Thursday, September 18, 2025
■ Today's Top News
"We will not be intimidated and we will defend the First Amendment," said Rep. Robert Garcia.
By Brad Reed
Democratic lawmakers are vowing to investigate the Trump administration’s pressure campaign that may have led to ABC deciding to indefinitely suspend late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) announced on Thursday that he filed a motion to subpoena Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr one day after he publicly warned ABC of negative consequences if the network kept Kimmel on the air.
“Enough of Congress sleepwalking while [President Donald] Trump and [Vice President JD] Vance shred the First Amendment and Constitution,” Khanna declared. “It is time for Congress to stand up for Article I.”
Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, also said on Thursday that he was opening an investigation into the potential financial aspects of Carr’s pressure campaign on ABC, including the involvement of Sinclair Broadcasting Group, which is the network’s largest affiliate and is currently involved in merger talks that will need FCC approval.
“The Oversight Committee is launching an investigation into ABC, Sinclair, and the FCC,” he said. “We will not be intimidated and we will defend the First Amendment.”
Progressive politicians weren’t the only ones launching an investigation into the Kimmel controversy, as legal organization Democracy Forward announced that it’s filed a a Freedom of Information Act request for records after January 20, 2025 related to any FCC efforts “to use the agency’s licensing and enforcement powers to police and limit speech and influence what the public can watch and hear.”
US Sen, Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) speaks at the rally to Say NO to Tax Breaks for Billionaires & Corporations at US Capitol on April 10, 2025 in Washington, DC.
(Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Fair Share America)
"All of this ties back to money and people enriching themselves, and bending the knee to Donald Trump to make it happen," said Rep. Maxwell Frost.
By Brad Reed
Democratic lawmakers on Thursday vowed to fight back against US President Donald Trump’s efforts to attack and dismantle liberal and progressive organizations.
Led by Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), the Democrats introduced the No Political Enemies Act aimed at protecting organizations’ free speech rights from retaliation from the federal government.
During his speech touting the new legislation, Murphy recounted recent actions by Trump and his administration, including the president’s threats to “arrest members of the Soros family simply for funding groups that oppose his agenda,” as well as Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr’s pressure campaign to get ABC to fire late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel.
Murphy then said that the No Political Enemies Act was necessary because ”Donald Trump is right now instructing his Department of Justice to go on the hunt for his political enemies” for challenging him.
“Trump is making it 100% clear that he is going to ramp up his efforts to use the power of the federal government to punish his critics,” he said. “This is legislation that makes sure that the law is on the side of free speech and the right to dissent.”
The proposed law would give political organizations and individuals new tools to combat political harassment from the federal government, and would allow them to both recover attorney fees and more easily file lawsuits against federal officials who abuse their authority for political purposes.
Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas), who also expressed support for the legislation, put the stakes facing Americans in stark terms.
“We are in the biggest free speech crisis this country has faced since the McCarthy era,” he said. “The murder of Charlie Kirk was a horrific crime, and it’s clear that Trump wants to hijack that horrific crime to silence anyone who disagrees with the president about any issue.”
Casar, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, also took a shot at major corporations who have been caving to the president’s demands in recent months.
“As we saw last night, far too many billionaires and corporate-owned media companies are bending the knee: Disney and ABC, Paramount and CBS, the Washington Post editorial board, Facebook,” he said. “Let’s be clear, the ultrawealthy men who own these companies are making a choice. David Ellison, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Bob Iger—these men are enriching themselves, auctioning off the United State’s First Amendment to a wannabe dictator and tyrant.”
Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) pointed out that the FCC’s pressure campaign on ABC to fire Kimmel is particularly nefarious given that Sinclair Broadcasting Group, which is the network’s largest affiliate, is currently involved in merger talks that will need FCC approval.
“All of this ties back to money and people enriching themselves, and bending the knee to Donald Trump to make it happen,” he said.
The Democrats’ proposed legislation comes after Trump announced late Wednesday night that he planned to designate “antifa,” a movement of autonomous individuals and loosely affiliated groups who oppose fascism, as a “major terrorist organization.”
It also comes comes days after Trump adviser Stephen Miller began pushing a plan to “dismantle” the organized left using the power of the federal government.
During a recent appearance on Fox News, Miller described the entire left as a “domestic terrorism movement in this country,” and vowed “to dismantle and take on the radical left organizations in this country that are fomenting violence.”
Then-Secretary of Education nominee Linda McMahon testifies during her confirmation hearing in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Thursday, February 13, 2025.
(Photo by Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
One civics education advocate said the program, which will push schools to teach history content written by PragerU, Hillsdale College, and Turning Point USA, "smacks of authoritarianism."
By Stephen Prager
President Donald Trump’s Department of Education has announced that it will partner with right-wing think tanks and organizations to develop and spread what it claims is “patriotic education”—but which critics worry is nothing less than ahistorical propaganda—in American ”schools across the nation.”
Earlier this week, the Trump administration redirected $137 million initially meant for programs aimed at minority students toward what it described as “American history and civics education.”
Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced Wednesday that the money will be directed toward discretionary grants aimed at K-12 schools alongside the announcement of new civics curriculum and programs being drawn up by the 250 Civics Education Coalition—a consortium of more than 40 right-wing groups. The goal, McMahon said, was to advance education that “emphasizes a unifying and uplifting portrayal of the nation’s founding ideals” in advance of the nation’s 250th anniversary in 2026.
It is not Trump’s first crack at instilling the nation’s youth with a “patriotic education.” In the waning days of his first term in office, Trump unveiled the 1776 Report, which, education columnist Jennifer Berkshire recently noted in The Baffler, “was widely panned by actual historians for its worshipful treatment of the Founding Fathers, its downplaying of slavery, and its portrayal of a century-old ‘administrative state’ controlled by leftist radicals.”
While little has been publicized yet about what McMahon’s new endeavor will look like in practice, it is known the kinds of people and organizations who will be crafting it. The civics initiative is being led by the America First Policy Institute, a MAGA-aligned think tank that has been responsible for staffing Trump’s second administration and has received over $1 million from his political action committee, the Save America PAC. Until 2023, McMahon herself served on the board of AFPI.
In 2022, the group presented a piece of model legislation for a “Civics Course Act” to be introduced in states. It included requirements for students to spend ample time studying the nation’s founding documents and figures while banning the teaching of what it called the “defamatory history of America’s founding,” which suggests that slavery or inequality are in any way inherent to the nation’s institutions.
It also banned the concepts of “systemic racism” and “gender fluidity” and forbade teachers from giving students course credit for engaging with “social or public policy advocacy.”
Also included in the coalition is Hillsdale College, a private Christian liberal arts school in Michigan that has proposed its own K-12 curriculum, which Vanity Fair notes “has been criticized for revisionist history, including whitewashed accounts of US slavery and depictions of Jamestown as a failed communist colony.”
Another participant is PragerU, the overtly partisan and often factually loose YouTube channel that has been tasked with creating children’s educational content in nearly a dozen red states.
The group has produced content venerating figures notorious for practicing slavery, like colonist Christopher Columbus and Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Its videos have argued, among other things, that climate change is a myth, that European fascism was a “far-left” ideology, and that Israel has “the world’s most moral army.”
The pro-Trump youth group Turning Point USA will also be involved in crafting the curriculum. Its longtime leader, Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated in Utah last week, went on a crusade last year to, in his words, “tell the truth” about Martin Luther King Jr., whom he described as “an awful person,” while claiming his signature achievement, the 1964 Civil Rights Act, was a “huge mistake.”
An offshoot of Kirk’s group, Turning Point Education, said Kirk’s assassination has increased its resolve to promote a “God-centered, virtuous education” in US public schools.
The 250 Civics Education Coalition has not yet published a curriculum. But according to the Department of Education, it will be rolling out “a robust programming agenda” over the next 12 months.
During Trump’s second term, he has undertaken an effort to purge federal museums and national parks of what one executive order called “improper ideology,” which has resulted in the erasure of exhibits and monuments to Black and Native American history. Last month, he lamented that the Smithsonian Museum focuses too much on “how bad slavery was” and ordered a review of the museum’s content.
Federal websites, meanwhile, have systematically eliminated many pages that acknowledged the accomplishments of nonwhite historical figures or important events in women’s and LGBTQ+ history.
Critics in the education world view Trump’s effort to use grants to induce them to adopt his preferred curriculum as an illegal effort to propagandize children.
“The law is clear,” said education historian Diane Ravitch in a blog post. “Federal officials are prohibited from seeking to influence or direct curriculum in any way.”
Since 1970, the federal government has been barred by law from “any direction, supervision, or control over the curriculum” of public schools.
“Civic education is and must be non-partisan,” said Ted McConnell, the executive director of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools. “While the funding is long sought, this is the wrong approach and smacks of authoritarianism.”
Update: This piece has been slightly updated to better clarify what is understood about the nature of the civics initiative.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) conducts a forum at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on May 14, 2025 in Washington, DC.
(Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Student Borrower Protection Center)
"If Republicans want to shut down government so they can keep increasing costs and cutting healthcare, then they need to explain that to the American people," said the senator.
By Julia Conley
On the US Senate floor Thursday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren gave her Republican colleagues a choice: undo the damage they caused to the healthcare of millions of Americans by slashing Medicaid and insurance subsidies, or explain to the public why they refuse to do so—even if it means shutting down the government.
Warren (D-Mass.) spoke about a proposal released by the Democrats Wednesday night to keep the government running through October 31—averting a shutdown at the beginning of next month—if the GOP agrees to restore the $1 trillion in Medicaid cuts and extend the Affordable Care Act subsidies to keep out-of-pocket premiums from rising by an average of 75% for millions of people who purchase health insurance through the ACA.
A Congressional Budget Office analysis released Thursday found that making the ACA subsidies permanent would increase the number of insured people by nearly 4 million.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) have said Democrats will not vote for Republicans’ proposal to extend government funding at its current level through November 21, including the cuts in the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act, unless the GOP opens bipartisan talks on the legislation.
So far, GOP leaders have not asked the Democrats for input—but the Republicans will need at least 60 votes to pass the spending proposal in the Senate and will require Democrats to vote with them.
On the Senate floor, Warren told the Republicans how they can ensure that result.
“Before working moms go broke from a cancer diagnosis, Congress must act. Before community hospitals are forced to shut down, Congtess must act,” said the senator. “That is why Democrats are saying: ‘If Republicans want our votes, they need to restore healthcare for Americans.‘”
While Schumer has demanded bipartisan talks and called for the GOP to make concessions on healthcare, he told The Washington Post Wednesday that the Democrats do not have a “red line.”
Schumer angered progressive lawmakers and many of his own constituents in March when he joined the GOP to advance a spending bill that kept the government open—but cut $13 billion in nonmilitary federal spending and did nothing to rein in President Donald Trump and his then-adviser, Elon Musk, as they eviscerated government agencies.
Lisa Gilbert, co-president of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, said Tuesday that the current “alignment of Democratic leadership and appropriators in recognition of this moment of leverage is heartening.”
“A budget deal should be contingent on addressing Americans’ top economic priority—the cost of and access to healthcare. If Republicans refuse to negotiate and move away from their cost-increasing agenda, then they are the ones who will be forcing a government-wide shutdown,” said Gilbert. “There should be no deal without assurances that the budget will be honored and not impounded, and that it will begin to return care to the American people.”
By refusing to meet with the Democrats thus far, said Kobie Christian of Unrig Our Economy, GOP leaders are thus far showing that “if it isn’t about giving the ultrarich another tax break, Republicans in Congress aren’t interested.”
“Every day that Congress does not take action to prevent increases in health insurance premiums, more and more Americans are at risk of facing higher healthcare costs and losing coverage,” said Christian. “It’s time that congressional Republicans come to the table and find a solution to help all Americans, not just the ultrawealthy.”
On her way to the Senate floor Thursday, Warren said that “if Republicans want our votes for this budget, they’ve got to restore healthcare for millions of Americans.”
“It’s really that simple,” she added.
At least hundreds of thousands of protesters poured into the streets across France on September 18, 2025 to protest proposed austerity measures.
(Photo by Sébastien Delogu/X)
"We're in a situation of injustice," one protester said. "Workers can no longer feed themselves, students no longer have future prospects."
By Jessica Corbett
Echoing demonstrations against French President Emmanuel Macron’s pension reforms two years ago, hundreds of thousands of people joined protests across France on Thursday, outraged by the government’s proposed austerity measures.
While the CGT trade union—one of several labor groups that pushed for the mass mobilization—put the count at over 1 million, French authorities, whose figures are usually much lower than unions, said more than 500,000 demonstrated nationwide, including 55,000 in Paris.
Thursday’s demonstrations followed last week’s ”Block Everything” protests, which coincided with French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu’s first full day in office. Macron picked Lecornu, his ally and a former defense minister, for the post after François Bayrou lost a no-confidence vote in the National Assembly over the budget plan.
Although “Lecornu quickly scrapped one of the most unpopular proposals—eliminating two public holidays—he has not ruled out the rest,” Euronews noted Thursday. “These include an overhaul of unemployment benefits, delinking pensions from inflation, and raising out-of-pocket medical costs.”
A protester named Alexandre told Euronews that “right now, we have a government that doesn’t listen to us and is even the opposite of what the population needs. A government that robs fellow citizens, and it’s important for everyone to mobilise, for the people of France who want to be dignified and who also want to give others their dignity throughout the world.”
“We’re in a situation of injustice,” he added. “Workers can no longer feed themselves, students no longer have future prospects.”
Hospital staff, railway workers, students, and teachers were among those who poured into the streets across France—including major actions in cities such as Lyon, Marseille, and Paris—rallying behind the message: “Strikes, Blockades, Macron Get Out!”
The Public Service Ministry said that nearly 11% of France’s 2.5 million state employees were on strike. According to Le Monde, “Around 1 in 6 teachers walked out of primary and secondary schools, 9 out of 10 pharmacies were shuttered, and severe disruption occurred on the Paris metro network, where only the three driverless automated lines are working normally.”
Protesters want the government to not only kill the proposed austerity measures but also spend more on public services and impose higher taxes on the wealthy. Sophie Binet, the head of the CGT union, said that “the anger is huge, and so is the determination. My message to Mr. Lecornu today is this: It’s the streets that must decide the budget.”
Multiple elected officials with La France Insoumise (LFI), a party founded by Jean-Luc Mélenchon that is now part of the Nouveau Front Populaire alliance, shared social media posts about them joining the protests.
“The mobilization of youth continues,” said Claire Lejeune, an LFI member of the National Assembly, after speaking with secondary school students in Essonne who “no longer want this policy that is wrecking their future.”
Citing “the dismantling of public education,” “war policy,” and “ecological inaction,” Lejeune said: “They are absolutely right; in the country, no one wants Lecornu or Macron anymore. I was in support of this peaceful mobilization, alongside the unions and teachers, and faced with a completely disproportionate police setup.”
Approximately 80,000 police and gendarmes were deployed for the protests. Early Thursday, LFI’s Clémence Guetté, a vice president in the National Assembly, shared footage of officers kicking and shoving a woman.
“Everywhere this morning, the repression strikes and hits without distinction or restraint,” she wrote. “The images reaching us are shameful. Here in Marseille. To everyone, be careful. France no longer has a government: Macron is the only one responsible.”
After the 1 million estimate began circulating, Guetté called the mass action “immense, everywhere, impressive,” and declared: “The people are in the streets! We are going to win.”
As Al Jazeera reported: “Across the country, Palestinian flags were visible as some protesters also stood in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza during Israel’s war on the strip. Protesters blocked the Eurolinks arms factory in Marseille, which is believed to supply equipment to Israel, while holding a large banner that read: ‘Shut down the genocidal factory.‘”
Noting the solidarity with the Palestinian people on Thursday, LFI’s Sarah Legrain called for sanctions, an arms embargo, and lifting Israel’s blockade of Gaza, where civilians are starving to death.
Later Thursday, Legrain celebrated the massive turnout and pledged that “we will keep the pressure up until Macron leaves!”
Victoria Bay of Los Angeles protests against fascism while attending a “Good Trouble Lives On” demonstration in front of City Hall on July 17, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
(Photo by Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
"I hope he can first define what antifa is, because there is no antifa organization," said one congressman.
By Julia Conley
After US President Donald Trump absurdly announced late Wednesday night that he planned to designate the amorphous “antifa” movement as a “major terrorist organization,” a Democratic congressman had one request.
“I hope he can first define what antifa is, because there is no antifa organization,” said Rep. Daniel Goldman (D-NY) on CNN.
Goldman added that Trump is using the murder of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk last week “as a pretext to go after people he disagrees with.”
“He on the very night of Kirk’s murder, you will remember, accused the left of committing the murder when the murderer had not even been caught or identified,” he said.
“Antifa” is a portmanteau meaning “anti-fascist,” and the term encompasses autonomous individuals and loosely affiliated groups of people who say they oppose fascism—but with no organizational structure or leaders, it was not clear on Wednesday how the White House would seek to designate the idea of anti-fascist protest “a major terrorist organization.”
As The Guardian noted, since antifa is a US-based movement, it cannot be included on the State Department’s list of foreign terror organizations as ISIS and al-Qaeda are, allowing the Department of Justice to prosecute those who give material support to those organizations.
“There is no domestic equivalent to that list in part because of broad First Amendment protections enjoyed by organizations operating within the United States,” the outlet added.
Trump’s former FBI director, Christopher Wray, also testified in 2020—during nationwide racial justice protests that Trump also linked to antifa—that there is no organization to designate as a terrorist group.
Mark Bray, a historian and author of Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook, suggested Trump’s threat was akin to a statement claiming that the White House could designate other social justice movements as terrorist groups.
“Antifa is a kind of politics, not a specific group,” Bray told Al Jazeera. “In the same way that there are feminist groups but feminism is not, itself, a group. Any group that calls itself antifa and promotes the basic principles of militant anti-fascism is an antifa group. There is no general headquarters or leader to get official recognition from.”
The number of members of the anti-fascist movement and their identities are not public, and though Trump called for the “funders” of antifa to be investigated, Al Jazeera noted that there is “no way of identifying and collating a list of financiers of the movement”—which mainly raises small amounts of money “for bail,” according to Bray.
“He is trying to promote the common right-wing conspiracy theory that there are shadowy financiers like George Soros playing puppet master behind everything the left does,” Bray told Al Jazeera.
With its stated plan to designate antifa a terrorist group, said left-wing commentator Hasan Piker, “they’re openly admitting they’re fascist.”
Veteran union organizer Charles Idelson added that “surely what Trump and his puppets repeating the lie really want is to ban is anti-fascist thought and speech, and imprison individuals who express it.”
Since Kirk’s killing last week, Trump and others on the right have asserted that left-wing groups and commentators were responsible for the assassination because some had tied Kirk to fascism and racism.
Trump’s claim that he will designate antifa as a terrorist group came soon after ABC, under explicit pressure from the Federal Communications Commission, announced it was taking “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” off the air indefinitely after he remarked on the far-right MAGA movement’s reaction to the killing—a clear-cut violation of the First Amendment, said rights advocates.
Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project, told The Washington Post that Trump’s plan for antifa’s designation would “raise significant First Amendment, due process, and equal protection concerns.”
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