Letters from an American - May 1, 2025
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May 1st, 2025. President Donald Trump waited until the 101st day of his administration
to fire National Security Advisor Mike Walz, the official responsible for including the
editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, on an unsecure signal chat in which leaders shared
classified information about a military strike on the Houthis in Yemen.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who uploaded the classified information in that chat and
shared it in another unsecured chat with his wife, brother, and personal friends, is still
in the cabinet. On April 28th the US campaign
against the Houthis cost a 60 million dollar F-A-18 Super Hornet fighter jet.
The plane fell overboard from the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier when the
vessel turned sharply to avoid fire from the Houthis while military personnel were
moving the aircraft. Both the aircraft
and the tow tractor moving it were lost, and one sailor suffered minor injuries.
The signal scandal does not appear to have changed the Trump team's communication habits.
A Reuters photographer caught Waltz looking at his signal messages during yesterday's
cabinet meeting. The list of messages included
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, Director of National Intelligence
Tulsi Gabbard, and Vice President J.D. Vance, whose message began, I have confirmation from
my counterpart. Although signal messages appear to violate the Presidential Records Act that requires the preservation of documents from an administration, the Trump team apparently continues to use the app.
Trump announced that he will nominate Walz to be U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, the position Representative Elise Stefanik, a Republican of New York, expected, but that Trump pulled from her because the
Republicans majority in the House of Representatives is so slim. Secretary of
State Rubio will assume the duties of National Security Advisor. Rubio is now
serving as Secretary of State, National Security Advisor, U.S. Archivist, and
head of the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID.
All of these jobs are high-level, work-intense positions.
A spokesperson for the State Department learned about the change in Rubio's portfolio from
a reporter during a press briefing.
At 101 days, the Department of Government Efficiency and its leader, billionaire Elon Musk, are also running into trouble.
Musk vowed to slash $2 trillion from government spending, but that number kept dropping until he said Doggie would save about $150 billion.
As David A. Ferenhold and Jeremy Singer-Vine noted in the New York Times, that number is largely unsubstantiated.
The doggy team's list of cuts is riddled with errors. In addition, the nonpartisan
nonprofit Partnership for Public Service estimates that doggy cuts have actually
cost taxpayers 135 billion dollars this fiscal year, not including lawsuits. Yesterday Musk told
reporters that Congress will have to get to work to make the cuts he began
permanent as he pulls back from government work to oversee Tesla. His
foray into politics so badly hurt the company's performance that it saw a 71%
drop in profits in the first quarter of 2025.
According to Emily Glazer, Becky Peterson, and Dana Mattioli of the Wall Street Journal,
Tesla's board has begun looking for a new chief executive.
While both Musk and Tesla's board deny the report, Musk will move back toward company business.
When asked if he needed a successor in the White House, Musk answered, is Buddha needed for Buddhism? Was it not stronger
after he passed away? It's not clear that Congress will, in fact, embrace the cuts
Dougie has made willy-nilly throughout the government. Three days ago, a
Washington Post, ABC News, Ipsos poll found that only 35% of
Americans approve of the way Musk is handling his job in the Trump
administration while 57% disapprove. The amazing thing is they haven't actually
done anything constructive whatsoever. Literally all they've done is destroy
things. A current federal employee told Nick Robbins early of The Guardian.
People are going to miss the federal government that they had.
As the damage it has caused becomes clearer, doggy seems unlikely ever to become more popular.
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has turned control of the Interior Department over to a doggy operative, and Wes Seiler reports tonight
that doggy is preparing a reduction of force for the National Park Service, bringing total
workforce losses there to about a quarter of all NPS staff.
According to a group of NPS employees, calling themselves the Resistance Rangers, the cuts
are directed at regional and national offices
that support park-based staff in order to make the cuts less visible to the public.
As Seiler notes in his West Seiler's newsletter, the National Park Service is an important
public-facing part of the federal government.
Parks are highly visible and serve as symbols of national pride. He
notes that hurting the visitor experience, attraction closures, and
general bad news around NPS may serve to embarrass the administration more than
news of, say, reductions to internal revenue service staffing. Problems at
Doggie continue to emerge. Jake Pearson of ProPublica
reported yesterday that the Doggie employee who is working to shrink the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau or CFPB, Gavin Kleiger, owns stock in four
companies the CFPB oversees. This conflict of interest potentially violates
federal ethics laws.
Yesterday, David Gilbert and Victoria Elliott of Wired reported that the doggy operative installed at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD,
Christopher Sweet, is an undergraduate with no government experience.
He is using artificial intelligence to comb through the agency's rules and regulations,
compare them with the laws authorizing them, identify rules that can be relaxed or removed,
and rewrite them. A source from HUD told Gilbert and Elliott that such work is redundant. Officials
created the rules only after a multi-year, multi-stakeholder meat grinder.
Another source told the Wired reporters they were informed that Sweet is refining a model
to be used across the government. As Trump's poll numbers have dropped, Trump's team has doubled
down on immigration to energize its base. Today, Judge Fernando Rodriguez, Jr.,
a federal judge Trump appointed to the Southern District of Texas, rejected the administration's
use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to justify deporting Venezuelans from his district.
This ruling may have implications for lawsuits elsewhere. Rodriguez permanently
prohibited the Trump administration from deporting Venezuelans from the southern district of
Texas under that law. He noted that the law authorizes such deportations only during wartime
or a hostile invasion and concluded that it its plain ordinary meaning meant an invasion by
military forces, not migration by alleged gang members.
Trump's empowerment of heavy-handed immigration and customs enforcement, or ICE, tactics led
last Thursday to a raid on a house in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in which agents who said they were US Marshals, ICE,
and the FBI put a family outside in the rain
in their underwear and then tore apart the house.
They took the family's phones, laptops, and life savings.
But the people in the house were not
the ones on the search warrant.
They were all US citizens.
A mother and three girls
recently arrived from Maryland. I told them before they left I said you took my
phone we have no money I just moved here. The woman told KFOR News I have to
feed my children I'm going to need gas money I need to be able to get around
like how do you just leave me like this? Like an abandoned dog?
In his recent interview with Trump, Terry Moran of ABC News revealed that Trump has
a problem with a disconnect between his actions and the country's principles. Trump had a
copy of the Declaration of Independence installed in the Oval Office, and Moran asked the President what it means to him.
Trump's answer made it clear he has never read the document.
Well, it means exactly what it says, he answered.
It's a declaration.
It's a declaration of unity and love and respect,
and it means a lot, and it's something very special
to our country.
Last night, former Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate for president in 2024,
gave her first major speech since losing the election.
Throughout my entire career, I have always believed in the ideals of our nation, she began.
The ideals reflected in the Declaration of
Independence, that all are created equal and endowed by our Creator with certain
inalienable rights. Ideals advanced and affirmed by the service and sacrifice of
generations of patriots. The ideals that ground the Constitution of the United States, that here in our country, power ultimately lies not with the wealthy or well-connected,
but with all of us, with we, the people.
After excoriating the Trump administration's narrow, self-serving vision of America,
where they punish truth-tellers, favor
loyalists, cash in on their power and leave everyone to fend for themselves
all while abandoning allies and retreating from the world, Harris noted
that this is not a vision that Americans want. She urged the audience to gear up for the hard work ahead.
And please, always remember, this country is ours.
It doesn't belong to whoever is in the White House.
It belongs to you.
It belongs to us.
It belongs to we the people.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, dead in Massachusetts,
recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.