The Trump Justice Department on Monday filed a misconduct complaint against a federal judge for warning in early March that the president could spark a “constitutional crisis” by defying court orders — a concern that was swiftly validated. The complaint against James Boasberg, chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, was announced by Attorney General Pam Bondi…
Columbia University has agreed to pay a $200 million fine and make other significant concessions to the Trump administration in a deal to restore federal grants canceled earlier this year as part of the president’s assault on institutions of higher education. Under the terms of the settlement, which was released Wednesday, Columbia agreed to “conduct a thorough review” of its educational…
A trio of Democratic U.S. senators on Monday launched a probe into reports that President Donald Trump’s legal team struck a secretive side deal with Skydance — the prospective owner of CBS — that includes millions of dollars worth of “broadcast transmissions” supporting right-wing causes. In a letter to Skydance CEO David Ellison, Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)…
The Trump administration on Thursday said it will restrict waivers that have allowed states to keep kids enrolled in Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program beyond the 12-month period of continuous coverage required under federal law. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), led by Mehmet Oz, announced the move on Thursday, saying that it has informed states of a…
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s decision Friday to eliminate its scientific research arm drew horrified responses from public health experts and climate advocates, who warned that the Trump administration is targeting the foundation of the department’s work to shield Americans from hazardous chemicals, toxic pollution, and drinking water contaminants. “This is grim news…
The U.S. House passed legislation early Friday that would provide roughly $832 billion in funding for military programs for the coming fiscal year, a vote that came shortly after the chamber approved a $9 billion rescissions package that takes an axe to public media and foreign aid. Five House Democrats — Reps. Don Davis of North Carolina, Jared Golden of Maine, Vicente Gonzalez of Texas…
A group of congressional Republicans introduced legislation Wednesday that would revoke the federal charter of the National Education Association, the largest teachers union in the United States and an organization that has mobilized against the Trump administration’s far-right agenda — which includes an ongoing effort to dismantle the Department of Education. The bill…
The Trump administration has reportedly embarked on what local election officials and rights groups say is an unprecedented effort to collect data on voters across the U.S. and physically examine election equipment in states across the country, heightening concerns that the president is planning a reprise of his lawless attempt to subvert the 2020 contest. The Washington Post reported…
A corporate lobbyist who for decades has helped major companies and rich Americans dodge taxes is now serving as the U.S. Treasury Department’s top tax policy official, a position in which he will write rules implementing the newly passed Republican budget law. That role is “enormously powerful,” The New York Times’ Jesse Drucker wrote in a Monday profile of Ken Kies, whom the GOP-controlled…
Missouri’s Republican governor on Thursday signed legislation repealing the paid sick leave portion of a ballot measure that the state’s voters approved with nearly 60% support in the 2024 election. The short-lived provision, which will officially be repealed on August 28, required Missouri employers to provide workers with an hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours of work.
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva responded defiantly on Wednesday to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to impose a 50% tariff on products from the South American nation, a move that Lula said would be reciprocated. “Brazil is a sovereign nation with independent institutions and will not accept any form of tutelage,” Lula said in a statement released shortly after Trump issued…
Consumer advocates said Tuesday that the Trump administration is to blame for an appeals court decision that effectively killed the Federal Trade Commission’s click-to-cancel rule, a Biden-era effort to stop companies from trapping consumers in subscriptions with onerous cancellation terms. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit vacated the rule entirely on procedural grounds on…
A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked a provision of the new Republican budget law that bars Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood health centers across the United States, an attack that reproductive rights advocates warn could shutter hundreds of clinics nationwide. The decision by Judge Indira Talwani of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, an Obama appointee…
The Republican budget measure that U.S. President Donald Trump signed into law late last week contains a provision that analysts say will allow private jet owners to write off the full cost of their aircraft in the first year of purchase, a boon to the ultra-rich that comes as millions of people are set to lose healthcare under the same legislation. FlyUSA, a private aviation provider…
President Donald Trump’s handpicked Social Security chief issued a statement Thursday applauding the passage of a Republican reconciliation bill that analysts say would negatively impact the New Deal program’s finances. Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano called the Republican legislation, which Trump is expected to sign on Friday, a “historic step forward for America’s seniors”…
The parent company of CBS News, Paramount Global, announced Tuesday that it has agreed to pay U.S. President Donald Trump $16 million to settle what legal experts called an entirely meritless lawsuit over the media organization’s handling of a pre-election “60 Minutes” interview with Kamala Harris. Under the reported terms of the settlement, the money will go toward Trump’s legal fees and his…
Even after an all-night session of amendment votes and wrangling behind closed doors, Senate Republicans still did not have enough support to pass their reconciliation package as of Tuesday morning, leaving party leaders scrambling to placate GOP holdovers who are purportedly nervous about the legislation’s unprecedented cuts to Medicaid and federal nutrition assistance. Sen. Chris Murphy (D…
Sen. Bernie Sanders condemned the Republican budget reconciliation package in stark terms during a floor speech late Sunday, calling the measure “the most dangerous piece of legislation in the modern history of our country” and warning that its massive cuts to Medicaid, federal nutrition assistance, and other programs would have deadly consequences nationwide. “Over 50,000…
Senate Republicans on Thursday moved to revive a plan to dramatically reduce the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s budget after the chamber’s parliamentarian determined that an earlier proposal ran afoul of reconciliation rules. The previous proposal, crafted by Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee, would have zeroed out the CFPB’s budget, but the Senate parliamentarian deemed it…
An Oxfam report published Wednesday estimates that the richest 1% globally have seen their wealth surge by more than $33.9 trillion over the past decade, with just 3,000 billionaires accounting for $6.5 trillion of that increase. The report, released ahead of June 30 development financing talks in Seville, Spain, argues that the international community’s plan to achieve the Sustainable…
This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on June 25, 2025. It is shared here with permission.
Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani prevailed in Tuesday’s Democratic mayoral primary in New York City after running a grassroots campaign centered on delivering transformative change and lower costs in the expensive metropolis.
Mamdani’s primary win, a stunning upset, is expected to become official after the ranked-choice tally next week. In his victory speech, Mamdani said that his campaign and its supporters “made history.”
“In the words of Nelson Mandela, ‘It always seems impossible until it is done,’” he added. “My friends, we have done it.”
Affordability was a key focus of Mamdani’s policy platform and messaging, with the Democratic state assemblymember calling for an immediate rent freeze for all of the city’s rent-stabilized tenants, the creation of a network of city-owned grocery stores focused not on profits but on “keeping prices low,” and free childcare.
Mamdani proposed funding those and other priorities with a higher tax rate on corporations and city residents earning more than $1 million per year—fueling the backlash his campaign faced from the ultra-wealthy.
Aru Shiney-Ajay, executive director of the Sunrise Movement—whose local chapter knocked on over 20,000 doors for the race—said in a statement that “the people of New York City proved that a movement powered by hope, courage, and working people can beat the money of billionaires.”
“This is what it looks like to take back power,” said Shiney-Ajay. “Pundits, billionaires, and the political establishment said it couldn’t be done. But this campaign shattered that belief.”
On Friday night, we walked the length of Manhattan, from Inwood Hill to Battery Park.
New Yorkers deserve a Mayor they can see, hear, even yell at. The city is in the streets. pic.twitter.com/gbOLz78Fta
— Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@ZohranKMamdani) June 23, 2025
Shiney-Ajay, like other progressives, argued that Mamdani’s campaign should serve as a model for the rudderless Democratic Party as it tries to recover from its devastating loss to President Donald Trump and the Republican Party in last year’s election.
“Zohran Mamdani is the future of the Democratic Party,” said Shiney-Ajay. “This kind of campaign and vision is what the party needs to rebuild trust with young voters and working-class voters, so we can defeat Trump and his allies.”
Joseph Geevarghese, executive director of Our Revolution—a national progressive advocacy group that endorsed Mamdani—said that the democratic socialist’s win “has shaken the political establishment and proven that a united grassroots movement can take down even the most entrenched, powerful forces.”
“This race was a showdown between the billionaire-backed status quo—which poured tens of millions into pro-Cuomo super PACs—and a new generation ready to crush corporate greed and deliver real results for working people,” said Geevarghese. “The demand for people-powered change is loud, clear, and unstoppable.”
While the winner of New York City’s Democratic mayoral primary would typically be considered the heavy favorite going into the general election, “this fall’s contest promises to be unusually volatile,” The New York Timesobserved, noting that it will “include Mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent.”
Despite conceding defeat in Tuesday’s primary, Cuomo left open the possibility of running as an independent in November.
“Mamdani faces an enormous responsibility—not only to his immediate constituency but also to a broader progressive movement.”
Following his win, Mamdani supporters pointed to his broad support and successful coalition-building as reasons to be optimistic about his general-election prospects.
“The results make clear that his voting base wasn’t limited to young, college-educated voters most engaged by his campaign,” Bhaskar Sunkara, the president of The Nation and founding editor of Jacobin, wrote Wednesday. “Notably, Mamdani succeeded in neighborhoods like Bay Ridge, Bensonhurst, Dyker Heights, Sunset Park, and Brighton Beach—all areas that swung rightward in the 2024 presidential election.”
“Mamdani has undoubtedly delivered a major victory in America’s largest city,” Sunkara added. “But we must be sober about the challenges ahead. Electoral wins are meaningful only if they translate into tangible improvements in people’s lives, and political momentum can dissipate quickly if governance falls short. Mamdani faces an enormous responsibility—not only to his immediate constituency but also to a broader progressive movement watching closely from across the country and the world.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders late Monday led the introduction of a bill that would prevent the Trump administration from using federal funds for a military attack on Iran without explicit authorization from Congress, as Israel’s unlawful assault on the country continued for the fifth consecutive day. “Netanyahu’s reckless and illegal attacks violate international law and risk igniting a regional…
Senate Republicans on Monday proposed cutting Medicaid even more aggressively than their House colleagues to help offset the cost of trillions of dollars in tax breaks that would disproportionately benefit the wealthiest Americans. The legislative text unveiled by the GOP-controlled Senate Finance Committee is a central component of the sprawling reconciliation package that Republicans are…
Warning against “another endless conflict” in the Middle East, Democratic U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine on Monday introduced a war powers resolution aimed at preventing President Donald Trump from attacking Iran without congressional debate and authorization. Given its status as a privileged resolution, the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate will be forced to swiftly consider and vote on the measure…
The Republican-controlled U.S. Senate voted Thursday to confirm scandal-plagued Billy Long to serve as head of the Internal Revenue Service, an agency that he sought to abolish during his tenure in Congress. Every Republican senator voted in favor of confirming President Donald Trump’s IRS commissioner pick in the face of revelations that he was closely involved in promoting a fraud-riddled…
Senate Republicans unveiled legislation Wednesday that would require the sale of millions of acres of U.S. public land in Western states, a proposal that conservation groups slammed as a giveaway to corporate interests and the rich disguised as an attempt to alleviate the housing crisis. The bill released by the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources is a piece of the GOP’s…
This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on June 9, 2025. It is shared here with permission under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.
Israeli forces early Monday boarded the Madleen, a United Kingdom-flagged vessel carrying humanitarian aid, and detained its crew members as they sought to deliver food, children’s prosthetics, and other supplies to Gaza’s besieged and starving population.
The Freedom Flotilla Coalition said in a statement that the Madleen was “unlawfully boarded, its unarmed civilian crew abducted, and its life-saving cargo—including baby formula, food, and medical supplies—confiscated.”
Huwaida Arraf, a human rights attorney and Freedom Flotilla organizer, said that “Israel has no legal authority to detain international volunteers aboard the Madleen” and argued that Israel’s naval blockade violates the International Court of Justice’s “binding orders requiring unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza.”
“These volunteers are not subject to Israeli jurisdiction and cannot be criminalized for delivering aid or challenging an illegal blockade—their detention is arbitrary, unlawful, and must end immediately,” said Arraf.
Heidi Matthews, an assistant professor of law at Osgoode Hall Law School at York University in Canada, echoed Arraf, writing on social media that “the world is watching Israel attack a civilian boat carrying no weapons—only humanitarian aid—flying a U.K. flag in international waters and carrying humanitarians of many nationalities.”
“Israel has precisely zero authority to do so under any law,” Matthews added.
“If you see this video, we have been intercepted and kidnapped in international waters by the Israeli occupational forces, or forces that support Israel.”
The Israeli Foreign Ministry on Monday derided the Madleen as a “selfie yacht” and said the vessel is “safely making its way to the shores of Israel” after the country’s forces boarded the boat, which set sail from Sicily on June 1. The foreign ministry added that there are other “ways to deliver aid to the Gaza Strip”—but Israel’s military has been tightly restricting the flow of food and other assistance, pushing the enclave toward famine.
Among the vessel’s dozen passengers are Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg and Rima Hassan, a member of the European Parliament.
“If you see this video, we have been intercepted and kidnapped in international waters by the Israeli occupational forces, or forces that support Israel,” Thunberg said in a video posted online by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition. “I urge all my friends, family, and comrades to put pressure on the Swedish government to release me and the others as soon as possible.”
SOS! the volunteers on 'Madleen' have been kidnapped by Israeli forces. Greta Thunberg is a Swedish citizen. Pressure their foreign ministries and help us keep them safe!
— Freedom Flotilla Coalition (@GazaFFlotilla) June 9, 2025
Zeteo‘s Prem Thakker reported that “before connection was lost, video from the vessel showed some form of white substance sprayed upon the vessel.”
“Passengers reported the unknown liquid came from drones flying overhead, while the ship’s radios began being jammed,” Thakker wrote.
Nihad Awad, national executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, called Israel’s seizure of the Madleen “a blatant act of international piracy and state terrorism.”
“We call on governments—especially western governments funding Israel’s genocide and Arab Muslim governments watching it happen—to show an iota of the courage demonstrated by those on the Madleen by using every tool at their disposal to force an end to the genocide,” said Awad.
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories, wrote that “while Madleen must be released immediately, every Mediterranean port should send boats with aid, solidarity, and humanity to Gaza.”
“Breaking the siege is a legal duty for states, and a moral imperative for all of us,” Albanese added.
Since Trump took office in January, US foreign assistance spending of all kinds has been severely curtailed in Haiti. But, that didn’t stop the embassy in Port-au-Prince from obligating $60,000 for “pool maintenance.” The contract was awarded in March to a local company, Klean-X S.A, and has a potential value of up to $250,000.
The firm is owned by the Succar family and, according to a Haitian government contracting document, one of the beneficial owners is Antoine Salim Succar. He also appears on the original incorporation paperwork published in the official Le Moniteur. A former advisor to previous Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe and past President Michel Martelly, Succar was sanctioned by Canada in early 2023 for “significant acts of corruption.” Both Lamothe and Martelly have also been sanctioned by the US and Canada.
Government contracting document that lists “Antonio S. Succar” as a beneficial owner of Klean-X S.A. Mr. Succar’s full name is Salim Antonio Succar. The document shows that the Haitian state telecommunications agency, CONATEL, awarded Klean-X S.A. a 1.26 million gourde contract in April 2023 — about two months after the Canada sanctions.
A copy of the July 2, 2011 Le Moniteur, showing the owners of Klean-X as Salim Succar, Jean Succar, and Jacques Frantz Remonvil. At the time, Salim Succar held 40 percent of the shares.
The recent award from the US, however, is far from Klean-X’s first contract. An analysis of government contracting data shows that Succar’s firm has received more than a dozen contracts from the US Embassy since 2019, totaling more than $1.4 million. The contracts are for cleaning services, gardening, and pool maintenance. Nearly $400,000 of that total was obligated after the Canadian sanctions.
USASpending.gov profile page for Klean X SA showing total awards amounting to $1.4 million.
Though Succar is not under US sanctions, officials have consistently indicated that they are coordinating with Canada, the UN, and other nations on sanctions policy. Doing business with entities owned by sanctioned individuals sends a drastically different message.
Not only did Succar continue getting Haitian government and US government contracts after the sanctions, Klean-X received money from Canada as well. In fact, Klean-X also held janitorial contracts at the Canadian embassy dating back to 2016. Since then, the firm has received some $1.25 million for work at the embassy. That work continued even after Canada sanctioned Succar, with Klean-X receiving more than $100,000 in 2023. In 2024, for the first time in nearly a decade, the Canadian embassy awarded its cleaning service contract to a new firm.
The last contract that Klean-X appears to have received from the Canadian government was awarded in August, 2023 — about six months after the sanctions.
Various UN agencies, including UNOPS and UNICEF, have contracted with Klean-X as well, including after the 2023 Canada sanctions. In 2023 and 2024, Klean-X received more than $250,000 fromUNICEF and about $50,000 fromUNOPS.
Succar seems aware that his presence on the Canadian sanctions list could be problematic for his US holdings, if not his ability to receive US taxpayer money. In 2024, two South Florida properties in Succar’s name were transferred to Florida-registered LLCs; one purchased in 2015 and the other in 2017. They have a combined value of over $1 million. Both newly created LLCs list the registered agent as Cabinet Lissade Succar Trust, with a residential address in Doral — that home was purchased for $800,000 by Succar’s brother, Michel, just two months after the sanctions.
Mr. Succar did not respond to a request for comment.
The Trump White House on Tuesday formally asked Congress to rescind over $9 billion in approved spending, taking aim at lifesaving foreign aid programs as well as funding for U.S. public broadcasting outlets targeted by the president. The $9.4 billion rescission request, expected to be the first of several, is laid out in a memo authored by Office of Management and Budget Director Russell…
Israeli forces on Tuesday gunned down dozens of people, including children, close to a privatized aid distribution site in southern Gaza, marking the third consecutive day that Israel’s military has opened fire on Palestinians seeking food amid an increasingly dire humanitarian emergency. A doctor at nearby Nasser Hospital, which is barely functioning and unequipped to handle an influx of…