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Immigrant Medicaid enrollees' personal data given to immigration officials

Immigrant Medicaid enrollees' personal data given to immigration officials

The Hill13-06-2025
The Trump administration has reportedly given the personal data of millions of Medicaid enrollees to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), as part of President Trump's sweeping deportation agenda.
Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services handed over a dataset on Medicaid enrollees in California, Illinois, Washington state and Washington D.C., according to the Associated Press. All these states allow non-U.S. citizens to receive Medicaid benefits.
The AP obtained an internal memo and emails showing that two top advisors to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ordered the data sharing and gave CMS 45 minutes to comply. The data includes names, addresses, social security numbers and immigration status.
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), in a statement to the AP, said the 'potential data transfer' was 'extremely concerning, and if true, potentially unlawful, particularly given numerous headlines highlighting potential improper federal use of personal information and federal actions to target the personal information of Americans.'
Immigration and Customs Enforcement are aiming to deport 3,000 undocumented immigrants per day, according to White House aide Stephen Miller.
The administration has frequently threatened states that don't cooperate with Trump's immigration policies. Trump this week suggested he'd like to see Newsom arrested over his response to protests in Los Angeles against federal workplace immigration sweeps.
CMS announced on May 27 that it was 'increasing federal oversight to stop states from misusing federal Medicaid dollars to cover health care for individuals who are in the country illegally,' in line with President Trump's executive order 'Ending Taxpayer Subsidization of Open Borders,' signed on Feb. 19.
'Medicaid funds must serve American citizens in need and those legally entitled to benefits,' CMS Deputy Administrator Drew Snyder said at the time. 'If states cannot or will not comply, CMS will step in.'
According to the AP, Medicaid Deputy Director Sara Vitolo wrote in a memo that this move could violate federal laws such as the Social Security Act and Privacy Act of 1974.
The growing tension between state and federal authorities over Trump's deportation push was on full display Thursday when Democratic governors appeared for a House Oversight hearing.
Last month, a judge allowed ICE to have access to Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data to facilitate mass deportations, which overturned decades of precedent in handling of personal data between agencies.
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Israeli airstrikes kill 33 Palestinians in Gaza
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Israeli airstrikes kill 33 Palestinians in Gaza

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Croatian right-wing singer Marko Perkovic and fans perform pro-Nazi salute at massive concert

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Croatian right-wing singer Marko Perkovic and fans perform pro-Nazi salute at massive concert
Croatian right-wing singer Marko Perkovic and fans perform pro-Nazi salute at massive concert

San Francisco Chronicle​

time31 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Croatian right-wing singer Marko Perkovic and fans perform pro-Nazi salute at massive concert

ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) — A hugely popular right-wing Croatian singer and hundreds of thousands of his fans performed a pro-Nazi World War II salute at a massive concert in Zagreb, drawing criticism. One of Marko Perkovic's most popular songs, played in the late Staurday concert, starts with the dreaded 'For the homeland — Ready!' salute, used by Croatia's Nazi-era puppet Ustasha regime that ran concentration camps at the time. Perkovic, whose stage name is Thompson after a U.S.-made machine gun, had previously said both the song and the salute focus on the 1991-95 ethnic war in Croatia, in which he fought using the American firearm, after the country declared independence from the former Yugoslavia. He says his controversial song is 'a witness of an era.' The 1990s conflict erupted when rebel minority Serbs, backed by neighboring Serbia, took up guns, intending to split from Croatia and unite with Serbia. Perkovic's immense popularity in Croatia reflects prevailing nationalist sentiments in the country 30 years after the war ended. The WWII Ustasha troops in Croatia brutally killed tens of thousands of Serbs, Jews, Roma and antifascist Croats in a string of concentration camps in the country. Despite documented atrocities, some nationalists still view the Ustasha regime leaders as founders of the independent Croatian state. Organizers said that half a million people attended Perkovic's concert in the Croatian capital. Video footage aired by Croatian media showed many fans displaying pro-Nazi salutes earlier in the day. The salute is punishable by law in Croatia, but courts have ruled Perkovic can use it as part of his song, the Croatian state television HRT said. Perkovic has been banned from performing in some European cities over frequent pro-Nazi references and displays at his gigs. Croatia's Vecernji List daily wrote that the concert's 'supreme organization' has been overshadowed by the use of the salute of a regime that signed off on 'mass executions of people.' Regional N1 television noted that whatever the modern interpretations of the salute may be its roots are 'undoubtedly' in the Ustasha regime era. N1 said that while 'Germans have made a clear cut" from anything Nazi-related 'to prevent crooked interpretations and the return to a dark past ... Croatia is nowhere near that in 2025.' In neighboring Serbia, populist President Aleksandar Vucic criticized Perkovic's concerts as a display 'of support for pro-Nazi values.' Former Serbian liberal leader Boris Tadic said it was a 'great shame for Croatia" and "the European Union' because the concert 'glorifies the killing of members of one nation, in this case Serbian.' Croatia joined the EU in 2013.

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