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Trump's immigration enforcement push results in skyrocketing arrests of criminal illegal aliens

Trump's immigration enforcement push results in skyrocketing arrests of criminal illegal aliens

Fox News23-07-2025
The number of criminal illegal immigrants arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has soared during the Trump administration, authorities said Tuesday.
Statistics vary from state-to-state, but ICE has arrested illegal immigrants convicted of various crimes, including murder, rape and other violent offenses, the agency said.
Since Trump took office in January, ICE arrests in Maryland have jumped 290% and a staggering 470% in Virginia, the agency said. In South Carolina, arrests have more than tripled.
In Michigan, ICE arrests have jumped 145% since Trump took office. Colorado and Wyoming have seen almost five times as many arrests compared to the same time period under former President Joe Biden.
Across eight western states – Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming and California – arrests of illegal immigrants each month since January have nearly tripled.
In Chicago, ICE arrested three times as many illegal immigrants convicted of crimes during the first 150 days of the Trump administration compared to Biden's final 150 days in office, ICE said.
Additionally, in the San Diego region, immigration arrests have increased 400% compared to this time last year.
The arrests come at a time when jurisdictions like Los Angeles and other cities have demanded that ICE stop raids targeting criminal illegal immigrants.
In addition, attacks on ICE personnel have increased 830% compared to 2024, Acting ICE director Todd Lyons told CBS' "Face the Nation" in an interview that aired Sunday.
"I think the sharp increase in the rhetoric, especially from a lot of elected officials, that are shaming, if you will, or speaking out against [the] ICE law enforcement mission, is what's really increasing these attacks on officers," he said.
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Texas showdown: Warrants, expulsion threats ratchet up fight
Texas showdown: Warrants, expulsion threats ratchet up fight

The Hill

time2 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Texas showdown: Warrants, expulsion threats ratchet up fight

In today's issue: ▪ Abbott issues warrants for fleeing Dems ▪ Trump faces GOP skeptics on economy ▪ MTG on her place in the Republican Party ▪ How will tariffs affect back-to-school shopping? THE PRE-2026 MIDTERM redistricting battle has kicked into high gear as Texas Democratic legislators face arrest warrants and blue state governors plot to fight back against GOP maps. Texas Democrats' refusal to show up to the Legislature is part of a rapidly escalating political war over the state GOP's attempt to pass a highly unusual mid-decade redistricting plan. President Trump has encouraged the move, which could help the GOP win five additional House seats in next year's elections. Republicans, bracing for an unfavorable political environment in 2026, are hoping for an edge as they seek to ward off a Democratic takeover of the House that would likely open the Trump administration to numerous investigations. The group of 50-odd Texas Democratic lawmakers is threatening to wait out the remainder of the 30-day special session that gaveled in last month, depriving Republicans of a quorum. In response, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) ordered the arrest of the Democrats who fled the Lone Star State. The Texas House on Monday approved warrants to track down the missing lawmakers in an 85-6 vote. Abbott said he would strip lawmakers who failed to return to the state Capitol of their seats. Texas lawmakers already incur a daily $500 fine and threat of arrest for breaking quorum, and Abbott previously threatened the legislators with bribery charges if national Democrats pick up the tab. 'I believe they have forfeited their seats in the state Legislature because they're not doing the job they were elected to do,' Abbott said Monday on Fox News. State Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) — who is running as a right-wing challenger to Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) this cycle — on Monday called the Democrats 'jet-setting runaways' and said it was 'imperative that they be swiftly arrested, punished, and face the full force of the law for turning their backs on the people of Texas.' Abbott and Paxton did not mention the redistricting efforts in their statements, which Democrats describe as a naked power grab. 'COME AND TAKE IT': Members of the Texas state House on Monday lashed out at Republicans' efforts to redraw the congressional district map, brushing off the governor's threats. State Rep. John Bucy (D) argued Democrats' quorum-busting actions were necessary, adding upholding their oaths of office sometimes means refusing to play along in a 'rigged game.' 'We're not running away,' Busey said. 'We're running into the fight.' Officials will have difficulty arresting the lawmakers as most are beyond the jurisdiction of Texas authorities. State Rep. Gene Wu (D-Texas), the chair of the chamber's Democratic caucus who fled to Illinois, challenged Abbott to 'come and take it,' referring to his seat. 'It's all bluster,' Wu told CNN when asked if he thinks Abbott could successfully take away their seats. 'Sound and fury signifying nothing.' The rapidly escalating tit for tat underscores how the redistricting battle has turned into an all-out national brawl ahead of what both parties expect to be a fiercely fought midterm election. While Texas is ground zero in the fight, The Hill's Caroline Vakil and Saul Elbein report Democratic lawmakers from Illinois to California and New York are promising to retaliate with their own maps. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) on Monday said the time for impartial political mapmaking had long passed. 'If Republicans are willing to rewrite these rules to give themselves an advantage, then they're leaving us no choice; we must do the same,' Hochul declared in Albany, flanked by several Texas lawmakers. 'I'm tired of fighting this fight with my hand tied behind my back. With all due respect to the good government groups, politics is a political process.' ▪ The Hill: Five things to know about Texas Democrats fleeing the state amid redistricting fight. ▪ The Washington Post: In their own words: Why Texas Democrats fled. PRESIDENTIAL SPOTLIGHT: 2028 hopefuls are using the Texas showdown as an opportunity to stand out, with heavyweights like California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) taking front-line positions in the battle, The Hill's Amie Parnes notes. Newsom is weighing several options in the national redistricting fight, with the Golden State eyeing redrawing its own maps and moving ahead through a ballot measure or the state Legislature. Pritzker vowed to protect lawmakers who traveled to his state from the threat of arrest from top Texas leaders. Their actions are welcome news to Democrats who have been itching for an opportunity to show voters they can put up a fight, Parnes reports. 'This is an issue that may not necessarily animate the electorate, but it ignites the base and the donor community,' said former Rep. Steve Israel (N.Y.), who led the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee from 2011 to 2015. 'Democrats like Newsom, Pritzker … among others, are at least showing that rolling over isn't a strategy. You have to fight fire with fire.' Smart Take with Blake Burman Here's a headline you may have missed as the week began: 'China is choking supply of critical minerals to Western Democracies.' As The Wall Street Journal reports, China is limiting critical minerals to Western defense companies, who use those rare minerals to build key technology that supports our military. The topic also came up last week in my conversation with Peter Navarro, White House senior counselor for trade and manufacturing. I asked him if the White House plans to continue investing taxpayer dollars in American companies who supply rare earth minerals. 'We are going to have a lot of deals to fill out the supply chain. That's the strategy across critical minerals,' Navarro told me. Rare earths are a new battleground between the U.S. and China, and it's worth watching to see which companies the government chooses to invest in, along with how many. Burman hosts 'The Hill' weeknights, 6p/5c on NewsNation. 3 Things to Know Today President Trump is set to appear on CNBC's 'Squawk Box' this morning at 8 a.m. EDT for a rare interview as he goes on the defense over jobs numbers, tariffs and his firing of a top labor statistics official. Attorney General Pam Bondi directed the Department of Justice to launch a grand jury probe into how Obama administration officials handled intelligence about Russian interference in the 2016 election. NewsNation's Robert Sherman is in Ukraine this week reporting ahead of the president's deadlines for new Russia sanctions. Check out his latest dispatch on the ground here. Leading the Day GOP JITTERS: Republicans are on edge about the economy after the latest jobs report showed far fewer jobs were added over the past three months than previously thought, The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports. Trump and his economic team insist the economy is strong and poised for even more growth from his policies, but their optimism is facing skepticism from some in the Republican Party who worry the president's trade overhaul is creating uncertain economic headwinds. 'It definitely is indicative of a weakened economy, an economy that's not acting in a robust fashion. I've all along felt like there's a lag between tariffs and actual economic downturn,' Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) admitted. Trump's latest tariff plan — another modification of the 'Liberation Day' global trading overhaul he first unveiled in April — includes steep increases on imports from major trade partners Canada and Brazil. The executive order outlining the proposal was released the same day a disappointing jobs report was released, which ultimately prompted Trump to remove the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) commissioner. 'I think it is worrisome and I do worry that the news has been relatively benign on tariffs so far,' Paul said. 'The proof is really in the next couple months. ' The president is facing rare pushback from conservatives — normally staunch Trump allies in Congress — over fears of potential economic fallout. The Senate and House are both on a monthlong recess, a time when Republican lawmakers are broadly working to sell what they view as the successes of the first few months of Trump's second administration. 'My view is that there's no question that consumers, Americans, pay a price for tariffs. It increases the price of the goods coming into the United States,'' said Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.). 'The question is, 'Is there a reason that tariffs in a temporary way can solve trade barriers that have been artificially created against our products going somewhere else?'' DATA CONCERNS: Trump's firing of the BLS commissioner continues to send ripples across the world economy and raise concerns about whether the next labor statistics chief will be willing to manipulate job numbers to work in Trump's favor. The traditionally nonpartisan role, usually held by career professionals who serve across multiple administrations, has given all presidents bad news in recent years. But Trump's firing of Erika McEntarfer has provoked worry among data experts that the independent work could now be politicized, even as they acknowledge manipulating the figures is highly difficult. The Hill's Alex Gangitano and Brett Samuels report on the concerns here. HOLD UP: Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) has put a hold on three of Trump's nominees to the Treasury Department over anticipated administration rules that could hamper tax credits for wind and solar energy. Grassley announced his move to place the holds in the congressional record Friday. 'The Department of the Treasury is expected to issue rules and regulations implementing the agreed upon phase-out of the wind and solar credits by August 18, 2025,' he wrote. 'Until I can be certain that such rules and regulations adhere to the law and congressional intent, I intend to continue to object to the consideration of these Treasury nominees.' Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah), who entered the Senate in January, is also placing a hold on the same nominees — Brian Morrissey Jr., Francis Brooke and Jonathan McKernan — for the same reasons, a source told The Hill's Rachel Frazin. Grassley, who is currently the longest-serving senator with more than four decades under his belt, was recently embroiled in a rift with Trump that rankled the president's backers in the upper chamber. Trump lashed out at the 91-year-old Judiciary Committee chair for sticking to a long-standing Senate custom of allowing senators to have a say on judiciary appointees in their states. NOT EASY BEING GREENE: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) discussed her recent disconnect with the GOP on several issues in a new interview with The Hill's Emily Brooks in the latest edition of The Movement newsletter later today. (Click here to sign up for The Movement.) 'I'm an early indicator, and my complaints are felt and being said far and wide among your average American people who voted for the president and Republicans in 2024,' Greene told Brooks on Monday. 'The Republican Party is the one drifting away from what we campaigned on.' Greene had hinted in a recent interview with the Daily Mail that she's questioning her place in the GOP after repeatedly butting heads with other conservatives — including Trump, who she's staunchly supported. 'I don't know if the Republican Party is leaving me, or if I'm kind of not relating to the Republican Party as much anymore,' Greene told the Mail. 'I don't know which one it is.' 'I think the Republican Party has turned its back on 'America First' and the workers and just regular Americans,' she added. Among their differences: Greene has accused Israel of carrying out a 'genocide' in Gaza; vocally pushed for the release of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, despite the president's desire to move on from the story; and criticized the U.S. strike on nuclear facilities in Iran. SAVING SANTOS: Despite some friction with the administration, Greene is urging the president to grant clemency and facilitate an early release from prison for former Rep. George Santos (R-N.Y.), who is serving seven years behind bars for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. 'A 7-year prison sentence for campaign-related charges is excessive, especially when Members of Congress who've done far worse still walk free,' Greene wrote online Monday. 'George Santos has taken responsibility. He's shown remorse. It's time to correct this injustice. We must demand equal justice under the law!' Santos was expelled from the House in 2023 after serving less than a year after his personal background unraveled as a series of elaborate deceptions. He reported to prison last month. ADMINISTRATION ROUNDUP: ▪ The Hill: The State Department is testing a program aimed at curbing visa overstays by requiring migrants from some countries to pay bond as high as $15,000 to secure a visa for business or personal travel. ▪ The New York Times: Trump's demand to trading partners: Pledge money or get higher tariffs. ▪ The New York Times: Trump is expected to unveil a task force to boost the federal government's involvement in the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. ▪ The Wall Street Journal: The White House is preparing to issue an executive order to step up pressure against big banks over perceived discrimination against conservatives and crypto companies. ▪ The Washington Post: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 's acting chief of staff tried and failed to oust a senior White House liaison assigned to the Pentagon. ▪ The New York Times: Judges are starting to openly doubt the government as the Justice Department misleads and dodges orders. When and Where Trump will sign an executive order at 4 p.m. The Texas state House is scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. EDT. The U.S. House and Senate are on recess until September. Zoom In HITTING THE (POCKET) BOOKS: Parents may be wary about early back-to-school shopping this year, as tariff hikes and rising prices start to strain family budgets. New surveys suggest some are bracing to pay more in back-to-school costs this year, and many blame Trump's trade wars for the spike. 'Consumers are navigating an uncertain environment right now, and uncertainty is coming from they just don't know how much things are going to cost later in the year, and they're trying to deal with that by buying ahead of time, stocking up now, while they know what prices will be, and trying to get ahead of potential price increases later in the season or later in the year,' the National Retail Foundation's Katherine Cullen said. As more people turn to 'buy now, pay later' purchases for things, including back-to-school items, NPR has a breakdown of how those purchases can affect your credit score. ▪ The Wall Street Journal: A Generation Is Turning to 'Buy Now, Pay Later' for Botox and Concert Tickets. CULTURE CLASH: The president has leaned into the latest front on the culture wars: an ad for blue jeans featuring a 27-year-old actress. Trump, 79, weighed in Monday over 'Euphoria' actress Sydney Sweeney and the American Eagle denim ad that has sparked widespread debate. 'Sydney Sweeney, a registered Republican, has the 'HOTTEST' ad out there. It's for American Eagle, and the jeans are 'flying off the shelves.' Go get 'em Sydney!' Trump wrote on Truth Social on Monday morning. Trump's comments sent American Eagle's stock soaring. The ad features Sweeney and plays up her 'great jeans,' a play on the idea of the actress's 'good genes.' It has spawned backlash online, with critics claiming there are racist undertones. Online sleuths found Sweeney's voter registration records that show she's a registered Republican in Florida. American Eagle defended the ad, saying it's only about their denim line Sweeney was paid to promote. 'You'd be surprised at how many people are Republicans,' Trump told reporters Sunday. 'If Sydney Sweeney is a registered Republican, I think her ad is fantastic.' POWERING UP: Big Tech has poured billions into artificial intelligence (AI) development, and it could be paying off. Wall Street has given its fickle stamp of approval, and the major industry players — Google, Microsoft and Meta — are celebrating after outperforming investors' lofty expectations. 'There are some moments that will be remembered in the market for many years… last night was one of them with the eye-popping results from Microsoft and Meta,' Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives wrote in an investor note last week. 'These massive results seen by Microsoft and Meta further validate the use cases and unprecedented spending trajectory for the AI Revolution on both the enterprise and consumer fronts.' ▪ Smithsonian magazine: You can now have a conversation with the statues at Versailles using AI. ▪ The Hill: Elon Musk donates $5 million to Trump super PAC. ENERGY UNCERTAINTY: The president has been focusing on promoting U.S. energy in his sweeping trade negotiations, but announcements about the agreements reached have been light on details. Actual outcomes remain uncertain. 'There's still a lot we don't know about what these deals look like, including in terms of how ambitious these actually are,' said Clara Gillispie, a senior fellow for climate and energy at the Council on Foreign Relations. 'You have in some of the detail deals references to energy products. Some say energy exports from the U.S. LNG is often referenced as part of a suggestive, but not necessarily all inclusive list,' she added. As The Hill's Rachel Frazin reports, 'decisions are made by private companies, rather than anything run by the state, and in many cases, if deals were economic, it's possible they would have already been made with or without a trade deal.' Meanwhile, the Trump administration is weighing more ways to curtail the development of solar and wind energy on public lands, calling the endeavors 'highly inefficient uses of Federal land.' 'Gargantuan, unreliable, intermittent energy projects hold America back from achieving U.S. Energy Dominance while weighing heavily on the American taxpayer and environment,' Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said in a statement on the effort. The renewable industry argues that the move could have significant impacts on developing energy projects already planned. SHIELD LAWS: Republicans are waging a multipronged campaign against abortion shield laws — legislation passed in states where the practice is legal that protects abortion providers from liability for violating anti-abortion laws in other states. Republicans are hoping to force the federal government to ultimately ban the laws. Legal experts say the effort will be difficult — as some states have already learned. Fifteen Republican attorneys general sent a letter to GOP congressional leaders last week urging federal action to preempt abortion shield laws, arguing they interfere with state criminal laws. 'Congress should consider stepping in to remedy this problem,' they wrote. 'Instead of allowing pro-abortion States to disrespect the decisions of other States regarding abortion and trample the Constitution, Congress should assess whether it should tackle this issue head on with legislation that preempts state shield laws.' Here is a breakdown from the University of California, Los Angeles law school tracking shield laws across the states. Elsewhere GAZA: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will convene his security Cabinet this week to decide on Israel's next steps in Gaza following the collapse of indirect ceasefire talks with Hamas. Netanyahu is reportedly pushing for a full occupation of Gaza, including areas where hostages are held, even as Palestinians in Gaza face a dire humanitarian crisis with mass hunger and inadequate access to aid. Over the weekend, special envoy Steve Witkoff had said he was working with the Israeli government on a plan that would effectively end the war in Gaza. The failed ceasefire talks aimed to clinch agreements on a U.S.-backed proposal for a 60-day truce, during which aid would be flown into Gaza and half of the hostages would be freed in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. ▪ CNN: The Israeli government voted unanimously to dismiss the country's attorney general, Gali Baharav-Miara, a critic of Netanyahu who is leading the corruption case against him. The controversial move was immediately blocked by a Supreme Court injunction. ▪ NPR: New images of emaciated Israeli hostages have horrified Israelis and added pressure on Netanyahu to reach a ceasefire. RUSSIA: Trump is rattling the U.S.'s formidable nuclear saber amid his growing frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin 's refusal to halt the war in Ukraine, just days ahead of Trump's deadline for a ceasefire. Trump last week said he was moving two 'nuclear' submarines closer to Russia in response to threatening rhetoric from a top Kremlin official. On Sunday, he confirmed the vessels were now 'in the region.' Experts say it's a risky tactic unlikely to sway Putin, who has stood in the way of the president's campaign promise to end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours of returning to the White House. Trump's promises, threats and cajoling have failed to shift the Kremlin's position, with Putin shrugging off the pressure. Meanwhile, Ukraine is losing more territory on the front line. Witkoff is expected to travel to Moscow on Wednesday or Thursday. Trump said his special envoy is seeking to broker a truce 'where people stop getting killed.' Witkoff heads to Russia amid building frustration in the White House. Trump in July issued a 50-day ultimatum to Putin, threatening sanctions and tariffs if the Kremlin failed to agree to a ceasefire. Last week, he cut the window to 10 days, citing continued Russian drone and missile strikes on Ukraine. That deadline will expire on Friday. ▪ NewsNation: Life under siege in Kyiv. ▪ CBS News: Ukrainian refugees face an uncertain future as their U.S. work permits are set to expire. ▪ CNN analysis: Ukraine is now Trump's war. ▪ The Washington Post: Locals beg for Putin's help as Russian-occupied Ukraine runs out of water. Opinion Our president is economically illiterate, by Steven Rattner, columnist, The New York Times. Trump's 'Queen of Hearts' moment with the BLS echoes Putin's purges and Orwell's omens, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Judith Chevalier, Stephen Henriques and Steven Tian write in Fortune magazine. The Closer And finally … 🐻 Release the Kraken grizzly! Seattle's hockey team and its lovable troll mascot, Buoy, were trying to film some online content in Alaska when they received a surprise recently. A hefty grizzly bear came charging at them, and it appeared particularly interested in the costumed mascot, who was wearing waders and fly fishing in a stream. The team posted a video on social media of Buoy and the players' narrow escape from the wild beast.

Poor People Are America's Swing Voters
Poor People Are America's Swing Voters

Time​ Magazine

time3 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Poor People Are America's Swing Voters

In January, while the world waited to see what a second Donald Trump Presidency would look like, photos from the Inauguration offered a snapshot of what was to come. Some of the wealthiest people in the world joined politicians in the Capitol rotunda to mark the beginning of the Trump regime while everyone else was locked out in the cold. Six months later, Congress passed one of the largest transfers of wealth from low-income people to the rich in history. As lawmakers go home for their August recess, the record is clear: the White House and Congress are working hand-in-hand to serve the interests of elites at the expense of everyday Americans. On the one hand, this is the worst of times: power is concentrated in the hands of people who pray at the opening of Congress, then act to prey on the people they swore an oath to serve. But a close look at voter demographics and the failure of both Democrats and Republicans to engage poor voters in recent decades suggests that a small percentage of poor voters who understand that they are losing their health insurance, nutrition assistance, and rural hospitals because of their political leadership have the potential to upend American politics. Over the past four decades, as inequality has grown exponentially for all Americans, the number of poor and low-income white people—66 million in 2018—has swelled higher than any other demographic. This is one reason low-income, majority white communities became susceptible to the 'populist' appeal of the MAGA movement. If white people are hurting, the divide-and-conquer myths suggests, it must be because Black people or immigrants are taking from them. By leaning into an aggressive investment in extreme ICE raids, Trump's regime has bet the farm on this myth. But the reality of American politics is that, despite these appeals, most poor people don't vote against their own interests. While Trump improved in 2024 among low-income voters who cast a ballot in the election, new data from Lake Research Associates makes clear that the real change was in the number of poor and low-income people who decided not to vote in the race between Trump and Harris. More than 19 million 'Biden Skippers' who helped elect President Joe Biden in 2020 didn't show up in 2024. When asked why, nearly a third said their number one reason for not voting was that they didn't feel like the Democrats' message spoke to their economic situation. When asked, these 'Biden skippers' were not disinterested in politics. Far from it, nearly half say they check the news more than once a day and the majority favor Democrats in a generic match-up. What they want is a candidate who speaks to them, commits to fight for them, and presents an economic agenda that they know would make a difference in their lives. Poor people are not driving the extremism in American politics, nor are they the true base for Trump, whose major policy achievement has been to cut government programs that serve everyday people so he can give tax breaks to corporations and wealthy Americans. Poor and low-income Americans are, in fact, the largest swing vote in the country. We need a movement to engage poor people who haven't voted because they've never imagined the system could work for them. As they begin to feel the impact of the cuts from Trump's big ugly budget bill, poor and low-income people must organize to demand candidates who will represent them. Movements that bring poor people together across lines of race and region can build on America's history of moral fusion movements to strengthen democracy for all of us. In our book White Poverty, we wrote about how the 2018 midterms saw a roughly 10% increase in voter participation over the previous midterms—a larger four-year-increase than Obama's record-breaking turnout in 2008. Many factors contributed to this surge in participation, but a raw number increase in low-income voters made a significant contribution to the 'blue wave' that returned control of the U.S. House to Democrats in 2018 and put a check on Trump's use of the White House to reward elite interests and undermine policies that lift poor people in 2020. A movement can change how candidates talk and what agenda they promise to pursue when elected. Democrats need a new wave of leadership that not only articulates a vision for how government can serve everyday people, but also demonstrates that they are committed to use executive action, change courts, and use power when they are in office to win policies that lift from the bottom so everyone can rise. If a moral fusion movement, led by poor and low-income people, can rise up in America today, we have the numbers to change the political conversation. This is why we have organized Moral Mondays across the South to go to the districts that will be hurt first and worst by cuts to healthcare and organize people who will be directly impacted to speak directly to their representatives with clergy and moral leaders by their side. A movement led by these people, linking arms across racial lines and joining hands with progressive allies, could not only decide the Presidential elections, but many Congressional and other statewide races as well. Poor and low-income people make up a third of the U.S. electorate—more than 40% of the electorate in the swing states that will decide the 2026 midterms. It's time for poor people of every race to reject the myths that have been used to divide us and come together to demand an economy that works for all of us. Such a movement isn't only good news for the poor. It's the best hope for American democracy. Adapted from White Poverty: How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy, by William J. Barber with Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove (Liveright), out in paperback August 5, 2025.

President Donald Trump to join 'Squawk Box' at 8 a.m. ET
President Donald Trump to join 'Squawk Box' at 8 a.m. ET

CNBC

time3 minutes ago

  • CNBC

President Donald Trump to join 'Squawk Box' at 8 a.m. ET

President Donald Trump will join CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Tuesday around 8 a.m. ET for a wide-ranging conversation on the economy and the state of the U.S. Trump's interview comes as the administration juggles a slew of tariff negotiations as well as new U.S. jobs data that prompted the president to dismiss the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Trump on Monday threatened even higher tariffs on Indian imports to the U.S., citing the country's purchases of Russian oil. "India is not only buying massive amounts of Russian Oil, they are then, for much of the Oil purchased, selling it on the Open Market for big profits. They don't care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian War Machine. Because of this, I will be substantially raising the Tariff paid by India to the USA," Trump said in a Truth Social post. India responded by saying it's being "targeted" by the U.S. and European Union over those crude imports, with the country's foreign ministry saying: "it is revealing that the very nations criticizing India are themselves indulging in trade with Russia. Unlike our case, such trade is not even a vital national compulsion [for them]." Trump's comments also come after a July jobs report that not only missed expectations, but also included heavy downward revisions to June and May figures. The data led Trump to fire Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer just hours after the Friday release. "We need accurate Jobs Numbers. I have directed my Team to fire this Biden Political Appointee, IMMEDIATELY. She will be replaced with someone much more competent and qualified," Trump said in a separate post.

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