Friday, June 05, 2026

The Snapshot

Friday, June 5, 2026.  Donald Chump crumbles as his power decays. 




As Ben (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes this morning, Donald Chump was losing it on social media as his party plans crashed and burned 
 

There was a time when Chump was feared and got whatever he wanted.  Joni Ernst foolishly voted to confirm Pete Hegseth, for example.  Even though she knew better.  Because she was scared. So many people in Congress went along because they were scared.  They aren't scared now.  You can't live your life in fear and that's changed some of the control Chump had.  Then he's also been exposed for a self-serving jerk (at best) who the American people have turned against.  He's a grifter who has run one con job after another and exposed himself in the process.  So here we are and Filip Timotija (THE HILL) reports:
 
The House Armed Services Committee adopted a provision for the annual National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would demand the Pentagon inform Congress why senior military officers were fired or dismissed within five days. 

The requirement was introduced by Rep. Pat Ryan (D-N.Y.) and was adopted Thursday without objections in a bipartisan voice vote. 
The provision comes as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has fired two dozen senior military officers since taking the helm at the Pentagon, prompting bipartisan worries that experienced officials are being dismissed without explanation. 

Earlier this year, Hegseth fired widely respected Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, leading some House Republicans to voice opposition to the move, arguing that George is an experienced military leader


Oh, yes, a check is now in place with, no doubt, the hope that balance will be restored.  Because Congress is part of three branch government and each of the branches is supposed to act as a check on the others.  



Several Democratic lawmakers are demanding answers following a report that a White House official intervened to grant a $620 million Pentagon loan to a company linked to President Trump’s eldest son. 

“We write to demand a full explanation for what appears to be an egregious example of Trump administration corruption involving the White House delivering a lucrative Defense Department loan to a company with financial ties to the Trump family,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles on Tuesday. 

The Democrats include Sens. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), Richard Blumenthal (Conn.) and Mazie Hirono (Hawaii) and Reps. Jason Crow (Colo.) and Mike Levin (Calif.).

Vulcan Elements, a rare-earth magnet startup based in North Carolina, announced last November it had received $620 million in a direct loan from the Pentagon and an additional $50 million from the Commerce Department. The company said in a press release at the time it would use these funds to produce 10,000 metric tons of magnet production in the U.S. annually.  

A ProPublica investigation published last week revealed Donald Trump Jr.’s venture capital firm, 1789 Capital, took an undisclosed stake in the company around three months before this deal was closed.

Additionally, the outlet reported the lending request was made by Peter Navarro, the president’s senior counselor for trade and manufacturing. 


That's Democrats trying to do a check and balance.  And hopefully Republicans will join them in this.  Chump's corruption is the worst.  He's gotten away with it so far.  But he's a lame duck now and the American people have caught onto him.  

The American people have caught on to him.  And that includes members of Congress.  Take John Cornyn.  In the 2002 election, he was voted into the US Senate.  And he remained there winning re-election over and over and over.  And should have been a walk this go round -- at least in the GOP primary.  But Chump endorsed Ken Paxton and Paxton won instead. James Osborne (HOUSTON CHRONICLE) reports:


U.S. Sen. John Cornyn went so far as to push legislation renaming a highway for President Donald Trump as he sought the president's endorsement in his hotly contested runoff with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.  

Now he says that bill "may not make it into my priorities the next seven months."
A week after losing his reelection bid to Paxton, who Trump endorsed in the final days of the race, Cornyn's political career is seemingly at its end. And the four-term senator - who said he is "looking forward to working in the private sector" - seems to have a new attitude to the president.
[. . .]
[T]there are early signs Cornyn is more willing to split with the president. On Tuesday, he joined moderate Senate Republicans, including Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, in challenging the qualifications of Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, to serve as the acting director of national intelligence.

And then there's Todd Blanche.  Chump wants to make him Attorney General.  That requires Senate confirmation.  And it's not January 2025 anymore.  



Lawrence O'Donnell noting suck up Todd Blanche kissing up to Chump,  "That was Todd Blanche saying to Donald Trump, 'I will do anything for you, sir.  Anything'."




In May 2025, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, a Democrat, arrived at an ICE detention facility in his New Jersey city and asked for a tour. Though he was initially let inside the facility’s gate, he was soon confronted by about a dozen federal law enforcement officers and asked to leave. And so he did.
For a moment, that seemed like it would be the end of this incident, but then one of the officers had a phone call. A video, later submitted to a federal court, shows this officer turning to his fellow law enforcers after the call and informing them, “We are arresting the mayor right now, per the deputy attorney general of the United States.”

That deputy attorney general was Todd Blanche, who is now the acting leader of the Department of Justice. On Wednesday, President Donald Trump announced that he would nominate Blanche to become the Senate-confirmed attorney general of the United States.

[. . .]

Blanche was Trump’s personal lawyer before he arrived at the Justice Department. As DAG, Blanche oversaw the Justice Department’s criminal investigations and prosecutions, including the DOJ’s 93 regional US Attorneys’ offices and law enforcement agencies such as the FBI.

That means that Blanche’s involvement in the Baraka arrest wasn’t an isolated incident — at a hearing formally dismissing the charges against Baraka, a federal magistrate judge scolded the DOJ for “using the immense power of the government to pursue weak cases or to make examples without sufficient cause.” Blanche was the senior Justice Department executive overseeing political prosecutions targeting a wide range of Trump’s perceived enemies, including former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

That is only one reason Blanche isn't qualified.  And Senator John Fetterman's saying he's not voting to confirm Blanche. If he's not going to vote for Blanche it's doubtful any Senate Democrat will.  Fetterman's the one who's been closest to Chump.  But the Republicans, he's got them sewn up, right?  


But in recent days, Blanche has faced backlash from some of the same Republican senators whose support he needs to secure confirmation after he championed plans for a $1.8 billion fund that would have paid out Trump followers and allies who alleged political persecution by prior administrations.

Unhappy Senate Republicans confronted Blanche about the fund at a contentious GOP conference meeting last month. On Tuesday, Blanche said he was abandoning the plan, which threatened to sink an unrelated immigration-enforcement bill.

Many lawmakers worried such a fund could be used to reward people who assaulted police officers during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. But Trump said he loved the idea and that Blanche was “doing a very good job” leading the Justice Department.

Blanche also continues to face criticism over the Justice Department’s release of millions of files from the FBI’s investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Asked whether he thought Blanche could get enough votes to secure confirmation, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R, S.D.) told reporters, “it’s hard to say … this is an environment where nothing is a safe or sure thing.”

Blanche on Thursday described his relationship with senators as good. “I don’t say no to phone calls,” he said. “I’ll meet with anybody who wants to meet with me.”


Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC), who sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee, signaled the issue as a political faultline and a decisive hurdle for Blanche as lawmakers weigh his nomination to permanently lead the Justice Department.
Speaking to CNN journalist Manu Raju in the halls of the Capitol, Tillis made clear that any perceived sympathy for those involved in the 2021 riot would be a dealbreaker.

“I haven’t made a decision yet, the key for Todd or anybody going through the Judiciary Committee is being pretty tight on January the 6th,” the senator said.

He added: “They better not have said for one minute that the people that beat up police officers like these right down here were righteous people. You come even close to saying that. You don’t have a prayer of my vote in Judiciary.”


!





Yesterday, we noted:

Chump's destroyed the economy with tariffs and the Iran War and he's got more he's plotting.   Paul Farrell (INDEPENDENT) notes:

The Trump administration is proposing tariffs of 10 percent or more on products from dozens of major trading partners, following a probe into imports allegedly made with forced labor.

A report released early Wednesday by the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) stated that Canada, Mexico, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and other countries would face 10 percent additional tariffs for allegedly failing to enforce a forced-labor import ban.
A 12.5 percent additional tariff would be imposed on China, Japan, India, South Korea, Brazil, Switzerland, and dozens of other countries.

The United Kingdom?  

Chump and his never ending lies.


Economist Paul Krugman covers the latest nonsense from Chump:


Yesterday it came in the form of “Section 301” tariffs on 60 trading partners, including the European Union and Japan. Section 301 is titled “Relief from Unfair Trade Practices.” So what are the unfair practices the Trumpists say the whole world is engaging in?

The answer is that the Trump administration is accusing other countries of “failure to impose and effectively enforce a prohibition on the importation of goods produced with forced labor.”

Notice the wording. They aren’t accusing the European Union itself of employing slave labor. Even the Trumpists aren’t willing to lie that shamelessly (yet). No, the claim is that the EU isn’t doing enough to stop countries that do employ slave labor from selling their goods in Europe.

Everyone, and I mean everyone, understands that the alleged justification for these tariffs is a lie. There is absolutely no reason to believe that the EU is less diligent about opposing the use of slave labor than the US. For that matter, there is no reason to believe that Trump and his minions have any particular objection to slave labor. This is nothing but a transparently, one might say sneeringly, bogus rationale for continuing to flout both US law and international agreements.

Why do Trump’s minions keep using legal tricks and lies to impose tariffs? There is, after all, no reason they couldn’t simply ask Congress to impose tariffs through normal legislation. But doing so would run into three problems, from Trump’s point of view. First, Congress might balk. Second, at minimum an attempt to pass legislation would require hearings, in which the weakness of the administration’s arguments would become obvious. Third, one of the reasons Trump loves tariffs is that he gets to issue decrees at will, none of this pesky nonsense of consulting with the legislative branch; having to follow the Constitution would spoil his fantasies of omnipotence.

So here we go again, with another round of tariffs that will probably be ruled illegal some months from now.

Chump's just lying.  Accusing the UK and others of using slave labor.  Lies to get his way.  Lies to try to fool the American people.  Sam Stevenson (NEWSWEEK) explores what this means for American consumers:

For consumers, the implications are direct: tariffs are effectively taxes on imports, and those costs are often passed through supply chains, increasing prices at the checkout.

That means everyday products such as clothing, electronics, household goods and car parts could become more expensive if the proposal takes effect.
Economists broadly note that tariffs tend to raise costs. Previous U.S. trade actions have been linked to higher consumer prices as importers and retailers adjust pricing to cover additional expenses.


Let's move over to Homeland Security where Kristi Noem is gone but not forgotten.  Russell Payne (SALON) explains:


Kristi Noem, the former head of the Department of Homeland Security and current U.S. envoy for the Shield of the Americas, is facing a new Hatch Act complaint over her use of a government jet for a political trip, as well as her use of government social media accounts for self-promotion.
The Hatch Act is a 1939 law limiting the political activities of federal employees with the aim of ensuring that federal programs are administered in a nonpartisan fashion and to prevent executive branch employees, except for the president and vice president, from using their office for political ends.

The complaint alleges that “Noem, and one or more members of her staff violated the Hatch Act by using public resources to travel to and attend part of the Republican Governors Association conference in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 11, 2025.”

American Oversight, the watchdog group that filed the complaint, also requested that the Office of Special Counsel, which handles Hatch Act complaints, investigate the Department of Homeland Security’s use of its official Flickr account to “publicize Noem’s attendance at the partisan RGA event and other similarly-political activities.”
Records show that DHS One, the name of the jet used by the secretary, was used for Noem’s trip to the Republican Governors Association in Nashville. Former advisor to President Donald Trump, Corey Lewandowski, who served as a special government employee during Noem’s tenure at DHS, and who was allegedly engaged in an extramarital affair with Noem, was also CC’ed on some of the communications regarding the RGA trip. Noem has faced questioning before Congress about the alleged relationship, and attacked the reports as “tabloid garbage,” though she stopped short of explicitly denying the allegations while under oath.



The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is canceling most pending contracts initiated under ousted Secretary Kristi Noem, the current ‌secretary said on Wednesday, a move that follows congressional scrutiny and an internal watchdog review of her contracting practices.
During a hearing before the U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee, Secretary Markwayne Mullin also said he would restore longer training for federal immigration officers, reversing a Noem-era decision that shortened training during a hiring surge ​and drew bipartisan concerns in Congress about whether recruits were adequately prepared.
Mullin faced questions from a top Democrat about what steps ​he had taken to roll back Noem-era contracts.
"We are looking at the contracts that weren't already signed, and we ⁠did go through and cancel most of those," Mullin said.


Homeland Security's actions have appalled the nation.  Last night, THE NEWSHOUR (PBS) did a story on the repulsion. 


Matt Standal:

Just 50 miles from the Canadian border, the town of Froid is home to less than 200 people.

For more than a decade, Roberto Orozco-Ramirez has been one of them.

Marvin Qualley:

Roberto's our neighbor. He's a part of our community.

Matt Standal:

Over the years, Roberto has come to mean a lot of things to a lot of people here. He's a local diesel mechanic, little league coach, and father of four boys.

Sheri Crain:

Great businessman. He's my neighbor, been my neighbor next door for 11 years.

Matt Standal:

But what residents of Froid didn't know until recently is that Roberto is also an undocumented immigrant who had been deported back in 2009.

Keith Nordlund:

Up until six months ago, I didn't know Roberto was illegal.

Matt Standal:

Neighbor Keith Nordlund says Border Patrol vehicles started showing up around town in early January.

Keith Nordlund:

We had -- 24 hours a day, seven days a week, we had at least two Border Patrolmen in our town.

Matt Standal:

Agents staked out Roberto's house and, according to his neighbors, even harassed Roberto's children.

Keith Nordlund:

I personally don't believe that's right. Them four boys are American citizens.

Matt Standal:

Roberto turned himself in on January 25. The government charged him with illegal reentry and immediately took him into detention, telling Montana PBS that this enforcement action represents a community safety priority.

Keith Nordlund:

The beef is donated by local ranchers.

Matt Standal:

Within days, Keith Nordlund found himself organizing the biggest fund-raiser this town had ever seen to help Roberto. More people showed up to the Froid Community Center than the town has residents. They shared a meal. They bid on hay and gravel and tools, raising thousands of dollars for Roberto's family.

A separate legal fund raised thousands more.

Roberto Orozco-Lozcano Jr.:

It's really hard seeing that now he's in jail.

Matt Standal:

Roberto Orozco Jr. is Roberto's oldest son. He says his father fled cartel violence in Mexico as a teenager and came here to build a better life.

Roberto Orozco-Lozcano Jr.:

It's incredible seeing such a hardworking man, I mean, my dad. being in a situation like this. I just don't find it very fair.

Matt Standal:

When Montana attorney Laura Christoffersen heard about Roberto, she says she began studying immigration law and hired an expert thanks to those private donations. And what they found changed everything.

Laura Christoffersen, Attorney:

What we believe is that, even in 2009, at the time of his first deportation, he was not afforded due process, which means he was illegally removed.

Matt Standal:

Christoffersen says she found mistake after mistake in the way federal authorities handled Roberto's deportation and says, since January, ICE agents have repeatedly violated his rights.

Laura Christoffersen:

I think people should understand that this is the person who's been in the U.S. more than 25 years, raised a family with four U.S. citizen children who are contributing members of our community. They pay taxes. They obey the rules. They follow the law. They don't take from our society.

Matt Standal:

In this deep red part of the state, there are mixed feelings about Roberto's legal status. But Keith Nordlund says this ordeal has caused him to question some long-held political beliefs.

Keith Nordlund:

I'm not OK that Roberto was here illegally. I don't believe that's right. However, our system is so broken that a guy like Roberto that's came here, has worked his butt off, has built a business, he's thriving in a niche, and he is a valuable asset to our community, how is there not a way for him to be legal?


ICE has destroyed so many lives.  Aala Abdullahi and Geoff Hing (MOTHER JONES) reported earlier this week:

For about five days in December, Abdullahi Mohamed seemingly vanished into the US immigrant detention system. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had detained him near Portland, Maine, and held him for more than seven weeks in Massachusetts. Then, without warning, ICE began moving him repeatedly across the country, from state to state and facility to facility, faster than his family could keep up. News of his whereabouts came to them in fragments: an email from his lawyer that he was in Mississippi; a phone call from the wife of a fellow detainee who said he was in Louisiana; and at one point, a call from Mohamed himself—that lasted for about two minutes—from an undisclosed airport.

His lawyer laid out what was happening. “They are doing this now more and more—moving people without any notice,” he wrote to the family in an email. The transfers, he explained, can block people like Mohamed from speaking with an attorney and make it difficult to file legal petitions in the right jurisdiction, while distressing families. “This is cruelty,” he wrote.

Quick and repeated transfers have become more common in President Donald Trump’s second term, a Marshall Project investigation has found. From the final year of the Biden administration to the first year of Trump’s latest term, the number of people transferred five or more times more than tripled. The number of people transferred out of state within 24 hours more than doubled, according to a Marshall Project analysis of ICE detention data obtained by the Deportation Data Project.

Immigration lawyers say the many transfers not only cause undue suffering for people being detained and their families but have significantly undermined due process protections. Because detainees have limited access to phones while in transit, and ICE’s detainee locator does not always reflect their real-time location, immigration attorneys say rapid transfers can leave people unreachable for hours or even days. Families can lose track of their relatives, while lawyers struggle to locate or speak with clients.

During those gaps, attorneys say, some detainees have been pressured to sign forms affecting their immigration cases before they can speak with counsel.


Turning to Chump's dead best friend Jeffrey Epstein,  Annie Grayer and Nicky Robertson (CNN) note:


House Oversight Chair James Comer and other Republican lawmakers are calling on the Justice Department to investigate allegations involving two men accused of sexually abusing Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime assistant, according to a letter provided first to CNN.

The new pressure from the Republican lawmakers stems from testimony the panel received last month from the assistant, Sarah Kellen.
In her closed-door interview, Kellen said Frederic Fekkai, a French celebrity hairstylist, and Philip Levine, the former mayor of Miami Beach, sexually assaulted her in separate incidents. She alleged that a third individual, Patrick Demarchelier, a French fashion photographer, exposed himself to her, according to a newly released transcript.

Comer’s letter to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche asked the Justice Department to investigate  “the allegations against, and any other criminal conduct committed by” Fekkai and Levine in particular, noting Levine appears in the so-called Epstein files 600 times and that Fekkai was known as a “close friend” to Epstein.


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

ICYMI: Murray, Kaptur Asked GAO to Look Into Energy Department’s Decision to Steer Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Away from Wind, Solar in Defiance of Spending Law

Washington, D.C. — Today, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) concluded that the Department of Energy’s (DOE) decision last year to steer hundreds of millions of dollars provided by Congress in fiscal year 2025 for the research and development of clean energy sources toward energy sources favored by Secretary Chris Wright violated the law.

GAO’s investigation into the matter was requested last July by Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development, and Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-OH-09), Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development.

In a statement responding to the decision, Senator Murray and Congresswoman Kaptur said:

“Today, GAO confirmed what’s been clear from the start: the Trump administration broke the law when it gutted investments in affordable, clean energy. Secretary Wright unilaterally rewrote a spending bill signed into law by President Trump, all so he could benefit handpicked industries at the expense of clean energy research Americans are counting on to lower their energy bills. GAO has made clear that this was not merely a policy choice—it was a clear violation of appropriations law.

“The Department of Energy cannot simply ignore the law because the Secretary has a vendetta against the most affordable energy sources. American families have paid the price for this lawbreaking—in higher energy costs, in canceled university and industry research awards, and in national lab scientists who lost their jobs. The administration must take steps to immediately comply with the law, and we must work on a bipartisan basis to insist the Department follows the law.”

In fiscal year 2024, Congress provided $137 million for DOE to support wind energy and $318 million to support solar energy. The fiscal year 2025 full-year continuing resolution—written by House Republicans and signed into law by President Trump in March 2025—continued those funding levels. However, in a spend plan made public on July 2, 2025, the Trump administration revealed it was steering hundreds of millions of dollars away from congressionally directed clean energy technologies to other, favored industries. Rather than fund wind at the enacted level of $137 million, the administration allocated just $29.8 million – a 78% cut. Rather than fund solar at the enacted level of $318 million, it allocated just $41.9 million – an 87% cut.

On July 28, 2025, Kaptur and Murray formally asked GAO to issue a legal decision on whether DOE’s FY2025 spend plan violated the Purpose Statute—which requires that appropriations be used only for the purposes for which they were provided—and the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits agencies from obligating funds in excess of available appropriations.

On February 25, 2026, as DOE began obligating funds in defiance of the law—including issuing a Notice of Funding Opportunity making $146.5 million in FY2025 funds available for geothermal energy despite Congress providing only $118 million—Kaptur and Murray renewed their GAO referral and called on the Department to immediately reverse course. Today’s GAO legal decision responds to that request.

In its decision today, GAO stated: “DOE is required to obligate and expend its FY 2025 appropriations in accordance with the referenced congressional control point amounts in the FY 2024 explanatory statement. …. To the extent that DOE obligated or expended FY 2025 funds in excess of appropriated amounts—that is the FY 2024 levels described above—DOE should report an Antideficiency Act violation.”

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