
NYC bodega owners worry Zohran Mamdani will put them out of business with his city-run grocery store plan: ‘I don't want to lose my job'
'Competing with the city having business is not going to be something that we can support,' Radhames Rodriguez, president of United Bodegas of America, said during a press conference outside a Gristedes supermarket in Midtown.
Rodriguez, 62, who owns four bodegas in the Bronx, said his stores and others won't be able to compete with prices at the city-run stores — which would be exempt from paying rent or property taxes under Mamdani's plan.
7 Gristedes owner John Catsimatidis and New York City bodega owners held a press conference to raise concerns about Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's plan for city-run grocery stores on June 30, 2025.
Matthew McDermott
7 Radhames Rodriguez, president of United Bodegas of America, said bodegas won't be able to compete with the prices at the city-run grocery stores.
Matthew McDermott
'Let's say they sell a dozen eggs for $1 and the cost to us is $4 … that is going to destroy our business,' he said.
Miguel Valerio, 51, who owns two bodegas in the Bronx, said he worried for the welfare of his dozen employees — and pointed out government workers may not be suited to running a business like his.
'I don't want to lose my job,' Valerio, a dad of two, told The Post.
'The government doesn't want to do the same thing I do everyday. I wake up at 5:00, I go to sleep by 11:00 every day,' he added.
'What is going to happen to people running their business?' Valerio asked. 'I have 12 people working for me, that's what I care about.'
7 Bronx bodega owner Miguel Valerio said he is worried about his employees if Mamdani is elected.
Matthew McDermott
The pilot program is part of Mamdani's 'affordability' platform, aiming to provide New Yorkers with cheaper prices for food and other necessities to customers.
But merchants complained the government-run stores could undercut the prices of privately-run bodegas that are required to pay tax and rent or mortgages, siphoning off customers.
During a podcast interview Monday, Mamdani emphasized the program is a $60 million experiment — one city-owned grocer in each borough, or five total.
'If it isn't effective at a pilot level it doesn't deserve to be scaled up,' the Democratic Socialists of America candidate said on the 'Plain English' podcast with Derek Thompson.
7 Mamdani said he only is planning on creating one city-owned store per borough to start.
Stephen Yang
But bodega and grocery store owners and workers called it a rotten egg, Soviet-style plan that pits the government against small private sector merchants.
'It's going to be a huge problem. You can't force us to pay taxes and then be our adversary,' Rafael Garcia, owner of La Economica Meat Choice store on University Avenue in The Bronx, told The Post.
In some bodegas, about two-thirds of the business is from customers with government-financed food stamps and Garcia said there was no doubt those shoppers would flock to the lower-cost, city-run grocery stores.
Francisco Marte, the president of the Bodega and Business Association, said at Monday's press conference: 'Socialism hasn't been successful anywhere in the world. Even China has turned to capitalism. Come on, this is stupid.'
7 Rafael Garcia, owner of La Economica Meats Choice in The Bronx, predicted Mamdani's plan would be a 'huge problem' for his store.
Stephen Yang
Gristedes owner John Catsimatidis, who also spoke at the event at Second Avenue and East 40th Street said, 'City-owned supermarkets don't work. Cities do not know how to run a business.'
Progressive Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson had considered launching a municipal grocery store in the Windy City after a study concluded it was 'not only feasible but necessary.'
But Johnson said he put the plan on hold after companies reached out and asked to join the venture, suggesting a public-private partnership to improve access in so-called food desserts or a public market instead.
Government-owned grocery stores have been tried in smaller towns in rural America that lost their last grocers — with mixed results at best.
A town-owned grocery store in 1,400-resident Baldwin, Fla. opened in 2019. The store operated at a loss and closed in March.
A city-owned store set up in Erie, Kan., didn't attract enough customers and sales to break even and was forced to change its approach. To lower costs, it leased out the building to a private operator to be the grocer, while the city retained ownership, Governing Magazine reported.
Not every municipal grocery has gone belly up.
Another Kansas town, 600-person St. Paul, bought its own store in 2013 after the last supermarket closed and nearest grocer was 17 miles away.
The government-owned grocer is still operating there, a success story cited by Mamdani.
7 Fernando Mateo, the spokesman for the United Bodegas of America, speaking at the press conference.
Matthew McDermott
The Queens assemblyman, during the lengthy podcast interview, defended his own plan, noting that prices have skyrocketed since the COVID-19 pandemic.
'There is a sticker shock that New Yorkers tell me about all the time,' he said. 'And the most obvious examples here are eggs and milk and bread that have been cited again and again.'
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Mamdani — who will face off against Mayor Eric Adams and other candidates in the November general election — said poorer residents of color suffer from living in 'food deserts' that lack access to affordable produce.
'This is a proposal of reasonable policy experimentation,' he said.
The estimated price tag for the program is less than the $140 million the city spends on supermarkets for participation in the city's Food Retail Expansion to Support Health Program or FRESH to sell food in underserved areas.
Mamdani, the frontrunner for the mayoralty, also claimed the city's response to the pandemic, including quickly setting up testing and vaccination sites, showed that the government could run a few grocery stores efficiently.
7 Catsimatidis said the plan won't work because the city can't successfully run the businesses.
Matthew McDermott
'Food is non-negotiable. It's not a luxury item,' he said.
Mamdani also took a shot at Catsimatidis.
'It's funny even to hear some of the critiques – especially from John Catsimatidis, the owner of Gristedes – is to completely miss the fact that many New Yorkers can't even afford to go into those types of stores today,' he said.
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Fox News
19 minutes ago
- Fox News
Politicians push job-killing minimum wage hikes while ignoring the devastating economic reality
Despite it being widely known by anyone who can think two steps ahead that price controls have negative consequences, politicians can't help but continue to promote price controls as policy. With Americans facing increased costs of living, there has been a return to calling for minimum wage hikes from democratic socialists like New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, who wants to raise the minimum wage in the city to $30/hour, to Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who is bafflingly pushing an increase in the federal minimum wage to $15/hour with additional increases indexed to inflation. If wages could be raised by mandate without negative consequences, why would we stop there? Why not make the minimum wage $100/hour, $100,000/hour or even a cool $1 million/hour? Because in real life, that's not the way things work. The minimum wage has always been an evil policy, rooted in racism. It was passed as legislation precisely to exclude unskilled workers, particularly immigrants, minorities and women, from the workforce. It has the same effect today. But the financially illiterate don't seem to understand basic economics. The minimum wage is not an average wage, median wage, maximum wage or even an expected wage. It is quite literally a floor (although, as economist Thomas Sowell has pointed out, the real minimum wage is zero). As reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ("BLS") via FRED, only 1% of workers report being paid at or below the federal minimum wage, and that data is "based solely on the hourly wage they report (which does not include overtime pay, tips or commissions)." The minimum wage is heavily slanted toward teens and workers entering the workforce with few skills. As the BLS noted, "Minimum wage workers tend to be young. Although workers under age 25 represented one-fifth of hourly paid workers, they accounted for 43% of those paid the federal minimum wage or less." While minimum wage directly impacts a small number of individuals, its effects ripple throughout the economy at large. If teens and unskilled workers have a guaranteed wage floor, those with skills and experience will want to be compensated even more. That increases both wages and taxes paid for a business throughout their labor force, as well as that of all their suppliers, adding substantially to operating costs and reducing what may already be slim operating margins. The businesses will either have to make less money or pass on costs to consumers – or both. This makes products and services more expensive and, in many cases, will put businesses out of business across the economy as every company now competes in a market where nonskilled workers have a high fixed cost set by government. Sometimes, businesses will also reduce product sizes or service offerings – shrinkflation, as we saw under the last administration – but one way or another, that increase in labor cost flows through the economy and impacts what you are able to get for your dollars. It's notable that small business owners, who often work well in excess of 40 hours of week and risk their own capital, don't get a guaranteed wage, but politicians are happy to make entrepreneurial efforts more risky and costly. The minimum wage, particularly the federal proposals, don't take into account different economic costs by region or geographic area, either. Just because bad policy exists doesn't mean that we should keep doubling down on it. Pay should be negotiated between parties based on value and demand for skills and services. An economy cannot function without being able to get people into the workforce and trained. We need to keep jobs where people can enter the workforce, learn skills and, if desired, move on in their career paths. At a time when AI is threatening jobs, and technology is replacing workers, enacting legislation that incentivizes fewer jobs and makes it more costly and difficult to run a business is patently insane. Wages will naturally shift with the market for labor, as we have seen in recent years. Politicians who are trying to "help" will once again find that intentions do not equate to outcomes, and their policies only make the cost-of-living issues worse. If they want to help in a way that drives positive outcomes, make it cheaper and easier to do business by removing costly regulatory barriers and red tape. That is the path to a flourishing economy and better cost of living, not mandated wages.


Politico
27 minutes ago
- Politico
Good will Lander
Presented by the Coalition for a Better Times Square With help from Amira McKee Brad Lander is feeling pretty good for someone who just got trounced in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary. The city comptroller's campaign struggled to gain traction as Zohran Mamdani — younger and less experienced — soared high enough to eventually defeat former New York governor Andrew Cuomo by 12 points, according to unofficial results released Tuesday. But thanks to their unique cross-endorsement, Lander has been celebrating Mamdani's victory as if it was his own. 'People, it turned out, were so hungry for a more hopeful and collaborative form of politics,' Lander told POLITICO. The two progressive Democrats brokered their alliance in the last leg of the chaotic, 11-candidate primary contest, the first true cross-endorsement since the city began ranked-choice voting four years ago. The duo — one a Muslim millennial and democratic socialist, the other a liberal Jewish Gen Xer — campaigned together and even appeared on the same primary night stage. Lander supporters who ranked Mamdani second almost certainly added to the state lawmaker's margin against Cuomo, though the city Board of Election numbers released Tuesday weren't detailed enough to illuminate by exactly how much. Early returns showed Lander finished a distant third. The Brooklyn Democrat isn't ready to say what his next career steps will be, including whether he'll be part of a potential Mamdani administration. He has also been floated as a potential primary challenger to Rep. Dan Goldman. Lander, however, said he's hard at work paving the way for Mamdani to City Hall, serving as a liaison to stakeholders who need reassurances about having a hard-left leader who wants to raise taxes on the wealthy to help pay for services like free buses. 'I'm certainly talking to a lot of folks in the business and investor communities from my work as comptroller,' Lander said. 'In a lot of those conversations, I'm trying to help people see a positive path forward.' Mamdani will face incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent, in the general election, as well as Republican Curtis Sliwa and independent Jim Walden. Still unknown is whether Cuomo will mount an active campaign, following his embarrassing primary upset. Lander has been widely commended by the city's political left for boosting Mamdani. 'This is the character of a man,' Public Advocate Jumaane Williams said on primary night. 'He said, 'This city is more important than any one person.'' Former City Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer said of Lander, 'He genuinely went from that feeling when you realize things aren't going your way to rediscovering purpose.' That's not to say it was easy for Lander, a progressive standard-bearer who watched his dream to run the country's biggest city sputter. Lander acknowledged that he struggled to replicate the 'coalition of progressives and moderates and focus on both affordability and safety' that had helped him win past elections. 'One important element of my campaign was competence and experienced leadership for the city,' he added. 'That is hard to make sexy or compelling.' Read more on Lander's role in the race by POLITICO's Emily Ngo. HAPPY WEDNESDAY: Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman. WHERE'S KATHY? In Erie County and Virginia with no public schedule. WHERE'S ERIC? Public schedule not available as of 10 p.m. Tuesday. QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'Ultimately, what we're seeing in President Trump's rhetoric is an attempt to focus on who I am, where I'm from, what I look like, how I sound, as opposed to what I'm actually fighting for.' — Zohran Mamdani told NY1 of Trump's criticism, including questioning the Democrat's citizenship status. ABOVE THE FOLD POOR POLL NUMBERS FOR GOP MEGABILL: A majority of New York state voters do not have a pretty view of President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' with 52 percent saying they believe it' will worsen life for most Americans, according to a Siena College poll released this morning. Just about as many people — 54 percent — say Trump's domestic and foreign affairs agenda will not make America great. The Senate approved the Republican megabill Tuesday in a nailbiter of a vote. Rather than soften its edges, Senate Republicans have taken the sprawling blueprint the House sent them and sharpened it further, making the heart of Trump's legislative agenda more politically explosive, POLITICO reports. New Yorkers are more divided on the proposals within the sprawling legislation, the Siena College poll found. Sixty-one percent support eliminating income taxes on tips, 48 percent back requiring healthy adult Medicaid recipients to work to receive benefits, 24 percent support cutting taxes for corporations and 23 percent back reducing spending on SNAP food assistance. The disapproval of Trump and his top legislative priority aren't surprising in a conventionally blue state where Democrats outnumber Republicans by about two to one, said Siena College pollster Steven Greenberg. According to the survey, Trump had a dismal 37 percent favorability rating. But Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer didn't fare much better, with a 41 percent favorability rating. The poll was conducted June 23-26 among 800 registered state voters. It had an overall margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. — Emily Ngo CITY HALL: THE LATEST ADAMS' SUMMER HOLLIDAY: Real estate mogul Marc Holliday, who's pitching a casino in Times Square with his firm SL Green, is hosting a rooftop fundraiser for Adams' reelection campaign on July 9 at Le Jardin sur Madison overlooking Manhattan's Madison Square Park. Holliday donated $100,000 to pro-Cuomo super PAC Fix the City just days before the primary, so the Wednesday event is a sign that some in the city's monied class are throwing support behind Adams in the general election rather than waiting to see if the former governor will mount a serious campaign against Mamdani. 'You're going to see quite a bit of that,' Adams' political adviser Frank Carone told Playbook. 'The outpouring of support the mayor has received has been overwhelming, humbling and exciting at the same time.' Holliday downplayed the move, saying he's supported Adams since his days in the Legislature 'and would have supported him in the primary as well.' 'Under Mayor Adams' administration, the city has thrived and is far better off than it was three and a half years ago,' he added in a statement. Holliday himself can't donate more to Adams, after giving $400 in April 2022 — the maximum for a registered lobbyist. He's chair and CEO of SL Green, and topped the Commercial Observer's real estate power list this year. Holliday was set to get a $10 million bonus if the firm's bid wins a license from the state and builds a casino, but POLITICO reported in January that deal was likely illegal. Adams has gone back to fundraising for his reelection campaign while awaiting resolution of his lawsuit against the Campaign Finance Board for denying him public matching funds. He reported bringing in $300,000 in just three weeks in the last filing. — Jeff Coltin More from the city: — Adams' charter revision commission is moving forward with a plan to put measures on the November ballot that would curb the City Council's power to reject new housing and shift local elections to even years. (New York Times) — Major crimes are down across the city, except for a troubling years-long spike in rapes, new NYPD stats show. (New York Post) — Mamdani wants to end mayoral control of schools, but he hasn't detailed his plans for an alternative. (Gothamist) NEW FROM PLANET ALBANY ZOHRAN MAKES ALBANY INROADS: Mamdani's mayoral bid on Tuesday was endorsed by Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins — the latest sign that the establishment is coming around to support his upstart campaign. Institutional backing in Albany will be crucial to fulfilling his agenda if Mamdani is leading City Hall next year. The state Capitol is a place where mayoral priorities go to die and recent history is littered with failed proposals from Michael Bloomberg and Bill de Blasio. That Albany — a small city some 150 miles north of Manhattan — can call the shots for a world capital has long grated on mayoral nerves. Mamdani will need Albany's sign off for his proposed tax hike on rich New Yorkers. Many of his priorities — such as funding free buses and child care services — would also require state support. Some Democrats are skeptical (to say the least) that Mamdani — a three-term backbencher in the state Assembly — will have an easy go of it next year should he win. 'We know he's going to be very limited in what he can do when it comes to his many promises,' said Democratic Assemblymember Chuck Lavine. 'The state of New York has great authority over what the mayor of the city of New York can do. He has the opportunity to grow, but at the same time he's going to have to provide the public with more specificity with what his programs involve.' Gov. Kathy Hochul — who is yet to endorse the 33-year-old democratic socialist — has firmly shot down a tax hike. The Democratic governor, who is running for reelection next year, will have to navigate a treacherous political path if Mamdani is mayor. Republicans are already yoking her to the party's mayoral nominee with the expectation he'll be unpalatable to moderate, suburban swing voters. Lefty Democrats will undoubtedly press her from the other end of the political spectrum to back Mamdani's agenda. Hochul, though, has emphasized potential areas of agreement, like addressing affordability. State Sen. Gustavo Rivera, a vocal Mamdani booster in the state Legislature, told Playbook he's confident the Democratic nominee could win over the Capitol. To bolster his case, Rivera pointed to Mamdani's 12-point win over Andrew Cuomo in the third and final round of early voting. 'What these numbers demonstrate and what the next couple of months will demonstrate is his ability to crossover,' Rivera said. 'That means sitting down with anybody and getting to a good place.' — Nick Reisman More from Albany:— Hochul's support for a new nuclear plant has sparked interest — and some early lobbying. (WXXI) — Building a nuke plant will likely be a costly endeavor, experts found. (Spectrum News) — The governor touted the opening of an affordable housing development in her hometown. (Buffalo News) KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION A SALTY LEARNING CURVE: Democrat Beth Davidson appears to be operating on a steep learning curve when it comes to the state and local tax deduction, a top issue in the district where she seeks to unseat GOP Rep. Mike Lawler. The Rockland County legislator told Spectrum News in May she believes the SALT cap should be lifted '25 percent at least.' Then, given the chance to clarify, she said she meant to say it should be lifted to $25,000. That proposal is far lower than the $40,000 limit that blue state House Republicans, including Lawler, have negotiated in grueling intraparty meetings. It's also a very far cry from her fellow Democrats' call for the cap to be scrapped altogether. Davidson — waging a formidable campaign in a crowded Hudson Valley primary, and so far leading the Democrats in fundraising — told Playbook this week that she erred in her previous comments because she wasn't aware the current cap on SALT had an expiration date. 'I didn't actually realize it was expiring completely at that point,' Davidson said before pivoting to attacking Lawler. 'I made a mistake in the number, but he's made the mistake in how he's voted, which I think is more important.' Davidson added that she would have supported allowing the SALT cap to expire if she were serving in Congress. The current $10,000 SALT cap, set by Trump's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, was set to sunset after this year, but is now on track to quadruple. On Tuesday, the Senate approved the GOP megabill with the limit increased to $40,000. Lawler has praised the deal as a win. SALT is a top priority in battleground House districts in the Hudson Valley and on Long Island, where high taxes have hit homeowners hard. 'I'll own that I didn't know that, and now that I do, I'm completely opposed to, certainly, the $40,000 cap,' Davidson said of the expiration date. The county lawmaker, one of at least seven Democrats seeking to unseat Lawler in the 17th Congressional District, has previously attacked the incumbent for voting with Republicans for a bill that didn't completely eliminate SALT. 'First, Beth Davidson didn't know what a 'fiscal year' was, and now she admits not even understanding how the SALT deduction and cap works,' Chris Russell, a Lawler campaign spokesperson, said in a statement. 'This is beyond embarrassing. How is this person running for Congress?' Davidson's spokesperson, Molly Kraus, fired back: 'Mike Lawler is about to vote for a trash bill that guts Medicaid and puts an unacceptably low cap on SALT, so he's trying to distract by punching his most feared opponent Beth Davidson, who's clearly living in his head rent free.'— Jason Beeferman and Emily Ngo More from Congress: — Trump and Speaker Mike Johnson are digging in to pass Republicans' massive tax and spending bill by Friday in time for a July 4 celebration. (POLITICO) — Chuck Schumer forced a name change for Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' moments before the legislative package passed the Senate. (Fox News) — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries warned Democrats would not allow quick passage of the GOP megabill in the House. (POLITICO) NEW YORK STATE OF MIND — A Columbia University cyberattack appears to be politically motivated. (New York Times) — More than 22 miles of car-free streets will be available this summer. (NY1) — Two upstate utilities have proposed a major rate hike. (POLITICO Pro) SOCIAL DATA FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: New York Public Radio is revamping its board of trustees, adding Gary Knell, a senior advisor at Boston Consulting Group and former president and CEO of both National Geographic and NPR; Jenna Weiss-Berman, co-founder of Pineapple Street Studios and head of podcasts at Paper Kite Productions; and Jeremy Kuriloff, managing director and partner at BCG … City government veteran Carl Weisbrod is now a vice chair of the board, along with journalist Anna Quindlen … John Rose, CEO of Spectrum Advisors and a senior advisor at BCG, will chair the board. … MSNBC is adding Vaughn Hillyard as senior White House correspondent, Laura Barrón-López as White House correspondent, David Noriega as a correspondent and Marc Santia as an investigative correspondent. Hillyard, Noriega and Santia previously were at NBC. Barrón-López previously was at PBS NewsHour and POLITICO. MAKING MOVES: Eric S. Goldstein has stepped down as CEO of UJA-Federation of New York. WELCOME TO THE WORLD: Allie Taylor, founder and president of Voters For Animal Rights, and Scott Taylor, a staff engineer at Shopify, welcomed Althea Starlight Taylor on June 29. — Anna Epstein, a director at FGS Global, and Aaron Steeg, an associate at Barrasso Usdin Kupperman Freeman & Sarver, on June 17 welcomed Alice Madeline Steeg, who is named for two of her late grandmothers. Pic HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) … NYC Council Member Rafael Salamanca Jr. … Andrew Rigie of the New York Hospitality Alliance …Josephine Stratman of the Daily News … Stephen Hanse, president and CEO of the New York State Health Facilities Association … Xavier Mission's Cassandra Agredo … Robert Press … NBC's Tom Llamas … Derek Gianino of Wells Fargo … NBC's Keith Morrison … Katherine Lehr … Jonathan Capehart … Courtney Geduldig … Brooke Oberwetter … Michele Gershberg … (WAS TUESDAY): Myron Scholes Missed Tuesday's New York Playbook PM? We forgive you. Read it here.


Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
How Trump's immigration policies target Mass.
Write to us at . To subscribe, . TODAY'S STARTING POINT Immigration has been Donald Trump's top issue since his political career began. When Trump launched his first presidential run, he described Mexican migrants as 'rapists' and promised to build a wall on the US-Mexico border. During his first administration, he separated migrant families. And while campaigning for president last year, he pledged to toughen border enforcement and deport undocumented people en masse. So far, Trump's second term has sought to make those promises real. Many of his actions — including trying to deport foreign students and allowing Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to arrest people near schools and churches — have played out in Massachusetts. My Globe colleagues have just published a story showcasing But in case you haven't been following every twist and turn, today's newsletter steps back further, offering a guide to how the administration's changes to immigration policy are affecting Massachusetts. Advertisement When did immigration arrests ramp up? Federal immigration agents have long detained people, but their efforts have expanded since Trump's second term began. In May, his administration announced a nationwide goal of arresting Advertisement Why Massachusetts? Many of the administration's efforts mirror what's happening across the country. But in some cases, it appears to be deliberately targeting Massachusetts. In February, Tom Homan, Trump's border czar, vowed to bring 'hell' to Boston. The next month, congressional Republicans summoned Mayor Michelle Wu and other Democratic mayors to What have the arrests looked like? ICE has arrested people What effect are the raids having? The administration's new policies have sparked fear, sometimes regardless of a person's legal status. 'It's like we're living in an occupied country,' one Salvadoran immigrant living here legally How do voters feel? Massachusetts is a liberal state, and Trump's immigration policies are unsurprisingly unpopular here. Some residents have Advertisement Polls also Who's being detained? Trump officials say they're targeting ' Will courts stop him? Courts have temporarily blocked some of Trump's policies, like his attempt to bar foreign students from Harvard, but greenlit others for now. Last week, the Supreme Court let Trump's effort to end birthright citizenship proceed, although other legal challenges are ongoing. The court has also let Trump deport immigrants to countries they aren't from and revoke legal protections for Haitians, Cubans, Venezuelans, and Nicaraguans living in the US. What's next? Deportations seem likely to ramp up further. The spending bill the Senate passed yesterday includes tens of billions of dollars to build detention facilities, hire ICE agents and immigration judges, and more. Advertisement Trump has also suggested he wants to strip US citizenship from naturalized Americans who were born abroad, potentially enabling him to deport them. Before touring a new detention facility in Florida yesterday, Trump 🧩 4 Across: 87° POINTS OF INTEREST Trucks sit idle at a facility for the waste management company Republic Services. David L Ryan/ Globe Staff Hot trash: More than 400 waste collection workers went on strike after their contract expired, Antisemitism: Murder and other violent crimes declined in Massachusetts last year, but reported Cheaper bills: Boston is steering most city residents into a more expensive electricity plan by default; few seem to know they could save money Cost of living: The Massachusetts Legislature's move to ban broker fees Susan Collins: The Maine Republican voted against Trump's tax cut bill even though it passed anyway. It may help her Israel-Hamas war: Israel agreed to a new proposal that would pause the fighting in Gaza for 60 days and release some Hamas-held hostages, Trump said, urging Hamas to take the deal. ( Transgender rights: The University of Pennsylvania settled a case over trans athletes with the Trump administration, agreeing to bar trans people from female sports, strip a trans swimmer's titles, and apologize to athletes who competed against her. ( Advertisement Russia-Ukraine war: The Trump administration halted shipments of air defense missiles and other munitions to Ukraine, citing dwindling US weapons stockpiles even as Russian missiles and drones target Ukrainian cities. ( USAID: A Boston University researcher estimates that the Trump administration's cuts to the aid agency, which officially shut down yesterday, have Free speech: CBS News's parent company will pay $16 million to settle Trump's lawsuit over a '60 Minutes' interview with Kamala Harris. Executives saw the lawsuit as a hurdle to securing administration approval for a corporate merger. ( BESIDE THE POINT 🗓️ For your calendar: Friday is the Fourth of July. Here are ✈️ Bad trip: Traveling with friends can bring you closer — or cause rifts. Here's how to preserve your friendship. ( 🚗 Good trips: No car? No problem. Try these 🦈 Shark tale: In a new Netflix documentary, a conservationist named Ocean Ramsey (yes, really) swims with the predatory fish. Some people aren't happy about it. ( ❤️ It's a love story: A woman on her way to a Museum of Science exhibit about Taylor Swift spotted a mystery couple getting engaged in the rain. Advertisement 🚲 Ride or die: Biking, that classic rite of childhood fun, health, and independence, is on the decline. ( 🎤 Band stand: Opposing Trumpian politics 'is what Dropkick Murphys Thanks for reading Starting Point. This newsletter was edited by ❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at ✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can 📬 Delivered Monday through Friday. Ian Prasad Philbrick can be reached at