In Oklahoma last month, a state senator introduced for the second time a bill seeking to remove "incompatibility" from the state's grounds for divorce, while also proposing a separate piece of legislation that would provide a tax credit to encourage covenant marriages, which make it harder for spouses to obtain a divorce. In Indiana, a now-dead bill introduced last month aimed to add a hurdle for married couples with minor children seeking a divorce on no-fault grounds.
The recent bills targeting no-fault divorce come against a backdrop of a slew of executive actions at the federal level that threaten civil rights and freedoms for a host of Americans. While these state bills have previously failed to gain any traction in their respective legislatures — Republican Oklahoma state Sen. Dusty Deevers' 2024 attempt at eliminating no-fault divorce failed to make it out of committee — their reappearances in state legislatures illuminates a potentially burgeoning trend toward further limiting women's rights.
In a post-Dobbs United States, legal experts find such a prospect alarming.
Marcia Zug, a professor of marital law at the University of South Carolina School of Law, told Salon that she expects more of this kind of legislation to arise in the years to come because of their spread. Despite these bills' current unpopularity, their failures are not dissuading lawmakers in other states from introducing similar proposals.
"It's not being looked at as a crazy thing," Zug said of some ultraconservative state lawmakers' approach to the legislation. "'Some state over there is doing it. Let's consider it, and maybe we want to propose it, and maybe it'll pass — maybe it won't.' But if more and more, states propose it, some state will pass it. Maybe other states will pass it. That's more likely than not at this point."
This is C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"
A new poll from Reuters shows that the early optimism that greeted President Donald Trump's second term is quickly fading as consumers sour on the American economy.
According to Reuters, Trump's job approval fell by three points since the start of his second term a month ago, and he's being dragged down by perceptions of the economy, which was the issue that many political analysts believed put him over the top in the 2024 presidential election.
"The share of Americans who think the economy is on the wrong track rose to 53% in the latest poll from 43% in the January 24-26 poll," Reuters writes. "Public approval of Trump's economic stewardship fell to 39% from 43% in the prior poll."
Renée Paradis, a member of the party's National Political Committee said opinion inside the DSA ranges widely, including those who want the group to be more active inside the Democratic Party.
But the consensus coming out of the convention, she said, remains that DSA should keep running candidates in Democratic primaries while building its own outside campaign infrastructure.
"Most working-class voters still heavily identify with the Democratic Party," said Paradis. "Bernie’s campaigns and DSA’s own electoral campaigns have shown that we can build socialist power while tactically using the Democratic Party’s ballot line.”
If anyone should’ve felt safe in their government jobs, you’d assume it would be the 350 employees at the National Nuclear Security Administration, charged with oversight of the country’s nuclear arsenal.
Never assume.
In what the White House is now calling a mistake, a large swath of NNSA employees were fired last Thursday before the Trump administration realized they had cleared out the wrong agency. By Friday, they were scrambling to rehire these essential workers. All but 28 employees had their dismissals rescinded, according to the Los Angeles Times.
President Donald Trump and Elon Musk, in their hunt for "fraud, waste and abuse" in the federal government, are falsely implying millions of dead Americans are receiving Social Security benefits, experts told ABC News.
It started in the Oval Office last week when Musk -- facing reporters for the first time since the Department of Government Efficiency began its aggressive overhaul of the federal government -- said he found "crazy things" in the Social Security system, including, he said, people who are "150 years old."
[. . .]
Social Security policy experts and economists told ABC News that they are getting it wrong, contending Musk is misreading the agency's records system.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) has multiple databases,
including one that gets sent to the Treasury Department each month
outlining who is receiving payments.
According to agency statistics, of the 67 million people who receive Social Security benefits, only 0.1% are over the age of 100.
"So, when they're throwing around numbers like tens of millions of dead people are getting Social Security, well there's only 67 million total. What are they talking about? Half the people are actually dead? The numbers are so ridiculous. It's not true," said Kathleen Romig, the director of Social Security and disability policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
SSA does make some improper payments, but they are not widespread (roughly 1%) and most of the mistakes made are overpayments to living beneficiaries, according to a July 2024 inspector's general report. That report found from 2015 through 2022, the SSA made $71.8 billion in improper payments. The agency issues $1 trillion in benefits every year.
The Trump administration admitted on Tuesday that it accidentally fired "several" USDA employees who were working on resolving the H1N5 bird flu outbreak in the United States. The USDA said in a statement it was working on bringing those agency employees back.
"Although several positions supporting [bird flu efforts] were notified of their terminations over the weekend, we are working to swiftly rectify the situation and rescind those letters," a USDA spokesperson said in a statement reported by NBC.
"USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service frontline positions are considered public safety positions, and we are continuing to hire the workforce necessary to ensure the safety and adequate supply of food to fulfill our statutory mission."
The DOGE purge of the federal government had already claimed 300 employees at the National Nuclear Safety Administration (NNSA) last week, which then had to be walked back after it was revealed they were in charge of maintaining the safety of the United States' nuclear arsenal.
Another accidental firing carried out by Donald Chump's sugar daddy Alien Musk. Alien who was not elected to government office and who does not hold a position that the Senate might confirm. South African-born Alien Musk coming into our country, having the nerve to fire American citizens and then, over and over, OOPS!
Oops?
The first oops made it clear Alien didn't know what he was doing and should not be over anything to do with the US government. The man is seen as a security risk by our own government. And, along with accessing our data that should be protected from him, he's firing people and clearly doesn't know what they do, what their duties are or how important they are to running this country.
He doesn't know.
And he doesn't care to know.
Chump's put his Sugar Daddy ahead of the citizens of this country.
In just a few short weeks, the Trump administration has brought drastic changes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and public health. Beginning with the removal of websites and key public health datasets in January 2025, the Trump administration has taken actions to dismantle established public health infrastructure as part of its second-term agenda.
In addition, the administration has begun a widespread purge of the federal public health workforce. As of Feb. 19, around 5,200 employees at the CDC and the National Institutes of Health had been let go. About 10% of the CDC’s staff have been removed, with plans for additional firings.
How is any of this helping the American people?
The vast increase in the price of groceries since Chump was sworn in? He's not addressing that. He's not honoring his word that the prices would go down on the first day of his administration.
That's what he told people.
That's what he campaigned on.
But he's not doing anything about it. He's too focused on destroying our country and advancing his plans before the entire country catches on to how he's looting American taxpayers and treasures to enrich people like Alien Musk.
Suzanne Gordon and Steve Early (TAP) report:
In a scene that has become familiar in Washington these days, angry federal workers and concerned members of Congress gathered outside a government office to protest the latest depredations of the “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) created by President Trump.
On February 13, the venue of the day was the Vermont Avenue headquarters of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), an agency with the second-largest workforce and third-largest budget in the federal government.
The Senate Democrats who rallied, in person or via press release, to “Protect Our Veterans” trained their fire on the evil meddling of the billionaire boss from Tesla, SpaceX, and X, the social media site previously known as Twitter.
In her statement of support, Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) warned that Musk and his crew were accessing data that included personal information about VA patients, which is supposed to be safeguarded by the secretary of veterans affairs. “Veterans risked their lives to defend our country,” Murray said. “And they deserve better than to have an unelected billionaire reviewing their medical records, targeting the benefits they have earned, or using their private information for personal gain.”
He's going after Social Security, he's going after Medicare, he's going after Medicaid and he's going after veterans.
Those of us who support those four programs? We outnumber Chump and Alien. We're right and we're left and we're center. And we have the numbers. Even a dumb ass like Ted Cruz -- one of Texas' two idiot US senators -- has to grasp that reality if his constituents call his office, write him, demand a face-to-face, protest -- all of it.
Even dumb Ted Cruz knows Chump's not going to protect Cruz's ass. Chump will protect his own ass. But at the end of the day, he's not doing anything for Cruz. So confronted with angry constituents, Cruz does have to develop some form of a spine and stand up for his constituents.
A President’s Day weekend swept by fear and grief from the sudden termination of thousands of federal employees in the US Forest Service and Department of Interior left chaos and uncertainty after the latest assault on the federal workforce by the Trump administration and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.
For people on the ground in mountain communities, small towns and rural areas, the cuts were nothing short of devastating. They came with no explanation, warning or discernment, and the impact on public land and wildlife, observers say, will be felt for years.
“It’s pretty hard to fathom,” said Claire Thompson, 35, a trail leader who was fired Friday afternoon after eight years with the US Forest Service. “It feels like they’re punishing the people who least deserve it. We have chosen to stay in careers working for so little money. We are literally the boots on the ground, physically working all day.”
The Emperor's got no clothes on
No clothes? That can't be; he's the Emperor
Take that child away
Don't let the people hear the words he has to say
One small voice
Speaking out in honesty
Silenced, but not for long
One small voice speaking with the values
we were taught as children
So you walk away and say, Isn't he divine?
Don't those clothes look fine on the Emperor?
And as you take your leave
You wonder why you're feeling so ill-at-ease
Don't you know?
Lies take your soul
You can't hide from yourself
Lies take their toll on you
And everyone else
One small voice speaking out in honesty
Silenced, but not for long
One small voice speaking with the values
we were taught as children
Tell the truth
You can change the world
But you'd better be strong
Donald Trump called himself “THE KING” on Wednesday, and the rest of the White House was overjoyed to see the president was dropping the pretense of democracy.
Trump announced in a post on Truth Social that his administration would challenge New York City’s recent policy installing congestion pricing, with an added rhetorical twist.
What they're saying: "My oath is to the Constitution of our state and of our country," Pritzker said in the speech.
- "We don't have kings in America — and I don't intend to bend the knee to one. I am not speaking up in service to my ambitions, but in deference to my obligations."
Context: Pritzker, a Democrat who has both attacked and sued the Trump administration in recent weeks, is considered a rising national star in his party.
Zoom in: Pritzker's own budget office revealed a $3.2 billion deficit for 2026 in November, but the governor's office has since revised that to a $1.7 billion deficit.
- The budget calls for revenue to grow by almost 3% to offset the deficit, along with a slew of cost-cutting measures, like streamlining state purchasing and a freeze on new hiring.
Centrist Republicans in Congress who have publicly criticized President Donald Trump have nonetheless turned out to be reliable votes for his Cabinet nominees. This may be due to fear of retribution.
That's according to a Wednesday article in Vanity Fair, which quoted several Republicans who say there's fear among GOP elected officials in Washington D.C. about the potential for political violence from Trump's base if they outwardly oppose him. Vanity Fair's Gabriel Sherman spoke with longtime Republican strategist Stuart Stevens — who worked for former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign before joining anti-Trump group The Lincoln Project — who said today's Republicans have lost their spine.
"These are the heirs of the Greatest Generation, and they turned out to be the worst generation," he said. "A guy sends a mob into your workplace to kill you, and you’re okay with that?"
One
of the more moderate members of the Senate Republican Conference who
has publicly criticized Trump is Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who is
running for reelection in 2026 in a relatively purple state. But Tillis
turned out to be the deciding vote to confirm former Fox News host Pete
Hegseth as secretary of defense. One of Sherman's sources said Tillis
was made aware of "credible death threats" by the FBI ahead of the final
vote.
"They’re scared s---less about death threats and Gestapo-like stuff," said an unnamed source who worked in the first Trump administration.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency may be trying to inflate the numbers of its spending cuts.
DOGE published an itemized list of canceled government contracts Monday accounting for an alleged $16 billion in spending. Almost half of those savings were attributed to a hefty $8 billion contract for D&G Support Services to provide “program and technical support services” to the Office of Diversity and Civil Rights at the the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
There was just one problem: The DOGE website included a screenshot of the award, which showed that it was only worth $8 million, not $8 billion, as was the amount listed directly below the image.
"Trump burned $25,000 in jet fuel, doing laps around Daytona in Air Force One, which will be paid for by tax money. Someone alert DOGE," wrote one user on Reddit.
"Trump's Daytona flyover? More like a taxpayer-funded ego trip!" said another on X. A third wrote: "Waste fraud and abuse written alllll over it. But since it's maga sponsored race, they won't complain lol."
And a fourth said: "Receipt that it costs millions to travel?"