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The Atlantic Announces Tom Bartlett as Staff Writer

The Atlantic Announces Tom Bartlett as Staff Writer

The Atlantic16 hours ago
As The Atlantic continues a major expansion of its editorial team, we are announcing that Tom Bartlett begins today as a staff writer covering health and science under the second Trump administration. Recently, Tom has covered the measles outbreak in West Texas, speaking with a parent of the first child to die of the disease in America in a decade and reporting on what RFK Jr. told grieving families about the measles vaccine. He has also written about the most extreme voice on Kennedy's new vaccine committee.
Below is the staff announcement from editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg and executive editor Adrienne LaFrance:
Dear everyone,
We are very glad to share the news that Tom Bartlett is joining The Atlantic as a staff writer. Tom is an extraordinary reporter and a brilliant, empathetic writer—qualities that were all on display in the stories he wrote for us earlier this year about the Texas measles outbreak. As you no doubt remember, Tom found and interviewed the family of the first American child to die of measles in a decade, and he was also first to report on the conversations that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had with victims' families.
At The Atlantic, he will cover a wide range of stories at the intersection of health and science, with a particular focus on attacks against enlightenment values and the remaking of American public health in the second Trump presidency.
Tom comes to us with great expertise in scientific controversy and rooting out scientific dishonesty. Most recently, during his 22 years at The Chronicle of Higher Education, he covered the reproducibility crisis in psychology, numerous academic scandals, and even research about falsehoods that was itself falsified. Tom is also a seasoned features writer. (The Tom Bartlett completists among us will also remember his excellent profiles of Tucker Carlson and Gene Weingarten for the Washingtonian.) He has become one of the nation's great experts on the anti-vaccine movement, and is skilled at covering the field's major players with requisite scrutiny while still maintaining respectful curiosity about why people believe what they believe, and always demonstrating a willingness to go where the story—and the truth—lead him.
Tom is based in Austin, Texas. Please join us in welcoming him to the team.
Adrienne and Jeff
The Atlantic has announced a number of new hires this year, including managing editor Griff Witte; staff writers Isaac Stanley-Becker, Tyler Austin Harper, Quinta Jurecic, Nick Miroff, Toulouse Olorunnipa, Ashley Parker, Alexandra Petri, Missy Ryan, Vivian Salama, Michael Scherer, Jamie Thompson, Josh Tyrangiel, Caity Weaver, and Nancy Youssef; and senior editors Jenna Johnson and Dan Zak. Please reach out with any questions or requests.
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This article was originally published in The 19th. On July 4, Nory Sontay Ramos stepped off a flight from San Antonio into a country she hardly recognized: Guatemala. The summer wasn't supposed to start this way. The 17-year-old had plans. In early June, she wrapped up 11th grade on a high note, having made the honor roll and represented her Los Angeles high school in the city finals for track. With track season over, she turned her attention to cross-country, showing up to campus for practice after the school year ended. Everything changed when she and her mother, Estela Ramos — both undocumented — appeared at what they thought was a standard check-in visit with immigration officials on June 30. Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter 'ICE took us to a room, and they ended up telling my mom, 'Your case is over, so we have to take you guys with us,'' Sontay Ramos told The 19th. Over the objections of their attorney, federal agents led them away. The next day, she and her mother were shipped to Texas. And by July 4, they were on a plane to Guatemala, a country where neither of them have lived for over a decade. On Independence Day — an occasion associated with freedom, with hope — their American dream shattered. Sontay Ramos has no idea what will become of the friends, family members and school community her deportation forced her to leave behind in Los Angeles. A lawyer hired after she and her mother were detained said Monday that a motion to reopen the case has been filed with the Board of Immigration Appeals but provided no other information to The 19th. A year shy of becoming a high school graduate in the United States, the teen's life — and opportunities — completely changed in the span of five days. 'I'm confused,' Sontay Ramos said, her voice breaking. 'I don't know. I'm just really sad about everything.' 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The Trump administration has not provided a tally of how many minors have been deported this year, but The 19th's review of figures from the Deportation Data Project found that only about 3 percent of removals involved children. When ICE targets juveniles, the incidents often make national headlines, such as when a 9-year-old boy and his father living in Torrance, California, were detained in May and swiftly deported to Honduras. In states including Michigan, Massachusetts and New York, the detainment of teenagers, including those who are technically legal adults, have also garnered widespread media attention this year. But when Sontay Ramos and her mother exited their Guatemala-bound flight on Friday, they weren't met with fanfare. None of their family members in the Central American nation knew to expect them. With the help of an internet connection, they managed to contact one of Sontay Ramos' older sisters, with whom they're now living. 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'The two major reasons, especially if we look at families, have to do with violence and drought,' said David Leblang, a coauthor of that study and politics professor at the University of Virginia. 'It has been drought and then flood, hurricane and then drought that has just decreased the ability for families to put food on the table, so you see a combination of economic insecurity, but more so for families, food insecurity — because when you can't feed your kids, that's when families are going to pick up and they're going to move first to more urban areas and then out of the country.' About 11 years ago, Sontay Ramos and her mother headed by car to the United States in search of safety and opportunity. There, other family members awaited them and they hoped to be granted asylum, she said. The transition was not easy. They left behind three of Sontay Ramos' older siblings who did not want to come to the United States, she said. Her father remained in Guatemala, too. 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When she first came to the States, my younger sister was kind of her only friend in school because she didn't know anybody and, again, the language barrier. She actually does struggle speaking Spanish.' In time, Sontay Ramos and her mother adjusted to life in California. Her mother ultimately became a garment worker, employed as a seamstress until physical setbacks — illness and surgery — sidelined her earlier this year. Her deportation has separated her from her life partner, with whom she and her daughter shared an apartment in the Westlake District of Los Angeles, the neighborhood where an ICE raid at a Home Depot close to an elementary school in June panicked families, and days of demonstrations in nearby downtown escalated after Trump deployed 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines. Los Angeles is a deeply blue city in a liberal state, with the nation's highest concentration of immigrants — a place that the president has made ground zero for his immigration raids. In November, the city council voted unanimously to make L.A. a sanctuary city, which bars it from using resources for immigration enforcement. Last week, the Trump administration filed suit, challenging the policy. Meanwhile, advocacy groups including the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California and Public Counsel are suing the Trump administration for what it describes as a pattern of federal violations during immigration raids in Greater Los Angeles. Before Trump's immigration policies roiled her neighborhood and upended her life, Sontay Ramos was indistinguishable from her peers born in the United States. She grew up on the Netflix shows 'Stranger Things' and 'Cobra Kai,' enjoys the music of Lana Del Rey and The Weeknd and dotes on her cat, Max, who turned 1 on May 15. He is black — one of her two favorite colors. In her spare time, Sontay Ramos practices taekwondo, which she's been learning for nearly four years. 'I just liked it,' she said of the martial art. Knowing how to fight, she added, helps her feel protected. Sontay Ramos never sensed she was in danger before the immigration check-in that would push her out of the United States. But her cousin Jennifer Ramos worried. The night before, Ramos' father invited the family over to have Sunday dinner with his wife and three daughters. The evening was largely festive. Her father made shrimp ceviche and was eager for his family to enjoy the tangy, citrusy dish — especially Estela Ramos, who had just celebrated her 45th birthday. But when Estela mentioned that she and her daughter had an immigration check-in scheduled, everyone fell quiet. 'We were kind of scared,' Jennifer Ramos said. 'We were like, 'Are you sure you should go?'' But her aunt tried to reassure them by letting them know their lawyer said it would be fine. After all, they had shown up for previous check-ins without incident, and if they didn't appear, immigration officials would just find them at home. 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She doesn't understand how or why their case was closed. Recent polls, particularly those conducted after the immigration raids in Los Angeles, reveal that the Trump's administration's immigration crackdowns may be unpopular with the majority of the public. A PBS News/NPR/Marist poll released July 1 found that just 43 percent of Americans support Trump's tactics. Sixty-four percent of registered voters support giving most undocumented immigrants in the United States a pathway to legal status, with 31 percent preferring deportation for most of them, according to a Quinnipiac University national poll released June 26. Six months ago, only 55 percent of voters supported giving unauthorized immigrants a path to legal status, while 36 percent backed deportation. Leblang, the politics professor, said that ultimately the economy will sway the public to take a stand on immigration. 'All of those people who are being deported, they're consuming goods that are produced by natives,' he said. 'So, what the evidence suggests is that's going to affect native workers' wages, so across the board, this is going to have a negative effect on the economy.' For Manuel Guevara — a physical education teacher and coach at the Miguel Contreras Learning Complex, where Sontay Ramos is enrolled as a student — immigration isn't an economic issue but a personal one. He came to the United States at 11 months old in the mid-1980s during El Salvador's horrific 12-year civil war, becoming a citizen as a teenager. He fears that more deportations of youth from his school are imminent. He knows some families skipped school graduations in the area due to their concerns over raids. Some are so worried they refuse to let their children attend football practice. He's heard that other families intend to self deport. 'This is not normal,' Guevara said. 'Our whole community is beyond vulnerable. A lot of [students'] parents, sad to say, don't know how to read and write. Their kids need to do that for them. If they're presented with [immigration] paperwork, they might not even be able to read it because that's not their primary language.' He can hardly believe that Sontay Ramos, whom he taught for most of her high school years, is gone. 'She was smiling, happy-go-lucky,' Guevara said. He's astounded that she was detained and deported in less than a week. 'Nory is going into her senior year, which is another thing that's just killing me. She was going into her senior year with all this momentum.' Guevara fondly recalled the teen's high-pitched voice that gets even higher when she's excited. 'You could tell when she's coming from down the hallway, for sure,' he said. But her trademark voice is now subdued due to her deportation ordeal. Through tears, she expressed gratitude for how her teachers, classmates and other supporters have donated nearly $7,000 to her GoFundMe campaign. 'I just want to thank everybody for the support and tell them to just be safe out there and be strong no matter what's going to happen,' she said. If she can't return to the United States, she will figure out how to finish her education in Guatemala. Guevara is certain Sontay Ramos has the aptitude for greatness. Her academics and extracurricular activities are just hints of what she's capable of, he said. 'She was about to reach cruising altitude,' he said. 'Some of our students are capable of reaching the clouds up there and doing some great things. And I really believe that she was on her way.' This story was originally reported by Nadra Nittle of The 19th. Meet Nadra and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.

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Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Support for President Donald Trump's deportations has surged among Hispanic voters in the space of two months, according to a new poll. The survey, conducted by polling firm Cygnal between July 1 and 2, revealed that the percentage of Hispanic voters that strongly support the deportation of people in the United States illegally rose by 11 percent between May and July 2025. The poll was conducted on 1,500 people and had a margin of error of +/- 2.51 percent. People deported from the United States disembark a flight in Guatemala City in June. People deported from the United States disembark a flight in Guatemala City in June. Anna Moneymaker/AP Why It Matters The findings come after the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has carried out numerous raids and deportations across the country in recent months. In addition to people living in the country without legal status, immigrants with valid documentation, including green cards and visas, have been detained. Newsweek has revealed dozens of cases involving green card holders and applicants who were swept up in the ICE raids. Trump has also pledged to carry out the largest mass deportation operation in U.S. history to tackle illegal immigration and strengthen border security. What To Know The poll found that more than 60 percent of all voters now support deportation of undocumented migrants, with Hispanic voters showing a notable uptick. In contrast, 34.7 percent opposed deportations, and four percent were unsure. Among Hispanic voters, 50 percent supported deportations and 48 percent opposed. There was a seven percent increase in overall support since May among this demographic, with an 11 percent rise among those who said they "strongly support" the policy. Among Black voters, 53 percent supported deportations, while 37 percent opposed. Overall support among this demographic increased by three percent since May. Meanwhile, support among White voters was 65 percent, while 31 percent opposed. Overall support fell by three percent since May. What People Are Saying The Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Newsweek previously:"We encourage all illegal aliens to take control of their departure with the CBP Home App. The United States is offering illegal aliens $1,000 and a free flight to self-deport now. We encourage every person here illegally to take advantage of this offer and reserve the chance to come back to the U.S. the right legal way to live the American dream. If not, you will be arrested and deported without a chance to return." Rebecca Shi, CEO of the American Business Immigration Coalition, said on June 17: "We need Congress and the administration to go further with real solutions, and that's work visas for people who've lived, worked, and pay taxes here."

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