Thursday, January 30, 2025
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Thursday, January 30, 2025

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Springfield, Ohio: The Real Story

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Wisconsin Right Now traveled to Springfield, Ohio, this month to find the real story beyond the corporate media spin.

Springfield, Ohio – Eric Coleman Sr., 65, is a former U.S. Marine and retired welder. He sits on a frayed stoop in Springfield, Ohio, on a recent Sunday, in the shadow of a Trump flag flying outside his neighbor’s house in this working-class city that is ground zero in the nation’s high-stakes immigration debate. Coleman is a Democrat who is African-American. At first, he says he’s voting for Vice President Kamala Harris. Then, he says he was a lot better off economically four years ago. Ultimately, Coleman says he could vote for Trump or just sit it out.

Coleman attributes his growing economic stress to the surge of Haitian immigrants who have streamed by thousands into Springfield, an industrial city with a once-shrinking population and manufacturing base that was undergoing a “renaissance” that drew the influx. His life has gotten a lot harder since the Haitians got here. Companies were hungry for low-paid workers, and Haitians were hungry for jobs. But so are the American citizens who live there.

Coleman’s rent has skyrocketed from $550 to $1,100 because some landlords now make more money renting homes to Haitians they charge per head to sleep on cots jammed into former single-family homes. He’s not alone. “I know two or three (non-Haitian) families who were kicked out, and Haitians are living in those homes today.”

The U.S. military veteran lives on social security and disability checks that net him only about $1,600 a month. He was denied food stamps. “I’m broke,” he says. Forget cats and dogs; he can’t afford meat and survives on donated “canned goods and juice.” He doesn’t think the Biden-Harris administration, which welcomed the Haitians in, has its priorities straight.

“That doesn’t make sense for the government to give them all of that money and not give Americans. I think the government should recalculate,” he says. “You’re over cluttering us. I think the government should stop that immediately.”

This is somewhat different than the stream of illegal immigrants flooding over the U.S.-Mexico border who took advantage of Biden-Harris’s weak immigration policies; the Haitians flew legally into the United States. Biden and Harris waved their magic wand and made it so. They were granted “immigration parole” and “temporary protected status” by the Biden-Harris administration, a deliberate and calculated policy decision. They’re happening together, though, and they’re causing similar stress on communities.

Here, in Springfield, the Haitian immigration wave is causing some U.S. citizens harm. It’s a story playing out all over America, although that’s not the story the corporate media or Harris want to tell. Biden-Harris rolled out the welcome mat. That’s inarguable.

Once here, the Biden-Harris administration granted the Haitians “temporary protected status” – through a program that Trump tried to kill – which grants them a raft of government benefits and debit cards, including driver’s licenses. It’s meant to be temporary, but the government can extend TPS indefinitely. Of course, if the Haitians have children here, those children are automatically U.S. citizens who will someday be allowed to vote (the Haitian migrants can’t vote legally, but two tell us they might do so anyway).

If Harris won’t promise to stop the Biden-Harris immigration policies, Coleman decides he won’t vote for her after all.

“Trump didn’t start this,” Coleman says.

Coleman doesn’t fit the media’s stereotype of an angry racist or conspiracy theorist railing against immigrants. That’s true for most here. In fact, he expresses empathy for the Haitians and relates to their working-class plight. They want the same things he does. They aren’t the villains of this story. To locals here, the government is. And that starts at the top, with Biden and his VP.

Springfield ohio
Coleman.

The numbers are staggering. The Haitian population exploded by 15,000 to 20,000 people in a city of just under 60,000, the city manager, Bryan Heck, wrote in a letter. Affluent Martha’s Vineyard residents collectively freaked out over 49 arrivals not that long ago. That was lambasted as a “cruel political stunt” in the media, although those people were soon gone.

“It’s taxing our infrastructure. It’s taxing public safety. It’s taxing our schools. It’s taxing health care…it’s taxing our housing,” Heck said in July, calling the housing crisis “a hundred times worse.”

“It’s setting communities like Springfield up to fail. And, we do not have the capacity to sustain it, and, without additional federal assistance or support, communities like Springfield will fail.”

In Springfield, hard-working lower-income folks in an already distressed city with a poverty rate of 22.7 percent are just supposed to take it. Worse, they’re branded as racists for not wanting to lose their rental homes or jobs.

Springfield“This is being done in the most destructive, damaging and divisive way possible, kicking people out of their homes to move in people willing to live 10 people to a bedroom,” says Bill Monaghan, a former newspaper journalist who speaks near a building with shattered windows in downtown Springfield around the corner from an MSNBC crew.

“They want to really gut the working and middle classes,” he says. “To disrupt the whole town and tear the social fabric apart – this is not an accident. This is an effort to dismantle the working class.”

Monaghan doesn’t believe the Haitians are being treated right, either.

“They are jammed in like slave quarters, charged to get back and forth to work. It’s a modern slavery system here, 40 people to a house or 10 people to a bedroom, just cots,” he says.

John Rice, a pastor and realtor, says a relative who is an HVAC contractor “was in a home recently, and 19 Haitians lived on each side of the double. Every room is a bedroom in the house. One house; 38 people.” Rice says home and rent prices have skyrocketed because landlords make more money if they can jam Haitians into a house.

“What is the limit a community can absorb? I think we have far exceeded it,” he says.

It’s not only housing. Locals’ concerns range from hospitals and schools being overwhelmed to dangerous traffic crashes. Traffic crashes in the county rose from 2019 to 2023, according to police data. U.S. citizens have died, and residents described dangerous near misses with Haitians who don’t understand the rules of the road.

One crash involving a Haitian driver took the life of an 11-year-old boy on a school bus whose dad doesn’t want his story politicized. In another widely discussed tragedy, grandmother Kathy Heaton was killed by a Haitian migrant who plowed into her as she put out the trash. “Kathy was struck so violently that both her socks were left behind on the pavement as her body was thrown across the street,” the New York Post reported. The driver wasn’t charged.

The Biden-Harris programs allow the Haitians to receive taxpayer-funded benefits and driver’s licenses. “Enrollment in Medicaid and federal food assistance and welfare programs surged,” Reuters reported. Rent rose 14.6 percent from May through December 2023 and 3.2 percent in 2024 so far.

It can be difficult to tease out the economic stresses on Springfield residents due to immigration from the national pressures under the Biden-Harris economy. For example, although home prices have risen, they’ve done so less than the country as a whole. Rising grocery prices are putting stress on families everywhere.

Springfield, ohio

Community hospitals spend $50,000 monthly for translation services, and the school district gets 40 new students each week, many who can’t speak English. The police chief told NPR that calls for service, property crimes, and translation needs are up, although police aren’t tying crime increases to immigrants.

Ohio’s Republican Gov. Mike DeWine sent $2.5 million in taxpayer money to Springfield to boost traffic enforcement and deal with growing pressures on medical centers. General healthcare, not communicable diseases, is driving the pressure on healthcare.

“The influx of Haitians to Springfield and Clark County has significantly impacted local primary care providers due to the increased number of patients and the need for more translation services. In general, migrants from Haiti have had little to no healthcare services prior to arriving in the United States, including vaccinations,” DeWine said.

Springfield, ohio
A man is observed at a vehicle parked in a driveway of a springfield home marked as condemned by an ‘x’

Haitians in Springfield are only part of the story. “Through the end of August 2024, nearly 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans arrived lawfully on commercial flights and were granted parole under these processes,” the U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced on September 16.

“More than 110,000 Cubans, more than 210,000 Haitians, nearly 93,000 Nicaraguans, and nearly 117,000 Venezuelans arrived lawfully and were granted parole,” CBP says.

That’s occurring against the backdrop of record surges of millions of illegal immigrants over the southern border. Even the New York Times admits, “Border crossings were low when Donald Trump left office. But when President Biden is in the White House, they start shooting up and up — to numbers this country had never seen before, peaking in December 2023.”

Rice believes the United States should help Haiti through charitable giving and humanitarian outreach instead. “Our responsibility is first to our people,” he says. “Our church has a food pantry. We are sheltering homeless people right now who are natural-born citizens; people who are in horrible straits who were born here. Our economy is bad to start with. How we can afford to fly in tens of thousands at a time?”

“Why would our government want to do such a thing?”


Dogs & Cats Dominate the Media

Springfield dogs
Springfield dog.

The national media fixated on wildlife, pets – and Trump. You can find stories about the other concerns, but they aren’t dominating the narrative.

Coleman, Rice, and Monaghan don’t care much about the pet-eating controversy that has consumed the beltway media and dominated TikTok since Trump accused Haitian immigrants of eating people’s cats and dogs in a viral debate moment.

“I have four or five families on my street, and I’ve never seen them chase a cat or dog and eat it,” Coleman says, but he doesn’t even bring it up until well into our conversation. Like many non-Haitians here, including Trump supporters, the cat-and-dog controversy just isn’t what matters. It’s a shiny ball Trump kicked, and the media are chasing it.

Most Springfield residents we spoke to – including ardent Trump supporters – think Trump overstepped. They don’t think Haitian immigrants are eating cats and dogs in Springfield or at least have no evidence to prove it, although a Haitian man, Jean Pierre, informs us that some Haitians DO eat cats back home.

Springfield residents believe Trump’s comments served a purpose, though, by coaxing an uninterested, biased, and, frankly, lazy national media into finally paying attention to a topic that doesn’t help Democrats (or Harris) but is hurting regular Americans.

“As far as what I took from what I saw on the clip, you know, Trump going, ‘Well, they’re eating pet cats and dogs’ or whatever . . . I just started laughing,” says Springfield resident Al Overholser. “But the whole important thing that I like about him saying that is he shifted everybody’s attention to Springfield, Ohio because we need everybody’s help right now.”

“Springfield is a caring community,” he adds. “But I have a limit. This city has a limit as well. We need help and resources.” He believes Harris and Biden scoffed at concerns.

The liberal and conservative media are wrestling each other for the narrative, with a presidential election at stake. The cage match is occurring in Springfield.

The legacy media repeatedly blares that Trump made false comments about Haitians that follow racist tropes. Some reporters take the word of government as fact and don’t do original reporting on the scene. False, incendiary comments made by Harris and other Democrats don’t get blown up this relentlessly. Corporate journalists paint the influx of Haitians to Springfield in the glossiest terms; the story as they tell it is one of hard-working, maligned immigrants who are doing the jobs Americans won’t. Springfield is on the “upswing.” It’s constructed reality.

“The real story is that for 80 years we were a shrinking city, and now we’re growing,” Carl Ruby, the senior pastor at Central Christian Church, told NBC. “There is a workforce here just waiting.” But Springfield residents say there was no clear plan and too many people came too fast.

Springfield

“We needed a workforce,” Amy Donahoe, director of workforce development with the Greater Springfield Partnership, told Reuters.

In contrast, some independent media and conservative pundits have focused on trying to prove Trump’s comments had substantial truth to rescue him from his latest hyperbole. A man produced a sickening video he says shows people from the Congo grilling a cat in Dayton! There’s 911 audio of a man complaining Haitians were grabbing geese in Springfield’s Snyder Park! There’s a 911 call from a woman whose cat is missing and found meat in her backyard! (But when the Wall Street Journal went to interview her, she revealed she found “Miss Sassy” alive and unharmed, hiding in her basement.)

Those just aren’t the things locals really care about. Yet they’re the ones painted as racists by legacy reporters who are, in some cases, sitting on their butts in New York.

“I did pray over my city. The cat and dog thing is ridiculous. They’re spinning it out of control,” says Lisa Brannon, 47, referring to the media. A Trump flag flies on her porch. Across the street, Haitians have moved in.

Brannon believes Trump should have focused on something else. “There were better topics,” she says. “Our resources are being depleted right now.”

She doesn’t agree with the corporate media’s narrative that the immigration surge has been largely great for Springfield, either. Brannon’s friend, a domestic violence survivor, is staying with her because she can’t find affordable housing. Her family’s benefits were denied. Homeless people need meals, but shelters recently shut down.

Springfield ohio
Lisa brannon

“Every five houses on this block, there’s been a Haitian that’s moved in,” she says. Brannon says the Haitians have had hatred “spewed at them,” which is terrible. “I understand that the Haitians are coming from a war-torn country, but we can’t help people unless we can help ourselves.”

The American people, she says, “can’t afford” to subsidize the Haitians. Brannon used to work at Family Dollar, and Haitians “would ask me to help them pull their money off their” government cards. “And it wasn’t just one card,” she says.

Brannon says she’s called in many traffic accidents at the intersection near her home caused by Haitians.

SpringfieldFundamentally, the tension isn’t over cats or dogs at all, as it turns out; it is about a country’s allocation of, and prioritization of, its resources.

The controversy intensifies in an impoverished community like Springfield, which is pocked with foreclosed homes (locals say some Haitians are living in them), in a nation struggling with soaring inflation. Springfield was already a city in distress; the median income “dropped 27% between 1999 and 2014 . . . a bigger dip than any metropolitan area in the country,” USA Today reported.

Springfield
Downtown springfield, oh

It’s a story repeating in communities throughout America, from Aurora to Chicago.

Kyle Koehler is a former state representative who is running for state Senate in Ohio. He says the community wasn’t properly informed that the surge was coming. Temp agencies, churches, and businesses encouraged the Haitians to come here, some profiting greatly. “We didn’t know it was happening.”

Koehler said there’s been great “stress on our education system.” The local health care center is “overwhelmed.” The traffic accident stories are true. “People are concentrating on the cats more than the people. The issue is the social – the government – services that are being overwhelmed.”

“In the end, it’s just overwhelmed our community,” he says.

A couple of months ago, Koehler appeared at a press conference to highlight these concerns. Only one reporter came. But that was before Trump started talking about cats.

Jeff and Lori Clos have lived in Springfield for 54 and 30 years, respectively. He works in a trucking company. She was unemployed until recently. “I was actually displaced from my previous job,” she says. She was told the company was “doing away with my position.”

“After that, they started bringing in a lot of Haitians through the local temp service,” she says.

“Ten-fifteen people were let go the same week. The next week, they were bringing in the temp service people to run it,” she says. “It makes me angry. I work hard to raise the money we need to survive. Now you can’t survive on a one household income. It’s taking me three months to find a job. They keep saying the jobs are plentiful.” She’s done everything from factory to office jobs.

She doesn’t believe the media narrative is true.

“No. I’ve applied at some of these places hiring all the Haitians and never got a callback,” she says. “They hear they can bring the Haitians in for a cheaper rate than Americans can afford to work for.”

Ryan McKinney was working as a seasonal worker for Amazon when, one day, his key card (and others’ cards) wouldn’t work. That’s the same Amazon owned by Jeff Bezos, who also owns the Washington Post.

“I looked in the training center and saw it full of people from the Haitian community,” he says. McKinney is an admin on a Facebook page called “Stop the Influx Into Springfield, Ohio.”

“I strongly believe we were singled out to put the Haitians in,” he says. There are some cultural tensions. McKinney says he saw Haitians “literally washing their feet and hair in the bathroom sinks.”

Local leaders and police have pushed back hard against the pet-eating accusations, saying they’ve seen no evidence. Many reporters have taken the word of government as gospel.

To be sure, social media has caused problems even as it also informs. Yet without social and independent media – and especially the free speech zone on X – we’d be left with the corporate media’s narratives on Springfield. They’re warped, politicized in one direction, and far from the whole story. The corporate media say Trump isn’t being honest about Springfield, but are they?

The disturbing body cam video of a woman eating a cat is from Canton, Ohio, and she’s not Haitian. The viral photos of a man carrying dead geese were in Columbus, and they were killed by a car. The social media post about a cat being skinned and hung in Springfield was fourth-hand information that its author has taken back.

“One of the things that I heard that bothered me very much, and I’ve actually had quite a few people contacting me lately, is some pretty horrid things occurring to domesticated animals in the neighborhood. We’ve had some stuff in the park,” Heck, the city manager, said on video in March. Asked for proof, he said anonymous people had confided in him.

However, locals tell us, that’s the sideshow, not the story.

Trump’s running mate, Ohio U.S. Sen. JD Vance, has more recently tried to shift the conversation toward economic and safety concerns affecting people instead of pets. The media, however, are now focusing on the 33 bomb threats that resulted in closings throughout Springfield. Some outright blamed Vance for them. Then, DeWine revealed all of the bomb threats were hoaxes, with many coming from overseas.

Although our key goal wasn’t to prove or disprove the pet angle during our two days in Springfield this September, we did ask everyone about it. Retired hairstylist Beth Heffner produced a picture of a pig carcass she says was left near a school. Her close friend took it, but when we asked to speak to the friend, the friend never called. Heffner wore a “fight, fight, fight!” T-shirt with a bloodied Donald Trump. There’s no evidence that Haitians killed the pig, which isn’t exactly an unusual thing to eat in America anyway.

Amy heffner
Beth heffner

Locals believe the duck and goose population at Snyder Park has suspiciously waned, especially the white Peking ducks.

Springfield
Ducks at snyder park
Springfield
Geese at snyder park

But no one can prove Haitians caused that. At Snyder Park, the ducks and geese seemed plentiful to us.


Debit Cards & Plans to Vote

SpringfieldA few houses down the street from Coleman, we find Jean Pierre, a Haitian immigrant who speaks in halting English as other Creole-speaking Haitian men spill out of the modest home. He’s been in the U.S. for about a year, coming from Florida after he heard from Haitians that it was easy to find work here.

Other Haitians echo the same themes.

They came here to work. They work hard. It was pretty easy (although one family had to traverse through Brazil and then Mexico). Others just filled out an application and boom! They were in. They weren’t bused to Springfield; they started somewhere else (Georgia, Florida), and Haitians told them to go to Springfield because it was easy to get a job. Yes, they get debit cards. Yes, they get driver’s licenses. And even though it’s illegal, some plan to vote.

“It’s very hard for the immigrant,” Pierre says. He is grateful for the chance to add his voice and is very aware of the controversies on social media and Trump’s comments.

The national media have painted the cat-and-dog comments as provoking violence, even ludicrously tying them to the 2nd assassination attempt of Trump in Florida, which was allegedly committed by a Hawaiian Democratic donor with a Biden-Harris bumper sticker and an obsession over Ukraine.

The harm Pierre describes, though, is emotional. His feelings are hurt. He’s hurt when some people in Springfield won’t greet him in stores. He’s hurt that Trump thinks Haitians are here to cause “trouble.” At least in Haiti, he is treated with respect.

“We coming here to do the bad thing? That’s not true,” Pierre says.

Pierre intends to go back to Haiti when his temporary protective status expires, but he’s barely making enough to get ahead here, where the wages range from $18 to $22 an hour, a measly amount quickly eaten up by rent, food, and other costs. He’s separated from his family. Although immigration can be big business, that’s not true for him.

Pierre tells us matter-of-factly that some people in Haiti DO eat cats, but he insists no one is doing that here. “Yes, in Haiti, yes – you can do it. Maybe in Haiti, you can find someone who eats a cat because you can do it in Haiti. But when you come here, you can’t do it, so you have respect for that. We know you cannot eat a cat when you are in the United States, and the Haitian people are very afraid to do something in a country that says you can’t do that,” he says.

“The Haitian people have a good heart. They love everyone. We don’t come here to make trouble with the American people. We come to help. We come to work hard.”

No one eats dogs anywhere, he insists. “Eat the dogs, I never see that.”

Pierre is considering voting. He knows Haitians who plan to vote for Harris even though they aren’t U.S. citizens – “a lot of people,” he reveals. That would be illegal, which is a point that he doesn’t seem to realize. Ohio has implemented a law that puts a small non-citizen label on the back of people’s driver’s licenses, however.

“I don’t know if I’m going to do it,” he says. He shows us a valid Ohio driver’s license that lists his hometown as Dayton. It was easy to get.

“A lot of people, Haitian people, they prefer Kamala Harris than Trump. They think that Trump has a trouble with them,” he says.

There seems to be meager if any effort to educate the new Haitian population about voting laws. A now-nixed voting registration form in Creole is the talk of the town. “A false Ohio voter registration form created in Haitian Creole was not approved or created by the Clark County Department of Job and Family Services,” the county says.

“We come here to work. I don’t want to give anyone any trouble here. If Haitians do something wrong, I say, ‘Forgive them,’” he says, molding his hands as if in prayer. “I say sorry for anything the Haitian people do wrong in this city.”

Pierre, who was a truck driver in Haiti, has a State of Ohio debit card. “To give me food,” he says. Pierre says the government put about $200 on the card monthly for a few months.

Yves Pierre Louis, another Haitian immigrant a few blocks over, says he came to the United States in 2020 because Haiti is “very dangerous for me,” and he wants to “send money to my family” of 12 kids.

At first, he worked in a hotel in Georgia. When COVID hit, he came to Springfield because another Haitian told Louis, a forklift driver: “It’s easy to find a job.”

“We come here for help and family. I hear Trump tell Haitian do this, Haitian do that. I live here with my dog here.” He opens the door and ushers out a menacing-looking pit bull. “Why I no eat that? Because the dog is important for anybody.”

Yves louis
Yves louis.

He says he’s never seen people eat cats or dogs in Haiti or here. “Some chicken, goat, beef.” To come here, he filled out an application and worked with a company from Taiwan, since you need a sponsor.

Louis insists, though: “I don’t have a problem with Trump. Trump is a person I am not supposed to like him, the woman too. I like everybody.” We ask if he is planning to vote. “Yes,” he says.

When we pressed and asked whether he’s a citizen and allowed to vote, he shifts. “If I try . . . what I think, we are not supposed to do that.”


The Ku Klux Klan Rears Its Ugly Head

Springfield
Ku klux klan flyers found on a springfield, oh street

Some ugliness has descended on the town, mainly from the outside, and it’s not only the bomb threats.

A Ku Klux Klan group from Kentucky papered some neighborhoods with recruitment flyers. We were shown the flyer by Trump supporters who were so angry about it that they reported it to the police.

We later came across several of the flyers folded up on the street.

Springfield
Folded ku klux klan flyers littered a springfield, oh street

It’s a different vibe at Rose Goute Creole Restaurant, though, where a diverse crowd shows up for goat, chicken, turkey, plantains, and spaghetti. When we went there, the chicken was sold out, the crowd was happy, and everyone seemed to be getting along. The city says there are two Haitian restaurants, seven Haitian grocery stores, and one Haitian food truck in Springfield.

Rose goute creole restaurant
Rose goute creole restaurant

We ate turkey, rice, and beans as an Associated Press photographer bopped around taking pictures. A television crew from New York did interviews in the back.

Rose goute restaurant
Inside the restaurant.

The kind Haitian owner thanked us profusely for coming. But we didn’t interview people there, like everyone else. We headed into the neighborhoods.


Biden-Harris: ‘They’re the Disgrace’

Bernie Moreno, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Ohio, is closing the gap with incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown, by sounding a Trump-like immigration theme. Moreno is a Colombian immigrant and Cleveland businessman who came to America legally at age 5.

“This is not the fault of the Haitian refugees,” Moreno tells a crowd outside the Stella Bleu Bistro in Springfield. “Unfortunately, it took memes on the internet to get the attention of the media, but this has been going on for three years.”

“This is not the fault of the people of Springfield, Ohio. This is the fault of corrupt government politicians like Sherrod Brown and Joe Biden who have allowed that to happen. They put these people in this situation.” He included Harris on the list.

“They’re the disgrace. They’re the people that will be fired on Nov. 5.”

The Biden-Harris administration’s decision to grant “temporary protective status” and “immigration parole” to Haitians nationally was little explained to the public.

“The Secretary of Homeland Security may designate a foreign country for TPS due to conditions in the country that temporarily prevent the country’s nationals from returning safely,” the government says.

It’s completely incoherent; people from Central American countries are drowning in the Rio Grande but if you’re Haitian, you’re in.

In 2010, Haitians started getting TPS after a devastating earthquake, according to a May 2024 report from the Congressional Research Service. In 2017, the Trump administration, after briefly extending the designation, rescinded it, although that bogged down in endless ACLU-fueled legal battles.

On May 22, 2021, Biden’s Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Majorkas ended those when he “announced a new, 18-month TPS designation for Haiti based on extraordinary and temporary conditions” that included “social unrest, an increase in human rights abuses, crippling poverty, and lack of basic resources, which are exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Haitians are in Ohio through the “Immigration Parole Program,” Springfield’s website says. “The U.S. government may grant advance travel authorization to up to 30,000 noncitizens each month to seek parole on a case-by-case basis under the processes for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans,” the government’s website says. TPS is granted after you get here.

“Immigrants with TPS are legally qualified to receive financial assistance, health and nutrition services, employment and education services, and housing services,” the city says.

People with TPS status, a program dating to a 1990 act of Congress, “are not removable from the United States,” and are allowed to work, the government says, adding that they are screened. It lists 16 countries with TPS status. Some make sense (saving interpreters from Afghanistan). Others raise questions – Yemen, Ukraine, Sudan, Haiti.

As of March 31, 2024, approximately 863,880 foreign nationals had TPS status in the U.S. Of that, 200,005 Haitians who arrived after 2022 have TPS.

Trump terminated TPS status for multiple countries, including Haiti. The ACLU of California helped TPS recipients sue, some with U.S. citizen children. The latter is, of course, where new problems creep in (now they argue that kids are being separated from their parents! And of course, those kids will be voters someday.) The plaintiffs’ argument focused on the Trump administration adopting a “new narrow process” that doesn’t “consider all current conditions” in the involved countries. They accused Trump of racism. The case bogged down in California’s liberal courts.

The Biden-Harris administration swiftly restored the TPS after taking office, rendering the court case moot before it could land on the desk of SCOTUS.


Expletives Disrupt an Interview

Rob Rue is the mayor of Springfield. On Saturday, we encounter a local reporter interviewing Rue downtown, near the statue of George Rogers Clark, the Kentucky militiaman who fought in the Revolutionary War. The mayor is a controversial figure in town, called a “RINO” (Republican in Name Only) by some and chastised as “establishment.” The reporter later trashes him on X.

Rue, a funeral parlor owner, just assumed emergency powers because of security concerns.

The Buckeye Reporter has slammed Rue, accusing him of renting an apartment to a Haitian. The Buckeye Reporter says a different temp company owner also has 42 rental properties, painting immigration as a profitable business. Rue has denied conflicts of interest.

“Are you far left or far right?” he wearily asks us.

As Rue talks, people shout expletives at him from passing cars. “F*ck the Haitians,” yells a man. Another person yells something that sounds like “FJB.” Rue insists that Springfield is a great place. Another person pulls over. A contingent of “Proud Boys” is marching in the city.

Rue tells Wisconsin Right Now that he doesn’t want Trump or Harris to campaign in Springfield. “It would be very difficult to have them here.” He says neither campaign has reached out to him.

However, a few days later, Trump says he is coming to Springfield in the next two weeks.

“You may never see me again, but that’s okay. Whatever happened to Trump? Well, he never got out of Springfield,” Trump said in a rally, adding, “We’re going to take care of Ohio, and we’re going to take care of Colorado.” A lot of American communities are under “siege,” Trump said.

We asked whether Rue was asking Trump not to come, and he responded, “It would be overwhelming for Springfield to have either of the political leaders running for office for the presidency to come to Springfield.”

“It’s a lot of strain, period. We’ve already been in the national spotlight,” Rue says. “It’s a lot of stress. It’s a hot time. Why are you in Springfield, Ohio? You’re here because we have been affected by campaigning, and it’s been negative. So why am I talking to you? Because we’d like to tell our story. Springfield is a great place. It’s my hometown.”

However, Rue has also given media interviews in which he said things like, “This border crisis, the policy of this administration, is failing cities like ours and taxing us beyond our limit.” He tells us that he fundamentally blames an “open border.”

We tell the mayor that the Springfield residents we spoke to say they have been affected economically by the influx of immigrants, not by campaigning.

“Well, I’d say both. The influx has caused strain,” he says. “I won’t deny that. I haven’t denied that at all. It’s caused strain.”

Beth Heffner, the woman wearing a “fight, fight, fight!” T-shirt, is standing nearby, listening. She expresses anger the second the mayor walks off.

“It’s disgusting,” she says.

She’s upset he doesn’t want to welcome Trump, who she sees as trying to solve a problem other officials caused, from Biden and Harris on down. It was done too fast and without a clear plan, she says. It’s a mess.

“They did it all wrong.”

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Trump International Airport Proposed, Renaming Dulles

Changing the name to Donald J. Trump International Airport from Dulles International Airport has been proposed by a freshman congressman from North Carolina.

Rep. Addison McDowell, the 31-year-old Republican from the state’s 6th Congressional District, introduced the bill Thursday along with Reps. Brian Jack, R-Ga., Riley Moore, R-W.V., Brandon Gill, R-Texas, and Guy Reschenthaler, R-Penn.

“It is only right that the two airports servicing our nation’s capital are duly honored and respected by two of the best presidents to have the honor of serving our great nation,” McDowell said.

Dulles International and Reagan National are major airports serving the District of Columbia, Maryland and Northern Virginia. The former is named for Josh Foster Dulles, secretary of state under Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1953-59. More than 26 million passengers used Dulles in the 12 months ending in November, according to the latest statistics available.

The then-$108.3 million airport, on 10,000 acres of Loudoun and Fairfax counties in Virginia, was dedicated Nov. 17, 1962. Another 830 acres were acquired 20 years ago.

Jack said the effort “to ‘cancel’ President Trump during his post-presidency” is rightly countered by the bill to “enshrine President Trump’s legacy.”

“This legislation will cement his status in our nation’s capital as our fearless commander-in-chief, extraordinary leader, and relentless champion for the American people,” Reschenthaler said in a release from McDowell’s office.

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, smaller in gates 113 to 58 than Dulles, is on 860 acres in Virginia. Opening in 1941 as National Airport, Democratic two-term President Bill Clinton on Feb. 6, 1998, signed the legislation authored by Sen. Paul Coverdell, R-Ga., renaming it for the nation’s 40th president.

Reagan National also checked more than 26 million passengers in the 12 months ending in November. The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority reported 53.1 million total between the two.

New Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth Shows Changes Already in Motion

Pete Hegseth, the newly-confirmed Secretary of Defense, has indicated that changes to the military are already in motion.

Hegseth told reporters outside the Pentagon Monday that Trump will soon authorize the reinstatement of military members who were discharged for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine, with backpay.

He also hinted that military bases renamed under the Biden administration will revert to their original names. This includes Fort Moore and Fort Liberty, originally known as Fort Benning and Fort Bragg, the names of confederate officers.

"Our job is lethality and readiness and warfighting, and we are going to hold people accountable," Hegseth told reporters on the Pentagon's steps.

The Senate voted 51-50 late Friday to confirm Hegseth, with Vice President J.D. Vance casting the tie-breaking vote.

Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., along with Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and Susan Collins, R-Maine, voted no.

“Effective management of nearly 3 million military and civilian personnel, an annual budget of nearly $1 trillion, and alliances and partnerships around the world is a daily test with staggering consequences for the security of the American people and our global interests,” McConnell said Friday night. “Mr. Hegseth has failed, as yet, to demonstrate that he will pass this test.”

The veteran and former Fox News host has faced allegations of abusing alcohol, mismanaging nonprofit funds, and sexual assault, which he denies.

All Democratic senators voted against Hegseth. The Senate Armed Services Committee barely recommended his nomination Monday with a 14-13 vote.

Ranking member on Senate Foreign Relations committee Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Thursday that Hegseth’s “11th hour conversion” on the roles of women in the military and the importance of NATO “raises questions about what he really believes.”

“Any inconsistency in our commitment to support our allies and partners, to support democracy around the world, to support the international world order — that is going to be seen and exploited by our adversaries,” she said.

As Defense secretary, Hegseth has promised he will root out social justice initiatives and partisan politics in the military, focusing instead on merit-based recruiting, effective deterrence, and overall lethality.

“Thank you for your confidence Mr. President. Thank you for the tie-breaker Mr. Vice President. Thank you Senators for 50 votes,” Hegseth posted on X following the vote. “This is for the troops. For the warriors. For our country. America First. Every day. We will never back down.”

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Abbott Deploys Texas Military to Rio Grande Valley to Assist Trump Administration

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott surged additional Texas military resources to the Rio Grande Valley (RGV) to assist President Donald Trump with his border security efforts.

Abbott did so as removal operations are already underway in Trump’s first week in office after he issued a series of executive orders to secure the border, including sending 1,500 troops to Texas and California, The Center Square reported.

Abbott directed the Texas Military Department to deploy the Texas Tactical Border Force to the RGV to coordinate efforts with U.S. Border Patrol agents.

More than 400 troops are departing from military bases in Fort Worth and Houston Monday morning, as well as C-130s and Chinook helicopters, to join thousands of Texas National Guard soldiers already stationed at the Texas-Mexico border.

“Texas has a partner in the White House we can work with to secure the Texas-Mexico border," Abbott said. “For the past four years, Texas held the line against the Biden Administration’s border crisis and their refusal to protect Americans. Finally, we have a federal government working to end this crisis. I thank President Donald Trump for his decisive leadership on the southern border and look forward to working with him and his Administration to secure the border and make America safe again.”

Abbott first deployed the border force in May 2023 to the RGV and El Paso to support his border security mission, Operation Lone Star, The Center Square reported.

Under OLS, thousands of Texas National Guard soldiers and Texas Department of Public Safety troopers have been deployed to the Texas-Mexico border since March 2021. Abbott also received the support of 25 Republican governors, who also sent troops to Texas to participate in OLS.

“We have shifted troops to hotspots, added additional drone teams, and increased miles of barrier along the border. The dedication of these troops to the State of Texas is inspirational,” Texas Military Department Major General Thomas Suelzer said when the border force was first deployed in 2023. They included quick reaction forces comprised of military police units in El Paso and another to cover the region stretching from San Antonio to the Rio Grande Valley.

Last year, Texas Military Department efforts expanded after Texas built its first modern-day military base at the U.S. border in Eagle Pass, Texas, the only National Guard base along Texas’ border with Mexico, The Center Square reported.

Texas’ Forward Operating Base camp houses 1,800 troops with the ability to expand up to 2,300 if needed. Since then, military forces have been consolidated, enabling troops to expand barrier construction and other operations.

Since March 2021, when OLS was launched, more than 10,000 Texas National Guard troops and Texas Department of Public Safety troopers have been deployed to the Texas-Mexico border.

Through OLS, they’ve built more than 240 miles of border barriers, constructed 100 miles of border wall, installed and fortified 200 miles of concertina wire barriers, and installed marine buoy barriers, including additional barriers last week. Attempts by the Biden administration to prevent Texas’s construction of concertina wire and buoy barriers failed in court.

OLS officers alone have apprehended more than 530,000 illegal border crossers, repelled over 140,000 attempted illegal entries, made more than 50,000 criminal arrests, with more than 43,000 felony charges reported, and seized enough lethal doses of fentanyl to kill everyone in the U.S., Mexico and Canada combined, according to data from the governor’s office.

After Texas’ first Border Czar Mike Banks expanded OLS efforts, a 51% drop in federal border apprehensions was reported in one year in Texas, The Center Square exclusively reported.

Within that first year, as Texas resistance grew, illegal entries increased in Arizona, California and New Mexico, The Center Square exclusively reported.

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$55 Million in Improvements, Winterization for American Family Field

(The Center Square) – Nearly $55 million in spending was reportedly approved to winterize American Family Field in Milwaukee, with claims the taxpayer district funds will allow for winter events and concerts at the stadium.

The spending includes $25 million to winterize the stadium, meaning the improvements would allow for the seating bowl temperature to be 68 degrees even when the temperature outside is 10 below zero, according to WISN.

The Wisconsin Professional Baseball Park District Board also approved $10 million for social gathering spaces, $500,000 for roof repairs, $661,000 to build a sensory room and $500,000 to upgrade the umpire locker room for women umpires, WISN reported.

The issue with the spending and winterization is that stadium concert tours do not occur in the winter because artists do not put together tours during a time of year when only some stadiums and cities can be visited.

"The difference between an outdoor stadium and an indoor stadium is essentially zero in terms of events," economist Victor Matheson told The Center Square while discussing similar claims involving a roofed NFL stadium in Nashville. "The reason for that is that all the big tours all go out in the summer specifically so they can use all the outdoor stadiums in the country rather than the limited number of domed stadiums."

American Family Field has a capacity of nearly 42,000, which is larger than most concert venues that artists perform at to begin with.

Visit Milwaukee told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel late last year that winterizing the stadium could lead to the stadium hosting The NHL Winter Classic and the NCAA men's and women's basketball Final Four.

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Colombia Backs Down After Trump Tariff Threat

After President Donald Trump threatened tariffs and other punitive measures, Columbia backed down and agreed to accept its citizens who illegally immigrated to the U.S.

Trump on Sunday said the U.S. would impose tariffs on Colombia after the South American nation refused to allow a plane carrying illegal immigrants from the U.S. to land.

But soon after the threat, Colombian President Gustavo Petro conceded and agreed to allow deportation planes from the U.S. to land in the South American country.

"Based on this agreement, the fully drafted IEEPA tariffs and sanctions will be held in reserve, and not signed, unless Colombia fails to honor this agreement," a statement from the White House said. "The visa sanctions issued by the State Department, and enhanced inspections from Customs and Border Protection, will remain in effect until the first planeload of Colombian deportees is successfully returned."

Trump had said the U.S. would immediately impose 25% tariffs on all Colombian goods, but would increase that to 50% in a week, presumably if the country didn't change its position.

Trump and his new border czar, Tom Homan, vowed to round up foreign nationals in the U.S. illegally and deport them back to their home countries, with violent criminals the priority.

Trump also has threatened to use tariffs as a negotiating tactic against foreign nations that don't cooperate with the U.S.

Secure the Border

Republicans Push to Finish Southern Border Wall

Republican senators riding high on President Donald Trump’s illegal immigration crackdown are continuing to push forward on other border security measures, with two lawmakers introducing separate bills to fund and finish the southern border wall.

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., reintroduced last year’s WALL Act, which would allocate $25 billion to finish the stalled construction.

“The United States needs a completed border wall—it is just common sense to have a physical barrier in place to ensure only lawful entry into our country,” Britt said Thursday. “The WALL Act would ensure the completion of America’s border wall without raising taxes on U.S. citizens or increasing the national debt by a single penny.”

To accomplish this, Britt’s bill eliminates illegal immigrants’ eligibility for certain taxpayer-funded benefits, such as federal housing programs.

It would also impose fines on migrants illegally entering the country — up to $10,000 per offense — or on immigrants who overstay their visas, which Britt says will not only provide money for construction but will also help deter more crossings.

Britt was also the sponsor of the Laken Riley Act, soon to become law, which empowers law enforcement to detain criminal migrants for deportation.

One of the WALL Act’s cosponsors, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., introduced a border wall bill of his own recently.

Barrasso’s Build the Wall Act would establish a southwest wall construction fund under the Department of Homeland Security, using unspent federal aid from the coronavirus pandemic.

“Before the Biden administration’s disastrous border policies, we were well on our way to a secure and safe southern border. Now, every state is a border state and dangerous criminals and cartels are entering our communities,” Barrasso said. “This bill will allow us to use money we already have to finish the wall and protect our national security.”

Under the Biden administration, more than 14 million illegal border crossers were encountered, while nearly 15,000 migrants convicted of murder are still roaming loose in the U.S., as of July 2024.

DHS has already resumed implementing Trump’s Remain in Mexico policy, with the president deploying 1,500 troops to the southwest border to aid in migrant removal efforts.

wisconsin school bus driver

Republican Lawmakers Push for Higher Academic Standards for Schools

(The Center Square) – A pair of Wisconsin lawmakers are asking the state to reverse the process of lowering school standards.

State Sen. John Jager, R-Watertown, and Rep. Bob Wittke, R-Caledonia, introduced legislation that would reset the K-12 school report card standards of 2019-20, makes grades 3-8 standards the same as those set by the National Assessment of Education Progress and would make the high school testing standards the same as those from 2021-22.

“We need to reinstate our high academic standards and strive for excellence on behalf of the students and families we serve.” Jagler said in a statement. “These changes were made behind closed doors in advance and revealed only when the test scores were announced. Not surprisingly, the massive uptick in artificial performance gains was confusing at best and misleading at worst.”

Jagler is the Chair of the Senate Committee on Education while Wittke was on the Assembly Education Committee for three terms.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty endorsed the legislation, pointing out where the state lowered school report card cut points in 2020-21, changed the labels on those in 2023-24 and lowered the cut points again that year as well.

“The bill represents a critical step in restoring the ability of parents, policymakers, and taxpayers to assess how well Wisconsin’s schools are doing across the public, charter, and private voucher sectors,” WILL Research Director Will Flanders said. “Make no mistake, since 2020, DPI has essentially changed the definition of success to mislead the public about stagnating academic performance in Wisconsin schools.”

Wittke said that the current system ranks 94% of schools as meeting expectations or above that, making it difficult to know which schools need to improve.

“It’s troubling to me that changing testing protocols is the path the state superintendent has chosen in response to students poor reading and math performance,” Wittke said. “Let’s set the bar as established by the National Assessment of Education Progress and make a better effort to understand student needs for academic improvement.”

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Trump Tells Federal Agencies to Root Out Disguised DEI Programs

President Donald Trump has called on federal agencies to get rid of diversity, equity and inclusion programs and warned employees to report efforts to disguise such programs or face consequences.

The warning came after Trump issued an executive order ending all diversity, equity and inclusion programs in the federal government earlier this week saying they discriminate against certain groups of people and waste money. Trump's order gave the job to the Office of Management and Budget, the Office of Personnel Management and the Department of Justice.

OPM drafted a letter for federal agencies to send to employees notifying them of the changes. The letter warned about efforts to get around the executive order.

"We are aware of efforts by some in government to disguise these programs by using coded or imprecise language," it states. "If you are aware of a change in any contract description or personnel position description since November 5, 2024 to obscure the connection between the contract and DEIA or similar ideologies, please report all facts and circumstances to [email protected] within 10 days.

"Failure to report such activities after the 10-day period could result in 'adverse consequences,'" it notes.

The draft letter further notes that "these programs divided Americans by race, wasted taxpayer dollars, and resulted in shameful discrimination."

Workers have since reported getting emails similar to the draft letter from federal agencies.

Trump also ordered all federal staff working on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion activities immediately be put on paid leave. That announcement came via a memo from the OPM, essentially the federal government’s human resources department. According to the memo, all DEI offices will be closed, and federal agency leaders have until the end of the month to submit plans on how they will close those offices. All online websites and social media accounts must be removed as well, according to the memo.

The American Federation of Government Employees, a union that represents 800,000 federal employees, called Trump's order an excuse for "firing civil servants."

"Ultimately, these attacks on DEIA are just a smokescreen for firing civil servants, undermining the apolitical civil service, and turning the federal government into an army of yes-men loyal only to the president, not the Constitution," AFGE National President Everett Kelley said in a statement.

Kelley said Trump's efforts would erode the government's merit-based approach to hiring.

"Undoing these programs is just another way for President Trump to undermine the merit-based civil service and turn federal hiring and firing decisions into loyalty tests," Kelley said. "Our nation's military leaders have said that eliminating diversity, equity, and inclusion programs within the Defense Department risks undermining military readiness."

On Thursday, Trump told world leaders that he was making America a "merit-based country" during a speech by satellite to the 2025 meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

DEI programs were designed to boost minority participation in the federal workforce. Such policies have come under fire from Republicans, including Trump and others.

The Asian American Coalition for Education applauded Trump's efforts.

"Affirmative action and woke DEI programs are racism in disguise. President Trump's executive orders rescinding affirmative action and banning DEI programs are a major milestone in American civil rights progress and a critical step towards building a color-blind society," Yukong Mike Zhao, the president of AACE, said. "AACE urges the U.S. Congress to enact legislation that permanently outlaws all aspects of affirmative action and DEI programs in America."

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War on DEI: Full Scale Battle Kicks Off as Trump Takes Office

Diversity, equity and inclusion polices are retreating nationwide, from the federal government to corporations around the country.

President Donald Trump immediately upon taking office began rooting out diversity, equity and inclusion positions within the federal government by ending programs and removing DEI staff.

Meanwhile, the pressure is also ramping up against private companies to stop embracing DEI.

Several major companies have announced they are cutting back or ending their DEI programs, including Meta, Walmart and McDonalds.

While companies are not cutting as aggressively as Trump, they are at least publicly pulling back from DEI goals and language.

Target reportedly sent out a memo this week to that end.

“Many years of data, insights, listening and learning have been shaping this next chapter in our strategy,” the memo said. “And as a retailer that serves millions of consumers every day, we understand the importance of staying in step with the evolving external landscape, now and in the future – all in service of driving Target’s growth and winning together.”

Costco made headlines for pushing back on the trend of Trump and others, doubling down on their DEI work after shareholders voted nearly unanimously this week to keep the DEI policies in place.

Jeff Raike, who has served on Costco’s board since 2008, encouraged businesses to "maximize DEI efforts" in a column published earlier this month by Forbes. Raike blamed “opportunistic politicians” for trying to “frighten and divide” the nation on the issue.

Costco's board last week, ahead of the shareholder vote, urged investors in the company to reject calls to scale back DEI policies in the company.

"Our success at Costco Wholesale has been built on service to our critical stakeholders: employees, members, and suppliers. Our efforts around diversity, equity and inclusion follow our code of ethics: For our employees, these efforts are built around inclusion – having all of our employees feel valued and respected," the board wrote, according to Fox Business.

Conservative activist Robbie Starbuck, whose public campaigns against companies such as Lowe's, Ford, Molson Coors and others, led them to scale back DEI initiatives, said Costco should do the same or face consequences.

“I suggest conservative consumers find other places to spend their money if Costco is so dedicated to doubling down on DEI," Starbuck wrote on X. "If they’re smart, Costco will do right by their shareholders and change before we turn our attention to them.”

The pressure on private companies is increasing. Ten attorneys general sent a letter now putting pressure on the private sector to end the DEI practices.

The letter went to Bank of America, BlackRock, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley and asked for an accounting of their DEI practices, including whether they broke the law.

"There is, however, mounting concern that political objectives have, in some cases, influenced your decision-making at the expense of your statutory and contractual obligations,” reads the letter, which was signed by the attorneys general of Alabama, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, Nebraska, South Carolina, Texas, Utah and Virginia.

“Specifically, you appear to have embraced race- and sex-based quotas and to have made business and investment decisions based not on maximizing shareholder and asset value, but in the furtherance of political agendas."

The anti-DEI effort has been bolstered by a 2023 Supreme Court ruling against affirmative action policies on college campuses.

DEI can lead to hiring or promotion discrimination against white Americans, critics argue. For instance, internal documents at the Pentagon showed discrimination against white Americans for promotions.

“Banks and financial institutions are finally starting to realize that the ESG and DEI policies pushed by radical activist groups are bad for consumers and potentially violate the law,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement. “Unlawful race- and sex-based quotas and so-called ‘green energy’ schemes will not be allowed to stand and I will continue to urge these organizations to uphold the legal obligations they owe to consumers and investors. Any institution found to be violating the law will be held accountable.”

Even before Trump took office, DEI’s corporate decline had begun with companies like Tractor Supply, John Deere and Amazon cutting back DEI programs. Some of those cuts, though, began after Trump won the election in November.

Critics say DEI has become a catch-all term for every liberal and progressive doctrine around race and gender. Until this week, those ideas were backed with federal funding across every federal agency and most of the largest corporations in the U.S.

Now, however, the conservative resistance to DEI has new power and focus on rooting out the DEI programs, which teach everything from white privilege to the litany of gender pronouns to the inherent racism of all white people and the U.S. as a whole.

Trump’s executive actions this week immediately put all DEI federal employees on paid leave with plans to fire all of them in the coming weeks. It also required essentially an audit of all federal DEI activities and DEI contractors, ceasing funding for them as well.

Trump sent a memo to the federal agencies later in the week saying he has seen initial reports that some federal employees are seeking to hide DEI efforts by rebranding or changing the language they are using.

Now, many companies are following suit.

Whether this is a new reality or a temporary setback for DEI remains to be seen.

"Corporate leaders who embrace discriminatory D.E.I. practices should be afraid, but they shouldn’t be confused,” said GianCarlo Canaparo, a legal expert at the conservative Heritage Foundation. “Trump’s order is clear: no organization doing business with the federal government may use discriminatory D.E.I. practices and those that do are subject to non-payment on their federal contracts, federal enforcement, and qui tam suits.

“And any corporation, nonprofit, university, or association subject to federal regulation that engages in D.E.I. discrimination will be identified, publicized, investigated, and punished according to the nation's colorblind civil rights laws,” he added.

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