June 16, 2026

Trump even wants to take away DC residents' vote

Huffington Post -    President Donald Trump’s desire to control everything in Washington, D.C., has moved beyond repairing fountains and sending in National Guard troops to electoral politics, as voters in the capital are set to select a new mayor for the first time in more than a decade.

Janeese Lewis George, a city council member who has led in the polls, is a democratic socialist who’s campaigned on delivering universal childcare and ceasing the D.C. police department’s cooperation with federal immigration authorities. Trump said last week he “wouldn’t like it” if she won.

“Maybe we’d take back Washington, run it on the federal basis,” Trump said in response to a reporter’s question at the White House. “We won’t put up with it. We’re not going to lose our businesses.”

The race between Lewis George and Kenyan McDuffie, a longtime former council member considered part of the city’s political establishment, is about a lot of things: the high cost of housing, crime, the city’s recovery from a DOGE-induced economic shock. But as with almost every personnel decision in Washington these days, voters in the city will also be weighing who is better equipped to deal with Trump.

The president can’t just “take back Washington” — at least, not legally.

There’s no question he can meddle in the city’s affairs. Trump has direct control over D.C.’s National Guard, and the Home Rule Act gives him the power to use the D.C. police force for federal purposes if he decides there are “special conditions of an emergency nature.” He took advantage of those authorities last year, when he briefly took over the police department and deployed the National Guard in response to a supposed crime crisis. Groups of guardsmen, mostly from GOP-controlled states, still roam the city’s streets.

Trump does not, however, have the power to single-handedly take over D.C.’s government. When Congress passed the Home Rule Act in 1973, it created the Washington, D.C., government that exists today and gave it significant control over its day-to-day activities.

The only way Trump could take over the district’s government is if Congress passes a bill amending the Home Rule Act. Even in today’s Congress, controlled by Republicans, such an effort would require a number of Democrats to support it in the Senate, which is highly unlikely.

Asked about Trump’s comments, Lewis George, who’s been a city council member since January 2021, said the city’s residents want a more confrontational approach to the president, who is obsessed with meddling with their city.

“We are not going to get ICE off our streets by fearing this president,” she said in a statement to HuffPost on Monday. “We are not going to protect our rights or Home Rule by obeying in advance. Threatening Home Rule because you do not like how residents vote is an attack on democracy itself.

Public schools

  • Federal data show White students fell from 51 percent to 44 percent of public school enrollment over ten years.
  • Hispanic enrollment rose from 24 percent to 29 percent in the same period.
  • The Census Bureau also found White students were below half of K–12 enrollment in 2021.

Best run cities

WalletHub - As local governments continue to grapple with challenges like inflation and ongoing public safety concerns such as mass shootings, the personal-finance company WalletHub has released its report on 2026’s Best- & Worst-Run Cities in America, along with expert commentary.

To evaluate the effectiveness of city leadership, WalletHub analyzed 148 of the nation’s largest cities based on their operating efficiency. The study developed a “Quality of City Services” score for each city, using 36 key performance indicators across six service categories, and compared those results to each city’s total per-capita budget.
 
 Top 20 Best-Run Cities in America 
1. Provo, UT11. Las Cruces, NM 
2. Nampa, ID12. Oklahoma City, OK 
3. Manchester, NH13. Mobile, AL 
4. Boise, ID14. Dover, DE 
5. Nashua, NH15. Chesapeake, VA 
6. Sioux Falls, SD16. Warwick, RI 
7. Fort Wayne, IN17. Durham, NC 
8. Virginia Beach, VA18. Jacksonville, FL 
9. Lincoln, NE19. Lexington-Fayette, KY 
10. Mesa, AZ20. Missoula, MT 
 
Best vs. Worst
  • Casper, Wyoming, has the lowest long-term debt outstanding per capita, which is 64.9 times lower than in Oakland, California, the city with the highest.
     
  • Nampa, Idaho, has among the fewest property crimes (per 1,000 residents), which is 9.7 times fewer than in Oakland city, California, the city with the most.
     
  • Rapid City, South Dakota, has the lowest unemployment rate, which is 8.8 times lower than in Flint, Michigan, the city with the highest.
     
  • Fremont, California, has the lowest share of the population living in poverty, which is 6.6 times lower than in Flint, Michigan, the city with the highest.
To view the full report and your city’s rank

Meanwhile. ..

Middle East

Roll Call -  Congress needs to be able to review the agreement between the Trump administration and Tehran that is intended to end the Iran war, senators in both parties said Monday. President Donald Trump announced Sunday that the United States and Iran had reached a memorandum of understanding to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz and begin more comprehensive negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program and sanctions relief.

The deal has been signed electronically, while a formal, in-person signing ceremony is scheduled for Friday in Geneva, Trump said Monday. While the United States and Iran have both been touting wins in the deal, no actual text has been released — making it impossible to parse who’s telling the truth and leaving U.S. lawmakers clamoring for more details.

“Trump must release the details publicly, brief Congress immediately and end this war for good,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a statement Monday.

The Hill -    Republican senators are holding back from embracing President Trump’s announced peace deal with Iran, telling reporters that they need more details about the agreement and whether it would stop Iran’s nuclear program before providing judgment.

Trump’s Republican allies on Capitol Hill have said since the United States and Israel launched strikes in February that Iran cannot be allowed to acquire a nuclear weapon, but they say they can’t assess whether the new memorandum of understanding (MOU) will achieve that objective because they have yet to review it.

“The MOU, I want to see it myself. The way Iran describes it is awful. The way we describe it makes sense to me. Let’s look at it and see what it actually is,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who was a leading proponent of the military strikes against Iran and urged Trump last month to resume strikes to “finish the job,” if necessary.

How your state ranks

Roku and Fox

Bloomberg - Fox’s surprise acquisition of Roku is a $22 billion bet on streaming as the company’s future, after years of building up a cable-TV empire and amassing sports media rights.

  • The deal will make Fox a streaming distributor as well as a content company, and the combined company will become the third-largest player in US television by viewing share.
  • It’s a gamble by Lachlan Murdoch, fresh off a succession battle that cemented his role as heir apparent to his father’s media empire.
  • Investors balked at the Roku deal, sending Fox shares down 17%, their steepest decline on record. Competitors including Google and Samsung are working to narrow Roku’s lead, while Walmart bought smart-TV maker Vizio in 2024 to accelerate its advertising business.

Word

“This is an administration capable of immense, epic destruction, but unable to create much besides spectacle.” - Michelle Goldberg, NY Times Opinion columnist

Trump's war on voting rights

The Guardian -   The Trump administration is waging war on voting rights using justice department lawsuits, FBI investigations, and an executive order to limit voting by mail, moves mirroring the US president’s false claims he lost the 2020 election due to voting fraud, say election experts and ex-officials.

Since Donald Trump began his second term, numerous 2020 election denialists have been installed in key agencies such as the DoJ, the FBI and elsewhere to pursue widely discredited claims of fraud, which can intimidate election workers and voters in swing states that Trump lost to Joe Biden in 2020.

The justice department has also filed lawsuits seeking sensitive voter data from 30 states – even though, by law, states control elections – and the FBI has launched investigations into debunked allegations of voting fraud in Georgia, Wisconsin and a few other swing states that Trump lost in 2020.

Trump in late March this year issued an executive order sharply tightening mail-in voting rules, which Trump has long claimed without evidence contribute to fraud. The order gives the United States Postal Service unprecedented powers to issue new rules making voting by mail harder.

The administration’s multi-pronged push to change voting rules is under way despite laws that empower states and Congress to set election rules, sparking lawsuits from states and nonpartisan voting rights groups.

Donald Trump

CBS News -   President Trump's investment accounts made 3,642 transactions between Jan. 6 and March 30, a pace of about 63 per trading day,  according to a financial disclosure form filed in May

Polls

Independent -   President Donald Trump’s support among rural Americans has plunged since he took office, a new poll has found, a stark change within a demographic that once strongly supported the Republican.  Trump’s approval rating among these voters stood at 50 percent in early June, down from 60 percent in February of last year, according to the Reuters/Ipsos poll with a three percent margin of error.

A nearly equal share of rural Americans, 48 percent, said they disapprove of the president, while 31 percent of rural respondents said they approve of Trump’s handling of the economy and cost of living issues.

Court Won’t Block Trump Voting Order

Newsworthy News -   President Trump signed a sweeping executive order to verify voter citizenship and restrict mail-in ballots — and a federal judge just let it move forward, dealing Democrats a stinging defeat.

Trump signed Executive Order 14399, directing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Social Security Administration to build verified citizenship lists for every state, limiting mail ballots to approved voters only.

The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is directed to deliver mail-in ballots only to voters on state-approved lists, with barcoded envelopes and centralized tracking required.
A federal judge rejected Democrats’ request to block the order, ruling they filed too early and no actual harm had yet occurred.

At least two dozen states and multiple voting rights groups have filed lawsuits, arguing the order oversteps presidential authority over elections.

Oil prices

Wall Street Journal - Brent crude futures dropped 4.8% to $83.17 a barrel, its lowest close since the early days of the war. WTI crude, the U.S. benchmark, fell 4.9% to $80.75. All three major U.S. indexes jumped, with the tech-focused Nasdaq composite closing more than 3% higher. SpaceX zoomed nearly 20% higher, following its IPO gains Friday, and many chip stocks jumped 5% or more.

Middle East

Alternet America -   JD Vance admitted on CNBC that nothing surrounding the Strait of Hormuz has been decided yet, hours after Trump declared it open and toll-free. Trump’s $14 million project to repaint the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool “American Flag Blue” is already blooming with green algae. ICE agents tried to raid the offices of three different law firms representing migrant children in the D.C. area within 48 hours. And the DOJ approved a $111 billion merger that would put CBS News and CNN under the control of a single Trump-allied family.

HQ News - Trump is giving $300 billion to Iran. This could pay for: — Student debt elimination for 7.6M Americans — An end to homelessness in America — Healthcare subsidies for 22M Americans for nearly a decade — Medicaid coverage for 3.2M Americans for a decade — Food assistance for 41M Americans for 3 years — Federal cancer research for 40+ years — Free school lunch for every kid in America for over 4 years — Replacing every lead pipe in America — Free pre-K for every child in America for over 7 years

Alternet -  One of President Donald Trump’s most outspoken supporters is turning on him over his deal to end the Iran war.   “I have asked for days, why can't we, the people, see the damn [memorandum of understanding]?” radio host Mark Levin, who traditionally supports the president, commented on Monday. “Not through people briefed by an anonymous person. Honestly, I've never seen anything like this. If it is a great outcome for peace, then release it.”

In a separate post, Levin commented on how Trump has shifted in his characterization of America’s relationship with Israel.

“In a period of two-months, Israel has gone from a great ally and partner in war, fighting by our side against a horrible enemy that has killed thousands of our people, killed tens of thousands of their own people, and was a dire nuclear threat intent on attacking us, to Israeli PM Netanyahu being a difficult person who should be thanking us for saving his country from Iran and should get our permission if he wants to defend his people from Hezbollah and Iran, and stand down when his country is attacked,” Levin wrote.

He added, “And just yesterday, Israel's [prime minister] avenged the execution of 5 American soldiers by taking out a Hezbollah commander/terrorist. And only Israel has been killing Hezbollah leaders who murdered our Marines, soldiers, embassy staff, and more. It seems to me a kind word is in order. How does this make any sense?”

New Republic -   Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth crumbled when he tried to explain the difference between Donald Trump’s new deal with Iran and Barack Obama’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. 

Speaking on CBS News’s Face the Nation Sunday, Hegseth struggled to justify what the U.S. had actually won after months and months of mass destruction and global economic turmoil.

“The document says Iran will never have a nuclear weapon, won’t seek one, won’t buy one, won’t have one,” Hegseth explained. 

“JCPOA said that too,” host Margaret Brennan pointed out.

Pretty much verbatim, actually. The preface of Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal states: “Iran reaffirms that under no circumstances will Iran ever seek, develop or acquire any nuclear weapons.” 

Hegseth scrambled to defend the new deal. 

“But they didn’t have the threat of military force the way that we do that Iran respects in a very—in a way that their regime is more devastated, more devastating, excuse me, more devastated than it’s ever been in its 47 years, and that’s why they’re at the table,” he ranted incoherently. 

June 15, 2026

Polls

Alternet - President Donald Trump’s support is declining among a group of Americans who have consistently among his staunchest supporters — that is, rural Americans.

“Trump's approval rating among rural Americans dropped in June to a new low of 50 [percent], according to the June 3-8 Reuters/Ipsos poll,” Reuters reported on Sunday. “That compares with 60 [percent] approval in February 2025 shortly after Trump took office.”

The wire service added, “Rural disapproval of Trump's performance meanwhile rose to 48 [percent] from 34 [percent] in February 2025, according to the poll of 4,531 U.S. adults nationwide. The poll, which was conducted online, had a margin of error of 3 percentage points for people in rural areas and 2 points for Americans overall.”


πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ NATIONAL POLL By NBC NEWS Pres. Trump Approve: 42% [-2] Disapprove: 57% [+3]

Alternet - President Donald Trump’s support is declining among a group of Americans who have consistently among his staunchest supporters — that is, rural Americans. “Trump's approval rating among rural Americans dropped in June to a new low of 50 [percent], according to the June 3-8 Reuters/Ipsos poll,” Reuters reported on Sunday. “That compares with 60 [percent] approval in February 2025 shortly after Trump took office.” The wire service added, “Rural disapproval of Trump's performance meanwhile rose to 48 [percent] from 34 [percent] in February 2025, according to the poll of 4,531 U.S. adults nationwide. The poll, which was conducted online, had a margin of error of 3 percentage points for people in rural areas and 2 points for Americans overall.”

NBC NEWS POLL: Overall % who are extremely or very proud to be American 🟒 2003 — 90% 🟑 2024 — 67% 🟀 2026 — 58% (all-time low) —— Extremely proud only: • Trump voters — 62% • Harris voters — 12% • Age 18-29 — 36% • Age 65+ — 75%

Word


                      Via  Willie Ross Jr. Knee Deep

Social Security

Newsweek -    Senator Elizabeth Warren and other Democrats warn that proposals to raise the retirement age floated by some Republicans could result in significant benefit cuts for millions of Americans. It comes as Congress faces pressure to address Social Security’s looming funding shortfall.

“Republicans have a history of attempting to increase the retirement age, privatize Social Security, or otherwise cut Social Security benefits, and some Congressional Republicans have called to raise the retirement age or means-test benefits as the 'solution' to this problem,” Warren and Senators Tammy Duckworth and Richard Blumenthal wrote in the new letter to President Donald Trump.

The Hill -   
Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) call for Republicans to act on Social Security reform if they keep control of Congress in 2027 is getting pushback from Senate Republicans who warn it’s a bad political message heading into November. 

Yet, a trustees’ report that the popular retirement program will become insolvent sooner than expected has lit a fire under lawmakers in both parties to call for reforms such as raising the cap on payroll taxes, “means testing” beneficiaries, raising the retirement age, and creating personal accounts to invest in the stock markets.

The Social Security trustees’ report warned that beneficiaries would see their monthly checks cut by 22 percent in 2032.

....“I’m sending a letter to our leadership. … I’m sending them an official letter saying we should set up a bicameral, bipartisan [committee] — equal number of Republicans, equal number of Democrats — and the sole goal is to discuss how to make Social Security and Medicare solvent,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said.

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said he’s going to hold the Speaker to his promise to address Social Security’s future fiscal trajectory if Republicans keep control of Congress.

“We were promised … if we retain the majority, we’re definitely going to tackle this. I’ll try and hold them to this,” he said.

The Wisconsin Republican said he wants to “plus up” Social Security benefits by slashing federal spending more generally to create more fiscal space to fund Social Security without adding to the deficit.