they want change at any cost.
At every step, history teaches us – these promises of freedom offered by the West are never fulfilled.

The reason is simple. The freedom of others is simply not on the Western agenda, no matter its public rhetoric. Imperialism of this nature does not want freedom; it wants control, domination, power and profit.

On March 4, as bombs were falling around him in Tehran, Mohamad Maljoo, an Iranian dissident, was finally able to connect to the internet. He wrote on his Telegram channel: “Those who claim that one can rain fire on the body of Iran in the name of striking the Islamic Republic while imagining that the people will remain unharmed either do not understand the reality of war or deliberately choose to ignore it. Bombs do not discriminate. Destruction does not operate selectively.”

The truth of his warning echoes from Palestine to Iran: “Life does not flourish in the shadow of oppression. Nor does it grow beneath the rubble of bombs.”


And what do the American people think?  Steven Shepard and Andrew Daniller of The Pew Research Center note a new poll:


Weeks into the U.S. military campaign against Iran, majorities of Americans say striking that country was the wrong decision and disapprove of President Donald Trump’s handling of the conflict.

About six-in-ten Americans (61%) disapprove of Trump’s handling of the conflict, while 37% approve.
The new Pew Research Center survey of 3,524 U.S. adults, conducted March 16-22, also finds a similar balance of opinion on whether the initial decision to use military force was right (38%) or wrong (59%).

And by nearly two-to-one, more say the military action is not going well (45%) than say it is going extremely or very well (25%).


Tomorrow, No Kings Protests will take place across the country.  Rachel Maddow noted this on Monday on MS NOW.


THE BULWARK noted the protests last night.


David Pakman noted the Saturday protests.


Robert Reich notes the protests.



Protests will be taking place across the country and you can visit the No Kings website to find a protest in your area. 



Immigration?  Donald Chump's war on immigrants is one of the things fueling the No Kings protests.  And for good reason.  Chump and ICE have been lawless liars.   Chloe Atkins (NBC NEWS) reports:


The Trump administration admitted in a court filing that it had erroneously relied on an ICE memo to justify arrests at immigration courthouses as part of an ongoing federal case brought by groups seeking to block the tactic.

Federal prosecutors said Tuesday that they had used the memo, titled “2025 ICE Guidance,” to defend the Trump administration’s deployment of ICE agents at courthouses, which led to numerous arrests of immigrants attending hearings.
The memo indicated that "ICE officers or agents may conduct civil immigration enforcement actions in or near courthouses when they have credible information" that a targeted individual would be "present at a specific location.”

But, the Department of Justice said in the court filing, the memo “does not and has never applied to civil immigration enforcement actions in or near” immigration courts.



The DOJ threw ICE under the bus for "agency attorney error," a "material mistaken statement of fact" repeatedly cited in briefs that undermines a "core" defense of civil arrests at or near the executive branch's immigration courthouses.

U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Jay Clayton, once the SEC chairman during President Donald Trump's first term, submitted a letter to U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel on Tuesday to "regrettably" inform the jurist that he issued a ruling in September based on false information from the government defendants.
"We write respectfully and regrettably to correct a material mistaken statement of fact that the Government made to the Court and Plaintiffs. Specifically, this morning, counsel from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement informed the undersigned of the following: the memorandum entitled Civil Immigration Enforcement Actions in or Near Courthouses, dated May 27, 2025 – which the Government relied on in presenting its arguments in this case and referred to as the '2025 ICE Guidance' – does not and has never applied to civil immigration enforcement actions in or near Executive Office for Immigration Review immigration courts," the letter said, acknowledging that a do-over will be needed to decide the plaintiffs' claims "on the merits."


And a change in the Secretary of Homeland Security hasn't changed much so far.  Isabel van Brugen (DAILY BEAST) reports:

Healthcare workers in Michigan warned of a “chilling effect” as patients increasingly stay away from hospitals and clinics amid a rise in ICE agents showing up at medical facilities.

President Donald Trump’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) goons are increasingly showing up in and around the state’s hospitals and clinics, healthcare providers and immigration advocates said during a press conference Tuesday, Bridge Michigan reported.

It follows the Trump administration’s rollback last year of prior protections that limited enforcement in so-called “sensitive locations.”
Dr. Lauren Snyder, a family physician in Michigan, said she’s having to monitor for what she described as a “basic fear of safety” during routine check-ups at her office, and adjust to the presence of ICE agents at her workplace.

“They are here,” she said.

The Michigan Immigrant Rights Center and the ACLU of Michigan held a briefing as they released new guidance to more than 400 hospitals and providers statewide in response to the rising ICE encounters. The 12-page document outlined how facilities should respond to law enforcement activity.


ICE was hard on a lot of people.  It was hard on immigrants, it was hard on those perceived as immigrants, it was hard on families and friends.  So when Kristi Noem rightly lost her job as Secretary of Homeland Security, there was some relief that someone was paying for the illegal actions and the cruelty.  Kristi had been traveling in 'her' airplanes with her man Corey Lewandowski -- her alleged boyfriend -- and now Corey has been fired.  Laura Esposito (DAILY BEAST) reports:

Corey Lewandowski was fired from the Trump administration after he was spotted jetting off on a tropical getaway with his alleged lover, ousted Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

A White House official and three sources close to the Trump administration confirmed Lewandowski’s ousting to the New York Post—Donald Trump’s favorite newspaper—after the special government employee was spotted with Noem, 54, in balmy Guyana, where temperatures ranged from 75°F to 83°F.

The final decision on Lewandowski’s future as a special government employee, where he served as Noem’s de facto chief of staff, reportedly came on Tuesday or Wednesday.
[. . .]
In Guyana, photos show the alleged couple meeting government and corporate officials.

The business meeting in the tropical country marked the first such public outing for Noem in her new role as Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas—a position created by Donald Trump after booting her from DHS and replacing her with former MAGA Senator Markwayne Mullin.
Lewandowski’s presence in Guyana was made public by the U.S. Embassy in Guyana on Wednesday, which shared several photos on X from the trip.



The photos marked the first time Noem was seen in public as she assumed her new role as Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas, a new position created by the Trump administration.

It remains unclear whether the recent firing will impact Lewandowski's ability to travel with Noem, who still enjoys exclusive government perks.
[. . .]
After persisting for more than four years, rumors over the affair peaked earlier this month when Noem refused to deny the affair while testifying under oath before a Senate committee.

Lewandowski is married to Allison Hardy, whom he met when he was in ninth grade and with whom he has four children. Noem married Byron Noem in 1992, and they have three children.


Photos of Noem’s visit to Guyana with Lewandowski sparked backlash online on Wednesday.

Meghan McCain, the daughter of the late Senator John McCain, asked on X, “GIRL WHAT IS YOU DOING?”

Billy Binion, a reporter for the libertarian Reason magazine, wrote on X, “Why are my taxpayer dollars funding Corey Lewandowski's travel to Guyana? How is that remotely acceptable?”


Chump's administration continues to waste money.  And on that, Simon Lewis and Ted Hesson (REUTERS) noted:


Noem, who continued to travel on a DHS jet with top aide Corey Lewandowski at her side, met Ecuadorean President Daniel Noboa on Wednesday, who awarded her an order of merit.

The former congresswoman and governor of South Dakota, who arrived in Washington in January 2025 as one of Trump's most prominent loyalists, now reports not to the president but to Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau as special envoy to the Shield of the Americas, according to a Trump official who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity to discuss internal operations.

Noem is expected to return to the United States later on Wednesday and is not anticipated to retain access to DHS aircraft afterward, the official said.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Noem's new role. Asked about Noem's use of the government plane and whether DHS officials had staffed the trip, an agency spokesperson said: "We are not going to comment on the whereabouts of our plane or DHS staff."


"We are not going to comment on the whereabouts of our plane or DHS staff."  Because they don't believe that they have to answer to the people.  Kristi's been allowed to break every rule there is including not supervising someone you're sleeping with.  Chump is a chump, an idiot and a buffoon. And this refusal of a federal agency to answer questions?  It's a motivating factor for people to turn out tomorrow and note that we have No Kings in the United States and that are government is supposed to serve us and be responsive to us.



Turning to Donald Chump's friend of so many years, the late Jeffrey Epstein.  The survivors of his abuse want justice.  Joe Sommerlad (INDEPENDENT) reports that Victoria Derbyshire spoke with five Epstein survivors on BBC NEWSNIGHT Wednesday:

All of the women interviewed said their experiences with Epstein began with them giving him a paid massage and escalated into sexual assault.

The group was also unanimous in their belief that Epstein did not take his own life in August 2019. They maintained that the personal arrogance he displayed in their presence indicated he always believed he would get away with his crimes.

Another victim, Joanna Harrison, who had never previously come forward but had felt “forced” to do so after her name appeared in the recently-released Epstein files unredacted by mistake, said: “It’s not normal to see your abuser’s face every day for six years on TV, hear their name, you walk in a store and you see him on a magazine.

“There was once, I even went to my mailbox, and there was a flyer with his face on it in my mailbox and that was devastating for me. And so it just kind of gets to a point where you’re being suffocated, and you need to breathe, and I feel this is my way of trying to breathe.”


Anna Betts (GUARDIAN) reports on another interview that aired Thursday on THE SHADOW SESSIONS podcast:


After casting her vote for Donald Trump in 2024 in hopes that he would bring transparency around the Jeffrey Epstein case, Epstein survivor Jena Lisa Jones said in an interview this week that she now fears “we’re not going to get justice in all of this”.

“I wanted my day in court,” said Jones, who has said she was abused by Epstein when she was 14, in an interview on the Shadow Sessions podcast that aired on Thursday morning. “I didn’t get that, and we were so close to it, it really got ripped from us, and then after [Epstein] passed, everything just went into a circus show.”
Jones said she backed Trump in the 2024 election because of his promises to release the files related to Epstein – who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal charges of sex-trafficking minors – and his network.
“Trump ran his whole freakin’ election on the release of these freakin’ files,” she said. “And it sparked it back all up again, gave us hope, gave me hope at least.

“He runs his campaign on this, and he runs it really, really hard to the point that a lot of us voted for him,” she added.

However, after the election, Jones said that she felt a shift.

“As soon as he gets in, we started pushing for the release of the files, and now it’s a ‘Democratic hoax’,” she said, referring to remarks Trump made in the fall in which he dismissed some calls to the release additional Epstein files as a Democratic “hoax”.

Meanwhile, questions remain regarding Epstein's final hours and the hours after his death, the immediate hours.  Isabelle Khurshudyan (CNN) reports


In the years since disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein was found dead from what was ruled a suicide in his prison cell on August 10, 2019, conspiracy theories have abounded about whether the convicted sex offender actually killed himself.

That speculation is likely to get new life now that Tova Noel, one of the prison guards on duty the night of Epstein’s death, has been asked to testify before the House Oversight Committee. Her testimony had been scheduled for Thursday but has been postponed due to scheduling issues.

[. . .]


The materials released in the files have only raised more questions, including new details about cash deposits Noel made in the months surrounding Epstein’s death. The files also show Noel Googled “latest on Epstein in jail” less than an hour before his body was found in his jail cell at around 6:30 a.m.

The files also include allegations from an inmate who reported that prison officials were shredding documents relating to Epstein in the days after his death.

In 2019, both Noel and Thomas were charged with conspiracy and falsifying records indicating they had checked on Epstein every 30 minutes as required that night.
Both were fired, but the federal criminal charges were later dropped under the terms of a deferred prosecution agreement that required community service and cooperation with a Justice Department inspector general review of the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death.


Pam Bondi's refused to comply with the law passed requiring the release of the government's Epstein files.  She slow walked them and then only released about half.  She has been subpoenaed to testify before the House Oversight Committee.   THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS offers:


Yet the nation's top law enforcement official has already signaled that she has no intention of complying with Congress' order, with Democrats walking out of a meeting with her Wednesday after she indicated that she would not abide by the subpoena.
There seems to be some confusion here; just because she leads the Justice Department does not mean that Bondi gets to decide what the law is or what constitutes compliance with subpoenas. She may be shocked to learn this, but her staff are not the only ones that have the capacity to conduct investigations in our government of checks and balances.

Once again, we must wonder what exactly is in the remaining and unredacted files that Bondi and the rest of the administration are willing to go to immense lengths, including unlawful ones, to prevent their release.

Of course, we all know broadly what this is about: it has to do with the man at the top. Trump was a longtime pal of Epstein's and features prominently in the files. This is the one story that seems to have really shaken the faith of the MAGA faithful, who once upon a time believed that Trump was a kind of savior that would finally shed light on the trafficking ring.

No matter how Trump tries to spin things now, his followers feel betrayed that he is so clearly attempting to protect his own self interest here. If Trump thinks even that loss of confidence is worth keeping the contents confidential in perpetuity, then all the more reason for lawmakers to zealously pursue full compliance with the law requiring total transparency.


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

Washington, D.C. — Today, Senator Patty Murray, Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, issued the following statement on funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

“Democrats have been clear for weeks: there is absolutely no reason that TSA agents’ paychecks should be held hostage to Republicans’ demands to provide another blank check for ICE and Border Patrol—and it is just plain wrong that their pay has been held up this long. But finally, Republicans have relented, and we are now on track to fund the areas we agree on and get TSA agents paid, get our airports moving again, and fund important disaster relief and cybersecurity work.

“This is very good news for the TSA agents who’ve been working without pay and all the families who are looking forward to spring break travel.

“But it is a shame that instead of working with Democrats to land the plane on several common-sense reforms to ICE and Border Patrol that the White House had already agreed to, Republicans walked away from constructive conversations and ultimately rejected some basic steps to reform these agencies. I will keep fighting to secure real, meaningful steps to help rein in these rogue agencies—we just need Republicans to join us.

“Because the American people spoke up and because Democrats stood their ground and stood united, we have already forced changes to the way this administration is conducting immigration enforcement, and we have rejected the ridiculous false choice that the only way to prevent chaos at our airports is by cutting another blank check for President Trump and Stephen Miller. Speaking up matters. We’ve got to keep fighting—and demanding the accountability the American people deserve. That’s exactly what I’ll keep doing.”

The funding bill released and passed by the Senate tonight mirrors the bill that Senator Murray introduced on March 5—and that Democrats have repeatedly tried to pass through unanimous consent, but that Republicans have blocked on each occasion.

The bill funds all of the Department of Homeland Security, except for ICE and Border Patrol, which receive no new appropriations in the bill. It includes necessary “start-up” language after a lapse of appropriations, guarantees backpay to workers who went without pay during the shutdown, and retains the new accountability measures included in the legislation introduced in January.

###



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