Wednesday, July 2, 2025

What did Donald Trump do today?

He missed a trillion-dollar cut in his own budget bill and had to be told what was in it.

Trump's budget bill is up for debate in the House, where its immediate future is uncertain. Mostly a vehicle for making Trump's 2017 tax cuts permanent at any cost, it contains any number of provisions that are likely to be disastrous both for Republicans seeking re-election and Americans as a whole. Among the most potentially devastating is a trillion-dollar cut to Medicaid, which more than 71 million Americans use quite literally from cradle to grave: it pays for 41.5% of hospital births, and it covers hospice care for the terminally ill

Many Americans who rely on Medicaid don't even know that they do, because it is rebranded in the states: BadgerCare in Wisconsin, STAR+PLUS in Texas, Medical Assistance in Pennsylvania, and so forth. Today, it seemed that Trump wasn't exactly clear on what Medicaid was either, as he had to be told by Congressional Republicans that his bill does indeed severely impact it. As a report in NOTUS on Trump's meeting with wavering House members today put it:

But Trump still doesn’t seem to have a firm grasp about what his signature legislative achievement does. According to three sources with direct knowledge of the comments, the president told Republicans at this meeting that there are three things Congress shouldn’t touch if they want to win elections: Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.

“But we’re touching Medicaid in this bill,” one member responded to Trump, according to the three sources.

In other words: Trump went to reassure House members that they could vote for his bill because it wouldn't touch the politically dangerous subject of Medicaid, and had to be informed by his own party's Congressional delegation that his bill grabs it with both hands.

This is not the first time that Trump has made this claim; it's a standard talking point for him and one his staff obediently repeated when asked for comment today. For the most part, the media has treated it as a standard Trump obfuscation, noting its falsehood without directly calling Trump a liar.

Today's report was the first strong indication that Trump may have genuinely believed what was on his cue cards, or at least thought there was some truth to it, and that he somehow missed the trillion-dollar cut to Americans' health care budget with his name on it.

Why does this matter?

  • A president who can't keep track of a TRILLION dollars in urgently-needed health care spending isn't fit for office. 
  • Neither is one who can't be bothered about it. 
  • Neither is one who knew but forgot. 
  • Neither is one who just lies about it.

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

What did Donald Trump do today?

He once again called for his political enemies to be jailed or deported for being his political enemies. 

Trump visited a hastily built internment camp in the Florida Everglades today, and used the opportunity to threaten to jail or deport at least three of his imagined political enemies by name—all of whom are American citizens.

Zohran Mamdani. The Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York City was born in Uganda and became an American citizen in 2018, though he has lived in the United States since he was seven. His shocking come-from-behind victory in the primary over Andrew Cuomo has rattled Trump and other Republicans, who were hoping for a contest between the scandal-plagued Cuomo and Eric Adams, the incumbent. Adams is running as an independent after Trump tried to use Biden-era corruption charges against him as blackmail, and succeeded in getting Adams to align with his immigration policies.

Asked about Mamdani, Trump called him a "communist" and then blurted out, "We'll have to arrest him," adding that "many people" were saying he was not really a citizen. (That accusation may sound slightly familiar coming from Trump, who routinely got confused on the campaign trail in 2024 as to whether it was Joe Biden or Barack Obama who was president at the time.)

Mamdani released a statement later in the day:

The President of the United States just threatened to have me arrested, stripped of my citizenship, put in a detention camp and deported. Not because I have broken any law but because I will refuse to let ICE terrorize our city.His statements don’t just represent an attack on our democracy but an attempt to send a message to every New Yorker who refuses to hide in the shadows: if you speak up, they will come for you. We will not accept this intimidation.That Trump included praise for Eric Adams in his authoritarian threats is unsurprising, but highlights the urgency of bringing an end to this Mayor’s time in City Hall. At the very moment when MAGA Republicans are attempting to destroy the social safety net, kick millions of New Yorkers off of healthcare and enrich their billionaire donors at the expense of working families, it is a scandal that Eric Adams echoes this President’s division, distraction and hate. Voters will resoundingly reject it in November. 

Alejandro Mayorkas. During his appearances today, Trump took questions exclusively from media outlets within his political comfort zone. Even so, he appeared unsure and unready when a reporter from the right-wing website Blaze asked about Alejandro Mayorkas, the Secretary of Homeland Security under President Biden. The Blaze staffer, Julio Rosas, had to guide Trump to an understanding of who he was talking about. Even then, Trump interrupted himself for hints from his own staff sitting nearby, and could only speak in general terms about how Mayorkas was "bad." Reminded that Mayorkas had been impeached, he called it "fake."

Mayorkas' 2024 impeachment was not "fake" in the sense that it happened, but even the Republican-controlled House that eventually mustered up the votes for it seemed embarrassed by it. The Senate dismissed the impeachment without a trial. Notably, the "charge" was dereliction of duty over a supposed crisis in immigration, but the Biden administration oversaw more removals in 2024 than Trump is on pace to in 2025. (Trump has not called for his own Homeland Security's impeachment, yet.)

Elon Musk. Friendly media also goaded Trump to attack his political patron, Elon Musk, who has come out strongly against Trump's budget bill. A grinning Trump did recognize Musk's name and said he'd "have to take a look" at whether Musk could keep his citizenship. He proceeded to muse out loud that Musk might somehow fall victim to the same government apparatus he'd helped to create to root out Trump's other enemies.

Unlike Mayorkas and Mamdani, there actually would—technically—be a basis in existing American law to denaturalize and deport Musk. As his own brother Kimbal has publicly acknowledged, both Musk siblings worked illegally in the United States after overstaying their student visas, then presumably lied about it during the naturalization process.

This denaturalization process is virtually never used. Musk is one of a number of people in Trump's inner circle who would technically be at risk. Others include both of Trump's foreign-born wives. Melania Trump worked illegally as a model before being naturalized, and then used her own citizenship to sponsor her parents, who—as elderly and unemployed dependents—Trump had to use his authority as President to cheat the rules for anyway. (In other circumstances, Trump and other nativists refer to this as "chain migration.") The late Ivana Trump broke Czechoslovakian law by entering into a sham marriage with her first husband in order to gain entry into the United States, which would also have made her citizenship theoretically revocable.

Trump, a convicted felon 34 times over himself, is himself the descendant of people who dodged and cheated immigration laws, but his own citizenship is secure by virtue of being born on American soil, unless he gets his way and changes that.

Why does this matter?

  • Making your political enemies "unpersons" is what happens in dictatorships, not democracies. 
  • No matter how much he wants it to be, it's not a crime to be someone Donald Trump doesn't like.  
  • Presidents who don't want to be too closely associated with Nazis shouldn't talk about stripping citizens of their rights while touring a brand new concentration camp.