Thursday, November 20, 2025

Despite Congressional Action, Quick and Complete Release of Epstein Files Unlikely

 Despite Congressional Action, Quick Release of Epstein Files Is in Doubt

Trump's DOJ lackey Pam Bondi speaks in the White House press briefing room as Donald Trump listens. (photo: Ken Cedeno/Reuters)
 
BRACE YOURSELF: Whatever Is Released Is Sure To Be De-Trumped 
 
Perry Stein, Jeremy Roebuck and Theodoric Meyer / Washington Post
 
 

ALSO SEE: House and Senate Both Approve Releasing the Epstein Files by a Near Unanimous Margin

For the past week, official Washington has talked constantly about the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, except for the agency that has custody of the Epstein files.

The Justice Department has been silent.

On Tuesday, the House and Senate agreed to pass a bill calling on Attorney General Pam Bondi to release all unclassified information and files related to the sprawling sex trafficking investigation into the onetime powerful financier.

The Justice Department so far has continued to say nothing about how it would respond to that demand. There are many reasons to doubt that a bulk release of the files is imminent.

If President Donald Trump wanted Bondi to release all of the Epstein files, he could have ordered her to do so at any point in the past six months. He didn’t.

On Sunday, when Trump did an about-face and said House Republicans should vote in favor of releasing the Epstein files, he notably did not say he favored releasing them. Instead, he said in a social media post that the House “can have whatever they are legally entitled to, I DON’T CARE!”

What Congress is “legally entitled to” is a more complicated question than the rhetoric from Capitol Hill might imply.

The legislation that Congress agreed to pass Tuesday gives the Justice Department a few exceptions under which it can refuse to release material. Among them: if release “would jeopardize an active federal investigation or ongoing prosecution.”

On Friday, Trump ordered Bondi to launch a new federal investigation related to Epstein — this one aimed at his ties to several prominent Democrats, including former president Bill Clinton, megadonor Reid Hoffman and former treasury secretary Lawrence H. Summers. Bondi said the top federal prosecutor in New York City would take on the task.

That investigation could become a reason for the Justice Department to block release of many files. Bondi and her deputies have previously said they cannot release information about active investigations.

Other information could be covered by grand jury secrecy rules. The bill Congress agreed to pass does not explicitly waive those.

Bondi has also said many of the files cannot be released because they contain sensitive victim information and pornographic material. The legislation contains another exception allowing the Justice Department to withhold material that “would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy” or “depicts or contains child sexual abuse.”

There would not be much recourse for Congress if the Justice Department refused to hand over the files since the bill does not have any enforcement teeth.

If the House decided to issue a subpoena demanding the materials, and the Justice Department refused, the chamber’s leaders could refer officials for criminal prosecution. But it would fall to Bondi to decide whether to prosecute herself or her deputies, rendering that threat potentially empty.

On Tuesday, some Republican lawmakers said they were confident that given the legislation, the administration would release the files. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said he hoped the vote in the House was so overwhelming that it would persuade the administration not to block the release of the files.

“I think it’d be a mistake,” Paul said. “If they really try to play games and obscure some of that, I think it’ll really backfire on them.”

Some Democrats were more pessimistic. Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont said he would not be surprised if Bondi refused to release documents because of the investigation she announced last week.

“It would be naive of any of us to think that Trump has really had a conversion,” Welch said, referring to the president’s call for House Republicans to vote for the bill after months of trying to block it. “He does not want the information out.”

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer of New York said he met with 10 other Senate Democrats on Tuesday evening to discuss ways to press the administration to release the files.

Democrats will do “everything we can to make sure all of it, all of it comes to light and they don’t hide evidence against anyone who might be incriminated by these documents,” Schumer told reporters.

In August, the House subpoenaed the Justice Department demanding the Epstein files. The Justice Department released some files, though that release fueled further public frustration since much of the material had already been made public.

That subpoena, in theory, is still in play, and Congress could attempt to enforce it.

For months, Trump has struggled to contain backlash from within his own party over the Justice Department’s decision this summer not to release the bulk of its investigative file on Epstein. Democrats have accused the president of attempting to hide embarrassing material documenting his years-long friendship with the disgraced financier.

Trump has said that he knew Epstein socially in Palm Beach, Florida, and that they had a falling-out in the mid-2000s. Trump’s name appears several times in previously released documents from Epstein’s estate, but the president has maintained that he had “no idea” about Epstein’s criminal behavior. The documents have produced no evidence of wrongdoing by Trump.

Some within the Republican Party have demanded further disclosures, believing the Justice Department is covering up information that could be damaging to the prominent and powerful friends with whom Epstein surrounded himself. Others have questioned the circumstances of Epstein’s 2019 death while in custody awaiting a federal sex trafficking trial. He was found hanged in his cell, and the death was ruled a suicide.

The questions surrounding Trump’s relationship with Epstein reached a fever pitch last week when the House Oversight Committee released thousands of pages of Epstein’s emails, including several in which he referenced his relationship to Trump.

Epstein, Bondi and Trump go way back to the halcyon days of molesting young girls.  Wonder if Bondi's name comes up in the Epstein files?  



Monday, November 17, 2025

A Grift Bubble May Well Collapse America

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXc7Th2tEXXM6c_3NX4m_WEf13QOSFyxIMFWjsiGg9oKU3ovWShnotmlyXhT0xxPNJ6imrZeloHFhFUNHtXVWQpVlM4JtvYRbPvKAcjYbSIkoykZn2b-JNMoTnl6DqdpeedmS6Yps0xZIu8xNJm-IFzmlL-ilO4JZac0s_Ygg9tI01kMgOUD8aSYcuw9I/s1000/057047-vance-and-trump-081224.jpg
GRIFTERS: "Trump and Vance do not believe in real things like love, law and patriotism." 
 
Timothy Snyder / Substack

ALSO SEE: Timothy Snyder: Thinking About (Substack)

ALSO SEE: Clark Hoyt | Why Trump Gets Away With It

How does a country burst? To answer this questions, it helps to see matters as do the president and the vice-president: from inside a grift bubble.

As I traveled around the United States these last few weeks -- Columbus, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, DC, Boston, Chicago -- , I tried to explain that I worry more about the disintegration of the United States than about a regime change in which Donald Trump exercises autocratic power from coast to coast.

The effort to create authoritarianism is more likely to lead to a breakup of the state than to a total regime change.

This end of the United States is possible, in part, because our president and vice-president think that it is impossible. Because they are inside a grift bubble, they push for authoritarianism in their own interest, without reckoning with the possibility that their actions can wreck the country. For them, America is a limitless passive resource.

Your perspective is probably different than theirs. To help us understand this risk, it helps to try to see the world from inside a grift bubble.

Imagine that you are a first-rate grifter: the president of the United States, say. Your grift is that you pretend to be a successful businessman, and use that supposed expertise to make your case for the presidency, which office you then use to make money. 

Or imagine instead that you are the vice-president. Your grift is that you claim to understand poor people, whose problems, you say, are the fault of gays, immigrants, and billionaires; and then you rise to power thanks to the money and support of a gay immigrant billionaire.

Given that these are their shticks, and that they have worked, you can see how Trump and Vance might conclude that Americans are gullible and that all things are possible.

The initial claim, the wild lie, is like the air the gets a balloon started: Trump is a rich person; Vance cares about the poor people. The big lies work! And then there is more lying, more hot air, a growing space, a sense of comfort, a safe space for fascist oligarchy.

You grift on and you grift on, and the bubble just gets bigger. It seems like you know everything that you need to know, and that the grift, the graft, and the gruffety-gruff can go on forever. When you have lived for a long time inside a grift bubble, you think you have seen it all, but this is not the case. From inside a grift bubble, you do not see the outside.

You do not grasp that your grift actually depends upon something larger, something better, which it is sapping, weakening, bringing to ruin.

You have fooled the world, and so you think that you understand it. Indeed, as a grifter, you become contemptuous of how other people make their living and live their lives. And yet your knowledge is actually limited. You know things that those outside the grift bubble do not know; but they also know things that you do not know.

You can take away what belongs to people without knowing how they achieved or attained it. The guy who cheats the farmer at the county fair does not know how to farm. The guy who profits from curated crypto scams does not understand the world economy.

Trump and Vance imagine, because it has worked thus far, that they can grift endlessly. They do not understand that their grift depends upon what I will unashamedly call the honest labor and decent convictions of millions of Americans. Were there not Americans who actually worked and cared and tried to live right, there would be nothing and no one to grift.

In an instructive article that he wrote in 1990, the American novelist David Foster Wallace said that cynicism is a form of naïveté. When you dismiss everything, you feel like you can do anything; but then you don’t believe in some things that are real: like love, or law, or patriotism. For you, such things are just tools of the trade, manipulable handles, just the way to enlarge the grift. That they have some other sense, that they are the building blocks of some other reality -- this you do not see. And in that way you are naïve.

Trump and Vance are indeed naïve, in the precise way that corresponds to their cynicism. They think that the United States will continue to exist, for their sake, no matter what they do. From inside the grift bubble, they see only grift, and think they see the whole country. As the bubble grows bigger, they confuse their own profit with the well-being of the whole.

The fact that Trump and Vance do not believe in real things such as love and law and patriotism makes them strong in one way; it makes them weak in another. They cannot foresee the larger consequences, because they do not understand how the world works or how a country is constructed. And as they break things, their naïveté prevents them from seeing what is happening, and indeed forces them to snarl harder -- I suspect that this is why, in some social media thing somewhere, the vice-president lashed out at me on this very point.

And so here we are. The bigger the grift bubble grows, the less healthy material remains beyond it. It sucks away what is productive. As personal connections become the basis of business, the economy slows. It sucks away what is ethical. As corruption comes to seem normal, citizens lose trust in one another. As basic institutions are scorned and destroyed, people cease to believe in the law. The material which builds a nation -- moral, institutional, economic -- starts to give way.

I am worried about the disintegration of the republic for other reasons, of course.

The goal of this administration seems to be to show that government does not work. The appointment of utter incompetents to positions of high authority, the firings of qualified civil servants, and the elimination of crucial agencies -- all this will likely bring epidemics and terror attacks and other disasters. At some point amidst the federal dysfunction the states will have to take on more responsibilities. But why then should their citizens pay taxes to a useless -- but oppressive -- federal government? ICE provoke people who live in cities; that does not mean that cities will concede. The threat to use soldiers against cities will likely create rifts inside the armed forces and the federal government more broadly. We are not so far away, I fear, from some branches of the federal government turning against other branches of the federal government.

Trump also seems to be contemplating a war against Venezuela (or whomever) to distract attention from his activities inside the grift bubble. But any land war, which is what it would take to generate such a distraction, will be difficult and unpredictable. He and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth are unfathomably ignorant about modern warfare. Such a move could lead not just to a lot of pointless death but to unpredictable chaos.

All of these factors are connected with the grift bubble. Indeed, they prove its existence. Some of these actions, like the destruction of government agencies, are meant to make grifting easier. Others are designed to generate cover for profiteering and corruption. None of these policies, not one, was made with an eye to something outside the grift bubble. Such actions only make sense to people who are inside the grift and confuse their own position with reality.

The president and vice-president do not know the history of people like themselves, or that of other republics that were needlessly brought down by men of their particular sort. They think that the magic of words will always save them, that there will always be a next grift, that no crisis is so great that it cannot be turned to personal profit. This is true right up until the moment when it is not.

The republic can break, but it need not. Those who work against the grifters, who reinforce the reality beyond the bubble, are doing right. They are not only holding back authoritarianism, but giving the republic a chance. They may be acting from love, or from law, because they know that these things are real. And so they should also know, in acting thus, that they are the patriots.

ONE TRACK MIND: From the mouths of grifters.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

JAMES CARVILLE: “I don’t put anything past him — nothing." Bush and Obama Lawyers Warn Trump Could Challenge 2026 Election Results

Bush and Obama Lawyers Warn Trump Could Challenge 2026 Election Results if Midterms Don’t Go His Way  
Bob Bauer (right) served as White House counsel under Democratic President Barack Obama. He joined Jack Goldsmith, who worked for Republican President George W. Bush, in arguing that Trump could dispute the 2026 midterms. (photo: Getty)

‘This prospect must be taken seriously,’ the lawyers for both former Democrat and Republican presidents warn

Brendan Rascius / The Independent 
 


Government lawyers, who served the Bush and Obama administrations, have warned that President Donald Trump may not take midterm election losses lying down.

Bob Bauer, who served under former President Barack Obama, and Jack Goldsmith, who worked for President George W. Bush, argued that Trump could dispute next year’s election results, which will determine whether or not the Republican party maintains control of Congress.

“His words and actions strongly suggest he may use the formidable powers of the presidency — and possibly even the armed forces — to resist 2026 electoral results he dislikes,” the lawyers wrote in The Economist Wednesday. “This prospect must be taken seriously.”

Bauer and Goldsmith noted that Trump has a history of questioning the legitimacy of election results, pointing to the 2020 win of President Joe Biden, which Trump has frequently described as “stolen” and “rigged.”

And now — less than one year into his second term — Trump seems to be preparing to contest the midterms, which historically have resulted in losses for the president’s party.

As evidence, Bauer and Goldsmith pointed to an August Truth Social post from Trump, in which he promised to “bring HONESTY to the 2026 Midterm Elections” by eliminating mail-in ballots and voting machines.

States, “must do what the Federal Government…tells them, FOR THE GOOD OF OUR COUNTRY…” Trump added.

Trump has also issued an executive order claiming presidential power to impose voting regulations on states, including by mandating proof of citizenship to vote.

This proposed federal takeover of elections “flies in the face of the constitution, which expressly allocates authority over the ‘Times, Places and Manner’ of congressional elections to the states and to Congress,” Bauer and Goldsmith wrote.

So, what could Trump actually do when the midterms roll around? Bauer and Goldsmith argue the president “could order many kinds of federal intervention.”

“As he did in 2020, but with a stronger hand, he could push officials to intervene in states, potentially seizing voting machines,” the lawyers wrote. “He could use federal agencies to demand that states co-operate with his administration’s efforts to detect election fraud. He could intimidate election officials by ordering investigations of claimed irregularities.”

But, the lawyers’ most serious concern is that Trump would invoke the Insurrection Act — which allows the president to suppress unlawful violence — and deploy the military across the country.

“Trump could claim his opponents are obstructing election laws and call in troops to enforce those laws in accordance with his wishes,” they wrote. “Such deployments could occur before, during or after voting begins.

“The integrity of the 2026 election could thus, as in 2020, also depend on the fortitude of state and local officials who administer elections.”

The lawyers did not address the current redistricting effort taking place in a number of states, including Texas and California, which could dramatically alter the balance of power in Congress.

Other commentators have expressed similar concerns about Trump and the midterms, including Democratic strategist James Carville.

“I don’t put anything past him — nothing — to try to call the election off, to do anything he can,” Carville said on a podcast in July.

A White House spokesperson shot back a fiery retort to Fox Digital.

“Trump has taken more action to restore the integrity of our elections on behalf of the American people than any president in modern history,” the spokesperson said. “According to the Democrats, voter fraud doesn’t exist – but clearly they are already searching for copouts preparing to lose big again in the midterms.”


 

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Epstein bombshells fall ever closer to Donald: "of course he knew about the girls"

The 'Victim' Trump Spent Hours With at Epstein's House Was Virginia Giuffre  
Donald Trump spent hours with same girl Prince Andrew enjoyed. (photo: Miami Herald)

'Victim' Trump Spent Hours With at Epstein's House Was Virginia Giuffre

Farrah Tomazin / The Daily Beast  

 
Donald Trump spent hours with a sex trafficking victim that Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell recruited from his Mar-a-Lago club and abused for years.

Moments after explosive new emails suggested the president may have known more about Epstein’s conduct than he has previously acknowledged, MAGA Republicans identified the victim at the heart of the documents as the late Virginia Giuffre, Epstein’s most high-profile survivor.

In one email to Maxwell, which was dated April 2, 2011, Epstein refers to Trump as “the dog that hasn’t barked” and reveals that a certain victim—whose name was redacted in the files—“spent hours at my house with him.”

The emails form part of a cache of documents provided by Epstein’s estate to Democrats on the House Oversight Committee.

However, soon after they were released on Wednesday morning, Republicans on the committee posted on X: “Why did Democrats cover up the name when the Estate didn’t redact it in the redacted documents provided to the committee? It’s because this victim, Virginia Giuffre, publicly said that she never witnessed wrongdoing by President Trump.

“Democrats are trying to create a fake narrative to slander President Trump,” they added. “Shame on them.”

Giuffre, born Virginia Roberts, was one of the earliest and loudest voices calling for criminal charges against Epstein and his enablers.

She lit a fire under the Epstein scandal in 2011, bringing it into the international spotlight when she alleged that she had been sexually assaulted by Prince Andrew as part of Epstein’s sex trafficking operation.

Her astonishing revelations turned the now-ex prince into Britain’s most tarnished royal, and contributed to him losing his royal titles last month.

Before she died by suicide earlier this year, Giuffre had testified that Maxwell hired her as a masseuse for Epstein after meeting her at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club, where she worked as a 16-year-old locker room attendant at the resort spa.

Maxwell, a British socialite, spotted Giuffre as she was reading a book about massage therapy. She then offered her a job interview to be a private, traveling masseuse, suggesting it would be a potentially life-changing opportunity.

Giuffre attended the interview at Epstein’s Palm Beach home, where she was introduced to Epstein naked and instructed by Maxwell on how to massage him.

The depraved couple soon made her their sex slave, pressuring her into gratifying not only the disgraced financier but also his friends and associates.

As the firestorm surrounding the Epstein files escalated this year, Trump acknowledged in July that he knew Giuffre from Mar-a-Lago and lamented how Epstein “stole her” from him.

“I think she worked at the spa,” he told reporters at the time. “I think that was one of the people. He stole her.”

“Other people would come and complain, this guy is taking people from the spa,” he added.

“I didn’t know that. And then when I heard about it, I told him, I said: ‘Listen, we don’t want you taking our people—whether it was spa or not spa—I don’t want you to take our people. And he was fine, and then not too long after that, he did it again. And I said: out of here!”

But while the president has long described the Epstein files as a “Democratic hoax,” the new emails raise questions about what he knew and when in relation to Epstein’s sexual conduct.

The documents suggest that Epstein mentioned Trump by name multiple times in private correspondence over the last 15 years.

In another email, written to author Michael Wolff on January 31, 2019, Epstein seems to address Trump’s earlier claim that he asked the sex offender to resign his membership at the president’s Mar-a-Lago Club.

“trump said he asked me to resign,” Epstein wrote, adding, “never a member ever. . of course he knew about the girls as he asked to Ghislaine to stop.”

The president did not receive or send any of the messages, nor has he been accused of any criminal wrongdoing in connection with Epstein or Maxwell.

However, the latest revelations are certain to inflame tensions about the administration’s handling of the Epstein files and the decision by Trump’s Department of Justice to renege on a pledge to fully release them.

House Oversight Committee ranking member Robert Garcia said the emails formed part of about 23,000 documents they received from Epstein’s estate in the last few days, and more would be released later today.

Britt Jacovich, spokesperson for progressive group MoveOn Civic Action, said: “It’s no wonder why Trump and Republicans have spent weeks hiding the Epstein emails and files from the public. This is textbook corruption.

“Just as Trump promised on the campaign trail, the American people deserve to know who enabled Jeffrey Epstein’s abuses and his victims deserve justice. Release the Epstein files.”

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt described the latest Esptein firestorm as a “hoax” designed to distract from the president’s achievements.

“The Democrats selec
tively leaked emails to the liberal media to create a fake narrative to smear President Trump. The ‘unnamed victim’ referenced in these emails is the late Virginia Giuffre, who repeatedly said President Trump was not involved in any wrongdoing whatsoever and “couldn’t have been friendlier” to her in their limited interactions,” she said.

From the mouths of babes - literally.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

More and More National Guard Members Question Trump Deployments

In an Encrypted Group Chat, National Guard Members Question Trump Deployments 
National Guard members near the White House. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
 
'This is just not what any of us signed up for' 
 
'I swore an oath to the Constitution, not a person.' 
 
Kat Lonsdorf / NPR 

As President Trump calls for National Guard deployments across the U.S., a small contingent of Ohio guard members has been quietly expressing concern in an encrypted group chat.

The administration started sending troops into several Democratic-led cities this summer, citing the need to crack down on violent crime and protect federal immigration facilities. 

The Ohio guard members now say they're alarmed at the turn the country is taking. They're even questioning their potential role in it.

"I really went to a dark place when they sent the troops to [Los Angeles], and then eventually [Washington, D.C.], and now, Chicago. This is just not what any of us signed up for, and it's so out of the scope of normal operations," says J, a member of the Ohio National Guard who spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity.

In the summer, Trump sent troops into Los Angeles as anti-ICE protests escalated. He then deployed guard troops into D.C., where around 2,300 still regularly patrol streets. Then a torrent of plans for deployments came — Chicago, Portland, Memphis, cities in Louisiana and Missouri. Many of them remain embroiled in legal limbo.

In Ohio, J and several other members have taken to that group chat to discuss the deployments and the accompanying anxiety they've felt. J, as well as members C and A — all part of the same unit — agreed to talk to NPR on the condition that they are only identified by their first initials, because they are not authorized to talk to the press and fear retribution for expressing their opinions.

"I have been on two humanitarian-esque missions with the guard, which were awesome, doing the things you see on the commercial, helping these communities," says J. "And then you want me to go pick up trash and dissuade homeless people in D.C. at gunpoint. Like, no dude. It's so disheartening every time I see another city — and I just wonder, 'who's going to stand up to this?'"

It's a sentiment that's building with guard members elsewhere.

In recent weeks, more than 100 active military members have reached out to About Face, a nonpartisan nonprofit made up of current service members and post-9/11 veterans to be a resource for those who might be questioning their deployments, according to the organization.

"In the military culture, it's really easy to feel like if you have questions or dissent, you're the only person who thinks that," says director Brittany Ramos DeBarros, a combat veteran who served in Afghanistan.

The group has started an information campaign, specifically targeting members of the National Guard around the country — using flyers, posters, even billboards — encouraging them to reach out if they're having doubts.

"We take very seriously making sure that people do understand what they could be facing if they follow their conscience," says DeBarros. "But the thing we also help people think through is, what is the cost of not following your conscience? Because as Iraq and Afghanistan vets in particular, many of us are living with that cost every day."

NPR reached out to both the White House and the Pentagon for this story.

"Our great National Guardsmen signed up to defend the nation and serve the American people," wrote Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson in a statement. "We are proud of the work they have accomplished this year, and we are confident in their collective ability to carry out any and all orders by President Trump, the Department of War, and state leaders."

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson defended the deployments, saying Trump was using his "lawful authority to protect federal assets and personnel." Jackson lashed out at Democratic leaders, saying they'd failed to stop violent attacks on law enforcement.

The group chat

The group chat with the Ohio National Guard members — set up on the encrypted messaging app Signal — began amid the flurry of executive orders President Trump signed as he took office. Some of them affected the military. The members say they needed a space to process it.

"It's not even necessarily expressing opinions or anything. It's just expressing questions about things that come out," says A.

They say the chat is active every day, with members sharing information and news articles they come across. In recent months, that chat has grown to a dozen members of their unit, and it's become largely focused on Trump's rhetoric around the National Guard and his deployments of troops to several cities.

Ohio's Republican Gov. Mike DeWine has agreed to send troops to support the administration's efforts; there are about 150 in DC right now.

That voluntary directive has come to this unit. None of the three took it. They say the orders themselves were uncharacteristically vague.

"What exactly are we going to be doing? Are we going to have leave? And those answers aren't very clear — but in the past, it's always been very clear," says A. "Anywhere that we go, there's crucial information that we get about the why behind it. And whenever we don't get that, especially for these city moves, members ask questions."

Growing anti-guard sentiment

A joined the guard to pay for college. J was looking for direction in life. And C felt the pull of the benefits that the guard offers and to serve her country. All three have served for years, even decades.

The three say they are grappling with whether to leave the guard, and end their military careers.

"The only reason I want to finish my current contract is just because I feel like there's weight to what I do and say right now, and I just want to use that to do some good," says J.

C says she has been proud of her military career and how she has served — noting that she's served on missions that she didn't necessarily agree with before. But she worries these deployments could change that. She says she's spent a lot of time thinking about what line she won't cross.

"I've been in therapy. Lots of therapy has taken me to the point where at least I can be okay if I have to say goodbye. That sucks. Is this tarnishing my service? Is it undoing everything I thought I was fighting for?" she says.

The three say they've felt anti-guard sentiment from some of their community and in their civilian lives.

"Everything that has been happening is so counter to doctrine, and so counter to what we've been taught," C says.

Their thoughts

The Trump administration has publicly talked about using the National Guard to help with mass deportations and immigration enforcement — something broadly illegal under US law. That bothers the three guard members.

"There is no way I would participate in that," says J. "I just think when everything is said and done, people are going to have to answer for what we're seeing now, and I don't want to be any part of it."

A also says he's been wrestling with what he'd do if made to participate.

"I think, like, establishing those boundaries with yourself: What am I willing to do? What am I willing to give up? And where do I draw those lines?" he says.

The idea of troops patrolling U.S. streets — even if they're only picking up trash — is also problematic for the Ohio guard members.

"It's kind of like fearmongering. People who don't see people in uniform every day, you send 50 of them out to walk their street, it's going to send a message," J says.

DeBarros, the director of About Face, says she knows the tactic well.

"In Afghanistan, we used to regularly carry out what are called presence patrols, where there was no purpose or mission other than to be present in the space and normalizing that we were there," she said. "Letting people know, oh, if you act up, we are here, and we're watching."

C has been thinking a lot about what she's willing to give up and the potential consequences.

"I swore an oath to the Constitution, not a person," she says. "I just really, really implore my peers and everybody outside looking in, to just think about that. Really think about that, and think about what that means. And if there are questions, ask them. Keep talking."




 

Friday, November 7, 2025

14 states band together to offer science-based health options to one-third of Americans

Fifteen governors announced the Governors Public Health Alliance, a coalition designed to coordinate public health policy across states. The Alliance positions itself as a response to what its members call a lack of science-based leadership from Washington under the second Trump administration.

All founding members are Democrats. They say the group is nonpartisan because it follows scientific guidance. Critics call it a partisan operation that will fragment the nation’s public health system.

What the Alliance Does

The GPHA describes itself as a “nonpartisan coordinating hub for governors and their public health leaders.” The organization connects member states on health surveillance, emergency response, and policy coordination.

Core Functions

Health threat detection: The Alliance creates channels for states to share data on emerging health threats.

Emergency preparedness: Member states pool resources and best practices for crisis response.

Public health guidance: The group aims to align policies on issues like vaccine recommendations across state lines.

Global health liaison: The GPHA plans to engage directly with international health organizations, a role typically held by the federal government.

The Alliance connects with existing regional groups like the West Coast Health Alliance and the Northeast Public Health Collaborative, creating a national platform for their work.

Member States and Leadership

The coalition includes 14 states and Guam, representing roughly one-third of the U.S. population. All founding governors are Democrats.

State/TerritoryFounding Governor
CaliforniaGavin Newsom
ColoradoJared Polis
ConnecticutNed Lamont
DelawareMatt Meyer
GuamLou Leon Guerrero
HawaiiJosh Green
IllinoisJB Pritzker
MarylandWes Moore
MassachusettsMaura Healey
New JerseyPhil Murphy
New YorkKathy Hochul
North CarolinaJosh Stein
OregonTina Kotek
Rhode IslandDan McKee
WashingtonBob Ferguson

GovAct and Advisory Structure

The nonprofit GovAct (Governors Action Alliance), founded by Julia Spiegel, incubated the GPHA. GovAct describes itself as a “centralized platform for collaboration across governors’ offices” to help them “champion fundamental freedoms and improve people’s lives.”

The Alliance uses two advisory groups to claim bipartisan legitimacy:

GovAct’s Bipartisan Advisory Board includes former Republican governors Arne Carlson (Minnesota), Marc Racicot (Montana), and Bill Weld (Massachusetts), along with Democrats Jim Doyle (Wisconsin), Deval Patrick (Massachusetts), and Kathleen Sebelius (Kansas). Former federal officials Sally Yates and Larry Thompson also serve.

Public Health Expert Advisors include Dr. Mandy Cohen (former CDC Director), Dr. Anne Zink (former Alaska Chief Medical Officer), and Dr. Raj Panjabi (former White House Senior Director for Global Health Security and Biodefense). Dr. Zink has said she joined only because the initiative is nonpartisan.

This structure separates the Democratic governors who run the Alliance from the bipartisan and expert advisors who guide it, creating a defense against partisanship accusations.

Why the Alliance Was Formed

The GPHA launched as a direct response to Trump administration health policies, particularly those of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker accused the federal government of “abandoning science for conspiracy theories.”

New York Governor Kathy Hochul said the administration was “wreaking havoc on public health” by undermining vaccine access, attacking abortion rights, and slashing Medicaid funding.

Maryland Governor Wes Moore stated that when the federal government tells states “you’re on your own,” governors must work together.

California Governor Gavin Newsom positioned the Alliance as protection against “political interference” and a counter to “extremists [who] try to weaponize the CDC and spread misinformation.”

These governors believe federal health agencies, particularly the CDC, have been compromised through leadership changes, reduced transparency, and the sidelining of scientific advisory bodies.

The Science vs. Politics Frame

The Alliance pledges to ensure public health decisions are “driven by data, facts, and the health of the American people” rather than political ideology. This positions member states as defenders of evidence-based policy against what they see as federal hostility to scientific consensus, especially on vaccines.

Lessons from COVID-19

Several governors, including Connecticut’s Ned Lamont, have compared the GPHA to regional pacts formed during the COVID-19 pandemic. When federal guidance seemed inconsistent, states collaborated on messaging, travel restrictions, and medical supply procurement. The GPHA formalizes this state-led approach.

The Alliance’s creation opens a fight over who controls the public health narrative in America. GPHA governors argue the administration politicized federal agencies like the CDC, requiring a new source of authority. The administration counters that these governors destroyed public trust during COVID-19 with mask mandates and school closures.

This reflects competing definitions of public health. For GPHA states, it’s a collective good protected by expert-guided government action. For the administration, it’s about individual liberty and freedom from government overreach.

How the Alliance Operates

The GPHA moved quickly to demonstrate its operational capacity beyond political statements.

Initial Actions

Coordinated executive action: Member states share strategies for preserving COVID-19 vaccine access, including standing orders to counteract federal guidance changes.

Expert briefings: Governors and their public health teams receive regular updates from Alliance advisors, providing scientific information independent of federal channels.

Policy toolkits: The GPHA develops resources for responding to major events like sporting competitions or political conventions, and for managing emerging health threats with coordinated cross-state communication.

Regional Coordination

The Alliance serves as a national umbrella connecting regional groups. It links the West Coast Health Alliance and Northeast Public Health Collaborative, amplifying their work on issues like bulk vaccine procurement and supply chain resilience.

The GPHA mirrors core CDC and HHS functions: expert briefings, policy guidance, and national strategy coordination on vaccine distribution and pandemic response. For member states, it operates as a parallel CDC providing services and scientific validation they no longer trust federal agencies to deliver.

This raises questions about resource duplication and whether a nonprofit-backed state coalition can replicate the scale, funding, and research capacity of federal public health agencies.

The Nonpartisan Claim

The gap between the GPHA’s “nonpartisan” branding and its all-Democratic membership generates the sharpest criticism.

Supporters argue the Alliance’s nonpartisanship comes from its mission to follow science, not from member party affiliation. They point to the bipartisan advisory board with Republican former governors and the independent health experts. Dr. Mandy Cohen notes that staff from Republican-led states have attended GPHA briefings.

Critics say an organization of only Democratic governors is partisan by definition. Several founding governors—Gavin Newsom, JB Pritzker, and Wes Moore—are potential 2028 presidential candidates, suggesting political positioning may drive their participation. GovAct has also coordinated Democratic-led alliances on abortion access, reinforcing perceptions that it advances partisan policy rather than nonpartisan governance.

The Federal Response

The Trump administration rejects the GPHA’s premise. HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon argues that GPHA governors “destroyed public trust” during COVID-19 through “unscientific school closures, toddler mask mandates, and vaccine passports.” He calls these the “failed politics of the pandemic.”

The administration claims it’s working to “rebuild that trust by grounding every policy in rigorous evidence and Gold Standard Science.” This rhetoric mirrors the Alliance’s language about science and evidence, framing the GPHA as a continuation of failed policies by discredited actors.

Risk of a Fragmented System

Policy experts warn the GPHA could create a “two-track system of public health protection.” GPHA states would follow one set of guidelines while non-member states follow different federal guidance or their own policies.

Stanford law and health policy professor Michelle M. Mello says this could create dramatic variations in public health protection by zip code. Because infectious diseases cross state borders, this fragmentation could undermine national pandemic response.

Politically defined health blocs operating with different facts and recommendations could increase public confusion and erode trust in all public health institutions.

The GPHA shifts American federalism. The traditional model features federal agencies setting national standards that states implement and adapt. The Alliance creates parallel guidance competing with the federal government for legitimacy, resources, and public trust.

States are no longer just “laboratories of democracy” testing policies. They’re building rival power centers on national security issues like pandemic preparedness. This competitive federalism could make the public increasingly cynical about all official health advice, regardless of source. Creating an alternative system to “rebuild trust” may further erode the concept of a single, reliable source of scientific truth.

 How the GPHA Differs from Existing Groups

The GPHA’s structure and mission contrast sharply with traditional interstate collaboration.

The National Governors Association

Founded in 1908, the National Governors Association represents all 55 states, territories, and commonwealths. It provides a forum for sharing best practices, developing bipartisan policy solutions, and speaking with unified voice on national policy.

The NGA maintains substantial public health infrastructure. Its Center for Best Practices and Public Health and Emergency Management Task Force support governors on health issues. The NGA provides policy analysis, technical assistance, and learning networks on Medicaid, the opioid crisis, chronic disease prevention, and epidemic preparedness. Task forces are typically co-chaired by one Democrat and one Republican.

Key differences:

Partisanship: The NGA is structurally bipartisan. The GPHA, despite its bipartisan advisory board, operates through an exclusively Democratic membership.

Federal relationship: The NGA collaborates with and influences the administration and Congress on behalf of all states. The GPHA was created to counter the federal government.

Scope and speed: The NGA is comprehensive and consensus-driven. The GPHA is focused and designed for quick action on specific public health threats.

The GPHA’s existence suggests its founding members believe traditional bipartisan mechanisms like the NGA can’t address their concerns in a hyper-partisan environment. If the NGA’s consensus model could resolve disputes between GPHA states and the Trump administration over science and public health, the Alliance likely wouldn’t exist.

The NGA seeks common ground. The GPHA defends what its members consider a non-negotiable position: the integrity of science-based policy.

The GPHA’s formation criticizes the NGA’s effectiveness when common ground on fundamental issues has vanished. When one side views the other as operating outside accepted bounds of facts and reason, polite bipartisan negotiation breaks down.

If governors feel they must create partisan alliances because traditional bipartisan forums are inadequate, it signals decay in collaborative structures managing state-federal relations. The GPHA isn’t just a new organization. It’s a symptom of declining influence among the old ones.

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