Monday, February 17, 2025

How Trump’s 2017 tax cuts made income inequality worse — and especially hurt Black Americans


REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
 U.S. President Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson shake hands during a House Republican members conference meeting in Trump National Doral resort, in Miami, Florida, U.S. January 27, 2025.
February 16, 2025

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a set of tax cuts Donald Trump signed into law during his first term as president, expired on Dec. 31, 2024. As Trump and Republicans prepare to negotiate new tax cuts in 2025, it’s worth gleaning lessons from the president-elect’s first set of cuts.


The 2017 cuts were the most extensive revision to the Internal Revenue Code since the Ronald Reagan administration. The changes it imposed range from the tax that corporations pay on their foreign income to limits on the deductions individuals can take for their state and local tax payments.

Trump promised middle-class benefits at the time, but in practice more than 80% of the cuts went to corporations, tax partnerships and high-net-worth individuals. The cost to the U.S. deficit was huge − a total increase of US$1.9 trillion from 2018 to 2028, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office. The tax advantage to the middle class was small.

Advantages for Black Americans were smaller still. As a scholar of race and U.S. income taxation, I have analyzed the impact of Trump’s tax cuts. I found that the law has disadvantaged middle-income, low-income and Black taxpayers in several ways.
Cuts worsened disparities

These results are not new. They were present nearly 30 years ago when my colleague William Whitford and I used U.S. Census Bureau data to show that Black taxpayers paid more federal taxes than white taxpayers with the same income. In large part that’s because the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow and structural racism keeps Black people from owning homes.

The federal income tax is full of advantages for home ownership that many Black taxpayers are unable to reach. These benefits include the ability to deduct home mortgage interest and local property taxes, and the right to avoid taxes on up to $500,000 of profit on the sale of a home.

It’s harder for middle-class Black people to get a mortgage than it is for low-income white people. This is true even when Black Americans with high credit scores are compared with white Americans with low credit scores.

When Black people do get mortgages, they are charged higher rates than their white counterparts

.
It’s harder for middle-class Black people to get a mortgage than it is for low-income white people
.MoMo Productions/Getty Images

Trump did not create these problems. But instead of closing these income and race disparities, his 2017 tax cuts made them worse.

Black taxpayers paid higher taxes than white taxpayers who matched them in income, employment, marriage and other significant factors.
Broken promises, broken trust

Fairness is an article of faith in American tax policy. A fair tax structure means that those earning similar incomes should pay similar taxes and stipulates that taxes should not increase income or wealth disparities.

Trump’s tax cuts contradict both principles.

Proponents of Trump’s cuts argued the corporate rate cut would trickle down to all Americans. This is a foundational belief of “supply side” economics, a philosophy that President Ronald Reagan made popular in the 1980s.

From the Reagan administration on, every tax cut for the rich has skewed to the wealthy.

Just like prior “trickle down” plans, Trump’s corporate tax cuts did not produce higher wages or increased household income. Instead, corporations used their extra cash to pay dividends to their shareholders and bonuses to their executives.

Over that same period, the bottom 90% of wage earners saw no gains in their real wages. Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO, a labor group, estimates that 51% of the corporate tax cuts went to business owners and 10% went to the top five highest-paid senior executives in each company. Fully 38% went to the top 10% of wage earners.

In other words, the income gap between wealthy Americans and everyone else has gotten much wider under Trump’s tax regime.

Stock market inequality

Trump’s tax cuts also increased income and wealth disparities by race because those corporate tax savings have gone primarily to wealthy shareholders rather than spreading throughout the population.

The reasons are simple. In the U.S., shareholders are mostly corporations, pension funds and wealthy individuals. And wealthy people in the U.S. are almost invariably white.

Sixty-six percent of white families own stocks, while less than 40% of Black families and less than 30% of Hispanic families do. Even when comparing Black and white families with the same income, the race gap in stock ownership remains.

These disparities stem from the same historical disadvantages that result in lower Black homeownership rates. Until the Civil War, virtually no Black person could own property or enter into a contract. After the Civil War, Black codes – laws that specifically controlled and oppressed Black people – forced free Black Americans to work as farmers or servants.

State prohibitions on Black people owning property, and public and private theft of Black-owned land, kept Black Americans from accumulating wealth.


A woman protests outside Trump Tower over the Trump administration’s proposed tax cut on Nov. 30, 2017, in New York City.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images


Health care hit


That said, the Trump tax cuts hurt low-income taxpayers of all races.

One way they did so was by abolishing the individual mandate requiring all Americans to have basic health insurance. The Affordable Care Act, passed under President Barack Obama, launched new, government-subsidized health plans and penalized people for not having health insurance.

Department of the Treasury data shows almost 50 million Americans were covered by the Affordable Care Act since 2014. After the individual mandate was revoked, between 3 million and 13 million fewer people purchased health insurance in 2020.

Ending the mandate triggered a large drop in health insurance coverage, and research shows it was primarily lower-income people who stopped buying subsidized insurance from the Obamacare exchanges. These are the same people who are the most vulnerable to financial disaster from unpaid medical bills.

Going without insurance hurt all low-income Americans. But studies suggest the drop in Black Americans’ coverage under Trump’s plan outpaced that of white Americans. The rate of uninsured Black Americans rose from 10.7% in 2016 to 11.5% in 2018, following the mandate’s repeal.
The consumer price index conundrum

The Trump tax cuts also altered how the Internal Revenue Service calculates inflation adjustments for over 60 different provisions. These include the earned income tax credit and the child tax credit – both of which provide cash to low-wage workers – and the wages that must pay Social Security taxes.

Previously, the IRS used the consumer price index for urban consumers, which tracks rising prices by comparing the cost of the same goods as they rise or fall, to calculate inflation. The government then used that inflation number to adjust Social Security payments and earned income tax credit eligibility. It used the same figure to set the amount of income that is taxed at a given rate.

The Trump tax cuts ordered the IRS to calculate inflation adjustments using the chained consumer price index for urban consumers instead.

The difference between these two indexes is that the second one assumes people substitute cheaper goods as prices rise. For example, the chained consumer price index assumes shoppers will buy pork instead of beef if beef prices go up, easing the impact of inflation on a family’s overall grocery prices.

The IRS makes smaller inflation adjustments based on that assumption. But low-income neighborhoods have less access to the kind of budget-friendly options envisioned by the chained consumer price index.

And since even middle-class Black people are more likely than poor white people to live in low-income neighborhoods, Black taxpayers have been hit harder by rising prices.

What cost $1 in 2018 now costs $1.26. That’s a painful hike that Black families are less able to avoid.

The expiration of the Trump tax cuts gives the GOP-led Congress the opportunity to undertake a thorough reevaluation of their effects. By prioritizing policies that address the well-known disparities exacerbated by these recent tax changes, lawmakers can work toward a fairer tax system that helps all Americans.

Beverly Moran, Professor Emerita of Law, Vanderbilt University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the
original article.
How Dems are playing into the racists' hands — and setting this country back 7 decades

D. Earl Stephens
February 14, 2025 
RAW STORY

REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

The 2024 election that might end up finishing off the United States of America for good was fueled at its ugly core by racism, and dangerous, centuries-old white grievance.

And if you are allowing yourself to be gaslighted by our mainstream media and too many Democratic politicians into thinking it wasn't, well, you are sliding toward being a major part of the problem. Worse, you are playing right into a career racist’s little hands, as he tries to beat us into a full surrender on this important issue.

It has always been about race, because the very first thing Donald Trump did when he began loudly hinting at a run for the presidency was make it about race.


From roughly 2011 until 2016 the America-attacking Trump ignited and reignited the reprehensible “birther” conspiracy seemingly after every one of his six meals a day. His relentless drumbeat that Barack Obama was not a U.S. citizen, and that he had “extremely credible sources” to verify it, set a fire inside the cold hearts of millions of white Americans who just couldn’t stomach the notion of a Black man getting two terms in our nation’s highest office.

Trump banged his drum, and too damn many white people danced with glee.

NOW READ: Ex-Republican blasts 'irresponsible' Trump voters — and says they should be held accountable

By 2016, the two-ton liar made race the foundation of his campaign, and his racist base absolutely loved him for it. MAGA was born, and the death of civil rights was their cold-blooded target.

And we all know there’s not a single thing this lonely, empty man won’t do for love ...

It has always been about race, because the first thing Trump did when he once again assumed his crooked position in our White House three weeks ago was make it about race ...

Within hours of ascending to his padded throne, Trump resumed his ugly attack on the diversity, equity and inclusion that truly helps keep our diverse country in the vicinity of great. He even appointed an apartheid-loving billionaire to crack his bloody whip to beat the issue to death inside our government that is supposed to serve all the people.

And when a plane tragically collided with a helicopter in his new hometown just nine days after his inauguration? Well, DEI was to blame for that, too.

The 2024 election was ALL about race, and I am way past sick and fucking tired of people telling me, a 65-year-old white man, that MAGA isn’t using race to beat us like a club and drag us by our hair back to the 1950s. The only person who is more of an expert on this sickening issue than me, and what lies in the cold, dead hearts of too many white people in this country, is a 66-year-old white man ...


Unfortunately, I know what makes these broken people tick.

I bet you I have read 129 different things in the media since November’s disastrous election warning liberals like myself not to misread this moment. We’ve been scolded not to blame racism for the hell that overcame us three months ago, and that there were many other factors besides racism to explain Trump’s win.

We’ve been rapped across the knuckles and told to never campaign on identity politics again. It’s a losing issue.

Except that’s exactly what Trump ran on. And if racism played no part in the outcome of the 2024 campaign, then why in the hell did the racist win?

Why did the man, who in addition to the sickening birther conspiracy, tell us he “saw fine people on both sides” of a KKK rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, win?

Why did the man, who has discriminated against Black people his entire damn professional life, win?

Why did the man, who took out full-page newspaper ads, and called for New York state to reinstate the death penalty against five innocent Black and Latino teenagers who were set to stand trial for allegedly beating and raping a white woman in Central Park, win?

Why did the man, who has regularly used the terms “animal” and “rabid” to describe Black district attorneys, win?

Look, I could go on for hours citing examples of this man’s overt racism, but I’d rather pose a quick question that doesn’t get asked near enough:


Why didn’t any or all of these things disqualify this monster from running for our nations’s highest office?

Read that again and sit with it for a bit...

Are we to believe this is OK and normal, and we just move on?

Is this the example we want to set for our children, who are born into this quaking world bright-eyed and innocent, but only later taught to judge and oppress?


Trump’s lifelong racist fetish is easily his most endearing trait to his tongue-dragging cult. It fuels them.

The fact is, he was a complete failure as a president the first time around. He didn’t pass a single piece of meaningful legislation to help Americans, just padded the bottomless pockets of the white and wealthy, and drove Obama’s economy off a cliff.

He was such a failure that by the end of his reign of terror, Americans were dropping like flies in the midst of a pandemic that he refused to take any responsibility for. No other country in the world had death rates as high as America.


And in the middle of all this sick and dying, he capped off his failed first term by launching the most violent internal attack on America since the Civil War.

He belongs in jail, because if any person of color had pulled that bit of treason, they’d be locked away forever. You know I’m right about that …

Racism has been at the core of Republican politics for more than one hundred years, but the party has never had such a natural talent like Trump to exploit it so eagerly.


White people are having a real time of it right now in this mess of a country. In fact, they are having a real time of it other places, too, like France, Germany and England, where white nationalism is on the rise.

Racism is now a global pandemic, and the only way to cure it is to call it out wherever and whenever you see it, and stomp it out — not excuse it, or warn us away from even bringing it up.

That is called submission, and submission is exactly what Trump and his hateful followers in Congress want.

At this terrible moment in American history, an orange master has finally unchained his white, knuckle-dragging supporters to be just as despicable as they want to be.

He has replaced their brakes with an accelerator. Instead of asking them to hold their racist tongues, he has handed them a megaphone.

I was gobsmacked Monday when one of my “friends” on Facebook, who I once knew as something approaching a dear friend some 50 years ago, started an openly racist thread complaining about the Super Bowl’s halftime show. It was amazing how many people jumped both feet first into the vile mud she was slinging. At one point she raged, “THERE WERE NO WHITE PEOPLE IN THE SHOW!!!!”

To which I responded: “So inclusion really does matter to you …”


I reckon that will blessedly be the last we ever hear of other, because she blocked me 22 seconds later. I’m telling you for a fact, race motivates this sick woman like nothing else. And don’t get her started on the “free” lunches that are provided to our hungry kids in their schools …

By avoiding the subject of race, and this revolting attack on DEI initiatives that make our country smarter and stronger, we are playing right into the hands of the racists, and setting this country back seven decades.

We’ve never needed to fight harder and with more heart on this vital issue than ever before.

The time to get into some good and necessary trouble is NOW, people.

D. Earl Stephens is the author of “Toxic Tales: A Caustic Collection of Donald J. Trump’s Very Important Letters” and finished up a 30-year career in journalism as the Managing Editor of Stars and Stripes. You can find all his work here, and follow him on Bluesky here.
J.D. Vance draws inspiration from a 19th-century pro-slavery tyrant

Sabrina Haake
February 16, 2025 

REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

In 1828, gold was found in the Appalacian Mountains of Georgia on land that belonged to the Cherokee Nation. As word of the gold spread, miners and settlers pushed into the area. The State of Georgia wanted to regulate, permit and benefit from the commerce, but the land belonged to the Cherokee under treaty with the federal government. As the state and miners continued to encroach, the Cherokee Nation refused to cede more land and sought an injunction that eventually reached the Supreme Court.

In 1832, Chief Justice John Marshall infuriated sitting president Andrew Jackson by declaring that the State of Georgia had no right to encroach on Cherokee lands, because the land belonged to the Cherokee under the terms of a federal treaty. Ignoring the Supreme Court’s ruling, a furious President Jackson famously responded: “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.”

President Jackson, a champion of slavery and states’ rights, ignored the Supreme Court’s ruling, and instead endorsed the Trail of Tears, a forced march to Oklahoma during which thousands of Cherokee starved and froze to death. It was among the most shameful episodes of ethnic genocide in American history.

In 2021, two years before he became a US Senator, Vice President JD Vance embraced the spirit of Andrew Jackson. Vance said that when Trump returned to office, he should “Fire every single… civil servant… (and) replace them with our people. When the courts stop you, stand before the country like Andrew Jackson did and say: The chief justice has made his ruling. Now let him enforce it.”

JD Vance is protecting Trump’s attacks against the federal government

His election as Vice President has not tempered Vance’s lust for power; if anything, it’s become worse. The Trump administration is closing entire federal agencies without understanding what services they provide or how they operate. Tech bros like to move fast and break things, but that’s not how government works, nor should it.

The federal government exists to serve the American people, not to turn a profit. When agencies are shuttered, Trump/Musk/Vance can brag on State TV about billions in “immediate savings,” but they have no idea what the downstream costs will be. How will closing USAID increase starvation and, thereby, radicalization and migration that will eventually visit our shores? When NIH research is shuttered, what will the resurgence of AIDs, polio, or epidemic variants cost in terms of human suffering and commerce? When FEMA or the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is closed, who will forecast deadly weather events and who will help the stricken people?

These are questions outside the bandwidth of an impatient Ketamine addict and a low-impulse control President. Vance, in contrast, possesses the intellectual capacity but is using it to weild unchecked authority and upend the balance of power.

Vance goads federal judges


After illegally firing federal employees based on political purity tests, including FBI agents, inspectors general, DOJ lawyers and commissioners, then giving Musk’s teenagers access to federal payment systems, Trump issued a spending freeze to retroactively suspend Congressionally created programs. A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order against the freeze, which Trump loyalists both disregarded and attacked.

Last week, Vance blasted the judiciary writ large and suggested judges lack jurisdiction over Trump's ‘legitimate power,’ clearly gaslighting the right into believing that Trump’s actions are “legitimate.” Vance went even further, offering these examples:

“If a judge tried to tell a general how to conduct a military operation, that would be illegal. If a judge tried to command the attorney general in how to use her discretion as a prosecutor, that’s also illegal.”


Vance, who attended Yale Law School and presumably took ConLaw 101, knows better. Using Vance’s examples, if Trump orders the military to shoot peaceful American protesters in the head, something Trump’s falling down drunk Secretary of Defense would likely relish, Vance says the Courts are powerless to stop him. If the attorney general decided to imprison every Democrat in the nation, something Kash-enemies-list-Patel would enjoy, Vance says again that there’s nothing the courts can do.

Vance is wrong, and he knows he’s wrong.

JD Vance deliberately skews the separation of powers


Contrary to Vance’s claim, centuries of court cases establish the role of the courts in checking overreach by the executive branch. In 1952, inYoungstown Sheet & Tubing Company v. Sawyer, President Truman issued an executive order directing the Secretary of Commerce to take control of the nation's steel mills to avoid an expected United Steelworkers strike. The consequences to the nation’s economy promised to be devastating, so the federal government had a demonstrated, vital interest in blocking the strike. In a 6-3 ruling, however, the Supreme Court ruled held that a president lacks that authority, clarifying that “the President's power to see that the laws are faithfully executed refutes the idea that he is to be a lawmaker.”

Trump/Musk/Vance, by the wholesale elimination of federal agencies created by Congress, are trying to be lawmakers. Vance, claiming the courts can’t stop them, is trying also to usurp the role of the Judiciary.

The Chief Justice has clearly heard Vance denounce the court’s authority. In his traditional, year-end report on the federal judiciary, Roberts remarked that judicial independence “is undermined unless the other branches [of government] are firm in their responsibility to enforce the court’s decrees… Within the past few years … elected officials from across the political spectrum have raised the specter of open disregard for federal court rulings. These dangerous suggestions, however sporadic, must be soundly rejected.”

Courts are pushing back against Trump/Musk/Vance’s lawlessness

Last week, Reagan-appointed U.S. District Judge John Coughenour issued a stark warning of his own, accusing Trump of trampling on the Constitution for personal gain. “It has become ever more apparent that, to our president, the rule of law is but an impediment to his policy goals. The rule of law is, according to him, something to navigate around or simply ignore, whether that be for political or personal gain.”

In a separate case demonstrating Trump’s defiance of a judicial order, plaintiffs alerted a federal court that Musk is still putting employees of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) on administrative leave, despite the judicial Order instructing the opposite.

As Trump/Musk/Vance fight to cancel money that has already been legislated by Congress to pay for essential services including Medicaid, school lunches, and low-income housing subsidies, the courts will block them. Fourteen states have already challenged Trump’s unchecked power. Whether Trump follows the ultimate rulings, or follows Vance and Andrew Jackson’s advice to ignore them, will determine whether we still have a functioning democracy.

Sabrina Haake is a columnist and 25 year litigator specializing in 1st and 14th Amendment defense. Her Substack, the Haake Take, is free.
Trump official dismantling USAID had secret foreign meetings with Christian nationalists

ProPublica
February 16, 2025 


FILE PHOTO: People hold placards outside the USAID building, after billionaire Elon Musk, who is heading U.S. President Donald Trump's drive to shrink the federal government, said work is underway to shut down the U.S. foreign aid agency USAID, in Washington, U.S., February 3, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura/File Photo

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.


Before Peter Marocco was selected to dismantle America’s entire foreign aid sector on behalf of President Donald Trump, he was an official with the State Department on a diplomatic mission.

In 2018, during Trump’s first term, Marocco was a senior political appointee tasked with promoting stability in areas with armed conflict. That summer, he made a two-week trip to the Balkans, visiting several Eastern European countries in what was advertised as an effort to “counter violent extremism” and “strengthen inter-religious dialogue.”

At the time, the U.S. was trying to maintain a fragile peace agreement it had helped broker two decades earlier in the region. The Balkans are still living in the shadows of the Bosnian war, a 1990s conflict between the region’s disparate ethno-religious groups that led to the deaths of an estimated 100,000 people, including thousands of Muslim civilians who were massacred by Serb forces.

To avoid compromising such delicate international relations, American diplomatic work is carefully prescribed, even down to the people U.S. officials meet — and those they should avoid, like politicians under Treasury Department sanctions for corruption or war crimes.

On a 2018 visit to the Balkans, Marocco secretly met with officials whom the American government had determined were off-limits without the highest levels of approval: ethnonationalist Bosnian Serb separatist leaders. Those politicians had been working for years to defy their nation’s constitution and undermine the American-backed peace deal in an effort to promote a Christian Bosnian Serb state. ProPublica pieced the episode together from interviews with seven current and former U.S. officials.

Among those in attendance was Milorad Dodik, according to one of the officials. The leader of a political region within the broader nation, Dodik was at the time under U.S. sanctions by the Trump administration for actively obstructing American efforts to prevent more bloodshed. (The officials interviewed for this article requested anonymity for fear of retaliation from the administration.)

Dodik has since called himself “pro-Russian, anti-Western and anti-American” in a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin and is currently under new sanctions for corruption charges. He has also vowed to tear the country apart rather than allow the U.S. to unify it.

Maureen Cormack, then the American ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina, discovered the meeting had taken place and confronted Marocco in the embassy at the end of his visit. Marocco initially demurred, an official said, before finally acknowledging the gathering. Cormack was furious, issuing a sharp rebuke, the official said. Cormack didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment.

Marocco left the country soon after. A year later, he was no longer working at the State Department.

What he had discussed with the Bosnian separatists is not clear. But the meeting itself provided legitimacy to far-right politicians pushing for a Christian state and undermined U.S. foreign policy, experts and officials said.

“He reinforced a whole political trajectory that is antithetical to what the U.S. is trying to do,” one U.S. official told ProPublica, “which is supporting a peace agreement.”

After the State Department, the Trump administration sent Marocco to a senior post at the U.S. Agency for International Development, where he attempted to delay or halt dozens of programs — including those that benefited Bosnia and Herzegovina’s unified government — and reinvent the agency to better align with his version of U.S. foreign policy. That agenda, former colleagues told ProPublica, was overtly militaristic and Christian nationalist. The complaints about Marocco alarmed agency leaders so much that they significantly curtailed his duties in the waning months of the administration.

Marocco’s turbulent tenure during the last Trump administration sheds light on his current efforts to destroy the American foreign aid system from the inside out. Current and former officials see it as a campaign of retribution against those who opposed his earlier work, as well as an opportunity to fulfill his most controversial policies by sidelining bureaucrats who get in his way.

Marocco is now the director for foreign assistance at the State Department and has been delegated the power of deputy administrator of USAID — helping lead the two agencies that previously rejected him. And unlike last time, Marocco is now without strictures and answers to few in the executive branch besides Trump himself.

Immediately after the inauguration last month, Marocco drafted the order shutting down all of USAID’s programs and freezing foreign aid. He’s led the efforts to place nearly all of the agency’s staff on administrative leave, though the courts have temporarily lifted many of those. Much of USAID’s work has not resumed, according to interviews with dozens of government employees and nongovernmental organizations, despite the State Department’s claim that waivers allow work involving “core lifesaving medicine, medical services, food, shelter and substance assistance” to continue.

“It’s an exact repeat of what he did but at scale,” said a former senior official at USAID who worked alongside Marocco during his previous stint in government. “He had no problem stopping foreign assistance. … He came in, he said, ‘We’re going to stop all programming, stop everything going on in the field.’”

Marocco and the State Department did not respond to a detailed list of questions about the meeting or his views. Dodik did not respond either.

Marocco’s meeting was not the only diplomatic misstep in his tumultuous career.

During a trip to Serbia, Marocco on his own volition invited the country’s president, Aleksandar Vučić, to visit Srebrenica, where more than 8,000 Muslims were killed during the Bosnian genocide, according to two officials familiar with the incident. Considered highly inappropriate — Bosnian Serb and Serbian paramilitary forces had massacred the people buried there — the invitation had not been approved by the U.S. ambassador.

In 2020, the Trump administration appointed Marocco to USAID, the world’s largest foreign aid organization. As assistant to the administrator in charge of the Bureau for Conflict Prevention and Stabilization, he bewildered staff by attempting to reorient the work exclusively toward his brand of U.S. national security interests, according to interviews with his former subordinates and superiors, as well as an official complaint, known as a dissent cable, lodged against him within three months after he’d joined. Some said he frequently favored programs that benefited Christian minorities abroad.

Marocco told subordinates that he disagreed with much of USAID’s traditional “soft power” approach toward diplomacy and ordered wide-ranging but vague reviews of the agency’s programs, insisting that he personally approve any expenses over $10,000, the officials said.

Those who worked alongside him throughout government were particularly alarmed by comments he had made during private conversations when discussing American foreign policy. Those officials told ProPublica that Marocco has questioned whether USAID should be funding programs to combat racist nationalism and hate speech abroad.

While he was at the agency, he frequently expressed wanting to cut programs he didn’t like or understand, his former colleagues said. In the internal cable filed to leaders of the agency, they accused Marocco of trying to withhold congressionally approved funds slated for most of the programs supporting democracy and fair elections in Bosnia and Herzegovina and redirect that money toward addressing Islamic extremism.

That cable warns that “operational capacity and strategic efficacy have been and continue to be rapidly degraded” by Marocco, and that the programs risk being irreversibly damaged “at significant financial cost to the American taxpayer.”

Diplomats said his efforts undermined U.S. strategic interests in the region and, by favoring one religion over another, likely ran afoul of the Constitution’s religious freedom clause, according to the cable. They were concerned that his actions “risk worsening BiH’s tense sectarian tensions by affirming one side’s narrative while stigmatizing the other,” they wrote in the cable, using the abbreviation for Bosnia and Herzegovina. Bosnia is about 50% Muslim with large minority populations of Serb Orthodox Christians and Roman Catholic Croats.

“He had it in for Bosnia,” a former official at USAID said, “and I didn’t know why at the time.”

Marocco’s short time at USAID was the last in a stretch of four jobs at four agencies, including the Pentagon and the Department of Commerce.

Marocco was next seen inside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, according to footage gathered and analyzed by an online group. He was not charged with a crime and has not responded to multiple requests for comment about his role that day, though he has called the accusations “[p]etty smear tactics and desperate personal attacks by politicians with no solutions.”

Experts in and outside government now consider Marocco to be orchestrating the new Trump administration’s foreign aid policy largely by himself. His official position is director of foreign assistance at the State Department, and the powers of the deputy administrator of USAID have been delegated to him as well. “Right now he is the most important person at the State Department,” one official observed.

Marocco’s rapid-fire assault on USAID has come under legal scrutiny in recent days after dozens of employees and organizations filed lawsuits, seeking to reverse his most consequential changes. Judges have at least temporarily reined in the broad use of administrative leave for thousands of employees across the agency and told the agency to reinstate programs that were funded and approved prior to Trump’s inauguration.

Marocco has defended his sweeping takedown as a necessary measure to root out government waste and support Trump’s agenda to make America safer and more prosperous.

“His thinking was that the people in government were not abiding by the right theory,” another official told ProPublica. “Well we know now how far he’s willing to go.”


Pratheek Rebala and Alex Mierjeski contributed research.

'Infantile' Trump trashed by Alaskans for 'dumb' mountain name change: report

TALLEST MOUNTAIN IN NORTH AMERICA 


Tom Boggioni
February 16, 2025 
RAW STORY

While the majority of attention has been focused on Donald Trump's decision to rename the "Gulf of Mexico" to the "Gulf of America," leading to the banning of the Associated Press from White House functions for their failure to comply with the president's edict, Alaskans are fuming at the renaming of Mt. Denali.

According to a report from the Washington Post, Trump's simultaneous relabeling of America's highest peak back to Mt. McKinley has aggravated more than a few Alaskans, some of whom are amused while others outraged.

As Jeff Yanuchi, who runs dogsleds in Denali National Park and Preserve, put it: "It was just another instance of someone from Washington putting their big nose in a place that it just doesn’t belong," before adding the mountain "cannot be a political pawn. And that’s what they’re trying to make it.”

According to the Post's Karin Brulliard, "What perplexes many here is why Trump chose to thrust a mountain thousands of miles from Washington into a culture war while disregarding Alaskans’ wishes, their legislature’s pleas and their Republican U.S. senators’ disapproval. As the weeks go by, affront has turned to worry as the implications of more executive orders from afar, particularly those freezing federal grants and imperiling the jobs of 'parkies' who help drive the local tourism economy, begin to ripple across the permafrost."

Chris Noel, mayor of Denali Borough, is another naysayer about the change, telling the Post, "We prefer it to stay Denali, and we’re not going to change our name,” adding that he has not heard from one local who approves.

Comments made to the Post about Trump's decision to make the change, include, "“infantile,” “laughable."

According to 86-year-old Eliza Jones, the change is "dumb," telling the Post, "We don’t know who McKinley is. Denali has so much more meaning to it.”

"Alaska Natives and elected officials pushed Washington for decades to call the mountain Denali, as it had done with the national park in 1980. Objections by lawmakers from Ohio, McKinley’s home state, thwarted them," the Post report notes adding that the change was finally made by former President Barack Obama.

Sherri Jones Kriska of Fairbanks told the Post, "You want to make America great? Then keep it as Denali," before pointedly stating, " The undertone of racism is there."

You can read more here.

'That level of paranoid': Federal workers fear they're being snooped on in own homes

Travis Gettys
February 17, 2025 
ALTERNET


A person holds a placard as demonstrators rally outside the U.S. Treasury Department after it was reported billionaire Elon Musk, who is heading U.S. President Donald Trump's drive to shrink the federal government, has gained access to Treasury's federal payments system that sends out more than $6 trillion per year in payments on behalf of federal agencies and contains the personal information of millions of Americans, in Washington, U.S., February 4, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura

Federal workers are so on edge as Elon Musk's "government efficiency" team gains access to agency computer systems that they're terrified of reading news articles on work systems, according to a report.

Some government employees say they're turning off their phones at home and choosing to talk with colleagues in person, rather than over Microsoft Teams, due to surveillance fears. Some have even bought special bags designed to block electromagnetic signals out of concern that something they say could be considered as being against President Donald Trump, reported CNN.

“I used to carry my work phone around with me everywhere, after hours, on the weekend, in case anything was needed," said one employee at the General Services Administration (GSA). "Now I won’t take it out of my office space."

More than a dozen federal employees at five agencies told CNN they're afraid of losing their jobs and of being surveilled without their knowledge. Rumors are rampant throughout the federal government that online activity is being monitored by more senior officials for evidence of disloyalty to the administration.

“There is a persistent feeling that we are being watched,” one Department of Veteran Affairs employee told CNN.

The GSA tried to alleviate concerns last week by announcing there were "no plans to surveil employees," but federal workers say they're changing their workplace behavior anyway.

“Does the truth matter, if everyone believes it?” said a federal worker. “Obviously, legally it does, but from a psychological perspective, if what they want is to scare people, then they might already be winning.”

The VA employee said they have stopped using their work computer to view news website during their lunch break in fear of being viewed as disloyal and thought about covering up the camera on their computer to avoid being watched.

“It’s very unlikely, but is it impossible? No," that worker said. "I mean, did you ever think that a 19-year-old named Big Balls would be accessing information at the State Department?”

Musk's team at the so-called Department of Government Efficiency has accessed IT systems throughout the federal government as part of what they say are audits for waste, fraud and abuse, but State Department employees report receiving notices on their mobile phones while on the job warning their employers had "installed a certificate authority in [their] work profile [and their] secure network traffic may be monitored or modified."

“Any technical glitch we experience, we wonder, is this just us being paranoid or is it some nefarious action?” said one employee at the Department of Education.

Scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration no longer take meeting notes in Google Docs, and workers elsewhere report concerns that they might say something to triggering artificial intelligence surveillance.

“People are picking up the phone for the first time in a decade because they don’t have to have online meetings or notes,” said a federal employee. “We’re that level of paranoid.”



'Incredulous': Judge bemused as Trump lawyers can't confirm if federal workers fired

Sarah K. Burris
February 17, 2025
RAW STORY


Judge Tanya Chutkan and President Donald Trump (Photos: Historical Society of the D.C. Circuit and White House/Flickr)

Judge Tanya Chutkan held a rare emergency hearing on Monday's Presidents' Day holiday to hear the case for a temporary restraining order halting the activity of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

Chutkan noted that several other cases currently in the courts attempt to pause cuts being ushered in by DOGE, which isn't a congressionally established or funded department. She asked why the broader case before her, which seeks to shut down all of DOGE's cuts, is different.

The legal team suing for the order pointed to reports over the dangers of Department of Energy employees who oversee the nuclear waste in Los Alamos, New Mexico as an example. They mentioned that thousands of government employees were let go on Friday

Chutkan asked whether the government's legal team could confirm — and they said they didn't know. It was a fact that legal analysts watching the case unfold were shocked by.

"I have not been able to look into that independently or confirm that," the government lawyer said, according to Just Security and MSNBC's Adam Klasfeld.

"The firing of thousands of federal employees is not a small or common thing. You haven’t been able to confirm that?" Klasfeld quoted Chutkan responding "incredulously."

Lawfare's Roger Parloff recorded Chutkan's concerns that DOGE's actions "have been unpredictable and scattershot." She commented that it's unclear if that is by design or a nature of the situation.

"That's why I'm asking: will there be terminations? Where? When?" Chutkan said, according to Parloff.

The government was forced to say they'd get back to her on that.

Lawfare managing editor Tyler McBrien pointed out that this might "sound damning," but that it might help the government's case in the end.

"This chaos may make it more difficult to demonstrate the immediate harm needed for the judge to issue a temporary restraining order — rather than just a generalized fear," he explained.

Chutkan said she would try to rule on the matter in 24 hours.




Park Service employee fired mid-air on her way home from a work trip


By Cthegoat - Glacier Point US Citizenship Ceremony 2011 Yosemite National Park, California USA, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37698586
Park rangers presiding over US Citizenship Ceremony
February 16, 2025
ALTERNET

A 23-year-old park guide at Palo Alto Battlefield National Historical Park, Helen Dhue, found out she'd been fired during a layover in Dallas on Friday, on her way home from a National Park Service business trip.

"The department determined that you have failed to demonstrate fitness or qualifications for continued employment because your subject matter knowledge, skills and abilities do not meet the department's current needs," read the email she received, according to the New York Times.

Dhue is one of 1,000 National Park Service employees affected by federal job cuts imposed by the Trump administration. Her firing comes at the same time a former Yosemite National Park official laments a "catastrophic" outcome of Trump's cuts, leading to reduced services and worse.

The executive director of the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, Tim Whitehouse, argues the NPS firings make little sense. "It's not going to save the government any money," he said. "It's going to degrade our parks, demoralize people that work very hard for very little money, and make the government a hostile place to be."

During the first weeks of the Trump administration, significant efforts have been made to overhaul the federal workforce. One of the administration's first acts was to summarily fire Justice Department prosecutors who had helped investigate Trump's attempts to overturn the 2020 election. These career DOJ officials, who had worked under presidents of both parties, were terminated, it's believed, due to their role in investigating the president's conduct.

The Trump administration has also sought to persuade federal employees into resigning, offering "buyout" packages of around eight months' pay if they voluntarily leave their positions. This move is seen by many as an unconstitutional attempt to purge the "deep state" of officials not aligned with Trump's political agenda.

The administration's actions have extended beyond the DOJ, with a reported plan to target Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) offices across the federal government. Internal documents from the Trump-aligned "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE) outlined a multi-phase strategy to identify and terminate DEI-linked employees, even in statutorily mandated civil rights offices.



'Disastrous': Trump’s 'haphazard' mass firings leave 'gaping holes in the government'


(Gage Skidmore)
Donald Trump in Phoenix on December 22, 2024

February 15, 2025
ALTERNET

Since President Donald Trump's return to the White House less than a month ago, thousands of federal government workers have been laid off.

Trump, with the help of ally Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), is gutting the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). Employees of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) fear their agency will suffer a similar fate, and Trump proposed eliminating the U.S. Department of Education altogether.


In an article published on February 15, six Politico reporters — Liz Crampton, Marcia Brown, Danny Nguyen, Ben Lefebvre, Catherine Morehouse and Eric Bazail-Eimil — detail the ways in which Americans are likely to be affected by these mass layoffs of federal workers.

READ MORE: 'Stop whining': GOPer smacked down after worrying Trump 'cuts will do more harm than good'

"Americans could soon start to feel the repercussions of the Trump Administration's decision to fire thousands of government workers — from public safety to health benefits and basic services that they have come to rely on," the journalists explain. "Trump's directive to slash thousands of jobs across agencies is leaving gaping holes in the government, with thousands of workers being laid off from the Education Department, the Office of Personnel Management, the Department of Veterans Affairs and multiple others."

The reporters continue, "At the U.S. Forest Service, where some 3400 workers are slated to be cut, wildfire prevention will be curtailed as the West grapples with a destructive fire season that has destroyed millions of acres in California. And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wasn't spared: Almost half of the agency's 2800 probationary employees were cut, while about 400 employees appeared to have taken the 'buyout' offer, meaning the agency responsible for protecting Americans from disease outbreaks and other health hazards will lose about a tenth of its workforce. That's on top of more than 2000 probationary employees fired from the Department of Health and Human Services, the CDC's parent agency."

According to the Politico journalists, a source "familiar with" activities at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) said that as many as 200,000 civil service workers who were in the probationary period are likely to be laid off.

The General Services Administration (GSA) is being rocked by layoffs as well.

"Haphazard cuts at GSA could be disastrous for the millions of Americans who rely on the agency's services like Login.gov, the central login system for Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security," the reporters note. "The agency also streamlines much of the federal government's real estate, acquisition and other technical services, and cuts to these could have a domino effect across the government."

Read Politico's full article at this link.



'None of This Is About Saving Money': Fury Over Trump-Musk Purge of Federal Workers

The "mass firing spree," said one union leader, is "about gutting the federal government, silencing workers, and forcing agencies into submission to a radical agenda that prioritizes cronyism over competence."


Members of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) protest against firings during a rally to defend federal workers in Washington, D.C. on February 11, 2025.
(Photo: Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Jake Johnson
Feb 14, 2025
COMMON DREAMS


The Trump administration intensified its large-scale purge of the federal government on Thursday by moving to fire potentially hundreds of thousands of probationary employees, an effort that one leading union condemned as a power grab aimed at forcing agencies to capitulate to the whims of a lawless president.

The new flurry of terminations impacted workers across at least seven federal agencies, from the Department of Veterans Affairs—which said it fired 1,000 employees—to the Forest Service, Department of Education, Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

Everett Kelley, national president of the American Federation of Government Employees—a union that represents more than 750,000 federal workers—said no one should fall for the Trump administration's claim that the mass firings are about federal employees' performance or enhancing government "efficiency."

"This administration has abused the probationary period to conduct a politically driven mass firing spree, targeting employees not because of performance, but because they were hired before Trump took office," Kelley said in a statement Thursday. "These firings are not about poor performance—there is no evidence these employees were anything but dedicated public servants. They are about power. They are about gutting the federal government, silencing workers, and forcing agencies into submission to a radical agenda that prioritizes cronyism over competence."

Vowing to "fight these firings every step of the way," Kelley said terminated employees were "given no notice, no due process, and no opportunity to defend themselves in a blatant violation of the principles of fairness and merit that are supposed to govern federal employment."

"We will stand with every impacted employee, pursue every legal challenge available, and hold this administration accountable for its reckless actions," said Kelley. "Federal employees are not disposable, and we will not allow the government to treat them as such."

"None of this is about saving money, it is about Musk and Trump enriching themselves and their wealthy friends while making huge cuts to services Americans depend on."

The new purge targeting more recently hired government employees marks the latest salvo in the Trump administration's far-reaching assault on federal agencies, an effort spearheaded by unelected billionaire Elon Musk and his so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. President Donald Trump has given the advisory commission unprecedented authority over federal hiring, effectively installing Musk as the leader of a shadow government in Washington, D.C.

The Washington Postnoted that "the latest data shows there were more than 220,000 federal employees within their one-year probationary period as of last March."

"These workers typically have little protection from being fired without cause," the Post observed.

In addition to firing rank-and-file workers, Trump has removed independent inspectors generaltop federal prosecutorsNational Labor Relations Board officials, and the head of the Office of Government Ethics, among others.

The new administration's sweeping attacks on the federal workforce, which have drawn union-led legal challenges, have left career civil servants confused, demoralized, and fearful of the future—music to the ears of far-right officials like Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought, who has expressed his desire to leave government employees "traumatically affected."

An anonymous OPM employee wrote for Slate last week that agency workers "are just as frustrated, confused, and traumatized as the rest of America."

"When I started my job at OPM, I swore an oath to the Constitution, and to defend it against all enemies foreign and domestic, making it especially awful that the threat to our government is coming from inside my own office building," the worker wrote. "The villains here aren't the civil servants working to serve the American people."




A purge of the federal workforce and wholesale dismantling of government departments were central goals of the far-right Project 2025 agenda authored by Vought and others in Trump's orbit. The playbook called on the new administration to disempower career civil servants and "fill its ranks with political appointees."

In addition to leading OMB, Vought is serving as acting director of the CFPB, an agency hit particularly hard by Thursday's purge. Reuters reported that "a new category of employees" at the consumer agency "received termination notices on Thursday... in a sign that the Trump administration was going beyond probationary employees as it looks to fire federal staff."

"Notices to dozens of so-called 'term employees,' full-time workers on contracts with end dates, began arriving Thursday evening, letting them know they were being terminated the same day," Reuters reported. "Some staff discovered they had lost access to the agency's IT systems before receiving their termination letters."

The sloppy and chaotic nature of the purge underscored what critics say is a reckless evisceration of government in service of a far-right ideological project.

The Post reported that the Small Business Association (SBA) "listed a paralegal phone number for laid-off employees to appeal their terminations. The number was an automated line for an apartment building."

According toAxios, one SBA worker "received two different firing emails with attachments... each with a different reason they were being let go."

"The first one said they were being let go because 'you have failed to demonstrate fitness for continued federal employment," Axios reported. "The second one hedged on the reason: '[Y]ou are not fit for continued employment because your ability, knowledge, and skills do not fit the agency's current needs and/or your performance has not been adequate to justify further employment at the agency."

Wiredreported that workers at the CFPB "were informed that they had been fired with a frenetic email" in which "some affected employees were addressed as [EmployeeFirstName][EmployeeLastName], [Job Title], [Division]."

Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.), who represents a large swath of federal workers, said in a statement earlier this week that "the Musk-Trump administration's purge of the federal civil service is illegal, terrible for the country, and paves the way for increased corruption."

"While Musk and Trump are distracting their followers with supposed 'savings' from these mass layoffs, which my Republican colleagues correctly note are a tiny fraction of all federal spending, they are preparing to enact tax cuts that will shower hundreds of times as much money on the rich," said Beyer. "None of this is about saving money, it is about Musk and Trump enriching themselves and their wealthy friends while making huge cuts to services Americans depend on."

Trump begins firing air traffic control staff amid 7 plane crashes

David Edwards
February 17, 2025 
RAW STORY

An American Airlines airplane lands near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in the aftermath of the collision of American Eagle flight 5342 and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into the Potomac River, outside Washington, U.S., January 31, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon

President Donald Trump's administration, guided by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), reportedly began firing staff responsible for air traffic control amid more than a half dozen recent airplane crashes.

The Associated Press reported that probationary employees at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) began receiving emails on Friday night saying they would be terminated.

"The impacted workers include personnel hired for FAA radar, landing, and navigational aid maintenance," the AP reported after talking to one anonymous air traffic controller.

The National Air Traffic Controllers Association was "analyzing the effect of the reported federal employee terminations on aviation safety, the national airspace system, and our members," the group said in a statement.

The firings come just days after a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter collided with an American Airlines passenger jet in Washington, D.C., killing over 60. Since then, at least six other plane crashes and wrecks have reportedly occurred


‘Stupid beyond belief’: Musk and Trump blasted as DOGE fires ‘hundreds’ from FAA






David Badash, The New Civil Rights Movement
February 17, 2025 

Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is reportedly firing hundreds of Federal Aviation Administration employees, according to multiple reports and the FAA workers’ union, even as fatal plane crashes continue to mount under President Donald Trump’s administration — including one as recently as Saturday.

“The impacted workers include personnel hired for FAA radar, landing and navigational aid maintenance, one air traffic controller told the Associated Press,” the AP reported. The firings also come as the FAA is without a Senate-confirmed administrator, after Musk called for him to resign. In 2023, Michael Whitaker had been confirmed unanimously, 98-0.

The terminations of what are called “probationary” employees can include not only employees hired within the past year, but also long-term employees who have been recently promoted. Air traffic controllers and other employees are a critical segment of the federal government. The FAA’s hiring practices are rigorous and require tremendous training, as a former Federal Aviation Administration official said recently after President Trump strongly suggested the deadly mid-air crash near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport might have been the result of “DEI” hiring.

CNN, which first reported DOGE’s mass firings had now hit the FAA, noted that the “exact number of firings is not yet known, but the head of the Professional Aviation Safety Specialists, AFL-CIO, said that ‘several hundred’ workers started getting firing notices on Friday — and that they could even be barred from FAA facilities Tuesday after the federal holiday.”

“The FAA’s system that distributes critical flight safety alerts to pilots failed just days after the crash and forced the agency to rely on a backup system.”

There have been at least six fatal aviation incidents since Donald Trump became president, according to news reports and a search of the National Transportation Safety Board’s (NTSB) database:

January 25, 2025: Charlottesville, VA
January 29, 2025: Potomac River Mid-Air Collision
January 31, 2025: Med Jets Flight 056 Crash (Philadelphia)
February 6, 2025: Bering Air Flight 445 Crash (Alaska)
February 10, 2025: Private Jet Crash in Scottsdale, Arizona
February 15, 2025: Small Plane Crash Near Covington, Georgia


That last crash came “just hours after ‘hundreds’ of pink slips were reportedly handed out at the agency,” The Daily Beast reported.

“Staffing decisions should be based on an individual agency’s mission-critical needs,” said David Spero, national president of Professional Aviation Safety Specialists (PASS) told CNN. “To do otherwise is dangerous when it comes to public safety. And it is especially unconscionable in the aftermath of three deadly aircraft accidents in the past month.”

Critics are blasting President Donald Trump and Elon Musk.

“No president has had more planes crash in their first month in office than Donald Trump,” charged U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) on Monday.

President Trump, meanwhile, amid the firings, on Sunday took a “taxpayer-funded Daytona 500 joyride” at a rained-out NASCAR race “as he guts [the] federal workforce,” The Independent, a UK-based news site, reported.

Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg on Monday morning asked: “The flying public needs answers. How many FAA personnel were just fired? What positions? And why?”

U.S. Rep. Don Beyer (D-VA), a member of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, blasted the FAA firings:

“Mass firings of FAA workers – at a time when they already have serious staffing problems – would be dangerous at any time. Musk and Trump doing this weeks after the deadliest crash in years is stupid beyond belief.”

Professor of Public Policy Don Moynihan charged, “even after a bunch of accidents that highlighted FAA staffing shortages they still went ahead and fired FAA staff. They don’t know what they are doing.”

“You might have noticed that since Trump became President a number of aviation fatalities have occurred,” Moynihan wrote at “Can We Still Govern?”

“This happened after Musk pushed the head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, and Trump fired its safety advisory board. This likely had little direct effect on the crash at Reagan airport, but the crash highlighted staffing shortages, causing the Trump administration to tell FAA employees they could no longer apply for deferred resignation offer they had received days earlier. Safety first, it seemed,” he explained. “FAA employees therefore had some reason to believe that they would be exempt from the purge of probationary employees, but this is not the case.”

Jason King, a now-former FAA employee and disabled veteran who was laid off on Friday, told WUSA, “my unit directly with the FAA is directly involved with safety.”

Musk sends SpaceX team to visit key U.S. air traffic command center

Agence France-Presse
February 17, 2025 

Elon Musk, seen here in the Oval Office on February 11 (Jim WATSON/AFP)

by Sarah TITTERTON

A team from Elon Musk's SpaceX was set to visit the command center of the U.S. federal aviation regulator on Monday with a brief for suggesting safety improvements in the wake of a deadly crash in Washington last month.

The visit, announced on Sunday by Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, has raised some eyebrows given the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has investigated and fined SpaceX on numerous occasions -– sometimes over safety issues.

US President Donald Trump, who has tapped top ally and donor Musk to slash the size of the federal government, has taken particular aim at the FAA over its hiring policies.

"America deserves safe, state-of-the-art air travel, and President Trump has ordered that I deliver a new, world-class air traffic control system that will be the envy of the world," Duffy said.

He added that SpaceX staff will take a "firsthand look" around when they visit the Air Traffic Control System Command Center, which works to balance demand for flights in the United States with the capacity to handle them.

It is also home to a team that tracks data about commercial space launches and re-entries and the status of various space missions, according to its website.

"The safety of air travel is a non-partisan matter," said Musk, whose federal cost-cutting drive has raised concerns about conflicts of interest with his companies, several of which -- such as SpaceX -- hold major government contracts.

"SpaceX engineers will help make air travel safer," he wrote on social platform X, which he also owns.

An aviation safety specialists union said that the Trump administration had begun firing "hundreds" of FAA employees over the long holiday weekend.


- 'Draconian' -

Trump has tapped billionaire Musk to wage a scorched earth campaign on the federal government, slashing workers and cutting programs -- such as aid to the world's poorest countries -- that he says do not align with his America First policies.


The president has accused the FAA of prioritizing "diversity, equity and inclusion" hiring policies -- meant to combat racism and other forms of discrimination -- over safety and efficiency.

"Several hundred" FAA employees began receiving notices that they had been fired late Friday, according to David Spero, president of the Professional Aviation Safety Specialists union.

"This draconian action will increase the workload and place new responsibilities on a workforce that is already stretched thin," Spero warned in a statement.

"Staffing decisions should be based on an individual agency's mission-critical needs. To do otherwise is dangerous when it comes to public safety."

He said the "hastily made" decision was "especially unconscionable" in the aftermath of the deadly crash last month.

The accident at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport saw 67 people killed as an army helicopter collided with a passenger jet coming in for landing.


It was the deadliest air disaster in the United States in two decades.

Trump has also, repeatedly and without evidence, blamed the Washington crash on DEI programs.

Flight safety experts investigating the crash have said that faulty instruments and communication problems may have been behind the disaster.


© Agence France-Presse