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Another One Bites the Dust

On March 5, then-DHS Secretary Kristi Noem got the boot. On April 2, then-"AG" Pam Bondi joined Noem in the unemployment line. And then there were three, because as of yesterday, Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer is out. That's three in a little over a month, which means that after a year-plus of mostly stability, we're back to Trump v1.0 levels of turnover.

Chavez-DeRemer has been enmeshed in various scandals for months, culminating in an extensive exposé in The New York Times last week. Here's the list of (known) issues:

It is really unbelievable how many sexual predators there are in this presidential administration. Heck, it is really unbelievable how many sexual predators there are in just the Chavez-DeRemer family.

Meanwhile, there is nothing publicly known about Chavez-DeRemer today that wasn't known a week ago, or even a month ago. So, why did the axe swing now? It's certainly possible that the White House's patience ran out. Another explanation, however, is that there is something new (and bad) about to come to light. We'll soon see, one way or the other.

The fall of Chavez-DeRemer has a fair bit in common with the fall of Noem, namely that they were both engaging in problematic relationships with underlings, and they were both grossly abusing the privileges of office. Bondi, by contrast, was done in by her failure to successfully pursue Donald Trump's enemies, and her unwise public statements. However, the two things that all three of the now-former Cabinet officers have in common are: (1) All of them embarrassed the administration and (2) All of them are women. Given that male Cabinet officers outnumbered female Cabinet officers more than 2-to-1 at the start of this year, it's pretty long odds that the first three folks would just so happen to be women, without some externality coming into play (like, say, a misogynist boss).

So, who is going to be the next to go? Here's a rundown of the leading candidates:

A couple of weeks ago, we asked readers to vote as to which Cabinet member would be next to go. Here's how the vote shook out:

We also got hundreds and hundreds of comments, and we selected a few to share; notice the theme that runs through so many of them:

There must have been close to 500 readers who wrote in with some variant of the "it's always the women" observation.

We shall see who goes next. At this rate, we'll only have to wait a week or so to find out. (Z)

Notes on the State of Virginia

Today, of course, we learn whether voters in Virginia want to change the state's maps to make them into an aggressive Democratic gerrymander. We had an item about it yesterday. We got several comments from dialed-in voters and thought that today, we'd pass them along:

Thanks to all of you for writing in! (Z)

Another Rebellion in the House

This story almost got by us, but the House has once again done an end run around Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA). The nation of Haiti has been beset by problems for years, as a result of a devastating earthquake and nearly uncontrolled crime. So, the Obama administration granted Haitian refugees Temporary Protected Status (TPS). The first Trump administration extended that, as did the Biden administration.

It would seem that, this time around, someone in the White House (ahem, Stephen Miller?) noticed that Haitians are Black. So, sh**hole country. And thus, the administration said there would be no more extensions, since there are allegedly no longer "extraordinary and temporary conditions" in Haiti. In response, Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) filed a bill by which Congress would extend TPS for Haitian refugees. Johnson refused to bring it to the floor, and so Pressley sought, and secured, the 218 signatures needed for a discharge petition.

The bill came up for a vote last Thursday, and passed, 224-204, with 10 Republicans crossing the aisle to vote with all the Democrats. Here is a list of those 10 Republicans, along with the PVI of their districts:

Member District PVI
Don Bacon NE-02 D+3
Mike Carey OH-15 R+4
Brian Fitzpatrick PA-01 D+1
Mario Díaz-Balart FL-26 R+16
Carlos Giménez FL-28 R+10
Mike Lawler NY-17 D+1
Nicole Malliotakis NY-11 R+10
Rich McCormick GA-07 R+11
María Elvira Salazar FL-27 R+6
Mike Turner OH-10 R+3

In addition, Rep. Kevin Kiley (I-CA), who was until recently a Republican, and who still caucuses with the GOP, voted for the bill. His district, CA-03, is R+2.

There are some pretty obvious themes that run through this list of apostates. To start, a lot of them represent swingy districts. Don Bacon doesn't count here, because while his district IS swingy, he's retiring. So presumably, he just voted his conscience. Or, alternatively, he just voted for what would piss Donald Trump off. Anyhow, while we have to exclude Bacon, we also have to include Nicole Malliotakis. Though her district does not appear swingy, she has to prepare for a potential future where the courts allow the new district maps to be put in place, which would definitely make her district swingy.

Truth be told, we're not clear why the six Republican members (and the "independent") running for reelection in swingy districts would be concerned about Haitian immigrants, in particular, and (apparently) see it as an important issue for constituents. There was, of course, the whole Trump/Vance shtick from 2024 about Haitians eating cats and dogs. Perhaps these members fear that will come back to life, and it will not be well for them to appear hostile to Haitians. But that is just a guess.

The other theme that runs through the list is "south Florida." Díaz-Balart, Giménez and Salazar all represent districts in the farthest southern part of Florida. It's not too easy to confirm that their districts have some sizable number of Haitian residents/voters, but certainly, if someone fled Haiti for the U.S., south Florida is the first place they would reach. The census does not break populations down by nation of origin, but we did check and confirm that those districts all have a sizable number of Haitian restaurants. So too does GA-07, for that matter. That's at least indirect evidence of a meaningful population of Haitians.

The bill is likely to die in the Senate. And if it doesn't die there, it will be killed by Trump's veto pen. That said, all is not lost for the Haitian refugees. The initial decision to yank their protected status is before the federal courts right now, and so may be restored at the end of one or more judges' gavels.

But the real story here is that this is the eighth successful discharge petition this Congress, which is more than the previous 20 Congresses combined. It is also an act of rebellion, not only against Johnson, but against Trump. As the President's approval rating sinks, and as swing-district members get closer and closer to Election Day, will such acts of rebellion become even more common? It's well within the realm of possibility. (Z)

Legal Bytes: TrumpWatch

We have some legal news we want to get caught up on, mostly focusing on how Donald Trump and his Trumpettes are doing what they can to bend the legal system to their will.

Aileen Cannon, Meet Neomi Rao: U.S. District Judge James Boasberg can't catch a break. He's been trying to hold the Trump administration accountable for violating his March 2025 order to turn the planes around and return detainees headed to El Salvador, and he drew the worst possible panel on the D.C. Court of Appeals: Two Trump appointees who are among the most notorious MAGA acolytes on the judiciary, Neomi Rao and Justin Walker, have never seen a Trump action or order they didn't absolutely love.

Boasberg had initiated a contempt inquiry to hear witnesses and other evidence to learn if his court order was willfully violated. And Rao and Walker granted Trump the extraordinary remedy of shutting down the proceeding before it even started. Importantly, this isn't a ruling that a contempt charge is unfounded; this is an appeals court telling a district judge that he can't even investigate whether his order has been violated in the first place. Judge J. Michelle Childs dissented and said that the ruling, which relies on the figleaf of "national security," threatens the rule of law and the courts' ability to enforce their orders.

Our Take: The plaintiffs are likely to seek a rehearing by the entire court of appeals, known as an en banc hearing. When Rao and Walker shut Boasberg down the first time, the Court denied an en banc hearing, but this ruling is so off the rails and obviously partisan that the other judges will likely get involved at this point.



The Cruelty Is the Point: At the urging of a conservative advocacy group called the Southeastern Legal Foundation, the Department of Education has said that it will no longer enforce the terms of several settlement agreements with colleges and school districts regarding their treatment of trans students. The Department now says that discrimination based on gender identity is not a violation of Title IX. In an agreement with Taft College in 2023, for example, the school agreed to revise its policies "to clarify that repeatedly refusing to use a student's preferred name and pronouns may constitute harassment based on sex, creating a hostile environment under Title IX." But not anymore, apparently. As Sydney Duncan of Advocates for Trans Equity put it, "[T]he department of education is sending a signal that your kid's safety, dignity and access to education are optional if they happen to be trans."

Our Take: The Supreme Court has held that sex discrimination includes gender identity and these colleges entered into these consent decrees and, by all accounts, were complying. In fact, one college said it would continue to abide by the settlement. So, there was no justification for this action other than this administration's continued targeting of the trans community, which is, itself, discriminatory.



Putting the Dic in Vindictive?: Donald Trump's quest for revenge against former CIA director John Brennan continues. The Department of Justice has been trying to build a criminal case against Brennan and the career prosecutor on the case, Marie Medetis Long, had the audacity to say they had no case, so she was immediately replaced. Now, another Trump personal attorney, Joseph DiGenova, is going to head up the investigation and make Brennan an offer he can't refuse. Oh, and it's being run out of the U.S. attorney's Office in the Southern District of Florida, and a former clerk for Aileen Cannon, Chris DeLorenz, has also been put on the case.

Our Take: They will no doubt try to bring criminal charges against Brennan for something, but it's likely to go about as far as the James Comey and Letitia James prosecutions. And that's true even if they get Aileen Cannon as the judge. But meanwhile, they're wasting huge amounts of resources harassing people to serve Trump's vindictive desires



In Counting There Is Strength: There has been a legal fight going on in Maricopa County, pitting crazypants Republicans (the Maricopa Board of Supervisors) versus a crazypants Republican (Justin Heap, the recorder for Maricopa County). Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Scott Blaney ruled this week, and backed Heap. So, Heap will control the counting of the votes in Maricopa, unless the state Supreme Court steps in, which it may well do.

Our Take: Why can't the U.S. do what most other western democracies do, and place the running of elections in the hands of non-partisan career officials?

We will have Political Bytes tomorrow. (L & Z)


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