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  • Senate leadership blocks vote as backlash grows
    Am I the only one tired of this?

    Same gridlock, same excuses. Who benefits from the stall?
    Senate leadership blocks vote as backlash grows Am I the only one tired of this? Same gridlock, same excuses. Who benefits from the stall?
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  • Senate leadership blocks vote as backlash grows
    This deserves loud pushback.

    Same gridlock, same excuses. Who benefits from the stall?
    Senate leadership blocks vote as backlash grows This deserves loud pushback. Same gridlock, same excuses. Who benefits from the stall?
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  • Navy Under Secretary Hung Cao says personnel discharged over vaccine mandate were 'failed'
    What's the administration thinking here?

    The Department of the Navy issued an apology letter Friday to former military personnel "unjustly removed" from service because of the COVID vaccine mandate during the Biden administration.
    Under Secretary of the Navy Hung Cao emphasized that the Department of War is committed to "righting past wrongs" and welcoming back former service members who were dismissed during the pandemic.
    "To the sailors and marines who were wrongfully discharged during COVID, we failed you," Hung said in a video posted on X. "We will never allow this to happen again, not on my watch. We are ready for you to come back, and we want to correct your records."
    Cao, the Department of the Navy’s chief operating and chief management officer, overseeing roughly one million Navy, Marine Corps and civilian personnel, acknowledged the impact of the mandate on those it forced out.
    HEGSETH ORDERS ABOUT FACE ON PENTAGON'S SLIPPING GROOMING STANDARDS
    "We are righting this wrong and it starts with this formal letter of apology," he said.
    President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14184 shortly after returning to office last January, directing federal agencies to identify service members affected by the former vaccine requirement and take steps to reinstate them or restore certain benefits.
    The order applies to former members of the Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, Space Force and Coast Guard who were discharged solely for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine.
    VA REVERSES BIDEN ADMIN POLICY PROVIDING ABORTION SERVICES AGENCY CALLS CONTRARY TO FEDERAL LAW
    The former secretary of defense mandated in 2021 that all service members receive the COVID-19 vaccine, a policy that was rescinded in 2023.
    "The military unjustly discharged those who refused the vaccine, regardless of the years of service given to our Nation, after failing to grant many of them an exemption that they should have received," Trump's executive order states.
    The Department of War issued guidance to all the secretaries of military departments to contact former service members with information about potential reinstatement and to correct their discharge records.
    TRUMP DECLARES ‘REAWAKENING’ OF ‘WARRIOR SPIRIT,’ UNWAVERING SUPPORT FOR MILITARY: ‘I HAVE YOUR BACKS’
    According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, more than 8,000 service members were separated after the Biden administration’s Department of Defense issued the vaccination mandate.
    "It is unconscionable that thousands of former Service members who held true to their perso…
    Navy Under Secretary Hung Cao says personnel discharged over vaccine mandate were 'failed' What's the administration thinking here? The Department of the Navy issued an apology letter Friday to former military personnel "unjustly removed" from service because of the COVID vaccine mandate during the Biden administration. Under Secretary of the Navy Hung Cao emphasized that the Department of War is committed to "righting past wrongs" and welcoming back former service members who were dismissed during the pandemic. "To the sailors and marines who were wrongfully discharged during COVID, we failed you," Hung said in a video posted on X. "We will never allow this to happen again, not on my watch. We are ready for you to come back, and we want to correct your records." Cao, the Department of the Navy’s chief operating and chief management officer, overseeing roughly one million Navy, Marine Corps and civilian personnel, acknowledged the impact of the mandate on those it forced out. HEGSETH ORDERS ABOUT FACE ON PENTAGON'S SLIPPING GROOMING STANDARDS "We are righting this wrong and it starts with this formal letter of apology," he said. President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14184 shortly after returning to office last January, directing federal agencies to identify service members affected by the former vaccine requirement and take steps to reinstate them or restore certain benefits. The order applies to former members of the Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, Navy, Space Force and Coast Guard who were discharged solely for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine. VA REVERSES BIDEN ADMIN POLICY PROVIDING ABORTION SERVICES AGENCY CALLS CONTRARY TO FEDERAL LAW The former secretary of defense mandated in 2021 that all service members receive the COVID-19 vaccine, a policy that was rescinded in 2023. "The military unjustly discharged those who refused the vaccine, regardless of the years of service given to our Nation, after failing to grant many of them an exemption that they should have received," Trump's executive order states. The Department of War issued guidance to all the secretaries of military departments to contact former service members with information about potential reinstatement and to correct their discharge records. TRUMP DECLARES ‘REAWAKENING’ OF ‘WARRIOR SPIRIT,’ UNWAVERING SUPPORT FOR MILITARY: ‘I HAVE YOUR BACKS’ According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, more than 8,000 service members were separated after the Biden administration’s Department of Defense issued the vaccination mandate. "It is unconscionable that thousands of former Service members who held true to their perso…
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  • Trump administration's defense strategy tells allies to handle their own security
    Who benefits from this decision?

    The Pentagon released a priority-shifting National Defense Strategy late Friday that chastised U.S. allies to take control of their own security and reasserted the Trump administration's focus on dominance in the Western Hemisphere above a longtime goal of countering China.
    Trump administration's defense strategy tells allies to handle their own security Who benefits from this decision? The Pentagon released a priority-shifting National Defense Strategy late Friday that chastised U.S. allies to take control of their own security and reasserted the Trump administration's focus on dominance in the Western Hemisphere above a longtime goal of countering China.
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  • Johnson warns House Republicans to ‘stay healthy’ as GOP majority shrinks to the edge
    Why resist verification?

    Republicans are clinging to a razor-thin 218-213 House majority.
    But House Speaker Mike Johnson shouldn't expect many reinforcements anytime soon.
    This month's shocking early House retirement of MAGA firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and the unexpected death of Republican Rep. Doug LaMalfa of California further shrunk the GOP's margins in the chamber.
    And that has House GOP leaders keeping a tight leash on the party's rank and file members.
    DEMOCRATIC TAKEOVER FEARS SOAR AS HOUSE REPUBLICANS CLING TO FRAGILE MAJORITY
    "They'd better be here," Johnson recently said of his members. "I told everybody, and not in jest, I said, no adventure sports, no risk-taking, take your vitamins. Stay healthy and be here."
    And House Majority Whip Tom Emmer’s office confirmed it is advising members that "outside of life-and-death circumstances," they expect Republican lawmakers to be on Capitol Hill.
    REP. LAMALFA'S DEATH FURTHER SHRINKS REPUBLICAN HOUSE MAJORITY
    There are currently four vacant House districts, which means four special elections to fill the seats. But it's the Democrats rather than the Republicans who will likely benefit more from the ballot box results in the short run.
    Here's a look at the special elections that are on deck:
    Voters in Texas' Democrat-dominated 18th Congressional District, which is anchored by downtown Houston and surrounding areas, head to the polls on the last day of January to choose a successor to fill the seat left vacant when Rep. Sylvester Turner died last March.
    Democrats Christian Menefee, a former attorney for Houston's Harris County, and former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards are facing off in the special election. They were the top two finishers in a field of 16 candidates that faced off in an initial election in November.
    While Texas has redrawn its congressional maps for the 2026 midterms, as part of the high-stakes redistricting battle between President Donald Trump and Republicans versus Democrats, the special election will use the state's current district lines.
    FORMER HOUSE SPEAKER MCCARTHY WARNS MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE IS ‘THE CANARY IN THE COAL MINE’
    The winner of the special election will give the Democrats one additional House member, giving Republican leadership further headaches.
    Eleven candidates are running in the Democratic Party primary in New Jersey's 11th Congressional District.
    The seat was left vacant after now New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill stepped down after winning November's guberna…
    Johnson warns House Republicans to ‘stay healthy’ as GOP majority shrinks to the edge Why resist verification? Republicans are clinging to a razor-thin 218-213 House majority. But House Speaker Mike Johnson shouldn't expect many reinforcements anytime soon. This month's shocking early House retirement of MAGA firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and the unexpected death of Republican Rep. Doug LaMalfa of California further shrunk the GOP's margins in the chamber. And that has House GOP leaders keeping a tight leash on the party's rank and file members. DEMOCRATIC TAKEOVER FEARS SOAR AS HOUSE REPUBLICANS CLING TO FRAGILE MAJORITY "They'd better be here," Johnson recently said of his members. "I told everybody, and not in jest, I said, no adventure sports, no risk-taking, take your vitamins. Stay healthy and be here." And House Majority Whip Tom Emmer’s office confirmed it is advising members that "outside of life-and-death circumstances," they expect Republican lawmakers to be on Capitol Hill. REP. LAMALFA'S DEATH FURTHER SHRINKS REPUBLICAN HOUSE MAJORITY There are currently four vacant House districts, which means four special elections to fill the seats. But it's the Democrats rather than the Republicans who will likely benefit more from the ballot box results in the short run. Here's a look at the special elections that are on deck: Voters in Texas' Democrat-dominated 18th Congressional District, which is anchored by downtown Houston and surrounding areas, head to the polls on the last day of January to choose a successor to fill the seat left vacant when Rep. Sylvester Turner died last March. Democrats Christian Menefee, a former attorney for Houston's Harris County, and former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards are facing off in the special election. They were the top two finishers in a field of 16 candidates that faced off in an initial election in November. While Texas has redrawn its congressional maps for the 2026 midterms, as part of the high-stakes redistricting battle between President Donald Trump and Republicans versus Democrats, the special election will use the state's current district lines. FORMER HOUSE SPEAKER MCCARTHY WARNS MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE IS ‘THE CANARY IN THE COAL MINE’ The winner of the special election will give the Democrats one additional House member, giving Republican leadership further headaches. Eleven candidates are running in the Democratic Party primary in New Jersey's 11th Congressional District. The seat was left vacant after now New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill stepped down after winning November's guberna…
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  • Documenting an Alaska Village, Before and After the Storm That Destroyed It
    This affects the entire country.

    Joann Carl’s dog Rocky, a long-eared, short-legged mix the color of graham crackers, has become Alaska famous since I first met Carl in April. Over the past few months, she’s seen his photo all over Facebook, she said, rescued after Typhoon Halong wiped away more than half the homes in her coastal Alaska Native village of Kipnuk, population 700.

    At the Anchorage Daily News, we’re based in Alaska’s largest city but travel as often as we can to small communities like Kipnuk in an attempt to cover a state that’s twice the size of Texas. We try to report more than one story at a time to justify the expense of plane tickets. Flights to a remote village in a small plane cost the same as a trip to New York. But rarely do we have the chance to document a community just before the breaking news arrives.

    Maybe you didn’t hear much about the typhoon. It began as a tropical storm, dumping record rainfall in parts of Japan before swirling toward Alaska. By the time it reached our shores, the remnants of the storm still carried enough force to flood two villages, sweeping away homes and leaving as many as three people dead.

    I’m writing to you about the storm because photojournalist Marc Lester and I happened to visit Kipnuk shortly before the typhoon. Marc returned to cover the evacuation, providing a look at an Alaska village on the front lines of climate change just before and after the devastation.

    The story of destruction in Carl’s hometown, along with the nearby village of Kwigillingok, adds an exclamation point to long-simmering fears about the future of Alaska coastal villages. Which town will be wiped away next? Where will climate refugees live? Should their former homes be rebuilt? If not, what does it mean for the future of these communities?

    Emily Schwing, reporting for KYUK public radio in Bethel and ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network, wrote in May about climate refugees the government helped relocate from the Yup’ik village of Newtok. In November, while covering Alaska’s crumbling public school infrastructure, she wrote how the school in Kipnuk housed hundreds of residents as an emergency shelter during the storm surge from Halong.

    When Marc and I first visited that schoolhouse in April, we were reporting on a very different kind of story. Justine Paul, Carl’s son, spent seven years in jail charged with murder in Alaska’s glacially slow justice system, where serious cases can take a decade to resolve. Paul’s case was ultimately dismissed after the evidence against him turned out to be deeply flawed. After struggling with addiction on the streets of Anchorage upon his release, Paul returned to live with Carl in the little Kipnuk house where he grew up.

    Our visit to their village before the storm gave Marc a chance to document a version…
    Documenting an Alaska Village, Before and After the Storm That Destroyed It This affects the entire country. Joann Carl’s dog Rocky, a long-eared, short-legged mix the color of graham crackers, has become Alaska famous since I first met Carl in April. Over the past few months, she’s seen his photo all over Facebook, she said, rescued after Typhoon Halong wiped away more than half the homes in her coastal Alaska Native village of Kipnuk, population 700. At the Anchorage Daily News, we’re based in Alaska’s largest city but travel as often as we can to small communities like Kipnuk in an attempt to cover a state that’s twice the size of Texas. We try to report more than one story at a time to justify the expense of plane tickets. Flights to a remote village in a small plane cost the same as a trip to New York. But rarely do we have the chance to document a community just before the breaking news arrives. Maybe you didn’t hear much about the typhoon. It began as a tropical storm, dumping record rainfall in parts of Japan before swirling toward Alaska. By the time it reached our shores, the remnants of the storm still carried enough force to flood two villages, sweeping away homes and leaving as many as three people dead. I’m writing to you about the storm because photojournalist Marc Lester and I happened to visit Kipnuk shortly before the typhoon. Marc returned to cover the evacuation, providing a look at an Alaska village on the front lines of climate change just before and after the devastation. The story of destruction in Carl’s hometown, along with the nearby village of Kwigillingok, adds an exclamation point to long-simmering fears about the future of Alaska coastal villages. Which town will be wiped away next? Where will climate refugees live? Should their former homes be rebuilt? If not, what does it mean for the future of these communities? Emily Schwing, reporting for KYUK public radio in Bethel and ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network, wrote in May about climate refugees the government helped relocate from the Yup’ik village of Newtok. In November, while covering Alaska’s crumbling public school infrastructure, she wrote how the school in Kipnuk housed hundreds of residents as an emergency shelter during the storm surge from Halong. When Marc and I first visited that schoolhouse in April, we were reporting on a very different kind of story. Justine Paul, Carl’s son, spent seven years in jail charged with murder in Alaska’s glacially slow justice system, where serious cases can take a decade to resolve. Paul’s case was ultimately dismissed after the evidence against him turned out to be deeply flawed. After struggling with addiction on the streets of Anchorage upon his release, Paul returned to live with Carl in the little Kipnuk house where he grew up. Our visit to their village before the storm gave Marc a chance to document a version…
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  • Trump administration messaging on ICE at odds with public support
    Am I the only one tired of this?

    As President Donald Trump’s administration doubles down on its aggressive immigration enforcement agenda, new polling data shows public approval for Immigration and Customs Enforcement has plummeted to new lows.

    The Democratic Congressional Progressive Caucus has taken advantage of the waning public support, making the “abolish ICE” movement a pillar in its 2026 legislative platform — vowing to block all Department of Homeland Security funding until meaningful reforms are enacted.

    DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has remained a staunch defender of the agency’s tactics, stating that federal agents have “been serving [their] country [their] entire life” and describing pushback from local leaders and media as “reckless behavior.”

    “President Trump and I will always stand with you. Please take some time today to thank an officer or agent today,” Noem said in a news release Jan. 9, Law Enforcement Appreciation Day. “Make them a meal, buy them a cup of coffee, or simply thank them. To every officer who puts on the badge each day: thank you. Your service is paramount to our nation’s safety.”

    The shift in public sentiment comes amid the massive federal immigration enforcement campaign known as “Operation Metro Surge,” which deployed approximately 2,000 federal officers to cities such as Minneapolis.

    Tensions reached a boiling point following the fatal shooting of Renee Good by ICE officer Jonathan Ross after Good struck Ross with her SUV, causing internal bleeding.

    The killing has sparked national protests and a fierce public clash between Minnesota leadership and the Trump administration over ICE’s presence.

    Support dropped when campaign promises became enforcement

    Recent data from the Economist and YouGov shows a hard shift in how the public views federal immigration officers.

    According to mid-January 2026 polling, 46% of respondents support abolishing ICE, a staggering increase from March 2025, when polling showed only 8% of respondents supported eliminating ICE.

    As the administration moves beyond its more than 150,000 arrests, 47% of the public believes the agency is making the country less safe.

    While the exact cause of the shift in public opinion is unknown, Roberto Suro, a professor of journalism and public policy at the University of Southern California, argued the backlash stems from a campaign promise by Trump that has been carried out far differently than originally pitched to voters.

    “The predominant image is of these big, burly masked men wr…
    Trump administration messaging on ICE at odds with public support Am I the only one tired of this? As President Donald Trump’s administration doubles down on its aggressive immigration enforcement agenda, new polling data shows public approval for Immigration and Customs Enforcement has plummeted to new lows. The Democratic Congressional Progressive Caucus has taken advantage of the waning public support, making the “abolish ICE” movement a pillar in its 2026 legislative platform — vowing to block all Department of Homeland Security funding until meaningful reforms are enacted. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has remained a staunch defender of the agency’s tactics, stating that federal agents have “been serving [their] country [their] entire life” and describing pushback from local leaders and media as “reckless behavior.” “President Trump and I will always stand with you. Please take some time today to thank an officer or agent today,” Noem said in a news release Jan. 9, Law Enforcement Appreciation Day. “Make them a meal, buy them a cup of coffee, or simply thank them. To every officer who puts on the badge each day: thank you. Your service is paramount to our nation’s safety.” The shift in public sentiment comes amid the massive federal immigration enforcement campaign known as “Operation Metro Surge,” which deployed approximately 2,000 federal officers to cities such as Minneapolis. Tensions reached a boiling point following the fatal shooting of Renee Good by ICE officer Jonathan Ross after Good struck Ross with her SUV, causing internal bleeding. The killing has sparked national protests and a fierce public clash between Minnesota leadership and the Trump administration over ICE’s presence. Support dropped when campaign promises became enforcement Recent data from the Economist and YouGov shows a hard shift in how the public views federal immigration officers. According to mid-January 2026 polling, 46% of respondents support abolishing ICE, a staggering increase from March 2025, when polling showed only 8% of respondents supported eliminating ICE. As the administration moves beyond its more than 150,000 arrests, 47% of the public believes the agency is making the country less safe. While the exact cause of the shift in public opinion is unknown, Roberto Suro, a professor of journalism and public policy at the University of Southern California, argued the backlash stems from a campaign promise by Trump that has been carried out far differently than originally pitched to voters. “The predominant image is of these big, burly masked men wr…
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  • There’s One World Leader We’d Most Like to Trade for Trump Right Now
    What's the endgame here?

    Politics

    There’s One World Leader We’d Most Like to Trade for Trump Right Now

    Man, does Canada have it good.

    By

    Jim Newell

    Jan 24, 20265:45 AM

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    Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images and Getty Images Plus.

    Sign up for the Surge, the newsletter that covers most important political nonsense of the week, delivered to your inbox every Saturday.

    Welcome to this week’s edition of the Surge, Slate’s weekly politics newsletter that needs to seriously ramp up its war crimes, and soon, if we’re going to snag a Board of Peace seat.

    This week, oh brother. We’ll just say upfront that there was so much Minnesota/ICE stuff to consider that we decided to not include any of it (this is called “news judgment”), though we would refer you to other excellent Slate content here. We do however talk about the Minnesota Senate race, and observe how Bill and Hillary Clinton are going to jail for a million years (unconfirmed). Plus, an old-fashioned look at Trump’s poll numbers, one year in.

    But first, Canada: Can we trade you for Mark Carney??

    1.

    Mark Carney

    What Trump hath wrought.

    Most contemporary political speeches are terrible, flattened into pablum and crowd-pleasing safety, delivered by empty vessels, then forgotten within the hour. Yet the address from Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a collected and poised former central bank head, will, we fear, be remembered for a long time. While he didn’t mention names, he did speak quite precisely of the recent “rupture” in the world order in which “great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited.” In other words, the great powers—such as the neighbor to which Canada’s economy has been deeply linked for decades—have begun to throw their weight around unreliably and turn on their own partners. That means it’s time for “middle powers,” like Canada or major European countries, to orbit around different suns, to diversify, and to work together outside the restraints of the broken American-led order. We encourage you to read it yourself. (Once you’re done with the Surge—no clicking away!)

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    This, in a nutshell, is the risk of Donald Trump. While it was good that Trump called off the dogs on a hostile takeover of Greenland—for the moment—in his own Davos address the next day, the damage was already done. You can only threaten NATO, threaten global institutions, threaten or implement tariffs, and threaten the sovereign territory of your allies so much before they’ll deem you an unreliable partner and begi…
    There’s One World Leader We’d Most Like to Trade for Trump Right Now What's the endgame here? Politics There’s One World Leader We’d Most Like to Trade for Trump Right Now Man, does Canada have it good. By Jim Newell Jan 24, 20265:45 AM Copy Link Share Share Comment Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images and Getty Images Plus. Sign up for the Surge, the newsletter that covers most important political nonsense of the week, delivered to your inbox every Saturday. Welcome to this week’s edition of the Surge, Slate’s weekly politics newsletter that needs to seriously ramp up its war crimes, and soon, if we’re going to snag a Board of Peace seat. This week, oh brother. We’ll just say upfront that there was so much Minnesota/ICE stuff to consider that we decided to not include any of it (this is called “news judgment”), though we would refer you to other excellent Slate content here. We do however talk about the Minnesota Senate race, and observe how Bill and Hillary Clinton are going to jail for a million years (unconfirmed). Plus, an old-fashioned look at Trump’s poll numbers, one year in. But first, Canada: Can we trade you for Mark Carney?? 1. Mark Carney What Trump hath wrought. Most contemporary political speeches are terrible, flattened into pablum and crowd-pleasing safety, delivered by empty vessels, then forgotten within the hour. Yet the address from Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a collected and poised former central bank head, will, we fear, be remembered for a long time. While he didn’t mention names, he did speak quite precisely of the recent “rupture” in the world order in which “great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited.” In other words, the great powers—such as the neighbor to which Canada’s economy has been deeply linked for decades—have begun to throw their weight around unreliably and turn on their own partners. That means it’s time for “middle powers,” like Canada or major European countries, to orbit around different suns, to diversify, and to work together outside the restraints of the broken American-led order. We encourage you to read it yourself. (Once you’re done with the Surge—no clicking away!) Advertisement This, in a nutshell, is the risk of Donald Trump. While it was good that Trump called off the dogs on a hostile takeover of Greenland—for the moment—in his own Davos address the next day, the damage was already done. You can only threaten NATO, threaten global institutions, threaten or implement tariffs, and threaten the sovereign territory of your allies so much before they’ll deem you an unreliable partner and begi…
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  • Cruz back in Texas after photo of him boarding plane sparks backlash ahead of winter storm
    The headline tells the story.

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, returned to the Lone Star State Friday after a photo went viral on social media of him boarding a plane as the state prepares for a potentially historic winter storm.
    The senator appeared to poke fun at himself on Friday as online chatter swirled over the past few days about whether he would once again be absent as his constituents hunkered down during a major weather event.
    "I’ve returned home from my work trip. It’s 66 degrees & beautiful. A storm is expected tomorrow night," Cruz wrote in an X post Friday.
    "But I am reliably informed by Twitter that if I simply raise up my hand on Texas soil, the storm will turn around & sunshine, rainbows & unicorns will emerge. Let it be," he continued.
    TRUMP MOCKS 'ENVIRONMENTAL INSURRECTIONISTS' AS AMERICANS BRACE FOR MASSIVE WINTER STORMS: 'GLOBAL WARMING?'
    In 2021, Cruz was slammed for traveling to Cancun, Mexico, with his family the same week that Texas dealt with a winter storm that left millions of people without power and ultimately caused 246 deaths, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.
    Cruz later admitted that the decision was "obviously a mistake."
    His comments Friday came after a photo was posted on X on Tuesday showing Cruz aboard a plane that was reportedly heading to Laguna Beach, California.
    FOX WEATHER TO PROVIDE EXTENDED LIVE COVERAGE OF WINTER STORM IMPACTING THE NATION
    The post quickly went viral, gaining more than 9 million views, with users both defending and blasting the senator.
    "I’m noticing a pattern," one person responded.
    A spokesperson for Cruz confirmed to FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth that the senator left Tuesday on a pre-planned trip, vowing that the senator would return ahead of the inclement weather.
    The winter storm is expected to impact 235 million Americans across 40 states this weekend, according to FOX Weather, and many areas will experience life-threatening cold weather, heavy snow and crippling ice.
    Cruz back in Texas after photo of him boarding plane sparks backlash ahead of winter storm The headline tells the story. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, returned to the Lone Star State Friday after a photo went viral on social media of him boarding a plane as the state prepares for a potentially historic winter storm. The senator appeared to poke fun at himself on Friday as online chatter swirled over the past few days about whether he would once again be absent as his constituents hunkered down during a major weather event. "I’ve returned home from my work trip. It’s 66 degrees & beautiful. A storm is expected tomorrow night," Cruz wrote in an X post Friday. "But I am reliably informed by Twitter that if I simply raise up my hand on Texas soil, the storm will turn around & sunshine, rainbows & unicorns will emerge. Let it be," he continued. TRUMP MOCKS 'ENVIRONMENTAL INSURRECTIONISTS' AS AMERICANS BRACE FOR MASSIVE WINTER STORMS: 'GLOBAL WARMING?' In 2021, Cruz was slammed for traveling to Cancun, Mexico, with his family the same week that Texas dealt with a winter storm that left millions of people without power and ultimately caused 246 deaths, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. Cruz later admitted that the decision was "obviously a mistake." His comments Friday came after a photo was posted on X on Tuesday showing Cruz aboard a plane that was reportedly heading to Laguna Beach, California. FOX WEATHER TO PROVIDE EXTENDED LIVE COVERAGE OF WINTER STORM IMPACTING THE NATION The post quickly went viral, gaining more than 9 million views, with users both defending and blasting the senator. "I’m noticing a pattern," one person responded. A spokesperson for Cruz confirmed to FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth that the senator left Tuesday on a pre-planned trip, vowing that the senator would return ahead of the inclement weather. The winter storm is expected to impact 235 million Americans across 40 states this weekend, according to FOX Weather, and many areas will experience life-threatening cold weather, heavy snow and crippling ice.
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  • There’s One Part of Our Passports That Seems Totally Normal. Until You Learn Its Surprising History—and Concerning Future.
    Equal justice apparently isn't equal anymore.

    Outward

    How the Passport Became a Linchpin of Trump’s Gender Panic Plot

    Passport gender markers had long been the easiest government document for trans people to update. Losing that ability will be costly for everyone.

    By

    Sohini Desai

    Jan 24, 20265:50 AM

    Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, Encrier/iStock/Getty Images Plus, Xphotoz/iStock, and Getty Images Plus.

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    Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily.

    In a functional sense, I’m an any-pronouns person. At my parents’ house, I will always be she/her. With friends, I’m a they/them. And at the Atlantic Terminal Mall in Brooklyn, I’m a he/him teenager who must be escorted out of Sephora for shopping without an adult present. (I haven’t been a teen since the 2010s, so this is how I found out that malls are increasingly banning young people. Showing Brooklyn’s own Paul Blart my “Sex: F” driver’s license, which features a pre-transition ID photo, did not improve the situation.) This mixed bag is a constant reminder: Gender is in the eye of the beholder.

    My gender bag has been especially mixed at the airport in recent years. To Transportation Security Administration agents and passport control officers, I’ve looked like a guy who stole some girl’s ID. And the only thing stopping me from joining the crimes-in-the-sky club, I guess, was the “Sex: F” marker that confirmed their suspicions. It’s never been too extreme, but I’ve had my share of airport confrontations—been sent out of security lines, tried my luck yelling “I’M TRANSGENDER” at more than a few agents. Luckily, I was among those who were able to take advantage of the brief window of time between July and November of last year when a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from enforcing its policy requiring gender markers on government IDs to match a person’s sex assigned “at conception.” I secured an “M” passport just before the Supreme Court overruled the injunction, hoping to never experience another gender interrogation at an airport again.

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    This ID policy is just one of many concurrent anti-trans assaults enacted or worsened by the Trump administration, including forcefully detransitioning incarcerated people, transferring trans women into men’s prisons, and plotting to revoke Medicaid funding for any hospital that provides gender-affirming care to trans youth. Without question, there are…
    There’s One Part of Our Passports That Seems Totally Normal. Until You Learn Its Surprising History—and Concerning Future. Equal justice apparently isn't equal anymore. Outward How the Passport Became a Linchpin of Trump’s Gender Panic Plot Passport gender markers had long been the easiest government document for trans people to update. Losing that ability will be costly for everyone. By Sohini Desai Jan 24, 20265:50 AM Photo illustration by Slate. Photos by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, Encrier/iStock/Getty Images Plus, Xphotoz/iStock, and Getty Images Plus. Copy Link Share Share Comment Copy Link Share Share Comment Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. In a functional sense, I’m an any-pronouns person. At my parents’ house, I will always be she/her. With friends, I’m a they/them. And at the Atlantic Terminal Mall in Brooklyn, I’m a he/him teenager who must be escorted out of Sephora for shopping without an adult present. (I haven’t been a teen since the 2010s, so this is how I found out that malls are increasingly banning young people. Showing Brooklyn’s own Paul Blart my “Sex: F” driver’s license, which features a pre-transition ID photo, did not improve the situation.) This mixed bag is a constant reminder: Gender is in the eye of the beholder. My gender bag has been especially mixed at the airport in recent years. To Transportation Security Administration agents and passport control officers, I’ve looked like a guy who stole some girl’s ID. And the only thing stopping me from joining the crimes-in-the-sky club, I guess, was the “Sex: F” marker that confirmed their suspicions. It’s never been too extreme, but I’ve had my share of airport confrontations—been sent out of security lines, tried my luck yelling “I’M TRANSGENDER” at more than a few agents. Luckily, I was among those who were able to take advantage of the brief window of time between July and November of last year when a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from enforcing its policy requiring gender markers on government IDs to match a person’s sex assigned “at conception.” I secured an “M” passport just before the Supreme Court overruled the injunction, hoping to never experience another gender interrogation at an airport again. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement This ID policy is just one of many concurrent anti-trans assaults enacted or worsened by the Trump administration, including forcefully detransitioning incarcerated people, transferring trans women into men’s prisons, and plotting to revoke Medicaid funding for any hospital that provides gender-affirming care to trans youth. Without question, there are…
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