cuts"

'Zeroed out': Trump eliminates DOJ unit protecting his base from organized crime

The Trump administration is “decommissioning” a Department of Justice unit known for dismantling transnational organized crime networks, including drug cartels, human trafficking rings and lottery and phone scams that target President Donald Trump’s senior supporters.

Bloomberg reports leaders of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces Unit, or OCDETF, were told they had until Sept. 30 to shut down operations, according to anonymous internal sources.

“An email sent last Monday by a DOJ budget analyst to a counterpart at OCDETF said that the unit’s fiscal year 2026 budget would be ‘zeroed out’ and the independent office dissolved," according to records obtained by Bloomberg News in response to a Freedom of Information Act request and people familiar with the matter.

READ MORE: Jim Jordan silent after critics hurl accusations of corruption on behalf of billionaires

The cause for the shutdown wasn’t specified in documents, and Bloomberg says it’s unclear who was responsible for making the decision, which runs counter to the administration’s stated commitment to tackle human and drug trafficking. A DOJ spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Trump, who is a convicted felon, instituted immediate, widespread cuts to the DOJ upon taking office. The OCDETF cuts appear to lack a financial justification: In 2025, with only a $550 million budget, the unit nabbed more than $2 billion in seized and forfeited proceeds from international criminal networks, according to the Government Accountability Office. The defunding also razes the department’s sprawling fusion center in Virginia.

In addition to shutting down drug trafficking organizations, the task force is the preeminent agency pursuing international scammers who target seniors with more than $3.4 billion in phone, internet and mail scams. State attorneys general offices field many senior victim complaints, but attorneys general must always defer scam reports to the federal government because states have no jurisdiction in places like Mumbai, India and Kingston, Jamaica, where the brunt of scams originate. The OCDETF, however, can reach into Jamaica and arrest individuals tied to lottery schemes that cost victims more than $9.5 million last year.

Such scams overwhelmingly target seniors who generally support Trump.

READ MORE: Florida Republicans aren't putting up with Ron DeSantis' temper tantrums anymore

The OCDETF is now preparing to cancel building leases, shut down its information systems and terminate contracts.

Read the full Bloomberg story here.

'Dead wrong': Trumpworld warns Republicans against Medicaid cuts that would hurt MAGA

NOTUS reports members of Trump’s circle are getting nervous about House Republicans’ determination to cut the federal health insurance program for low-income and disabled Americans in their reconciliation bill. Cuts, they say, could eat away Trump’s base.

“The House Republicans who are obsessed with cutting Medicaid are in danger of unwittingly breaking up the coalition Trump created,” one Trumpworld source told NOTUS. “The Republican Party has lost a portion of its college-educated supporters and has increased greatly with voters without a college education who rely more on entitlements.”

“Leave it to House Republicans to screw up a two-car processional,” a second Trump operative told NOTUS. “Like, they just can’t get out of their own way, sometimes.”

READ MORE: Only one thing is going to stand in Trump's way — and he knows it

House Republicans are allegedly itching to pitch Medicaid cuts as a way to pay for Trump’s 2017 tax cuts in the reconciliation bill. But Trump never campaigned on cutting Medicaid, despite supporting the budget resolution now pushing heavy Medicaid cuts.

Congressional Republicans have already backed adding work requirements to Medicaid and targeting “waste, fraud and abuse,” but these proposals barely make a dent in the almost $900 billion the White House needs to save over 10 years to sustain Trump’s tax cuts. Now Republicans are pushing a proposal that slashes the federal government’s contribution to Medicaid, forcing states to pick up a larger portion of the cost,. Only there is no guarantee that red states like Mississippi and Alabama will easily step up to the plate.

“A lot of MAGAs on Medicaid,” NOTUS reports Trump ally Steve Bannon saying on his podcast earlier this year. “If you don’t think so, you are dead wrong. You can’t just take a meat axe to it.”

Vulnerable moderate Republicans led Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.) sent a letter to GOP leadership reiterating their “strong support for this program that ensures our constituents have reliable healthcare. Balancing the federal budget must not come at the expense of those who depend on these benefits for their health and economic security.”

'Destroyed for no reason': Trump fires would-be mom hour after she nabs foster parent slot

“It probably puts a few seats they don’t want on the map, on the map,” another source told NOTUS.

Read the entire NOTUSs report here.

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'Destroyed for no reason': Trump fires would-be mom hour after she nabs foster parent slot

After years of preparing to be a foster mom, Atlanta CDC worker Bree Danner had finally won an opening to foster a little girl—one hour before DOGE pulled her job.

“My career in public service has completely been destroyed for absolutely no reason,” she told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Caseworker Danner was in her Atlanta office at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in February when the good news came from the adoption worker, but even then, she knew the Trump administration was eliminating federal government jobs. And she worried about hers.

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She stopped worrying less than an hour after she hung up with the caseworker because she and her team learned DOGE planned to fire thousands of probationary workers like her as part of sweeping layoffs across the federal government. Danner had worked for the CDC for years collaborating with community organizations for grants to fight substance abuse, but she had recently changed departments, which temporarily relegated her back to “probationary” status, per CDC protocols. The timing made her a prime DOGE target.

Danner says she had wanted to house a child in need for the long term, but Danner doesn’t have a large savings account. She is also single. So, she called the caseworker back and said she couldn’t move the child into an freshly unstable situation.

“I had a lot of guilt at not being able to take in that little girl,” Danner told AJC reporters.

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Trump’s budget director reveals plans to attack Social Security and Medicare

Opponents of Social Security and Medicare are so eager to end these two overwhelmingly important and popular earned benefits that they can’t contain themselves. Mick Mulvaney, the Trump administration’s director of the Office of Management and Budget, is the latest to make crystal clear the longstanding plan to destroy both programs.

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Trump's War on Federal Science Will Stifle Innovation and Hurt the Economy

Just after President Trump was elected last November, thousands of American scientists did something unprecedented. Alarmed by the incoming president’s blatant disregard for the facts, they sent an open letter calling on the new administration and Congress to respect “scientific integrity and independence.” Signed by more than 5,500 scientists, the letter ends with a warning: “We will continue to champion efforts that strengthen the role of science in policymaking, and stand ready to hold accountable any who might seek to undermine it.”

If Trump’s scientifically indefensible statements on the campaign trail weren’t disturbing enough, his cabinet appointees, his executive actions rescinding environmental safeguards and his preliminary “skinny” budget proposing to gut federal science programs have all set off alarm bells.

In response, the scientific community is preparing for another unprecedented action. On Saturday, April 22, Earth Day, scientists and their supporters gathered in Washington, D.C., and more than 400 cities around the world for the first-ever March for Science, kicking off a week of activism that will be capped by the People’s Climate March on April 29.

Never before have scientists seemed this motivated and engaged, and with good reason. Trump’s actions and his proposed budget would not only threaten public health and the environment, they also would stifle American innovation and slow economic growth.

That’s right. Most Americans — including the businessman in the White House, apparently — do not fully appreciate how much our economy relies on federal science. The truth is, U.S. corporations, their employees, and the public at large are all heavily indebted to taxpayer-funded research for a wide array of consumer products, pharmaceuticals and technologies. Regardless, Trump’s proposed cuts would hamstring research at federal agencies that have a long history of doing the heavy lifting.

Nipping the Nifty 50

Let’s start with the fact that you’re reading this on a computer or another electronic device. In 1973, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency launched a research program called the Internetting project, which developed procedures that allowed computers to communicate across multiple, linked networks. In the mid-1980s, the National Science Foundation underwrote the development of DARPA’s system to provide the backbone of what we now call the internet.

The National Science Foundation’s website includes the internet in its “Nifty 50” government-funded inventions, innovations and discoveries that we all now take for granted. The list, which includes everything from barcodes and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology to speech recognition and web browsers, amounts to just a small sampling of products and technologies government funding helped spawn.

Although Trump’s proposed budget does not specifically mention the National Science Foundation, which currently provides more than $7 billion annually in research grants, it likely will be included in the category of “other agencies” that Trump wants to cut by nearly 10 percent.

Defunding Life-Saving Drug Research

Trump’s proposal does explicitly call for slashing the National Institutes of Health’s annual budget by 18 percent, from its current $31.7 billion to $25.9 billion, which would bring its funding to the lowest level in at least 15 years (in constant dollars). According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, such a drastic cut “would irreparably harm the ability of the nation’s scientists to develop cures and treatments” and would “have a devastating effect on America’s health security.”

An analysis published earlier this month in the journal Science found that more than 30 percent of NIH-funded biomedical studies between 1980 and 2007 were later cited in a patent for a drug, device or medical technology. Nearly a tenth of all NIH grants over the same time period, meanwhile, led directly to a patent.

NIH’s commercialization track record has had a significant economic impact. According to a 2013 report by United for Medical Research — a coalition of leading research institutions, patient and health advocates, and private industry — NIH-funded research added $69 billion to U.S. gross domestic product in 2011 alone. If anything, “we’re underinvesting” in biomedical research, says economist Pierre Azoulay, co-author of the recent Science study. “The idea that we’re going to get to a better place by cutting [the NIH budget] is ridiculous.”

Running Out of Energy

The Trump blueprint proposes to cut the Department of Energy budget by less than 6 percent, to $28 billion, but would spend more on the DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration — which runs the nuclear weapons complex — and chop energy-related programs by nearly 18 percent. The Office of Science, which supports research at more than 300 universities and oversees 10 national laboratories, would suffer a 16 percent cut. Many of those labs, including Lawrence Berkeley and Pacific Northwest, conduct studies on bioenergy, electric vehicles, energy efficiency, hydropower and solar energy.

The Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy and the Innovative Technology Loan Guarantee Program, both which invest in cutting-edge energy technologies private investors won’t fund, would be eliminated altogether, as would the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Program, which provides loans to automakers to produce a new generation of fuel-efficient vehicles.

Federal Science Trumps Corporate R&D

The Trump administration’s rationale for eliminating these DOE research programs? According to the president’s budget report, the “private sector is better positioned to finance disruptive energy research and development and to commercialize innovative technologies.”

In fact, government-funded R&D — not the private sector — is responsible for much of the innovation that drives economic growth. As economist Mariana Mazzucato, author of The Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector Myths, explained in a September 2013 article, “businesses are typically timid — waiting to invest until they can clearly see new technological and market opportunities. And evidence shows that such opportunities come when large sums of public money are spent directly on high risk (and high cost)” research. The private sector’s “fear explains why we have seen venture capital entering, in industry after industry, only decades after the initial high risk has been absorbed by the government.”

Rush Holt, CEO at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, agrees that “corporate research, as beneficial as it may be, is no substitute for federal investment in research.”

“We need both,” he wrote in a September 2016 column. “But we should recognize that the private sector, with its natural focus on commercial results and return on investment, will not do much of the fundamental research that is necessary for the long-term progress of society.”

Holt, who served in Congress from 1999 to 2015 and holds a doctorate in physics, called on the federal government to “fund more vital research for public health, safety, security, economics and quality of life.” The Trump administration’s preliminary budget blueprint, however, indicates that it plans to do the exact opposite, one of the many reasons scientists will be marching this weekend.

Some experts point out that gutting federal scientific research would have dire international consequences as well.

“If they were enacted, these cuts signal the end of the American century as a global innovation leader,” Robert D. Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, recently told the Los Angeles Times. “America’s lead in science and technology was built on the fact that in the 1960s, the U.S. government alone invested more in R&D than the rest of the world combined, business and government. The Trump budget throws this great legacy away."

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