Tuesday, January 13, 2026

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Tuesday, January 13, 2026

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GOP 'Doubling Down on a Failed Agenda' With New Reconciliation Framework, Says Key Dem

"Americans will pay a steep price if Republicans move forward with this disastrous agenda," said Sen. Ron Wyden.

By Brad Reed

The House Republican Study Committee on Tuesday released a blueprint for a new budget reconciliation package with the purported goal of making “life more affordable for working families.”

However, according to an analysis by Washington Post economic policy reporter Jacob Bogage, two of the three most expensive items in the GOP budget blueprint would be the elimination of the federal estate tax, which would provide a massive windfall to the richest US households, and indexing capital gains to inflation, which even the conservative American Enterprise Institute contends “would further distort taxpayer decisions and increase the ability to shelter income from taxation.”

Other items in the GOP blueprint include refilling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve with oil seized from Venezuela, blocking federal funds for abortion providers, and a new “excise tax on colleges that allow trans women in sports.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, wasted no time ripping the proposal from the largest right-wing House caucus to pieces.

“After passing the largest health care cut in American history, Republicans are doubling down on a failed agenda that benefits billionaires and giant corporations while ripping away food, healthcare and other basic necessities,” Wyden said. “This legislation will eliminate protections for Americans with preexisting conditions, place more red tape between families and their healthcare, and seize ideological trophies instead of focusing on making life more affordable. Americans will pay a steep price if Republicans move forward with this disastrous agenda.”

Richard Phillips, pensions and tax policy director for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), marveled at the GOP loading up a bill supposedly focused on working families with massive giveaways to the wealthiest Americans.

“As part of it’s new affordability agenda for the American people the Republican Study Committee reveals its plan to give the wealthiest 0.2% of estates a $281 billion tax break?” he wrote in a post on X.

Chuck Marr, vice president of federal tax policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, similarly called the GOP blueprint “tone deaf.”

“Nothing says attack the affordability crisis working-class people face than Rs calling for eliminating the estate tax for the wealthiest heirs in the country—just months after giving them a $30 million tax free exemption,” he wrote.

The GOP’s second attempt at a budget reconciliation package comes months after it passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a reconciliation package that gave more tax breaks to the rich, but cut Medicaid spending by nearly $1 trillion over the next decade, while also slashing spending on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by nearly $200 billion over the same period.



'Where Were You Born?' ICE Conducting Show-Me-Your-Papers Stops in Minnesota Neighborhoods

"I was scared. I was devastated," said a Somali-American citizen who was accosted by ICE as part of what the agent called a "citizen check." No such thing exists in American law.

By Stephen Prager


US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal agents deployed to Minnesota are pulling many nonwhite residents aside and asking them to prove their citizenship, according to several reports and multiple videos posted to social media this week amid the Trump administration’s surge of immigration agents to Minneapolis.

There is no federal law requiring US citizens to carry proof of their citizenship, and immigration agents are barred from carrying out indiscriminate searches unless they have reasonable suspicion to believe that someone is in the country without authorization.

And yet, one video, posted on Sunday by a Somali resident of Minneapolis, a US citizen named Nimco Omar, shows a group of agents accosting her and asking her to show her identification as part of what they said was a “citizen check.”

Omar said she was on a walk when masked agents who “looked like soldiers” approached her and began questioning her.

The video shows one of the agents asking Omar, “Do you have an ID on you, ma’am?”

She replied: “I don’t need an ID to walk around in my city. This is my city.”

“OK, do you have some ID, then, please?” the officer asked. “If not, we’re going to put you in the vehicle, and we’re going to ID you.”

Omar responded: “I am a US citizen. I don’t need to carry around an ID in my home. This is my home.”

After being repeatedly asked, “Where were you born?” Omar replied simply, “Minneapolis is my home.”

The agent then told her: “We’re doing an immigration check. We’re doing a citizen check.”

Another agent then pulled out his cellphone and, without asking, appeared to snap a picture of Omar, likely to run through a facial recognition application that ICE has used to verify the status of people it detains—including citizens.

Omar continued to hold her ground, telling the agents: “I’m a US citizen. I don’t have to identify myself. I belong here— and it doesn’t matter where I was born.” After failing to get an answer, the agents then walked away.

“I was scared. I was devastated. I never imagined that something like this could happen to me in the United States,” Omar wrote in a social media post documenting the encounter. “As a community member who grew up here, who built a life here, and who calls Minnesota home, I want to be clear: This is not acceptable. This is not something we should ever normalize. This is not what the United States of America is supposed to look like.”

The scene was just the latest report of immigration agents conducting what Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said was “unlawful racial profiling by DHS agents” in a lawsuit against the agency filed Monday by the state of Minnesota. Illinois filed a similar but separate suit Monday.

“We’re doing a citizen check.”

Since last week, when ICE agent Jonathan Ross was filmed fatally shooting 37-year-old Renee Good in a Minneapolis neighborhood—which Vice President JD Vance said in a press conference occurred during “door-to-door” sweeps by ICE in search of undocumented migrants—several other similar cases have been documented in which immigration agents have approached nonwhite US citizens demanding they prove their citizenship.

In another case, on the same day of Good’s shooting, a Somali Uber driver was pulled over outside the Minneapolis airport and asked to prove his citizenship. One of the agents told the driver he did not believe the driver’s claim to be a citizen because “I can hear you don’t have the same accent as me,” and asked the man where he was born repeatedly.

It mirrored another case from December in which another Somali man, a US citizen identified only as Mubashir, was tackled to the ground by immigration agents who refused to accept his government-issued Real ID as proof of citizenship.

Outcry over that case prompted Gregory Bovino, the commander at large of the US Border Patrol, who has taken part in several stops and raids as part of the Trump administration’s operation in Minneapolis, to falsely claim that US citizens “must carry immigration documents” under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

About 83% of Somalis living in the US are citizens, according to census data. However, Minneapolis’ large Somali population—which has an even higher rate of US citizenship—has been used as a justification by President Donald Trump to flood the city with immigration agents. In recent months, the president has referred to Somalis as “garbage” and called for them all to be deported from the country.

But Somalis have not been the only targets of arbitrary “citizenship” checks in recent days.

Another video, filmed on the day of Good’s shooting, showed agents pinning a Hispanic Target employee, 17-year-old Jonathan Aguilar Garcia, to the ground, along with another employee, after asking him whether he was a US citizen. Even after shouting multiple times that he was a citizen and showing his government ID, Garcia was reportedly taken to an undisclosed location for hours with no notice given to his family about where he was or when he’d return.

In another case, detailed in the Minnesota lawsuit, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents “approached a team of four Minneapolis Public Works employees, working in Minneapolis and wearing city uniforms and badges. The agents asked the three nonwhite city employees for identification and questioned each of them about their citizenship and place of birth. The agents did not ask to see any identification or ask any questions of the fourth employee, who was white.”

Four members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, who were homeless and living under a bridge, were also reportedly detained last week and have still not yet been located. The tribe’s president has directed members to declare their tribal affiliation when encountering immigration officers, which makes them US citizens and therefore not subject to immigration enforcement.

“DHS said they were ‘highly targeted’ and go after ‘the worst of the worst,’” said the Democrats on the House Committee on Homeland Security in a post on social media responding to agents’ questioning of Omar. “In reality, DHS is indiscriminately profiling Black and brown American citizens.

They urged readers: “Protect yourself and your neighbors and film everything.”



'ICE Has Gone Rogue': Khanna Demands Arrest, Prosecution of Jonathan Ross for Murder of Renee Good

"We need to hold ICE accountable and we need to uphold human rights in ICE facilities. This is the time for Americans to speak up."

By Brad Reed

Rep. Ro Khanna on Monday called for the arrest and prosecution of the federal immigration officer who killed Minneapolis resident Renee Good last week.

In a video posted on social media, Khanna (D-Calif.) made the case for arresting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer Jonathan Ross, who has faced accusations of murder after he fatally shot the 37-year-old Good and left her 6-year-old son an orphan.

Khanna also said that the problems with ICE weren’t merely from one trigger-happy agent.

“ICE has gone rogue,” Khanna said. “We need accountability.”

He then referenced legislation he had written with Rep. Jasmine Crocket (D-Texas) that would force ICE agents to wear body cameras and carry visible identification, and would also bar them from wearing masks to conceal their identities while conducting operations.

Khanna also described a recent trip he made to an immigration detention facility in California, where he said he witnessed deplorable treatment of detainees, including one man who reported having blood in his urine but who had not seen any medical professional for the past seven days.

“We need to hold ICE accountable and we need to uphold human rights in ICE facilities,” he emphasized. “This is the time for Americans to speak up.”

As Khanna called for greater ICE accountability, new videos emerged on Tuesday of chaos caused by federal immigration officials in Minneapolis.

In one video posted by extremism researcher Amanda Moore, federal agents can be seen smashing a woman’s car windows, cutting her seat belt, and then dragging her out of the vehicle to be arrested.

Status Coup News reporter JT Cestkowski shared footage of federal agents lobbing tear gas canisters and firing pepper balls at demonstrators, which he described as “an everyday occurrence in America.”

NPR national correspondent Sergio Martínez-Beltrán posted a video of immigration agents walking around a Minneapolis parking lot and demanding shoppers offer proof that they were legally in the US.

“The drivers were people of color,” Martínez-Beltrán observed.

Despite multiple videos showing Minneapolis residents angrily confronting federal immigration officials, President Donald Trump dismissed the demonstrations as “fake” during what was supposed to have been a speech on the US economy.

“One of the reasons they’re doing these fake riots—I mean they’re just terrible,” Trump said, referring to largely peaceful demonstrations in Minneapolis. “It’s so fake. ‘Shame! Shame! Shame!’ You see the woman. It’s all practiced. They take hotel rooms and they all practice together. It’s a whole scam. We’re finding out who’s funding all this stuff too.”



'Put an End to This Narcissism': New Bill Would Ban Naming of Federal Assets After Sitting Presidents

"It's no secret that President Trump is undermining democracy and moving this country toward authoritarianism," said US Sen. Bernie Sanders. "Part of that strategy is to create the myth of the 'Great Leader' by naming public buildings after himself."

By Jake Johnson

Legislation introduced Tuesday in the US Senate would prohibit the naming or renaming of federal buildings, land, and other assets after sitting presidents, an effort to counter President Donald Trump’s moves to attach his personal brand to government infrastructure and programs.

The measure’s backers have filed the two-page proposal as an amendment to government funding legislation that senators are taking up this week.

US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), one of the new bill’s lead sponsors, said in a statement that Trump’s penchant for adding his name to federal structures and initiatives is not mere symbolism. It is of a piece, Sanders argued, with his broader assault on US democracy and attempts to impose his will on the country.

“It’s no secret that President Trump is undermining democracy and moving this country toward authoritarianism,” said Sanders. “Part of that strategy is to create the myth of the ‘Great Leader’ by naming public buildings after himself—something that dictators have done throughout history.”

“For Trump to put his name on federal buildings is arrogant and it is illegal,” the senator added. “We must put an end to this narcissism—and that’s what this bill does.”

If passed, the Stop Executive Renaming for Vanity and Ego (SERVE) Act would apply retroactively, “returning any federal assets named for the current sitting president to the name given under United States Code,” a summary of the bill notes.

The New York Times on Monday published a list of “some federal initiatives and places that have been named (or renamed) for him, or feature his image, in the last year alone”:

  • The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts;
  • Donald J. Trump United States Institute of Peace;
  • Trump-class U.S.S. Defiant;
  • The Trump Gold Card;
  • Trump Accounts;
  • TrumpRx;
  • A proposed 2026 Semiquincentennial $1 coin; and
  • America the Beautiful National Parks pass.

“Our country desperately deserves leaders focused on working for the people—not their own ego or narcissism,” said Sen. Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.), one of the bill’s lead sponsors. “This necessary legislation prohibits the naming, or renaming, of any federal building or land in the name of a sitting president.”

“And even more importantly, at a time when Americans can’t afford to put food on the table, pay their rent, or afford health care, this bill prohibits the use of any federal funds for these meaningless vanity projects,” Alsobrooks added.



47 Ways Trump Has 'Made Life Less Affordable' in Second Term

"Trump's actions since taking office a year ago reveal a clear and consistent effort... to serve the interests of his billionaire and corporate backers," said a co-author of the Economic Policy Institute report.

By Jessica Corbett

From “stripping collective bargaining rights from more than 1 million federal workers” to “denying 2 million in-home healthcare workers minimum wage and overtime pay,” President Donald Trump “has actively made life less affordable for working people.”

That’s according to a Tuesday report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), which cataloged 47 key ways that the 47th president made life worse for working people during the first year of his second term.

The think tank sorted the actions into five categories: eroding workers’ wages and economic security; undermining job creation; weakening workers’ rights; enabling employer exploitation; and creating an ineffective government.

“Many of the actions outlined here have impacts across categories,” the report notes. “Trump’s attacks on union workers, for example, reduce workers’ wages, weaken workers’ rights, and promote employer exploitation of workers.”

“Every dollar denied to typical workers in wages ends up as higher income for business owners and corporate managers.”

The first section highlights that Trump (1) cut the minimum wage for nearly 400,000 federal contractors, (2) ended enforcement of protections for workers illegally classified as independent contractors, (3) slashed wages of migrant farmworkers in the H-2A program, (4) deprived in-home healthcare workers of minimum wage and overtime pay, and (5) facilitated the inclusion of cryptocurrencies among 401(k) investment options.

On the job creation front, the president (6) paused funding for projects authorized under a bipartisan infrastructure law, (7) signed the Laken Riley Act as part of his mass deportation agenda, (8) revoked an executive order that created a federal interagency working group focused on expanding apprenticeships, (9) is trying to shutter Job Corps centers operated by federal contractors, and (10) disrupted manufacturing supply chains with chaotic trade policy.

In addition to (11) attacking the union rights of over 1 million government employees, Trump (12) delayed enforcement of the silica rule for coal miners, (13) proposed limiting the scope of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s general duty clause, (14) fired National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, (15) stripped work permits and temporary protections from immigrants lawfully in the country, and (16) deterred worker organizing with immigration enforcement actions.

Trump’s assault on workers’ rights has included (17) nominating Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, who has pursued a deregulatory agenda, (18) illegally firing Gwynne Wilcox from the NLRB, (19) ending funding to fight human trafficking and child and forced labor globally, and (20) terminating International Labor Affairs Bureau grants.

Chavez-DeRemer isn’t Trump’s only controversial pick for a key labor post. He’s also nominated (20) Jonathan Berry as solicitor of labor, (21) Crystal Carey as NLRB general counsel, (22) Scott Mayer as an NLRB board member, and (23) Daniel Aronowitz to lead the Employee Benefits Security Administration.

Trump has also (24) weakened workplace safety penalties for smaller businesses, (25) nominated Andrea Lucas as Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) chair, (26) revoked an executive order promoting strong labor standards on projects receiving federal funds, (27) appointed Elisabeth Messenger, the former leader of an anti-union group, to head the Office of Labor-Management Standards, (28) fired EEOC Commissioners Charlotte Burrows and Jocelyn Samuels, and (29) conducted systematic worksite raids that punished workers rather than improving wages and working conditions.

The president’s various “deliberate actions to weaken the federal government” have included (30) politicizing career Senior Executive Service officials, (31) firing most staff at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, (32) nominating Brittany Panuccio as an EEOC commissioner(33) and picking Project 2025 architect Russell Vought as Office of Management and Budget director.

He has also fired (34) Federal Labor Relations Authority Chair Susan Tsui Grundmann and (35) Merit Systems Protection Board Member Cathy Harris, and (36) tried to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, whose case is set to be argued before the US Supreme Court next week. Trump further (37) fired Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Commissioner Erika McEntarfer over accurate economic data, and is attempting to shut down (38) the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and (39) the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.

Additionally, the president (40) directed federal agencies to end the use of disparate impact liability, (41) put independent agencies under his supervision, (42) signed the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act that transfers wealth from working families to the ultrarich, (43) proposed a rule that would make it easier to fire federal employees for political reasons, and (44) issued an executive order on apprenticeships that does not require the government to consult with labor groups.

Finally, since returning to the White House, the Republican has (45) gutted the federal workforce, (46) directed US Attorney General Pam Bondi to challenge state laws that would regulate artificial intelligence technologies, and (47) fired 17 inspectors general.

“Trump’s actions since taking office a year ago reveal a clear and consistent effort to make life less affordable for working people in order to serve the interests of his billionaire and corporate backers,” said report co-author Celine McNicholas, EPI’s director of policy and general counsel, in a statement.

“Every dollar denied to typical workers in wages ends up as higher income for business owners and corporate managers,” McNicholas added. “This growing inequality is what is making life so unaffordable for workers and their families today.”

EPI released the report as the BLS published its consumer price index data for December, which show a 2.7% year-over-year increase in prices for everyday goods and services.



As Trump Threatens to Intervene, Iranian Protesters Warn US, Israel 'Want Entire Region in Chaos'

"This government has shown that it is not capable of reform," said one Iranian demonstrator. "On the other side, there are Trump and Netanyahu, both of whom are war criminals."

By Brad Reed

President Donald Trump has threatened to launch military strikes against Iran, purportedly to help anti-government protesters who are demanding change amid an economic crisis.

However, Middle East Eye spoke with some of the Iranian demonstrators and found they had little appetite for interference from either the US or Israel.

A 39-year-old protester from Tehran, who identified only as Sara, said that Israel’s record of bombing countries in the region made her suspicious of any offer that its government would make to help the Iranian protest movement.

“Over the past one or two years, Israel has attacked almost every country in the region,” she said. “They want the entire region to be in chaos while they remain safe.”

Sara also emphasized that “we want regime change, but we do not want our country to be destroyed.”

A 28-year-old demonstrator named Reza also expressed skepticism of Israel and US offers to help even while stating his fierce opposition to the Iranian government.

“On one side, this government has shown that it is not capable of reform and knows nothing but repression,” he said. “On the other side, there are Trump and Netanyahu, both of whom are war criminals.”

The Middle East Eye report noted that Trump, unlike past presidents, has not even offered a pretense of wanting to bring democracy to Iran to justify military action and has instead stated his desire to seize foreign nations’ resources, such as when he declared that the US would take control of petroleum production in Venezuela after the US military abducted President Nicolás Maduro.

Jamal Abdi, president of the National Iranian American Council, earlier this month expressed solidarity with the Iranian protesters while also warning Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to butt out.

“The outbreak of protests in Iran over the past week has been led by Iranians suffering under tremendous economic pressure and repression,” said Abdi. “It is the Iranian people’s movement and they deserve to be heard, not President Trump or Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, who cannot and should not try to speak for them. President Trump’s decision to insert himself and threaten military intervention at this moment is profoundly reckless. It distracts from the legitimate grievances of Iranians and risks being exploited to justify a more violent government crackdown.”

The Iranian government has responded to the protests with violence and mass arrests of demonstrators, and the government has blacked out internet access for its citizens.

The exact death toll resulting from the Iranian government’s crackdown is not known, although the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency estimated as of Monday night that more than 500 people had been killed, while an unnamed Iranian official told Reuters on Tuesday that 2,000 people had been killed so far, including Iranian security forces.



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■ Opinion


Why the US Must Absolutely Not Force Regime Change in Iran

The popular protests in Iran are just, but rolling back the regime through US intervention, rather than through the actions of the Iranian people themselves, cannot plausibly be described as support for democracy.

By Eric Ross


We Shouldn't Have to Watch a Woman's Murder to Counter Government Lies

Right-wing leaders are trying to convince all of us that what we saw on video with our own eyes was not actually what we saw, and for far too many, it seems to be working.

By Crystal Coache


Trump Declares War on Everyone

Trump has unleashed violence on America’s streets for much the same reason he has unleashed violence on Latin America and is planning to unleash it elsewhere: to display his own strength.

By Robert Reich




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Top News | 'Where Were You Born?' ICE Conducting Show-Me-Your-Papers Stops

                                                                                                                                         LOT...